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HumanResourceManagement15thEditionbyJoseph.pdf

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Joseph J. Martocchio

New York, NY

Human Resource Management

Fifteenth Edition

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Copyright © 2019, 2016, 2014 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. This publication is protected by copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise. For information regarding permissions, request forms, and the appropriate contacts within the Pearson Education Global Rights and Permissions department, please visit www.pearsoned.com/permissions/.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Martocchio, Joseph J., author. | Mondy, R. Wayne, 1940- Human resource management. Title: Human resource management / Joseph J. Martocchio. Description: Fifteenth Edition. | Boston : Pearson, [2017] | Revised edition of Human resource management, [2016] Identifiers: LCCN 2017037154| ISBN 9780134739724 | ISBN 0134739728 Subjects: LCSH: Personnel management—United States. | Personnel management. Classification: LCC HF5549.2.U5 M66 2017 | DDC 658.3—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017037154

1 17

ISBN 10: 0-13-473972-8

ISBN 13: 978-0-13-473972-4

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To my parents—for their sacrifices which have provided me with great opportunities.

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Brief Contents

Part One Setting the Stage 1 Chapter 1 Human Resource Management: An Overview 2

Chapter 2 Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability 28

Chapter 3 Equal Employment Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Workforce Diversity 52

Part Two Staffing 89 Chapter 4 Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning, and Job Analysis 90

Chapter 5 Recruitment 120

Chapter 6 Selection 146

Part Three Performance Management and Training 179 Chapter 7 Performance Management and Appraisal 180

Chapter 8 Training and Development 208

Part Four Compensation 243 Chapter 9 Direct Financial Compensation (Monetary Compensation) 244

Chapter 10 Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) 278

Part Five Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Safety, and Health 305 Chapter 11 Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining 306

Chapter 12 Internal Employee Relations 338

Chapter 13 Employee Safety, Health, and Wellness 362

Part Six Operating in a Global Environment 391 Chapter 14 Global Human Resource Management 392

vii

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Contents

Part One Setting the Stage 1

Chapter 1 Human Resource Management: An Overview 2

Human Resource Management: What It is and Why It is Important 3

Why Study HRM? 4 Human Resource Management Functions 4

Who Performs Human Resource Management Activities? 6 Human Resource Management Professional 7 Line Managers 7 Human Resources Outsourcing 8 Human Resources Shared Service Centers 8 Professional Employer Organizations 9 More about HR Professionals 9

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Staffing Stone Consulting 9 Human Resources as a Strategic Business Partner in a Dynamic Environment 12

Capital and Human Capital 13 Dynamic Human Resource Management Environment 13

The Role of HRM in Building Corporate Culture and Employer Branding 16

Corporate Culture 16 Employer Branding 17

Human Resource Management in Small Businesses 18 Country Culture and Global Business 18 Developing Skills for Your Career 20

Communication 20 Critical Thinking 20 Collaboration 20 Knowledge Application and Analysis 21 Business Ethics and Social Responsibility 21 Information Technology Application and Computing Skills 21 Data Literacy 21 Scope of This Book 21

Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 22 • Key Terms 23 Questions for Review 23 • Preparing for My Career 24

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Broken Promises 24 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 24 • HRM by the Numbers 25 Working Together: Team Exercise 25 • INCIDENT 1: HR After a Disaster 25 • INCIDENT 2: Parental Leave at Yahoo 26 • Endnotes 26

Chapter 2 Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability 28

Defining Ethics and the Sources of Ethical Guidance 29 Business Ethics 29 Sources of Ethical Guidance 30

Legislating Ethics 31

Creating an Ethical Culture and a Code of Ethics 34 Ethical Culture 34 Code of Ethics 35

Human Resource Ethics 36 Linking Pay to Ethical Behavior 37 Ethics Training 38

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Sales Incentives at Pinser Pharmaceuticals 39

Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability 39 Corporate Social Responsibility 40 Corporate Sustainability 42

Conducting a Social Audit 44 Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 45 • Key Terms 46 Questions for Review 46 • Preparing for My Career 46

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: A Selection Quandary 46 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 47 • HRM by the Numbers 47 • Working Together: Team Exercise 47 • INCIDENT 1: An Ethical Flaw 48 INCIDENT 2: Illegal Hiring 48 • Endnotes 49

Chapter 3 Equal Employment Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Workforce Diversity 52

Equal Employment Opportunity and the Federal Laws Affecting EEO 54

Constitutional Amendments and the Civil Rights Act of 1866 54 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Amended in 1972 54 Equal Pay Act of 1963, Amended in 1972 57 Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 58 Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 58 Civil Rights Act of 1991 59 Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, Amended in 1978, 1986, and 1990 60 Age Can Actually Be a Bona Fide Occupational Qualification 60 Rehabilitation Act of 1973 61 Vietnam Era Veteran’s Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974 61 Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as Amended 61 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 62 Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act of 2008 62 Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 63 Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994  63 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 63 State and Local Laws 63

Who’s Responsible for Ensuring Equal Employment Opportunity? 64

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 64

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x CONTENTS

Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs 65 Employers 65

Illegal Discrimination and Affirmative Action 66 Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures 66 Types of Unlawful Employment Discrimination 66 Affirmative Action 68

Uniform Guidelines on Preventing Specific Illegal Employment Discrimination 70

Guidelines on Sexual Harassment 71 Guidelines on Discrimination Because of National Origin 72 Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion 73 Guidelines on Caregiver (Family Responsibility) Discrimination 74 Discrimination Because of Disability 74

Diversity and Diversity Management 75 Elements of the Diverse Workforce 76

Single Parents and Working Mothers 76 Women in Business 76 Mothers Returning to the Workforce (on Ramping) 77 Dual-Career Families 77 Ethnicity and Race 77 Older Workers 78 People with Disabilities 78 Immigrants 78 Foreign Workers 79 Young Persons, Some with Limited Education or Skills 79 Baby Boomers, Gen X, Gen Y, and Gen Z 80

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Affirmative Action and Workforce Diversity 80 Multi-generational Diversity 81 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Employees 82

Preparing for Exam/Quizzes 82 • Key Terms 83 Questions for Review 83 • Preparing for My Career 84

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: How About Me? 84 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 84 • HRM by the Numbers 85 Working Together: Team Exercise 85 • INCIDENT 1: You’re Not a Good Employee 86 • INCIDENT 2: So, What’s Affirmative Action? 86 Endnotes 87

Part Two Staffing 89

Chapter 4 Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning, and Job Analysis 90

HR Strategic Planning Process 91 Mission Determination 92

Human Resource Planning 96 Forecasting Human Resource Requirements 97

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Workforce Planning at Master Cleaners 97 Forecasting Human Resource Availability 98 Shortage or Surplus of Workers Forecasted 98 Succession Planning: A Component of Strategic Planning 101

Job Analysis: Process and Methods 102 Reasons for Conducting Job Analysis 103

Job Analysis Methods 105

Job Descriptions 107 Job Identification 107 Date of the Job Analysis 107 Job Summary 108 Duties Performed 108 Job Specification 108 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 109 The Occupational Information Network (O*NET) 110

Competencies and Competency Modeling 110 Job Design Concepts 112 Preparing For Exam/Quizzes 114 • Key Terms 115 Questions for Review 115 • Preparing For My Career 116

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Which “Thinker” Should Go? 116

HRM Is Everyone’s Business 116 • HRM by the Numbers 117 • Working Together: Team Exercise 117 INCIDENT 1: Competitive Strategy at Buddy Dog Foods 1 17 INCIDENT 2: Who’s Flying the Plane? 118 • Endnotes 118

Chapter 5 Recruitment 120 Recruitment and the Recruitment Process 121 Environment of Recruitment 122

Labor Market Conditions 122 Active or Passive Job Seekers 123 Legal Considerations 124

Internal Recruitment Methods 124 Human Resource Databases 124 Job Posting and Job Bidding 124

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Recruiting Skilled Machinists 125 Employee Referrals 125

External Recruitment Sources 126 High Schools and Vocational Schools 127 Community Colleges 127 Colleges and Universities 127 Competitors in the Labor Market 128 Former Employees 128 Unemployed 128 Military Personnel 129 Self-Employed Workers 129 Ex-Offenders 129

External Recruitment Methods 130 Online and Mobile Recruiting 130 Traditional Methods 134 Tailoring Recruitment Methods to Sources 138

Alternatives to Recruitment 138 Promotion Policies 139 Overtime 139

Preparing for Exam/Quizzes 140 • Key Terms 140 Questions for Review 141 • Preparing for My Career 141

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Unfair Advantage? 141 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 141 • HRM by the Numbers 142 • Working Together: Team Exercise 142 INCIDENT 1: A Problem Ad? 142 • INCIDENT 2: I Am Qualified, Why Not Me? 143 • Endnotes 143

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CONTENTS xi

Chapter 6 Selection 146 Selection and Environmental Factors Affecting the Selection Process 147

The Selection Process 147 The Environment of Selection 148

Preliminary Screening and Review of Applications and Résumés 151 Selection Tests 153

Preliminary Considerations 153 Advantages and Disadvantages of Selection Tests 154 Characteristics of Properly Designed Selection Tests 154 Test Validation Approaches 155 Employment Tests 156 Unique Forms of Testing 158 Legal Considerations 159

