MSG Team's other articles people-management

13011 Current Employment Trends and Their Implications for Business, Society, and Individuals

Changing Nature of Work and the Trends in Employment The world of work is changing. Part Time and Freelance employment has grown whereas stable and secure jobs that last an employee’s lifetime in one organization are scarce. If the Baby Boomers were expected to work all their lives in at most two or three jobs, […]

13013 Current State of Employer Branding

Welcome to the talent economy! With the changing perception of organizations and increasing appreciation for talent, it won’t be wrong saying that we have transported into the talent economy. Though the shift has been taking place for many decades, the last decade, however, altered the scenario seemingly in the blink of the eye. The C-suite […]

13014 Current Trends in Talent Management

If you ask me for the guidelines for talent management, my response would be the following: Developing employees. Redeploying employees. Retaining the best talent. Yes, the prime focus of talent management is enabling and developing people, since the quality of an organization is determined by the people it employs and has onboard. After hiring and […]

12944 Cost Benefit Analysis for Training

As discussed in previous articles, it is very important to evaluate the benefits of the training and be able to put that in terms of numbers. Training comes at a cost and therefore any organisation would be interested in knowing the return on investment (ROI). Organisations use different methods to assess the benefits of training […]

12967 Creativity and Entrepreneurship

Individuals who are creative love to do things differently. They seldom blindly follow what others have done in the past but believe in creating their own concepts and ideas. Creativity and entrepreneurship go hand in hand. Let us first go through a case study: John was working with ABC industries as sales executive. His role […]

See More Article from MSG Team

It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout.

Visit Us

Our Partners

Search with tags

  • No tags available.

Each organization works towards the realization of one vision. The same is achieved by formulation of certain strategies and execution of the same, which is done by the HR department.

At the base of this strategy formulation lie various processes and the effectiveness of the former lies in the meticulous design of these processes. But what exactly are and entails these processes? Let’s read further and explore.

The following are the various HR processes:

  1. Human resource planning (Recruitment, Selecting, Hiring, Training, Induction, Orientation, Evaluation, Promotion and Layoff).

  2. Employee remuneration and Benefits Administration.

  3. Performance Management.

  4. Employee Relations.

The efficient designing of these processes apart from other things depends upon the degree of correspondence of each of these. This means that each process is subservient to other. You start from Human resource Planning and there is a continual value addition at each step. To exemplify, the PMS (performance Management System) of an organization like Infosys would be different from an organization like Walmart. Lets study each process separately.

  1. Human Resource Planning: Generally, we consider Human Resource Planning as the process of people forecasting. Right but incomplete! It also involves the processes of Evaluation, Promotion and Layoff.

    • Recruitment: It aims at attracting applicants that match a certain Job criteria.

    • Selection: The next level of filtration. Aims at short listing candidates who are the nearest match in terms qualifications, expertise and potential for a certain job.

    • Hiring: Deciding upon the final candidate who gets the job.

    • Training and Development: Those processes that work on an employee onboard for his skills and abilities upgradation.

  2. Employee Remuneration and Benefits Administration: The process involves deciding upon salaries and wages, Incentives, Fringe Benefits and Perquisites etc. Money is the prime motivator in any job and therefore the importance of this process. Performing employees seek raises, better salaries and bonuses.

  3. Performance Management: It is meant to help the organization train, motivate and reward workers. It is also meant to ensure that the organizational goals are met with efficiency. The process not only includes the employees but can also be for a department, product, service or customer process; all towards enhancing or adding value to them.

    Nowadays there is an automated performance management system (PMS) that carries all the information to help managers evaluate the performance of the employees and assess them accordingly on their training and development needs.

  4. Employee Relations: Employee retention is a nuisance with organizations especially in industries that are hugely competitive in nature. Though there are myriad factors that motivate an individual to stick to or leave an organization, but certainly few are under our control.

    Employee relations include Labor Law and Relations, Working Environment, Employee heath and safety, Employer-Employee conflict management, Employee-Employee Conflict Management, Quality of Work Life, Workers Compensation, Employee Wellness and assistance programs, Counseling for occupational stress. All these are critical to employee retention apart from the money which is only a hygiene factor.

All processes are integral to the survival and success of HR strategies and no single process can work in isolation; there has to be a high level of conformity and cohesiveness between the same.

Article Written by

MSG Team

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

Current Employment Trends and Their Implications for Business, Society, and Individuals

MSG Team

Current State of Employer Branding

MSG Team

Current Trends in Talent Management

MSG Team