Human resource management:
Gespeichert in:
Vorheriger Titel: | Milkovich, George T. Personnel |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chicago [u.a.]
Irwin
1997
|
Ausgabe: | 8. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXV, 693 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0256193541 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | 1
A Diagnostic Approach to Human Resource
Management 1
PART ONE
ASSESS CONDITIONS, PLAN AND SET
OBJECTIVES 25
2
External Conditions 27
3
Organization Conditions 61
4
Employee Characteristics 97
5
Planning and Evaluation 138
PART TWO
EXTERNAL STAFFING 174
6
External Recruiting 179
7
External Employee Selection 236
8
Turnover 307
PART THREE
EMPLOYEE DEVELOPMENT 349
9
Internal Staffing and Careers 351
10
Training 406
PART FOUR
COMPENSATION 457
11
The Pay System 459
12
Paying Individual Employees 499
13
Benefits 539
PART FTVE
EMPLOYEE/LABOR RELATIONS 565
14
Unions 567
15
Employee Relations 603
16
The Evolving Human Resource Management
Profession 640
Name Index 675
Subject Index 685
xi
CHAPTER 1
A Diagnostic Approach to Human Resource Management 1
Why Human Resources Are Critical 2
Integrated Decisions... 2
. . . That Influence Effectiveness 3
Integrating Efficiency and Equity 5
Valuing Human Resources as Assets 5
Separating HRM Costs and Payoffs from Other Initiatives 5
Payoffs as Expense Avoided 8
Expense of Doing Nothing 9
HR Activities Pay Off 9
The HR Practitioner 9
Service 10
Advocate 11
Business Partner/Change Agent 12
A Diagnostic Approach 13
An HR Example 13
Assess Conditions 15
External Conditions 15
Organization Conditions 15
Employee Conditions 15
Plan and Set Objectives 16
HRM Activities 16
Staffing: From an Employee to Teams 16
Development: From Training to Continuous Learning 16
Compensation: From Wages to Total Labor Costs and Rewarding Performance 17
Employee/Union Relations: From Labor Relations to Governance 17
Evaluating Results 18
xiii
xiv Contents
The Employment Relationship 18
The New Deal : Myth or Fact? 19
Managing a Breached Contract 19
Combine the Diagnostic Approach with Theoretical and Technical Knowledge 20
PART ONE
ASSESS CONDITIONS, PLAN AND SET OBJECTIVES 25
CHAPTER 2
External Conditions 25
Intertwined Forces Build the Employment Relationship 28
Government as a Third Party in the Employment Relationship 28
Regulations Reflect Society 28
Shaping Legislation 30
Worldwide Changes in the Employment Relationship 30
Global Comparisons 31
Managerial Autonomy 31
Ownership and Financial Markets 33
Union and Employee Involvement 33
An Increasingly Diverse Employee Population 34
Employee Trends: Immigration 35
Employee Trends: The African American Experience 35
Employee Trends: Women in the Workforce 36
An Expanding Notion of Fairness 37
Defining Discrimination 37
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act 37
Exceptions to Title VII 38
Preferences and Quotas: The Public Debate 40
Evaluating Compliance 40
Availability Analysis 40
Establish Goals 43
Programming to Achieve Goals: Affirmative Action 43
Ensure Compliance 43
We re Not What We Used to Be 44
Unequal Occupations, Unequal Incomes 44
The Glass Ceiling 46
Valuing Diversity 48
Pressures for Diversity Programs 48
The Role of HRM 48
Managers and Leaders 50
Training 51
Contents xv
Other Countries, Other Perspectives 52
Diversity Is Not a Universal Goal 52
The European Approach 53
Canada 54
Differential Impact and Responses to Uncertainty 54
Your Turn: Levi Strauss 56
CHAPTER 3
Organization Conditions 61
Nature of the Organization 62
Financial Condition 63
Technology and Productivity 63
Business Strategy 64
Organization Design 65
Networks 68
HR Decisions That Fit Organization Design 68
Nature of the Work 69
Designing Work 69
Human Relations 69
Work Characteristics Models 70
High Performance Work Systems 71
Go with the Flow 72
Reengineering 72
Is This Change Really Necessary? 74
Teams: A Fundamental Building Block 74
Building Blocks or Stumbling Blocks? 76
Yosh! 77
Nature of the Job 78
Job Analysis 79
Collecting the Data 79
Job Descriptions 84
Generic Descriptions: Flexibility versus Fences 84
Is Job Analysis Useful? 86
Yes, But Is It Really Useful? 86