Employment Interview 160 Interview Planning 160

■■ HR BLOOPERS: The First Interview 160 Content of the Interview 161 Candidate’s Role and Expectations 161 General Types of Interviews 162 Methods of Interviewing 163 Potential Interviewing Problems 164 Concluding the Interview 166

Pre-Employment Screening and Background Checks 166

Employment Eligibility Verification (Form I-9) 167 Continuous Background Investigation 167 Background Investigation with Social Media 167 Remembering Hiring Standards to Avoid 168

Selection Decision and Evaluating the Effectiveness of Selection Decisions 169

Making the Selection Decision 170 Evaluating Selection Decisions 170

Preparing for Exam/Quizzes 172 • Key Terms 173 Questions for Review 173 • Preparing for My Career 173

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Hiring with Incomplete Information 174

HRM Is Everyone’s Business 174 • HRM by the Numbers 174 • Working Together: Team Exercise 175 INCIDENT 1: A Matter of Priorities 175 • INCIDENT 2: National Career Day 176 • Endnotes 176

Part Three Performance Management and Training 179

Chapter 7 Performance Management and Appraisal 180

Performance Management, Performance Appraisal, and the Performance Appraisal Process 181

Performance Management 182 Performance Appraisal 182 Performance Appraisal Process 182

The Uses of Performance Appraisal and Performance Criteria 183

Uses of Performance Appraisal 183

Performance Criteria 184 Responsibility for Performance Appraisal 185 Performance Appraisal Period 187

Choosing a Performance Appraisal Method 188 Trait Systems 188 Comparison Systems 189 Behavioral Systems 191 Results-Based Systems 193

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Appraising Performance at Global Insurance 193

Assessing the Effectiveness and Limitations of Performance Appraisal Practices 195

Characteristics of an Effective Appraisal System 195 Limitations of Performance Appraisal 197 Legal Considerations 199

Performance Appraisal Interview 199 Scheduling the Interview 199 Interview Structure 200 Use of Praise and Criticism 200 Employees’ Role 200 Concluding the Interview 201

Trends in Performance Appraisal Practice 201 Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 202 • Key Terms 203 Questions for Review 203 • Preparing for My Career 204

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Abdication of Responsibility 204 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 204 • HRM by the Numbers 205 Working Together: Team Exercise 205 • INCIDENT 1: These Things Are a Pain 206 • INCIDENT 2: Good Job! 206 • Endnotes 207

Chapter 8 Training and Development 208 Training and Development and Related Practices 209 Training and Development Process 210

Determine Specific Training and Development Needs 211 Establish Training and Development Program Objectives 212 Training Methods 213 Training and Development Delivery Systems 217 Implementing Training and Development Programs 219 Metrics for Evaluating Training and Development 219 Factors Influencing Training and Development 221

Human Resource Management Training Initiatives 223 Careers and Career Planning Approaches and Methods 225

Traditional Career Path 225 Network Career Path 225 Lateral Skill Path 226 Dual-Career Path 226 Adding Value to Your Career 226 Demotion 226 Free Agents (Being Your Own Boss) 227 Career Planning Approaches 227 Career Development Methods 230

Management Development 231 Mentoring and Coaching 232 Reverse Mentoring 233

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Management Development at Trends Apparel 233

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xii CONTENTS

Organization Development and the Learning Organization 234

OD Interventions 234 Learning Organization 235

Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 236 • Key Terms 237 Questions for Review 237 • Preparing for My Career 237

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Consequences of Inadequate Training Design 238

HRM Is Everyone’s Business 238 • HRM by the Numbers 239 • Working Together: Team Exercise 239 INCIDENT 1: Career Development at Meyers and Brown 239 INCIDENT 2: There’s No Future Here! 240 • Endnotes 240

Part Four Compensation 243

Chapter 9 Direct Financial Compensation (Monetary Compensation) 244

Total Compensation and the Environment of Compensation Practice 245

Direct and Indirect Financial Compensation 246 Structure of Direct Financial Compensation Plans 247 Contextual Influences 248

Direct Financial Compensation Components 252 Base Pay 252 Cost-of-Living Adjustments 252 Seniority Pay 252 Performance-Based Pay 253

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Motivating Software Development Teams 258 Person-Focused Pay 259

Building Job Structures 260 Ranking Method 260 Classification Method 261 Factor Comparison Method 261 Point Method 261

Establishing Competitive Compensation Policies 261 Pay Level Compensation Policies 262 Pay Mix 263

Building Pay Structures 263 Pay Grades 264 Pay Ranges 265 Broadbanding 265 Two-Tier Wage System 266 Adjusting Pay Rates 266 Pay Compression 267

Exceptions to the Rules: Sales Professionals, Contingent Workers, and Executives 267

Sales Professionals 267 Contingent Workers 268 Executive Compensation 268

Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 270 • Key Terms 271 Questions for Review 272

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Sales Tactics at Wells Fargo Bank 272

HRM Is Everyone’s Business 272 • Questions for Review 272 • HRM by the Numbers 273 • Working Together: Team Exercise 274 • INCIDENT 1: The Pay Gap

at Barker Enterprise 274 • INCIDENT 2: The Controversial Job 274 • Endnotes 275

Chapter 10 Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) 278

Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) 279 Legally Required Benefits 280

Social Security 281 Unemployment Insurance 281 Workers’ Compensation 281 Health Care 282

Discretionary Benefits 285 Retirement Plans 286 Life Insurance and Disability Insurance 288 Paid Time-Off 288 Employee Services 291

Workplace Flexibility (Work–Life Balance) 293 Flextime 294 Compressed Workweek 294 Job Sharing 295 Two-in-a-Box 295 Telecommuting 295 Part-Time Work 296

■■ HR BLOOPERS: The Job-Sharing Problem at SunTrust Bank 297

Customized Benefit Plans 297 Communicating Information about the Benefits Package 297 Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 298 • Key Terms 298 Questions for Review 299

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: A Poor Bid 299 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 300 • HRM by the Numbers • 300 • Working Together: Team Exercise 301 • INCIDENT 1: Flextime 301 • INCIDENT 2: Communicating Benefits at Seaview Property Management Company 301 • Endnotes 302

Part Five Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Safety, and Health 305

Chapter 11 Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining 306

The Role of Labor Unions 307 Why Employees Join Unions 308 Prevalence of Unions 309

Union Structure and Labor Strategies 310 Structure of Unions 310 Organized Labor’s Strategies for Promoting a Stronger Labor Movement 312

Laws Affecting Collective Bargaining 314 National Labor Relations Act 314

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Stopping Unionization at Packer Industries 315 Labor-Management Relations Act 315 Antidiscrimination Laws and Executive Orders 316

Bargaining Unit Formation and the Collective Bargaining Process 316

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CONTENTS xiii

Forming a Bargaining Unit 316 Collective Bargaining Process 318 Bargaining Issues 319 Preparation for Negotiations 321 Negotiating the Agreement 322 Overcoming Breakdowns in Negotiations 324 Reaching the Labor-Management Agreement 327 Ratifying the Labor-Management Agreement 327 Administration of the Labor-Management Agreement 327 Public Sector Collective Bargaining 328

Grievance Procedure in a Union Environment 328 Union Decertification 330 Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 331 • Key Terms 332 Questions for Review 333 • Preparing for My Career 333

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: A Strategic Move 333 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 334 • HRM by the Numbers 334 • Working Together: Team Exercise 335 INCIDENT 1: Break Down the Barrier 335 • INCIDENT 2: We’re Listening 336 • Endnotes 336

Chapter 12 Internal Employee Relations 338 Employment at Will 339 Discipline and Disciplinary Action 340

Disciplinary Action Process 341 Approaches to Disciplinary Action 342 Problems in the Administration of Disciplinary Action 344

Employment Termination 345 “Just Cause” as a Standard for Choosing to Terminate Employment 345 Considerations in Communicating the Termination Decision 346 Termination of Employees at Various Levels 346

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Effective Discipline at Berries Groceries 346 Demotion as an Alternative to Termination 347 Downsizing 348

Ombudspersons and Alternative Dispute Resolution 350

Ombudspersons 350 Alternative Dispute Resolution 351

More Considerations for Internal Employee Relations 351

Transfers 351 Promotions 352 Resignations 352 Retirements 354

Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 355 • Key Terms 356 Questions for Review 356 • Preparing for My Career 356

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: To Fire or Not to Fire 356 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 357 • HRM by the Numbers 357 • Working Together: Team Exercise 359 INCIDENT 1: Employment at Will 359 • INCIDENT 2: To Heck with Them! 359 • Endnotes 360

Chapter 13 Employee Safety, Health, and Wellness 362

Nature and Role of Safety, Health, and Wellness 363 Occupational Safety and Health Administration 364

OSHA and Whistle-Blowers 366 OSHA and the Small Business 367

■■ HR BLOOPERS: Health and Safety Problems at XIF Chemicals 367 The Economic Impact of Safety 368

Workplace Safety Programs 368 Unsafe Employee Actions 368 Unsafe Working Conditions 368 Developing Safety Programs 368 Accident Investigation 370 Evaluation of Safety Programs 370 Musculoskeletal Disorders 370 Ergonomics 371

Workplace Bullying and Violence 372 Workplace Bullying 372 Workplace Violence 373 Legal Consequences of Workplace Violence 374

Employee Stress and Burnout 376 Potential Consequences of Stress 377 Stressful Jobs 377 Burnout 377

