hr planning
TRANSCRIPT
Human Resource Planning Process (HRP)Demand forecasting method-
Managerial Judgment, Work Study, Ratio-trend analysis Delphi technique
Supply forecasting methods- Management Inventory, Skill Inventory, Inflows & Outflows, turnover rate, conditions of work and absenteeism
In simple words, HRP is understood as the process of forecasting an organization's future demand for, and supply of, the right type of people in the right number.
After this only the HRM department can initiate the recruitment and selection process
Its called by manpower planning, personal planning or employment planning
• Basically it’s the process by which an organization ensures that it has the right the right number & kind of people, at the right number & kind of people, at the right place, at the right time, place, at the right time, capable of effectively & efficiently completing those tasks that will help the organization achieve its overall objectives.
ENVIRONMENT
ORGANISATIONAL
OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
HR NEEDS FORECAST HR SUPPLY FORECAST
HR PROGRAMMING
HRP IMPLEMENTATATION
CONTROL AND
EVALUATION OF PROGRAMME
SURPLUS SHORTAGE
RESTRICTED HIRING RECRUITMENT
REDUCED HOURS AND SELECTION
VRS, LAY OFF, etc
THE HRP PROCESS
HR plans need to be based on Organizational Objectives.
The role of HRP is to subserve the overall objectives by ensuring availability and utilization of Human Resources.
In developing these objectives, specific policies need to be formulated to address the following questions: Are vacancies to be filled from promotions from within
or hiring from outside? How do training and development objectives interfere
with the HRP objectives? What union constraints are encountered in HRP and
what policies are needed to handle these constraints? How to improve employees job? Should the routine and
boring jobs continue or be eliminated? How to downsize the organization to make it more
competitive?
Demand forecasting is the process of estimating the future quantity and quality of people required.
The basis of the forecast must be the annual budget and long-term corporate plan, translated into activity levels for each function and department
Demand forecasting must consider several factors both internal and external. Among external factors are
competition(foreign and domestic), economic climate, laws and
regulatory bodies, changes in technology and
social factors. Internal factors include budget constraints,
production levels, new products and services, organizational structure and employee
separation.
Demand forecasting helps to : Quantify the jobs necessary for producing a given
number of goods Prevent shortage of people where and when they
are needed most Determine what staff-mix is desirable in the future Monitor compliance with legal requirements with regard to reservation of jobs Asses appropriate staffing levels in different parts
of the organization so as to avoid unnecessary costs
Managerial judgment Ratio-trend analysis Work study techniques Delphi technique Flow modelsFlow models Other techniquesOther techniques
In this all managers sit together, discuss and arrive at a figure which would be the future demand for labour.
This technique may involve a ‘bottom-up’ or ‘top-down’ approach. A combination of both could yield positive results.
This is the quickest forecasting technique.
This technique involves studying past ratios, say, between the number of workers and sales in an organization and forecasting future ratios, making some allowance for changes in the organization or its method.
Work study techniques can be used when it is possible to apply work measurement to calculate the length of operations and the amount of labour required.
• This technique is the method of forecasting personnel needs.
• It estimates of personnel needs from a group of experts, usually managers.
• The HRP experts act as intermediaries, summarize the various responses and report the findings back to the experts.
• Summaries and surveys are repeated until the experts opinion begin to agree.
Supply forecasting measures the no of people likely to be available from within and outside an organization, after making allowance for absenteeism, internal movements and promotions, wastage and changes in hours and other conditions of work.
Quantify no of people and positions expected in near future.
Clarify the staff mixes. Prevent shortage of people Asses present staffing levels in different
parts of organization.
Existing human resources
Internal sources of supply
External sources of supply
• Skill inventories – info about non-managers.
1. Personal data 2. Skills 3. Special qualifications 4. Salary and job history 5. Company data 6. Capacity of individual 7. Special preference of individual
• Management inventories 1. Work history 2. Strengths 3. Weakness 4. Promotion potential 5. Career goals 6. Personal data 7. Number and types of employees
supervised 8. Total budget managed 9. Previous management duties.
HR planning and analysis Equal employment Staffing HR development Compensation and benefits Health,saftey and security Employee and labor relations
Inflows and outflows IS= current supply – outflow + inflow
Turnover rate No. of separations during one year
× 100 Avg. no of employees during the year
Conditions of work and absenteeism. Absenteeism is given by no of persons – days lost
×100 Avg no of persons × no of working days
After personal demand and supply are forecast the vacancies should be filled at right time with right employees.
Converting HR plan into action. Action programmes are..
Recruitment Selection & placement Training and development Retraining & redeployment The retention plan The succession plan
RecruitmentSelection & placement
If Shortage of employees- Do-
Hire new full-time employeesOffer incentives for postponing retirement Re-hire retired employees on part-time
basisAttempt to reduce turnoverBring in over-time for present employeesSubcontract work to another companyHire temporary employeesRe-engineer to reduce needs
It covers no. of trainees required It necessary for existing staff Identification of resource personal for
conducting development programmes Frequency of training and development
programmes Budget allocation
Retraining and redeployment:New skill should be imported to existing
employee
Retention plan: Compensation plan Performance appraisal Employees leaving in search of green pastures The induction criss Shortages Unstable recruits
Who is to be unneeded and where and when
Plans for re-development or re-training Steps to be taken to help unneeded
employees finding new jobs Policy for declaring redundancies Programme for consulting with unions or
staff associations
Analysis of demand Audit of existing executives Planning of individual career path Career counseling Accelerated promotions Performance related training and
development Planned strategic recruitment Filling the openings
Establish the reporting procedures Identifying who are in post and those
who are in pipe line It should report employment costs
against budget and trends in wastage and employment ratios
Institute of Applied Manpower Research
Requisites for successful HRPRecognize of corporate planningBacking of top management for HRPHRP responsibilities should be centralizedPersonnel record must be complete, up-date
and readily availableThe time horizon of plan should be long for
remedial actionThe techniques of planning should be best suitPlans should be prepared by skill levelData collection, analysis, techniques of planning
should be constantly revised
People question the importance of making HR practices future oriented and role assigned to HR practitioners in formulation of organizational strategies
HR practitioners are perceived as expert in handling personnel matters, but are not experts in managing business.
HR information often is incompatible with the information used in strategy formulation.
Conflicts may exist between short term and long term HR needs.
Conflicts between quantitative and qualitative approaches to HRP.
Non-involvement of operating managers renders HRP ineffective.