Skip to main content

Human Resources Management

Subject: Business Studies
Topic: 5
Cambridge Code: 0264 / 0450 / 7115


HRM Functions

Human Resources Management (HRM) - Managing people effectively

Key Areas

  1. Recruitment - Hiring right people
  2. Training - Developing skills
  3. Motivation - Encouraging performance
  4. Appraisal - Evaluating performance
  5. Compensation - Paying fairly
  6. Relations - Labor relations

Recruitment Process

Steps

1. Job Analysis

  • Identify needs
  • Define role requirements
  • Determine salary level

2. Advertising

  • Job boards (online, newspaper)
  • Agency (recruitment specialists)
  • Direct approach (from competitors)
  • Internal (promotion)

3. Shortlisting

  • Review applications
  • Select candidates for interview
  • Check qualifications

4. Interview

  • Assessment of suitability
  • Ask role-specific questions
  • Evaluate enthusiasm
  • Check communication skills

5. Testing

  • Aptitude tests (ability)
  • Psychometric (personality, values)
  • Technical (job-specific skills)
  • Work samples

6. Selection

  • Choose best candidate
  • Reference checks (previous employers)
  • Medical examination
  • Offer contract

Recruitment Methods

MethodAdvantageDisadvantage
Job boardsReach many candidatesAnonymous, high volume
AgenciesProfessional selectionExpensive, less control
InternalKnown quality, motivationLimited talent pool
HeadhuntingTargeted, experiencedVery expensive

Motivation Theories

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

  1. Physiological - Food, water, shelter
  2. Safety - Security, stability
  3. Social - Belonging, relationships
  4. Esteem - Recognition, respect
  5. Self-actualization - Goals, potential

Application: Satisfy lower levels before upper levels

Herzberg's Two-Factor Theory

Hygiene Factors (prevent dissatisfaction):

  • Pay, working conditions
  • Job security, supervision

Motivators (create satisfaction):

  • Achievement, recognition
  • Responsibility, growth

Application: Remove negatives AND add positives

McGregor's Theory X and Y

Theory X: Workers dislike work

  • Coercive management (threat)
  • Close supervision

Theory Y: Workers enjoy work

  • Participative management
  • Trust and empowerment

Motivation Methods

Financial Incentives

Wages/Salaries:

  • Basic income
  • Security and stability

Bonuses:

  • Performance-based reward
  • Tied to targets

Piece Rates:

  • Pay per unit produced
  • Encourages productivity

Profit Sharing:

  • Share company profits
  • Aligns interests

Non-Financial Methods

Job Enrichment:

  • More responsibility
  • Varied tasks
  • Development opportunity

Job Enlargement:

  • More tasks (same level)
  • Reduces boredom
  • Develops flexibility

Empowerment:

  • Delegate decision-making
  • Trust in workers
  • Increases ownership

Recognition:

  • Praise, awards
  • Public acknowledgment
  • Low cost impact

Training and Development

Training Types

Induction: New employee orientation

  • Company knowledge
  • Role training
  • Meet team

On-the-job: Training while working

  • Practical skills
  • Immediate application
  • Experienced trainer

Off-the-job: Formal training away from work

  • Classroom, workshops
  • External specialists
  • Structured learning

Apprenticeship: Long-term skill development

  • Combination on/off job
  • Qualification-based
  • Entry level

Benefits

  • Productivity increase - Better skills
  • Quality improvement - Fewer errors
  • Morale boost - Feel valued
  • Adaptability - Respond to change
  • Promotion pipeline - Internal advancement

Performance Appraisal

Appraisal - Formal evaluation of performance

Methods

Annual Review:

  • Once per year
  • Comprehensive assessment
  • Set future goals

Continuous Monitoring:

  • Regular feedback
  • Immediate issues addressed
  • Development focus

360-Degree Feedback:

  • Feedback from manager, peers, subordinates
  • Comprehensive view
  • Less manager bias

Appraisal Outcomes

  • Performance pay increase - Links reward to performance
  • Promotion planning - Identify potential
  • Training needs - Development areas
  • Dismissal - Poor performance documentation
  • Career planning - Future direction

Labor Turnover

Labor turnover = Number leavingAverage number employed×100%\frac{\text{Number leaving}}{\text{Average number employed}} \times 100\%

Problems with High Turnover

  • Recruitment costs - Replacing people
  • Training costs - New employee induction
  • Productivity loss - Reduced during transition
  • Knowledge loss - Experience leaves
  • Customer service loss - Relationship interruption

Causes

  • Poor management
  • Low pay
  • Limited prospects
  • Poor working conditions
  • Lack of recognition
  • Better opportunities elsewhere

Reducing Turnover

  • Improve pay/conditions
  • Career development
  • Recognition programs
  • Better management
  • Team building

Workforce Planning

Workforce planning - Future human resource needs

Process

  1. Analyze current
  • Number, skills, age
  • Turnover patterns
  • Succession issues
  1. Forecast demand
  • Expansion plans
  • Technology changes
  • Market growth
  1. Identify gaps
  • Skills deficiencies
  • Staff shortages
  • Surplus in areas
  1. Plan action
  • Recruitment strategy
  • Training programs
  • Redundancy plans

Key Points

  1. HRM: Recruitment, training, motivation, appraisal
  2. Recruitment: Systematic multi-step process
  3. Motivation: Hygiene factors + motivators
  4. Training: Develops skills and morale
  5. Appraisal: Evaluates and plans development
  6. Turnover: High turnover costly
  7. Workforce planning: Future-focused strategy

Practice Questions

  1. Design recruitment process
  2. Compare motivation theories
  3. Calculate labor turnover
  4. Propose motivation strategy
  5. Analyze training effectiveness
  6. Create workforce development plan

Revision Tips

  • Learn recruitment stages
  • Know motivation theories
  • Understand training types
  • Appraisal methods
  • Calculate turnover
  • Know labor laws basics
  • Relate HRM to business strategy