Substance Abuse, Substance-Abuse-Free Workplaces, and Drug-Testing Programs 378

Alcohol Abuse 379 Drug Abuse 379 Substance-Abuse-Free Workplace and Drug Testing 379

Employee Wellness and Employee Assistance Programs 382 Wellness Programs 382 Social Networking and Wellness 383 Employee Assistance Programs 384

Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 384 • Key Terms 385 Questions for Review 386 • Preparing for My Career 386

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: In Confidence 386 HRM Is Everyone’s Business 387 HRM by the Numbers 387 • Working Together: Team Exercise 388 • INCIDENT 1: Something Isn’t Quite Right 388 • INCIDENT 2: A Commitment to Safety? 388 • Endnotes 389

Part Six Operating in a Global Environment 391

Chapter 14 Global Human Resource Management 392

Evolution and Context of Global Business and Human Resource Management 393

Evolution of Global Business 393 Context of Global Business 395

Global Staffing 400 Expatriate 400 Host-Country National 400 Third-Country National 400 Approaches to Global Staffing 400 Recruiting Host-Country Nationals 401 Selecting Expatriates 401 Background Investigation 402

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xiv CONTENTS

■■ HR BLOOPERS: United Architect’s Expatriate Problems 402

Global Performance Management and Human Resource Development 403

Performance Management 403 Expatriate Human Resource Development 403 Pre-Move Orientation and Training 404 Continual Development: Online Assistance and Training 404 Repatriation Orientation and Training 405 Global E-learning 405 Virtual Teams in a Global Environment 406

Global Compensation 407 Compensation for Host-Country Nationals 407 Expatriate Compensation 408

Global Safety, Health, and Employee and Labor Relations 408

Safety and Health 408

Global Employee Relations 409 Global Labor Relations 410

Globalization for Small to Medium-Sized Businesses 410 Preparing for Exams/Quizzes 411 • Key Terms 412 Questions for Review 412 • Preparing for My Career 413

■■ ETHICS DILEMMA: Meeting Customer Demand at Any Cost 413

HRM Is Everyone’s Business 413 • HRM by the Numbers 414 Working Together: Team Exercise 414 • INCIDENT 1: My Darling 414 • INCIDENT 2: Was There Enough Preparation? 415 • Endnotes 415

Glossary 418 Name Index 429 Company Index 430 Subject Index 432

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Preface

New to this Edition Four new features appear in each chapter that enable students to integrate knowledge and valu- able skills regardless whether choosing a career in the HRM profession or other business func- tion in smaller or larger organizations, all available in MyLab.

xv

42 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Also, long before the enormous oil spill in 2010, BP promoted itself as being eco-friendly. Its literature stated that BP stood for “Beyond Petroleum.” BP marketed itself as a producer of alternative energies, an image that was seriously damaged by the devastating oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Instead of spending billions on eco-friendly energy and building an employer brand campaign around it, many believe that BP would have been much better off if it had spent more time and effort in training its employees on its oil drilling platforms, establishing stronger safety protocols, and waiting until they were safe to operate. Even during this public relations campaign, BP had a history of safety violation. BP had been “fined more than $100 million for safety violations that led to deaths of workers, explosions of refineries, and leaking pipelines.” 102

The following Watch It video describes the environmental impact of another oil company’s spill and leadership’s reaction to the disaster.

☛ F Y I The 2017 Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations were most commonly found in the following countries:

● United States: 19 companies ● France: 12 companies ● United Kingdom: 11 companies ● Canada and Germany: 6 companies ● Netherlands: 5 companies 105

Corporate Sustainability Corporate sustainability has evolved from the more traditional view of CSR. According to the World Commission on Environment and Sustainability, the narrow definition of sustainability is, “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” 106 The Dow Jones World Sustainability Index (DJSI) provides a good working definition of this term. They define it as, “An approach to creating long-term shareholder value by embracing opportunities and managing risks deriving from economic, environmental and social trends and challenges.” 107 In recent years, sustainability has been

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Co Responsible for Oil Spill Under Fire and to respond to questions.

Brighter Planet, a sustainability technology company, discovered in a recent survey that although more firms are engaging in green activities, the effectiveness of these efforts has declined. 103 Some believe that the problem with CSR is that it consists of a universal set of guidelines such as the “triple bottom line” (society, environment, and economy) mentioned previ- ously. To be “socially responsible,” each firm should follow the same guidelines instead of what would be the most appropriate strategy for each firm. Using this logic, it would be more logical for oil companies such as BP to focus on being profitable, yet be an environmentally conscious oil company. Fast-food restaurants such as McDonald’s and retailers such as Walmart should each use a different set of rules to do the same thing in their own industries.

There are those who believe that all shareholders should not be required to be involved in CSR investments. They think that only investors who want to be involved should participate. These investors would do so with the understanding that the objective is not just to make money but also to do good. For example, an oil company such as Exxon could establish an alternative-energy subsidiary. Exxon would own a controlling stake, but funding would come from new investors who want to support alternative energy and thus be socially responsible. If the subsidiary was unsuccessful, the losses would be confined to the new investors. If it succeeded, the profits would be shared by all shareholders. 104

$$ FYI. This feature provides tidbits of information from survey research and extensive databases (e.g., employment statistics) that illuminate trends, opinions, and the use of specific HR practices.

CHAPTER 2 • BUSINESS ETHICS, CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND SUSTAINABILITY 47

HRM by the Numbers Paying the Price for Underpaying Workers

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals should ensure that workers are paid for their work on a timely basis. Sometimes, companies pay workers less than what they should and there are various possible reasons such as intent to save money or in error. Either way, paying employ- ees lesser amounts than owed may violate the law. For instance, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) , which we will discuss in Chapter 3 , requires employers to pay eligible workers a higher pay for overtime work. Specifically, the overtime pay rate equals 1.5 times the regular hourly pay rate for each additional hour exceeding 40 in a work week.

You’ve learned that the company has not been paying employees appropriately for overtime work hours. It is your responsibil- ity to calculate the amount of overtime pay owed to workers. After reviewing the payroll records, you discovered the following details:

1. Group 1: 225 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $18.00. For each of the past 15 work weeks, every- one worked 45 hours.

2. Group 2: 310 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $21.00. For each of the past 20 work weeks, every- one worked 47 hours.

Every worker received regular pay for all their hours worked, but they did not receive an additional overtime pay amount.

Questions 2- 13. Calculate the hourly overtime pay rate for each worker in (a) group 1 and (b) group 2. 2- 14. How much money does the company owe all the workers in (a) group 1 over 15 weeks and (b) group 2 over 20 weeks? 2- 15. How much money did the company save by not paying all the workers (groups 1 and 2 combined) overtime pay?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Most company leaders and employees will face ethical challenges at one time or another. Some employees will intentionally commit ethics violations for personal gain. Other employees may unknowingly do so. Whether you are a manager or HR profes- sional—an employee may bring concerns about possible ethical violations to your attention or you may observe them yourself. Once you are aware of a situation where ethics are in question, you are obligated to respond.

Action checklist for managers and HR—responding to allegations of unethical behavior HR takes the lead

Work with managers to ensure that they understand the company’s code of ethics and communicate the procedures for addressing instances of potential ethical violations.

Encourage managers to share the company’s code of ethics with employees, lead open discussions about everyone’s obliga- tion to behave ethically, and create a safe environment for employees to report their concerns about possible ethical violations to the appropriate authority.

Guide managers through the process of handling employees who are suspected of committing ethical violations.

Managers take the lead Educate HR on certain aspects of employee roles to better understand how unethical behavior may manifest in your depart- ment. Bringing HR up to speed creates a partnership for more effectively responding to possible ethical violations.

Discuss concerns with HR about possible ethical violations and follow through based on company policy and procedures. Work together with HR to implement a training plan on the company’s code of ethics and creating hypothetical scenarios illustrating ethical and unethical behavior relevant to your departmental activities.

$$ Working Together. This feature offers oppor- tunities for students to collaborate through sharing ideas, listening to others’ ideas, and coming up with a cohesive team response to the assignment.

CHAPTER 2 • BUSINESS ETHICS, CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND SUSTAINABILITY 47

HRM by the Numbers Paying the Price for Underpaying Workers

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals should ensure that workers are paid for their work on a timely basis. Sometimes, companies pay workers less than what they should and there are various possible reasons such as intent to save money or in error. Either way, paying employ- ees lesser amounts than owed may violate the law. For instance, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) , which we will discuss in Chapter 3 , requires employers to pay eligible workers a higher pay for overtime work. Specifically, the overtime pay rate equals 1.5 times the regular hourly pay rate for each additional hour exceeding 40 in a work week.

You’ve learned that the company has not been paying employees appropriately for overtime work hours. It is your responsibil- ity to calculate the amount of overtime pay owed to workers. After reviewing the payroll records, you discovered the following details:

1. Group 1: 225 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $18.00. For each of the past 15 work weeks, every- one worked 45 hours.

2. Group 2: 310 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $21.00. For each of the past 20 work weeks, every- one worked 47 hours.

Every worker received regular pay for all their hours worked, but they did not receive an additional overtime pay amount.