Focus on the Person, Not the Job: Competencies 87
Your Turn: Astra Merck 90
Appendix: Job Analysis Procedures 91
xvi Contents
CHAPTER 4
Employee Characteristics 97
Employee Characteristics 99
Performance 99
Why Measure Performance, a Deadly Disease ? 100
What Performance to Measure 103
How to Measure Performance 105
Who Should Judge Performance? 112
When to Assess Performance: Timing Is Everything 116
How to Communicate Performance Assessment: It s All in How You Say It 117
How to Evaluate Whether Performance Assessment Works 118
More Than Just Performance: Employee Withdrawal 123
Absenteeism 124
Separations and Turnover 125
Employee Attitudes and Opinions 126
Your Turn: Appraising Quality Performance at Ford Motor Company 129
CHAPTER 5
Planning and Evaluation 138
Planning, Setting Objectives, and Evaluating Results 140
Planning Is Diagnostic Decision Making 141
The Four Planning Questions 141
Why Human Resource Planning? 142
Planning Links Human Resources and the Organization 143
Planning Links Actions and Consequences 143
Calculating the Return on Investment in Human Resources 143
Planning Integrates Human Resource Activities 146
Do Human Resources Fit to Strategy, or Does One Size Fit All? 146
Can Human Resources Provide a Competitive Advantage? 147
How Human Resource Planning Fits the Broader Planning Process 148
Planning from Mars 148
The Environment 149
The Organization 150
Human Resource Quantity and Deployment 152
Human Resource Department/Function 153
Specific Human Resource Management Activities 154
Employment Planning: The Quantity and Deployment of Human Resources 155
How to Measure Human Resource Demand and Supply 155
Demand Analysis: Where Do We Want to Be?
Internal Supply Analysis: Where Are We Now? Where Will We Be? 156
External Supply Analysis: Who Is Joining the Organization? Who
Will Be Joining? 162
Contents xvii
Objectives and Evaluation Standards: How Did We Do? 165
What Makes a Good Objective/Standard? 166
Your Turn: Planning for the Shortage of Petroleum Engineers 169
PART TWO
EXTERNAL STAFFING 174
CHAPTER 6
External Recruiting 179
Recruiting: The Beginning of the Staffing Process 181
The Applicant s Job Search Process 184
Choosing an Occupation 184
Seeking Information about Jobs/Organizations 186
Choosing a Job/Organization 186
Conflicting Goals for Applicants and Employers 186
The End of Permanent Employment? 187
On the Web : Career Help for the Contingent Worker 190
Choosing Applicant Qualifications: Beyond Tradition 192
Tapping the Older Workforce 192
Creating Opportunities for the Disabled 193
Removing Barriers for Discouraged Workers 193
Tapping Applicants with Minimum Basic Skills 194
Choosing Recruitment Sources and Communication Channels 195
Walk ins 196
Referrals 196
College Recruiting 198
Choosing Schools 198
Attracting Applicants 200
Other Educational Institutions 202
Public Employment Agencies 204
Private Employment Agencies and Headhunters 204
Professional Associations 205
Cyber Recruitment: Finding Your Dream Job on the Internet 205
Advertising 205
Immigrants 207
Which Sources Work Best? 208
Choosing Inducements 208
Choosing the Message: Realism versus Flypaper 210
xviii Contents
Choosing and Preparing Recruiters 211
Evaluating Recruitment 213
Efficiency 213
Productivity and Tenure 213
Equity 214
Actual Recruiting Evaluation Practices 214
Your Turn: Happy Meal Recruitment Advertising 217
Appendix: A Diagnostic Approach to Your Own Job Search 218
CHAPTER 7
External Employee Selection 236
External Selection 238
Objectives for External Selection 240
Developing an External Selection Strategy 241
Validity: How Well Information Predicts the Future
Validity Coefficient 241
Choosing Selection Techniques 246
Application Forms and Resumes 246
Reference and Background Checks 251
Life History Information 252
Interviews 256
Ability Tests 266
Legality and Equity 270
Job Knowledge Tests, Work Samples, and Job Try outs 271
Physical/Physiological Requirements 273
Personality, Honesty, and Integrity Testing 274
Putting the Pieces Together to Create the External Selection Process 277
Single Job Selection versus Classification 277