Questions 2- 13. Calculate the hourly overtime pay rate for each worker in (a) group 1 and (b) group 2. 2- 14. How much money does the company owe all the workers in (a) group 1 over 15 weeks and (b) group 2 over 20 weeks? 2- 15. How much money did the company save by not paying all the workers (groups 1 and 2 combined) overtime pay?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Most company leaders and employees will face ethical challenges at one time or another. Some employees will intentionally commit ethics violations for personal gain. Other employees may unknowingly do so. Whether you are a manager or HR profes- sional—an employee may bring concerns about possible ethical violations to your attention or you may observe them yourself. Once you are aware of a situation where ethics are in question, you are obligated to respond.

Action checklist for managers and HR—responding to allegations of unethical behavior HR takes the lead

Work with managers to ensure that they understand the company’s code of ethics and communicate the procedures for addressing instances of potential ethical violations.

Encourage managers to share the company’s code of ethics with employees, lead open discussions about everyone’s obliga- tion to behave ethically, and create a safe environment for employees to report their concerns about possible ethical violations to the appropriate authority.

Guide managers through the process of handling employees who are suspected of committing ethical violations.

Managers take the lead Educate HR on certain aspects of employee roles to better understand how unethical behavior may manifest in your depart- ment. Bringing HR up to speed creates a partnership for more effectively responding to possible ethical violations.

Discuss concerns with HR about possible ethical violations and follow through based on company policy and procedures. Work together with HR to implement a training plan on the company’s code of ethics and creating hypothetical scenarios illustrating ethical and unethical behavior relevant to your departmental activities.

$$ HRM by the Numbers. This feature provides an excel- lent opportunity to think through concepts and their applications as well as analyze quantitative data to facilitate problem solving.

CHAPTER 2 • BUSINESS ETHICS, CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND SUSTAINABILITY 47

HRM by the Numbers Paying the Price for Underpaying Workers

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals should ensure that workers are paid for their work on a timely basis. Sometimes, companies pay workers less than what they should and there are various possible reasons such as intent to save money or in error. Either way, paying employ- ees lesser amounts than owed may violate the law. For instance, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) , which we will discuss in Chapter 3 , requires employers to pay eligible workers a higher pay for overtime work. Specifically, the overtime pay rate equals 1.5 times the regular hourly pay rate for each additional hour exceeding 40 in a work week.

You’ve learned that the company has not been paying employees appropriately for overtime work hours. It is your responsibil- ity to calculate the amount of overtime pay owed to workers. After reviewing the payroll records, you discovered the following details:

1. Group 1: 225 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $18.00. For each of the past 15 work weeks, every- one worked 45 hours.

2. Group 2: 310 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $21.00. For each of the past 20 work weeks, every- one worked 47 hours.

Every worker received regular pay for all their hours worked, but they did not receive an additional overtime pay amount.

Questions 2- 13. Calculate the hourly overtime pay rate for each worker in (a) group 1 and (b) group 2. 2- 14. How much money does the company owe all the workers in (a) group 1 over 15 weeks and (b) group 2 over 20 weeks? 2- 15. How much money did the company save by not paying all the workers (groups 1 and 2 combined) overtime pay?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Most company leaders and employees will face ethical challenges at one time or another. Some employees will intentionally commit ethics violations for personal gain. Other employees may unknowingly do so. Whether you are a manager or HR profes- sional—an employee may bring concerns about possible ethical violations to your attention or you may observe them yourself. Once you are aware of a situation where ethics are in question, you are obligated to respond.

Action checklist for managers and HR—responding to allegations of unethical behavior HR takes the lead

Work with managers to ensure that they understand the company’s code of ethics and communicate the procedures for addressing instances of potential ethical violations.

Encourage managers to share the company’s code of ethics with employees, lead open discussions about everyone’s obliga- tion to behave ethically, and create a safe environment for employees to report their concerns about possible ethical violations to the appropriate authority.

Guide managers through the process of handling employees who are suspected of committing ethical violations.

Managers take the lead Educate HR on certain aspects of employee roles to better understand how unethical behavior may manifest in your depart- ment. Bringing HR up to speed creates a partnership for more effectively responding to possible ethical violations.

Discuss concerns with HR about possible ethical violations and follow through based on company policy and procedures. Work together with HR to implement a training plan on the company’s code of ethics and creating hypothetical scenarios illustrating ethical and unethical behavior relevant to your departmental activities.

$$ HRM Is Everyone’s Business. This feature explains how HR professionals and managers throughout the organization work together to address important workplace issues by highlighting specific connec- tions and the reality that HR activities are never performed in isolation.

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xvi PREFACE

Updates to the 15th Edition There are three significant updates made to this edition of the textbook; revised learning objec- tives, updates to HRM practices, and new content in the majority of special features. First, the learning objectives in each chapter have been revised to be consistent across chapters (there are now six learning objectives per chapter with the exception of chapter 1) in order to better inte- grate the chapter material together in a more effective manner to improve learning.

Second, there are substantial updates that highlight evolving HRM practices, statistics, and business professionals’ perspectives. For instance, Chapter 7 (performance management and per- formance appraisal) includes a section on trends in performance appraisal practice. In a nutshell, some companies are providing performance feedback more frequently and as needed on a less structured basis rather than putting off providing feedback until structured annual reviews are given. This section also addresses the pros and cons of this more contemporary thinking as well the same of longstanding approaches to provide students a balanced view.

Third, fifty percent of the Ethics Dilemma and fifty percent of the Incident features are new. Business ethics are sets of guiding principles that influence the way individuals and organiza- tions behave within the society that they operate. Analysis of the incidents, which depict realistic scenarios, requires interpretation and proposed actionable responses. Many new Watch It! videos appear throughout this edition.

Solving Teaching and Learning Challenges Increasingly, students expect to see the applicability of their coursework to life and work after graduation. When the connection is not clear to students, many may lose interest and, perhaps, choose to do as little as possible to earn a good enough grade on quizzes and exams. How the author conveys content and the choice of pedagogical features can pique interest in the subject matter and enhance learning and development of seven critical employability skills, which I have discussed in the Developing Employability Skills section in Chapter 1.

I approach the study of HRM in a realistic, practical, interesting, and stimulating manner. I focus on showing how HRM is practiced in the real world. Throughout the book, you will see examples of how organizations practice HRM. In explaining a concept, I often quote HRM professionals and other business professionals, yet all HRM discussion is based on sound theoretical concepts and practice. Where appropriate, the strategic role of HRM is apparent in the discussion of each major HRM function. In addition, I show how HRM topics are related to other HRM topics. For instance, a firm that emphasizes recruiting top-quality candidates but neglects to provide satisfactory compensation is wasting time, effort, and money. If a firm’s compensation system pays below-market wages, the firm will always be hiring and training new employees only to see the best leave for a competitor’s higher wages. Besides this one example, the interrelationship of HRM practices set in a dynamic business environment will become more obvious as these topics are addressed throughout the book. These interrelation- ships are also shown to be important as organizations operate within the global environment. I included several features that appear in the textbook and MyLab, designed to enhance student learning by actively engaging students.

Learn It Practice Students can be assigned the Chapter Warm-Up before coming to class. Assigning these questions ahead of time will ensure that students are coming to class prepared.

Watch It Videos Recommends a video clip that can be assigned to students for outside classroom viewing or that can be watched in the classroom. The video corresponds to the chapter material and is accompa- nied by multiple choice questions that reinforce student’s comprehension of the chapter content.

28

2. 1 Discuss what ethics means and the sources of ethical guidance.

2. 2 Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics.

2. 3 Define human resource ethics.

2

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

2. 4 Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability.

2. 5 Describe a social audit.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 2 Warm-Up .

34 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Creating an Ethical Culture and a Code of Ethics Ethics is an important component of an organization’s culture. And it’s turning out to be more key for organizations to conduct business in an ethical fashion. Why? The public insists on it. Customers call for it. Most companies that take ethics seriously have a code of ethics that codifies ethical principles and guides employees to behave ethically. Let’s explore HR professionals’ roles in facilitating ethical cultures and codes of ethics.

Ethical Culture Mark Twain once said, “Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” 37

This is certainly good advice for both employees and employers if the firm wants to create an ethical culture. Saying that a company has an ethical culture and having one may be two differ- ent things. Culture is concerned with the way people think, which affects the way that they act. Changing an organization’s culture thus requires modifying the common way of thinking of its members. 38 Organizations with strong ethical cultures take steps to ensure that their standards are widely accessible, promoted, and followed by their leaders and employees. 39 For example, the Volkswagen debacle was not supposed to happen. The Volkswagen Code of Conduct was 24 pages long and had a foreword by Martin Winterkorn, who was then the company’s CEO, and other top executives saying, “We stand for respectable, honest, and actions in everyday business that are in accordance with rules, and we commit ourselves to the following Code of Conduct.” 40

Even with the ethical code, it is apparent that Volkswagen’s top management pursued business as usual.

One way for a firm to create and sustain an ethical culture is to audit ethics, much like a company audits its finances each year. 41 An ethics audit is simply a systematic, independent, and documented process for obtaining evidence regarding the status of an organization’s ethical culture. It takes a closer look at a firm’s ethical culture instead of just allowing it to remain unexamined. An ethical culture is made up of factors such as ethical leadership, accountability, and values. The climate with top management is fundamental to a company’s ethical culture. 42 Ethical leadership begins with the board of directors and CEO and contin- ues to middle managers, supervisors, and employees. 43 Building an ethical culture that lasts requires a foundation of practices that continue even when leaders change. 44 The following Watch It video illustrates how employees and members of management are brought together to enact a change within the company. Their goal is to limit the negative environmental impacts of their company as much as possible by applying the best practices concept to their everyday activities.

2. 2 Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Patagonia: Ethics and Social Responsibility and to respond to questions.

According to the Corporate Executive Board in Arlington, Virginia, companies with weak ethical cultures experience 10 times more misconduct than companies with strong ethical cul- tures. 45 In workplaces with a strong ethical culture, only 4 percent of employees feel pressure to compromise standards and commit misconduct compared to 15 percent in a weaker culture. 46

That’s a noteworthy difference. As important as endorsing ethical cultures is, more companies need to get on board. A survey of compliance and ethics professionals revealed that only half maintain that promoting an ethical culture is a priority. 47 Perhaps this is the case because only 13.3 percent believe that management embraces an ethical culture as a primary objective of ethics programs. The results are not much better when it comes to their view of the board of directors’ values. Only 15.6 percent of the respondents saw creating an ethical culture as the board’s primary objective.

For organizations to grow and prosper, good people must be employed. Recent studies suggest that six personality characteristics are useful predictors of ethical individuals. 48 Individuals who

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PREFACE xvii

Personal Inventory Assessments The Personal Inventory Assessment feature, included in most chapters, gives students the opportunity for self-assessment and personal reflection. Understanding yourself and finding your voice will help you approach situations within and outside the employment setting with greater confidence.

CHAPTER 2 • BUSINESS ETHICS, CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND SUSTAINABILITY 45

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the Management & Ethics simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Discuss what ethics means and the sources of ethical

guidance. Ethics is the discipline dealing with what is good and bad, right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation. Business ethics addresses matters of choices about right and wrong made by business leaders. One might use numerous sources to determine what is right or wrong, good or bad, and moral or immoral, such as holy books or one’s conscience. Another source of ethical guidance is the behavior and advice of people, including our parents, friends, and role models and members of our churches, clubs, and associations. For most professionals, there are codes of ethics that pre- scribe certain behavior.

2. Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics. An ethi- cal culture is made up of factors such as ethical leadership, accountability, and values. The climate at the top is funda- mental to a company’s ethical culture. Ethical leadership begins with the board of directors and CEO and continues to HR managers, all other managers, and supervisors. Building an ethical culture that lasts requires a foundation of practices that continue even when leaders change.

A code of ethics establishes the rules that the organi- zation lives by. Only a few companies have made ethics

and compliance a process for determining how employees are compensated.

3. Define human resource ethics. Human resource ethics is the application of ethical principles to HR relationships and activities.

4. Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability. Cor- porate social responsibility is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capac- ity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves, and corporate sustainability focuses on the possible future impact of an organization on society, includ- ing social welfare, the economy, and the environment. According to the World Commission on Environment and Sustainability, the narrow definition of sustainability is, “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” In recent years, sustainability has been expanded to include the social, economic, environmental, and cultural systems needed to support an organization.

5. Describe a social audit. A social audit is a systematic assessment of a company’s activities in terms of its social impact.

Some of the topics included in the audit focus on core values such as social responsibility, open communication, treatment of employees, confidentiality, and leadership. Firms are now acknowledging responsibilities to various stakeholder groups other than corpo- rate owners. 128

Some audits even set specific objectives in social areas. They are attempting to formally measure their contributions to various elements of society and to society. An increasing number of companies, as well as public and voluntary sector organizations, are trying to assess their social performance systematically. Three types of social audits are currently being used: (1) simple inven- tory of activities; (2) compilation of socially relevant expenditures; and (3) determination of social impact. The inventory is generally a good starting place. It consists of a listing of socially oriented activities undertaken by the firm. Here are some examples: minority employment and training, support of minority enterprises, pollution control, corporate giving, involvement in selected com- munity projects by executives, and a hard-core unemployment program. The ideal social audit would go well beyond a simple listing and involve determining the true benefits to society of any socially oriented business activity.

CHAPTER 2 • BUSINESS ETHICS, CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND SUSTAINABILITY 39

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Sales Incentives at Pinser Pharmaceuticals Quarterly sales reports are in at Pinser Phar-

maceuticals and Ben Ross looks forward to sharing the reports with the sales team. As a compensation analyst, Ben calculates sales commissions for the sales representatives, and high sales mean big paychecks�for the team. The sales representatives receive incentive pay bonuses based on how many times doctors in their sales territory pre- scribe Pinser drugs. The number of prescriptions has increased with several of the popular drugs Pinser makes and the sales representatives that have the doctors writing the most prescriptions stand to benefit significantly. Ben knows that they have steep competition on some of their products, but he has also heard some rumors about how they stay ahead of competitors.

Apparently, many of the sales representatives are using some of their own extra earnings to earn the favor of the doctors. Gifts, dinners, and other incentives are provided to the doctors to encourage them to write Pinser prescriptions. At first he thought there might be a problem with this practice, but Ben knows that Pinser has a Code of Ethics and provides ethics training to all employees, so the sales representatives must know that their practices are acceptable. Ben understands that this is just the way business is done, and Ben’s job is just to make sure they get paid what they have earned.

☛ F Y I ● Eighty-eight percent feel their job is more fulfilling when they are provided opportunities to make

a positive impact on social or environmental issues. 83

from more than 120 people from departments across the organization, including legal, human resources, IT security, and records management. 80

Ethics training for global organizations is more complicated than preparing the training for U.S. employees. One must also train for the country in which the global company operates. Since 1994, LRN has helped 15 million people at 700 companies across the world simultaneously navigate legal and regulatory environments and foster ethical cultures. 81 A few of their customers include CBS, Dow Chemical, eBay, 3M, and Siemens. Chris Campbell, creative director at LRN, says, “Localization is as important as the accuracy of the translation process. Learners need to be able to connect in a way that is believable to them.” 82

Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Related to ethics are the concepts of corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves, and corporate sustainability focuses on the possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment. CSR and corporate sustainability differ from ethics in an important way. Ethics focus on individual decision making and behavior and the impact of ethical choices on employee welfare. As noted, CSR and corporate sustainability consider the broader impact of corporate activities on society.

Ethics, CSR, and corporate sustainability are everyone’s business. HR professionals par- ticularly concern themselves with establishing policies to promote ethical behavior and discour- age unethical behavior. In addition, the HRM function’s leadership works with other executive leadership to identify training opportunities for educating employees about how they may make positive contributions to these objectives and developing performance-based pay programs that align employee performance with CSR and social responsibility goals.

2. 4 Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corpo- rate sustainability.

corporate sustainability Concerns with possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment.

corporate social responsibility (CSR) Implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves.

46 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Ethical Leadership Assessment Organizations need ethical leadership from all employees, but especially from managers. In this PIA, you’ll see how much thought and effort goes into being ethical in your workplace behavior.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

Questions for Review 2- 1. What are ethics and business ethics? 2- 2. What are some sources of ethical guidance? 2- 3. What laws have been passed to legislate ethics? 2- 4. Why is it important to have a code of ethics? 2- 5. Regarding business ethics, what does the statement

“what you reward is what you get” mean? 2- 6. What are HR ethics?

2- 7. What are the areas in which HR professionals can have a major impact on ethics?

2- 8. What is corporate social responsibility? 2- 9. What does corporate sustainability mean?

2- 10. What are some of the practices companies can use to promote sustainability?

Key Terms ethics 29 code of ethics 35 human resource ethics 36

corporate social responsibility (CSR) 39

corporate sustainability 39 social audit 44

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

A Selection Quandary You are being promoted to a new assignment

within your company, and your boss has asked you to nominate one of your subordinates as your replacement. The possible candidates are Randy Carlton, who is obviously more qualified, and James Mitchell, who, though not as experienced, is much better liked by the workers. If Randy is given the promotion, you are not certain the workers will accept him as their leader. James, on the other hand, is a hard worker and is well liked and respected by the others, including Randy. As you labor over the decision, you think about how unfair it would be

to Randy if the feelings of the other workers kept him from getting a deserved promotion. At the same time, you feel that your primary responsibility should be to maintain the productivity of the work unit. If your former division fell apart after your departure, it would hurt your reputation, not to mention the company. 2- 11. What would you do? 2- 12. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business As noted earlier, HRM Is Everyone’s Business explains how HR professionals and managers throughout the organization work together to address important work- place issues. This feature highlights some of the specific connections between man- agers and HR professionals, and the reality that HR activities are never performed in isolation.

HRM By The Numbers Exercises As noted earlier, HRM by the Numbers provides an excel- lent opportunity to sharpen problem solving skills through the analysis of numerical data, creating the foundation for quantifying HRM concepts and practices. There are two data-driven exercises per chapter, one in the book and both in MyLab Management. Answers are found in the Instructor’s Manual and in MyLab Management.

Try It Mini Simulations Recommends a mini simulation that can be assigned to stu- dents as an outside classroom activity or it can be done in the classroom. As the students watch the simulation they will be

asked to make choices based on the scenario presented in the simulation. At the end of the simula- tion the student will receive immediate feedback based on the answers they gave. These simula- tions reinforces the concepts of the chapter and the students’ comprehension of those concepts.

HR Bloopers Exercises HR Bloopers present scenarios that describe potential mistakes that may occur in HR practice. Questions that follow in MyLab Management provide students with the opportunity to test their understanding and recall of the chapter material based on the information contained in the scenarios.