Gathering and Scoring Predictor Information 277
Combining Multiple Selection Procedures 278
Does It Work? Validating Selection Processes 280
Criterion Related Validation 282
Content Based Validation 285
Extent of Validation 286
Government Regulation of Validation
What Is the Payoff? Evaluating External Selection Activities 287
Efficiency 287
Equity 290
Your Turn: HIO Silver Selection at AFG Industries 292
Contents xix
CHAPTER 8
Employee Separations, Workforce Reduction and Retention 307
Workforce Reduction and Retention 308
A Diagnostic Approach to Workforce Reduction/Retention 308
Efficiency 309
Equity 311
Separations Initiated by Employees or Employers: Who Decides? 311
Measuring the Separation Rate 312
Beyond the Separation Rate: Workforce Value 312
Managing Resignations 314
Quits 314
Retirements 318
Managing Employee Dismissals 322
Discharges 322
Layoffs 327
Evaluating Employee Separations and Retention 336
Efficiency 336
Equity 336
Your Turn: Boeing Louisiana s Plant Closing 338
PART THREE
EMPLOYEE DEVELOPMENT 349
CHAPTER 9
Internal Staffing and Careers 351
Organizational Staffing and Employee Careers 354
Setting Objectives for Internal Staffing and Careers 354
Internal Employee Movement Is Part of the Staffing Process 356
External Staffing and Internal Staffing Create Career Systems 356
Internal Staffing Reflects Both Internal Selection and Separation 356
Internal Staffing Affects Workforce Quality 358
Balancing Employee and Employer Concerns: Career Management and
Career Planning 360
The New Employment Contract: In Business for Yourself 362
The New Career Path: Twists and Turns, Not Straight and Narrow 362
Career Planning: Employees Finding and Pursuing Their Goals 364
Career Orientation: Who Do You Want to Be? 364
Career Cycles and Stages 366
xx Contents
Recruitment in Career Management 371
Job Posting 371
Nomination by the Employees Themselves 373
Nomination by Employees Superiors 374
Nomination by Mentors 374
Skill Inventories 375
Replacement and Succession Planning 376
Selection In Career Management 378
Selection Procedures Used for Internal Staffing 378
Assessment Centers 379
Past Performance, Experience, and Seniority 382
Separation and Retention in Career Management: Who s Left When They Leave? 384
Dual Ladder Career Paths: Keeping Technical Talent on Track 384
Mommy Tracks, Parent Tracks, and Work Life Balance 386
Chief Executive Officer Succession 386
Managing Global Careers 387
Organizational Factors 389
Employee Characteristics: Arnold Schwarzenegger Would Be Ideal 389
Family Support: Whither Thou Goest Shall I Go? 390
Cultural Adaptability: Don t Sneeze into Your Handkerchief in Tokyo 390
Human Resource Management: How Can We Help? 390
Evaluating Internal Staffing and Career Development 391
Efficiency 391
Equity 392
Glass Ceilings and Walls 392
Your Turn: Shattering the Glass Ceiling at Corning Glass Works 394
CHAPTER 10
Training 406
Training and the Employee Development Process 408
Training Is Not for Training s Sake 408
Training as a Strategic Weapon for Nations 410
Training as a Strategic Weapon for Organizations 410
Achieving Impact: Diagnostic Approach to Training 411
Assessing the Organization s Needs 411
Job, Task, Competency, and Knowledge Skill Ability (KSA) Analysis 413
Person Analysis 415
Comparison and Use of Needs Assessment Methods 415
What s the Target? Identifying Training Objectives 416
Selection and Design of Training Programs 417
Establishing Supportive Conditions for Learning 417
Trainee Ability to Learn 417
Contents xxi
Trainee Motivation to Learn 418
Choosing the Content of Training 421
Choosing Training Delivery Methods: On the Job Training 427
Choosing Training Methods: Off the Job Training 429
Transfer from the Training Environment to the Job 434
Evaluating Training Outcomes: The Proof Is in the Results 436
Choosing Training Criteria: What Is Effectiveness? 436
Efficiency: Training Costs 438
Efficiency: Benefits 438
Break Even Analysis 440
Equity 444
Your Turn: Training to Build the Saturn Difference 446
PART FOUR
COMPENSATION 457
CHAPTER 11
The Pay System 459
Multiple Forms of Pay 460
Total Compensation Total Rewards 460
Multiple Pay Objectives 461
Pay Policy Decisions 463