CHAPTER 3 • EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY, AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, AND WORKFORCE DIVERSITY 85

HRM by the Numbers Detecting Adverse Impact An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Adverse impact usually takes place when an employment decision, practice, or policy has a disproportionately negative effect on a protected group. HR professionals rely on the “four-fifths” or “80 percent” rule to judge whether adverse impact may have occurred. Consider the situation for men and for women:

Sex Total Applicants Selected Applicants Selection Rate

Female 750 375 Male 1,050 450 Total 1,800 825

3- 18. Calculate (a) the selection rate for females and (b) the selection rate for males. 3- 19. What is the ratio of the female selection rate to the male selection rate? 3- 20. Based on your answer to question 3-19, is there evidence of possible adverse impact?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Most schools actively seek to admit a highly diversified student body. As a group, discuss student diversity at your school. Think about visible characteristics (e.g., race) and characteristics not visible (e.g., political party affiliation) that describe diversity. Besides your experiences, consider your school’s registered student organizations.

3- 21. What are some of the features that shape diversity at your school? Explain your reasoning. 3- 22. How would your student experience be different if your school’s student body was not diverse? Explain.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and applying the legal landscape HR takes the lead

Work with the legal department to conduct training sessions designed to educate managers on some of the most important legislation that will govern employee-related actions (e.g., Civil Rights Acts, ADEA, and ADA).

Conduct an audit to identify potential for disparate impact; disparate impact training is conducted to ensure that managers and other decision makers are aware of the pitfalls.

Consider private sector companies that hold government contracts to understand what additional standards may be placed on them because of their relationship with the federal government.

Provide legal updates to managers because legislation is changing quickly (particularly in these times). Many law firms provide these services via pro bono teleconferences. In-house employment lawyers can also provide these updates. For instance, we learned in this chapter that the EEOC considers treating gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender employees less favorably than others as a form of sex discrimination under the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Make sure that the legislative necessities create a starting point for establishing company policy and not merely the justifica- tion for doing the bare minimum.

Managers take the lead Speak openly about the importance of mutual respect and lead by example. Identify employees who fall into a group addressed specifically by law or company policy (e.g., ADA) which may be a new

experience for you to work with as a manager (e.g., in most jobs, you will have more experience working with minority employees than disabled employees or transgender employees).

Encourage employees to discuss in confidence with managers and HR professionals any concerns they may have about instances of possible illegal discrimination whether it be about themselves or out of concern for their coworkers. It is impor- tant to provide a safe haven for employees who come forward.

174 PART 2 • STAFFING

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Hiring with Incomplete Information Roberta Blythe recently opened a new business

named “Assisting You.” The company is a referral agency, matching service providers with customers who have home projects. Roberta’s strategy is to build a large clientele quickly by offering lower prices and shorter wait times than the competing agencies. Before long, cli- ents’ requests began coming in faster than she could meet them on a timely basis. Also, the recruiting and selection process from start to finish increased from 30 days to 50 days. Desperate to meet demand,

Roberta decided to streamline the process. Dropping background checks would reduce the wait time by 15 days. Feeling intense pressure to succeed, Roberta began hiring providers without first conducting background checks. Roberta feels confident in her decision because she has heard about many of the service providers, but certainly not all. 6- 22. What would you do? 6- 23. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business In Chapter 5 , we explained the role of HR professionals and managers in the recruitment process. Together, identified the best approaches to building a pool of qualified candidates. Now, it’s time to make selection (hiring) decisions. Successful selection decisions are based on the collaboration between HR professionals and hiring managers who bring complementary expertise and perspectives to the task. HR professionals are experts on every aspect of the selection process (e.g., reliability and validity), and hiring managers are most well-acquainted with their staffing needs.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and applying selection concepts and methods HR takes the lead

Review the appropriate guidelines for evaluating applications and résumés. Communicate what should and should not be considered. For example, some people list birthdate or marital status on their résumés and this information should never be considered when formulating interview questions or making the selection decision.

Discuss whether testing will add useful information for making more accurate selection decisions. Review the guidelines for conducting effective interviews and coordinate the types of interview questions that will be asked by HR and the questions that will be asked by managers.

HR professionals conduct background checks. HR professionals share their evaluations of the job candidates, and inform managers whether the results of the background check warrant further consideration.

Managers take the lead Review the top candidates with HR after prescreening applications and résumés. If testing is considered relevant, explain the minimum performance standards expected of successful employees. Share interview questions with HR to ensure job-relatedness. Consider all the job-related information and discuss whether a job offer should be made.

HRM by the Numbers Measuring Selection Outcomes

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management .

You were hired to develop a new recruitment and selection system to fill marketing assistant jobs. The Vice President of HR asked you to calculate various metrics to judge the effectiveness of the system using data from the previous calendar year. You have the following data to judge the effectiveness of the selection system:

A01_MART9724_15_SE_FM.indd 17 10/4/17 8:29 PM

Working Together Exercise As noted earlier, Working Together offers opportunities for students to collaborate through shar- ing ideas, listening to others’ ideas, and coming up with a cohesive team response to the assign- ment. If assigned by the instructor, students may make brief oral presentations of their ideas to the class, creating an additional opportunity for working together.

Assisted Graded Writing Questions These are short essay questions which the students can complete as an assignment and submit to you, the professor for grading.

MyLab Management Reach every student with MyLab MyLab is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By com- bining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student. Learn more at MyLab Management.

Deliver trusted content You deserve teaching materials that meet your own high standards for your course. That’s why we partner with highly respected authors to develop interactive content and course-specific resources that you can trust — and that keep your students engaged.

Empower each learner Each student learns at a different pace. Personalized learning pinpoints the precise areas where each student needs practice, giving all students the support they need — when and where they need it — to be successful.

Teach your course your way Your course is unique. So whether you’d like to build your own assignments, teach multiple sec- tions, or set prerequisites, MyLab gives you the flexibility to easily create your course to fit your needs.

Improve student results When you teach with MyLab, student performance improves. That’s why instructors have cho- sen MyLab for over 15 years, touching the lives of over 50 million students. Learn more.

Developing Employability Skills For students to succeed in a rapidly changing job market, they should be aware of their career options and how to go about developing a variety of skills. In this book and MyLab, I focus on developing these skills in the following ways: In this course, and, specifically in this text, students will have the opportunity to develop and practice seven important skills based on vari- ous learning features that are summarized in the matrix and subsequently illustrating some of the connections between the employability skills and learning features:

xviii PREFACE

A01_MART9724_15_SE_FM.indd 18 10/4/17 8:29 PM

Communication Critical Thinking Collaboration

Knowledge Application and Analysis

Business Ethics and Social Responsibility

Information Technology and Computing Skills

Data Literacy

FYI ✓ ✓

Watch It! ✓ ✓

Try It! Simulation ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓

HR Bloopers ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓

Chapter Review ✓ ✓

Personal Inventory Assessment

✓ ✓

Ethics Dilemma ✓ ✓ ✓

HRM Is Everyone’s Business

✓ ✓ ✓

HRM by the Numbers ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓

Working Together ✓ ✓ ✓

Case Incident 1 ✓ ✓ ✓

Case Incident 2 ✓ ✓ ✓

Instructor Teaching Resources Human Resource Management comes with the following teaching resources.

Supplements available to instruc- tors at www.pearsonhighered.com/

Features of the Supplement

Instructor’s Manual $$ Chapter-by-chapter summaries $$ Examples and activities not in the main book $$ Teaching outlines $$ Solutions to all questions and problems in the book

Test Bank More than 2,000 multiple-choice, true/false, and short-answer questions with these annotations: $$ Difficulty level (1 for easy, 2 for moderate, 3 for difficult) $$ Type (Multiple-choice, true/false, short-answer, essay $$ Topic (The term or concept the question supports) $$ Learning outcome $$ AACSB learning standard (Written and Oral Communication, Ethical Understanding and

Reasoning; Analytical Thinking; Information Technology; Diverse and Multicultural Work; Reflective Thinking; Application of Knowledge; Interpersonal Relations and Teamwork)

Computerized TestGen TestGen allows instructors to: $$ Customize, save, and generate classroom tests $$ Edit, add, or delete questions from the Test Item Files $$ Analyze test results $$ Organize a database of tests and student results.

PowerPoints Slides include many of the figures and table in the textbook

PowerPoints meet accessibility standards for students with disabilities. Features include, but not limited to: $$ Keyboard and Screen Reader access $$ Alternative text for images $$ High color contrast between background and foreground colors

PREFACE xix

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Acknowledgments I wish to give a special thank you to R. Wayne Mondy whose dedication and expertise in the first 14 editions have positively impacted thousands of students’ educational experiences. I am thrilled and honored to carry the torch forward in pursuit of doing the same for thousands more.

At Pearson, I wish to thank my editor, Dan Tylman, who provided excellent insights through- out the preparation of this edition. Many others at Pearson provided excellent advice throughout the process and project management oversight, including Yasmita Hota, Ashley Santora, Melissa Feimer, and Stephanie Wall. At SPi Global, I thank Raja Natesan and Nicole Suddeth. In addition, student feedback has made this book an invaluable resource. Finally, the support and encourage- ment of many practicing HRM professionals and faculty members has helped to make this book possible.

About Joseph J. Martocchio My interest in the human resource management field began while I was a junior at Babson College. I found myself want- ing to practice in the field as well as to become a university professor and researcher. I pursued both professional desires starting with employment at Cameron and Colby (a reinsur- ance company) in Boston and General Electric’s Aerospace business group in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.