External Competitiveness: Comparisons among Organizations 463
Internal Alignment: Comparisons within an Organization 464
Employee Contributions 465
Implementation 465
Balancing Policy Decisions 465
External Competitiveness 466
Measure the Market 466
Conducting a Survey 468
What Pay Level to Set? 471
Translating Pay Level Policy into Practice 472
Internal Alignment 473
Egalitarian versus Hierarchical Structures 474
Designing a Job Based Structure: Job Evaluation 476
Point Methods: The Most Common Job Evaluation Plan 476
Skill Based Structures 479
Competency Based Structures 483
Market Based Structures 485
Building Bureaucracies? 486
xxii Contents
Your Turn: Evaluating Jobs 488
Appendix: Factor Definitions and Points in A Skill Based Job Evaluation Plan for
Manufacturing Jobs 493
CHAPTER 12
Paying Individual Employees 499
Employee Contributions 500
Should Employees Be Paid Differently? 500
Flat Rates 501
Pay Ranges 501
Broadbanding 503
How to Pay for Employee Contributions 504
Merit Pay: Individual Employees Matter 504
Is Merit Mismanaged? Too Much Money Has Too Little Effect 506
Individual Incentives 508
Team/Unit Based Plans: Teamwork as a Key to Improved Performance 515
Gainsharing 510
Does Paying for Performance Pay Off? 514
Pay for Performance Affects Equity 514
The Dark Side of Variable Pay 515
Pay for Performance Affects Efficiency 515
Pay Implementation 516
Gaining Acceptance 516
Ensuring Legal Compliance 517
Comparable Worth 519
Special Groups 520
International Pay Systems 523
Comparing Wages and Productivity 523
Comparing Systems 525
Global Snapshots 525
Expatriate Pay 528
Your Turn: The Class Comparison 533
CHAPTER 13
Benefits 539
The Growth of Benefits 540
Contributions versus Entitlements 541
A Benefits Gap 542
Setting Benefit Objectives and Strategies 543
Contents xxiii
Competitiveness 544
Cost Comparisons 544
Compliance 544
Civil Rights Laws 545
Fiduciary Responsibility 546
Mandated Benefits 547
Coverage 549
Employer Purchased Insurance 549
Paid Time Away from Work 551
Employee Services 551
Retirement Income 551
Choice 552
Communication 555
International Variations 556
Outsourcing 557
Evaluating the Results of Benefit Decisions 557
Effects on Costs 558
Effects on Employee Behaviors 559
Effects on Equity 560
Your Turn: National Health Insurance 561
PART FIVE
EMPLOYEE/LABOR RELATIONS
CHAPTER 14
Unions 567
Why Do Employees Join Unions? 567
The Legal Framework for Collective Bargaining 570
Labor Relations Objectives 572
Maintain a Union Free Status 572
Collaboration 573
The Organizing Campaign 574
Negotiating a Contract 576
Preparation 576
Negotiation Issues 577
Refusal to Bargain 578
Impasses in Collective Bargaining 579
Mediation 579
Strikes 580
Replacement Workers 581
xxiv Contents
Contract Administration 581
Steps in the Grievance Process 581
Arbitration 583
The Union Organization 583
Union Leaders 584
Union Strategies 585
Cooperative Programs 586
What Does the Research Tell Us? 587
Public Sector Unions 588
New Legislative Initiatives 588
Labor Relations in Other Countries 589
Centralized Bargaining 590
Worker Councils 590
Social Legislation: Intensive versus Extensive 591
Evaluating the Effects of Labor Relations Activities 592
Efficiency: Union Impact on Wages 592
Efficiency: Union Impact on Productivity 593
Equity: Union Impact on Employees Voice 595
Different Countries, Different Effects 595
Your Turn: Caterpillar and the United Auto Workers: From Adversaries to
Cooperation to Adversaries 597
CHAPTER 15
Employee Relations 603
The Importance of Employee Relations 605
Communication 606
Employee Involvement 607
Quality of Work Life (QWL) 609
Employee Management Committees 610
Organization Initiatives 610
Family/Job Conflict 610
Work Schedule Adaptations 611
Child Care Assistance 612
Protection 613
Safety and Health Hazards 613
Occupational Safety and Health Act 615
Stress 616
Co Worker Relations 619
Employee Assistance 622
Approaches to Employee Assistance 624
Conflict and Discipline 625
Disciplinary Process 627
Contents xxv
Conflict Resolution 628
Judging the Judges 630
The Dark Side of the New Deal 631
Reciprocity in the Relationship 632