I advanced my education in the human resource manage- ment (HRM) field by earning a master’s degree and Ph.D. degree at Michigan State University. My master’s degree en- abled me to build an even stronger foundation in practice and my doctoral degree provided me with the skills to con- duct scholarly research and teach college-level courses. Since earning my graduate degrees, I have been a professor in the School of Labor and Employment Relations at the University

of Illinois, Urbana–Champaign and assumed administrative roles as a Provost Fellow, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, and Interim Dean. All the while, I have taught a variety of courses in the HRM field. These include compensation systems, employee benefits, employment systems (HRM and labor relations), HR planning and staffing, and statistics. I also teach the compensa- tion and statistics courses online. For many years, I served as the faculty advisor to the student chapter of the Society for Human Resource Management at the University of Illinois during which time students earned Merit Awards and Superior Merit awards on multiple occasions.

As a researcher, I have studied a variety of topics that include employee absenteeism, employee training and development, compensation systems, employee benefits, and generational diversity. My work appears in leading scholarly journals such as Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Management, and Personnel Psychology. I received the Ernest J. McCormick Award for Distinguished Early Career Contributions from the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP), and I was subsequently elected as a Fellow in both the American Psychological Association and SIOP. Following the attainment of this recognition, I served as the Chair of the HR Division of the Academy of Management as well as in various other leadership roles within that organization.

Besides writing scholarly articles and Human Resource Management, I have two sole- authored textbooks: Strategic Compensation: A Human Resource Management Approach (Pearson Higher Education), which is in its 9th edition, and Employee Benefits: A Primer for Human Resource Professionals (McGraw-Hill), which is in its 6th edition.

xx PREFACE

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Part One Setting the Stage Chapter 1

Human Resource Management: An Overview

Chapter 2

Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility,

and Sustainability

Chapter 3

Equal Employment Opportunity, Affirmative

Action, and Workforce Diversity

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2

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Human Resource Management: An Overview1 LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

1.1 Define human resource management (HRM) and the importance of studying it.

1.2 Describe who performs HRM.

1.3 Explain how the HRM function serves as a strategic business partner and the elements of the dynamic HRM environment.

1.4 Discuss the role of HRM in building corporate culture and employer branding.

1.5 Summarize HRM issues for small businesses.

1.6 Identify ways that country culture influences global business.

1.7 Explore essential skills for developing your career in HR or any other career path.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 1 Warm-Up.

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3

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: Like many students, you’ve probably had a job (or two) at some time or another while working on your degree. Your work experiences are likely to have been influenced by the knowledge and skills of a human resource (HR) manager and your manager. Both HR professionals and manag- ers work together to recruit and hire the right individuals as well as evaluating and rewarding job performance. This textbook is about the important work that HR managers accomplish and how they work with managers and employees to promote a mutually beneficial employment experi- ence. Mutually beneficial employment experiences can be described by goal-directed managers who create a positive environment for you to achieve exemplary job performance, which, together with other employees, will help the company meet its strategic objectives.

This chapter will enable you to describe and understand the human resource management function and why it is worthwhile to study it. In the sections that follow, we introduce you to the functions that make up human resource management (HRM) and identify who is responsible for managing it. Next, we discuss HRM as a strategic business partner and the dynamic role of the environment that influences HRM practice, followed by considering the role of HRM in building corporate culture and employer branding. Then, we turn our attention to HRM in small businesses and the influence of country culture on global business. Finally, we explore essential skills for developing your career in HR or any other career path.

Human Resource Management: What It is and Why It is Important Human resource management (HRM) is the use of individuals to achieve organizational objec- tives. Basically, all managers get things done through the efforts of others. Consequently, manag- ers at every level must concern themselves with HRM. Individuals dealing with human resource matters face a multitude of challenges, ranging from a constantly changing workforce to ever- present government regulations, a technological revolution, and the economy of the United States and the world. Furthermore, global competition has forced both large and small organizations to

1.1 Define human resource management (HRM) and the importance of studying it.

human resource management (HRM) Utilization of individuals to achieve organizational objectives.

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4 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

be more conscious of costs and productivity. Because of the critical nature of human resource issues, these matters must receive major attention from upper management.

Why Study HRM? Many of you plan to seek a career in HRM; others do not. Even if you don’t, HRM is everyone’s business. Why should you care about studying HRM if you plan to work in accounting, finance, marketing, operations, or starting your own business? Here are two things to consider. First, understanding HRM will give you a solid foundation for understanding your rights and responsi- bilities as an employee. For instance, you will be more informed about whether the employer is evaluating your performance relative to other employees’ performance or on an absolute standard. Knowing about the Fair Labor Standards Act primes an understanding about whether you qualify for overtime pay. The list goes on and on. Just read the book!

Second, at some point in the future, you will probably have the opportunity to supervise employees or lead a department. When you do, you will need to have the most qualified employees on your team; and, you will want to ensure that they are achieving exemplary performance by providing regular feedback and rewarding excellence. Also, when employees are not perform- ing to standard, you will be responsible for identifying strategies for improvement, perhaps by recommending participation in a training program or two, or deciding to terminate employment. You will seek guidance from HR professionals and they will work with you to use appropriate methods to recruit, select, evaluate, and reward employees. In the end, success in your career will not only depend on your expertise, but also on having good employees.

Human Resource Management Functions People who manage HRM develop and work through an integrated HRM system. As Figure 1-1 shows, six functional areas are associated with effective HRM: staffing, human resource devel- opment, performance management, compensation, safety and health, and employee and labor relations. These functions are discussed next.

STAFFING Staffing is the process through which an organization ensures that it always has the proper number of employees with the appropriate skills in the right jobs, at the right time, to achieve organizational objectives. Staffing involves job analysis, human resource planning, recruitment, and selection, all of which are discussed in this text.1

Job analysis is the systematic process of determining the skills, duties, and knowledge required for performing jobs in an organization. It impacts virtually every aspect of HRM, includ- ing planning, recruitment, and selection. Human resource planning is the systematic process of

staffing Process through which an organization ensures that it always has the proper number of employees with the appropriate skills in the right jobs, at the right time, to achieve organizational objectives.

FIGURE 1-1 Human Resource Management Functions

Human Resource

management

St af fi ng

Human Resource Development

C o m

p en

satio n

Sa fe

ty a

nd H

ea lt

h

Employee and Labor Relations

Perform ance

m anagem

ent

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 5

matching the internal and external supply of people with job openings anticipated in the organiza- tion over a specified period. The data provided set the stage for recruitment or other HR actions. Recruitment is the process of attracting individuals on a timely basis, in sufficient numbers, and with appropriate qualifications to apply for jobs with an organization. Selection is the process of choosing the individual best suited for a position and the organization from a group of applicants. Successful accomplishment of the staffing function is vital if the organization is to effectively accomplish its mission. These topics are collectively often referred to as staffing.

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT Performance management (PM) is a goal-oriented process that is directed toward ensuring that organizational processes are in place to maximize the productivity of employees, teams, and ultimately, the organization. Performance appraisal is a formal system of review and evaluation of individual or team task performance. It affords employees the opportunity to capitalize on their strengths and overcome identified deficiencies, thereby helping them to become more satisfied and productive employees.

HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT Human resource development (HRD) is a major HRM function consisting not only of training and development but also of career planning and development activities, organization development, and performance management and appraisal. Training is designed to provide learners with the knowledge and skills needed for their present jobs. Development involves learning that goes beyond today’s job and has a more long-term focus.

Organization development (OD) is planned and systematic attempts to change the organi- zation (corporate culture), typically to a more behavioral environment. OD applies to an entire system, such as a company or a plant. Numerous OD methods are discussed that serve to improve a firm’s performance.

Career planning is an ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, today’s employees will work for approximately 7 to 10 companies during their careers based on the assumption that most people will work 30 to 40 years.2 A survey conducted by LinkedIn revealed that on average, individuals under the age of 32 change jobs four times.3 Employee loyalty loses its meaning in this environment.

Career development is a formal approach used by the organization to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed. Individual careers and organizational needs are not separate and distinct. Organizations should assist employees in career planning so the needs of both can be satisfied.

COMPENSATION The question of what constitutes a fair day’s pay has plagued management, unions, and workers for a long time. A well-thought-out compensation system provides employees with adequate and equitable rewards for their contributions to meeting organizational goals. As used in this book, the term compensation includes the total of all rewards provided to employees in return for their services. The rewards may be one or a combination of the following:

$$ Direct Financial Compensation (Monetary Compensation): Pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salaries, commissions, and bonuses.

$$ Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits): All financial rewards that are not included in direct compensation, such as paid vacations, sick leave, holidays, and medical insurance.

$$ Non-financial Compensation: Satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological or physical environment in which the person works.4

EMPLOYEE AND LABOR RELATIONS Businesses are required by law to recognize a union and bargain with it in good faith if the firm’s employees want the union to represent them. In the past, this relationship was an accepted way of life for many employers, but most firms today would rather have a union-free environment. As a starting point, union wages and benefits are on average 54 percent higher than nonunion wages and benefits.5 When a labor union represents a firm’s employees, the human resource activity is often referred to as labor relations, which handles the job of collective bargaining (i.e., negotiating employment terms such as work hours). Internal employee relations comprise the HRM activities associated with the movement of employees within the organization such as promotions, demotion, termination, and resignation.

performance management (PM) Goal-oriented process directed toward ensuring that organizational processes are in place to maximize the productivity of employees, teams, and ultimately, the organization.

human resource development (HRD) Major HRM functions consisting not only of training and development but also of individual career planning and development activities, organization development, and performance management and appraisal.

direct financial compensation (monetary compensation) Pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salary, commissions, and bonuses.

indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) All financial rewards that are not included in direct financial compensation.

non-financial compensation Satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological and/or physical environment in which the person works.