Replacing the Contract with . . . What? 632
Evaluating Results 633
Efficiency 633
Equity 634
Your Turn: Saks Fifth Avenue 636
CHAPTER 16
The Evolving Human Resource Management Profession 640
The HR Function: From One Foreman to Globally Hight Flex ? 642
Industry Model 642
Investment Model 643
Involvement Model 643
High Hex Model 644
The Building Blocks: Human Resources Competencies 646
Human Resource Information Systems 647
What Is a Human Resource Information System? 649
Information System Value: The Three C s 649
Designing the HRIS 651
Input: Where Do You Get the Information? 655
Data Maintenance and Processing 655
Output: What You See Is What You Get 659
Avoiding Disclosure : Privacy and Security 660
Choosing the System 661
Tracking Value Added: A Balanced Scorecard 662
Stakeholder Opinions/Perceptions 662
Auditing Human Resource Activities 664
Human Resource Budgets 664
Activity, Cost, or Head Count Ratios 665
Human Resource Accounting 665
Return on Investment in Human Resources 666
Evaluating the Human Resource Function 668
Your Turn: A Web Page for HR at a University 670
Appendix: Specialization in HRM 670
Name Index 675
Subject Index 685
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Milkovich, George T. Boudreau, John W. 1956- |
author_GND | (DE-588)139063080 |
author_facet | Milkovich, George T. Boudreau, John W. 1956- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Milkovich, George T. |
author_variant | g t m gt gtm j w b jw jwb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV012116500 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HF5549 |
callnumber-raw | HF5549.M4736 1997 |
callnumber-search | HF5549.M4736 1997 |
callnumber-sort | HF 45549 M4736 41997 |
callnumber-subject | HF - Commerce |
classification_rvk | QV 570 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)35151133 (DE-599)BVBBV012116500 |
dewey-full | 658.320 658.3 |
dewey-hundreds | 600 - Technology (Applied sciences) |
dewey-ones | 658 - General management |
dewey-raw | 658.3 20 658.3 |
dewey-search | 658.3 20 658.3 |
dewey-sort | 3658.3 220 |
dewey-tens | 650 - Management and auxiliary services |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 8. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV012116500 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:21:58Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0256193541 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-008204806 |
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spelling | Milkovich, George T. Verfasser aut Human resource management George T. Milkovich ; John W. Boudreau 8. ed. Chicago [u.a.] Irwin 1997 XXV, 693 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Personeelsmanagement gtt Personnel management Personalpolitik (DE-588)4045269-4 gnd rswk-swf Personalpolitik (DE-588)4045269-4 s DE-604 Boudreau, John W. 1956- Verfasser (DE-588)139063080 aut Frühere Auflage Milkovich, George T. Personnel HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=008204806&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Milkovich, George T. Boudreau, John W. 1956- Human resource management Personeelsmanagement gtt Personnel management Personalpolitik (DE-588)4045269-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4045269-4 |
title | Human resource management |
title_auth | Human resource management |
title_exact_search | Human resource management |
title_full | Human resource management George T. Milkovich ; John W. Boudreau |
title_fullStr | Human resource management George T. Milkovich ; John W. Boudreau |
title_full_unstemmed | Human resource management George T. Milkovich ; John W. Boudreau |
title_old | Milkovich, George T. Personnel |
title_short | Human resource management |
title_sort | human resource management |
topic | Personeelsmanagement gtt Personnel management Personalpolitik (DE-588)4045269-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Personeelsmanagement Personnel management Personalpolitik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=008204806&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT milkovichgeorget humanresourcemanagement AT boudreaujohnw humanresourcemanagement |