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6 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

SAFETY AND HEALTH Safety involves protecting employees from injuries caused by work- related accidents. Health refers to the employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness. These aspects of the job are important because employees who work in a safe environment and enjoy good health are more likely to be productive and yield long-term benefits to the organization. For instance, one survey showed that the injury rate in highly productive organizations was 18 times lower than in average performing companies and 60 percent lower than in less productive organizations.6 Today, because of federal and state legislation that reflect societal concerns, most organizations have become attentive to their employees’ safety and health needs.

HUMAN RESOURCE DATA ANALYTICS Although human resource data analytics is not a traditional HRM function, it pervades all functional areas. Analyzing employment data (e.g., employee productivity) and business outcomes (e.g., profits) has empowered HR professionals to quantify its influence. In 2016, 51 percent of companies correlated business outcomes with HR programs, which is up from 38 percent just one year earlier.7 Data analytics go a long way toward establishing the HRM function as a strategic business partner.

The scope of data analytics is growing rapidly. No longer do HR professionals limit analyses to internal data. Nowadays, they leverage technology, which has given unfettered access to exter- nal data. (We discuss the available technology as part of the dynamic HRM environment later in this chapter.) Internally, research on job safety may identify the causes of certain work-related accidents. The reasons for problems such as excessive absenteeism or excessive grievances may not be clear. However, when such problems occur, HR analytics can help HR professionals find the causes and offer possible solutions. Externally, data gathered through social media outlets, demographic information, hiring patterns, and turnover can help HR professionals develop strate- gies for attracting top talent.8

HR professionals should not rely exclusively on data analytics for making decisions. Because data, no matter how comprehensive or well analyzed, needs to be tempered by good judgment. For instance, a recent government report states: “Companies should remember that while big data is very good at detecting correlations, it does not explain which correlations are meaningful.”9 For example, researchers have generally established a correlation between pay and turnover (lower pay rates are associated with higher turnover rates). However, it certainly is not the case that every person with low pay will leave the company. Some may stay because they have supportive managers or commute times are short. When making decisions, it is important to remember that correlation does not equate with cause and effect.

INTERRELATIONSHIPS OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT FUNCTIONS All HRM functional areas are highly interrelated. Management must recognize that decisions in one area will affect other areas. For instance, a firm that emphasizes recruiting top-quality candidates but neglects to provide satisfactory compensation is wasting time, effort, and money. If a firm’s compensation system pays below-market wages, the firm will always be hiring and training new employees only to see the best leave for a competitor’s higher wages. For instance, Walmart raised the starting pay rate for store associates to $9 per hour. Walmart executives reasoned that raising pay is a good business decision because it should promote better customer service, higher sales, and lower expenses.10 The interrelationships among the HRM functional areas will become more obvious as these topics are addressed throughout the book.

Who Performs Human Resource Management Activities? The person or units who perform the HRM tasks have changed dramatically in recent years, and today there is no typical HR department. Many of these changes are being made so that HR profes- sionals can accomplish a more strategic role. Still, most organizations continue to perform most HR functions within the firm. However, as companies reexamine internal operations, questions are raised, such as: Can some HR tasks be performed more efficiently by line managers or outside vendors? Can some HR tasks be centralized or eliminated altogether? Can technology improve the productivity of HR professionals? One apparent fact is that all functions within today’s orga- nizations are being scrutinized for cost cutting, including HR. All units must operate under a lean budget in this competitive global environment, and HR is no exception.

safety Protection of employees from injuries caused by work-related accidents.

health Employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness.

1.2 Describe who performs HRM activities

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 7

Evidence provided by The Hackett Group shows that the HR functions have been impacted more than other functions with regard to reductions in staff and operating budgets.11 In fact, the most efficient companies typically spend nearly 30 percent less per employee on HR and operate with 25 percent fewer HR employees.12 Mobile HR has been a major factor in this trend as we discuss later in the chapter. Also, many HR departments continue to get smaller because others outside the HR department now perform certain functions. For instance, HR outsourcing, shared service centers, professional employer organizations, and line managers now assist in the accom- plishment of many traditional HR activities.

Human Resource Management Professional Historically, the HR manager was responsible for each of the six HR functions. A human resource management professional is an individual who normally acts in an advisory or staff capacity, working with other managers to help them address human resource matters. Often, HR departments are created, with the central figure being the HR manager or executive. The HRM professional is primarily respon- sible for coordinating the management of HR to help the organization achieve its goals. We say more about the work of HR professionals later in the chapter before looking at HRM as a strategic business partner. In the meantime, Figure 1-2 displays a summary of a typical human resource professional’s job along with their usual duties. The typical tasks performed by these professionals.

Line Managers All managers get things done through the efforts of others. Consequently, managers at every level naturally concern themselves with HRM, for example, making decisions about which job candi- dates are likely to meet the needs of company, conducting employee performance evaluations, and determining pay raise amounts. Individuals directly involved in accomplishing the primary pur- pose of the organization are line managers. As the traditional work of HR managers evolves, line managers have assumed some tasks typically done by HR professionals.13 Automation has assisted greatly in this process. Managers are being assisted by manager self-service, the use of software, and the corporate network to automate paper-based human resource processes that require a manager’s approval, recordkeeping or input, and processes that support the manager’s job. Every- thing from recruitment, selection, and performance appraisal to employee development has been automated to assist line managers in performing traditional HR tasks.

human resource management professional Individual who normally acts in an advisory or staff capacity, working with other professionals to help them deal with human resource matters.

line managers Individuals directly involved in accomplishing the primary purpose of the organization.

FIGURE 1-2 Human Resource Professional Job Description Source: National Center for O*NET Development. 11-3121.00. O*NET OnLine. Retrieved January 2, 2017, from http://www.onetonline.org/link/ summary/11-3121.00

Plan, direct, or coordinate HR activities and staff of an organization. Sample of reported job titles: Human Resources manager (HR manager), Director of Human Resources, Human Resources Director (HR Director), Employee Benefits manager, Human Resources vice President, Employee Relations manager

Tasks

$$ Serve as a link between management and employees by handling questions, interpreting and administering contracts, and helping resolve work-related problems.

$$ Analyze and modify compensation and benefits policies to establish competitive programs and ensure compliance with legal requirements.

$$ Advise managers on organizational policy matters such as equal employment opportunity and sexual harassment, and recommend needed changes.

$$ Perform difficult staffing duties, including dealing with understaffing, refereeing disputes, firing employees, and administering disciplinary procedures.

$$ Plan and conduct new employee orientation to foster a positive attitude toward organizational objectives.

$$ Identify staff vacancies and recruit, interview, and select applicants. $$ Plan, direct, supervise, and coordinate work activities of subordinates and staff

relating to employment, compensation, labor relations, and employee relations. $$ Plan, organize, direct, control, or coordinate the personnel, training, or labor

relations activities of an organization. $$ Represent organization at personnel-related hearings and investigations. $$ Administer compensation, benefits and performance management systems, and

safety and recreation programs.

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8 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

There is a shared responsibility between line managers and HR professionals. Frequently, the line manager looks to HR for guidance in topics such as selection, training, promotion, and taking disciplinary action. The relationship between HR professionals and line managers is illustrated by the following account:

Bill Brown, the production supervisor for Ajax Manufacturing, has just learned that one of his machine operators has resigned. He immediately calls Sandra Williams, the HR manager, and says, “Sandra, I just had a Class A machine operator quit down here. Can you find some qualified people for me to interview?” “Sure Bill,” Sandra replies. “I’ll send two or three down to you within the week, and you can select the one that best fits your needs.”

In this instance, both Bill and Sandra are concerned with accomplishing organizational goals, but from different perspectives. As an HR manager, Sandra identifies applicants who meet the criteria specified by Bill. Yet, Bill will make the final decision about hiring because he is responsible for the machine operators’ performance. His primary responsibility is production; hers is human resources. As an HR manager, Sandra must constantly deal with the many problems related to HR that Bill and the other managers face. Her job is to help them meet the human HR needs of the entire organization.

☛ F Y I $$ The HR outsourcing industry in 2020 is expected to generate $53.9 billion in revenue, up from

$42.6 billion in 2015.14

$$ The industry’s expected future annual global growth is nearly 13 percent.15

Human Resources Outsourcing HR outsourcing (HRO) is the process of hiring external HR professionals to do the HR work that was previously done internally. In the early days of HRO, cost savings was the primary driver in determining which activities to outsource. Today, outsourcing agreements are focusing more on quality of service and saving time, which is often more important than saving money.16 In addition, HRO enables HR to serve as strategic business partners. Paul Belliveau, global advisor at Avance Human Capital Management Advisors, said “Fundamentally, this is about the transfor- mation of HR. Wherever there’s transformation, you have to take away things HR shouldn’t be doing anymore so they can be more strategic.”17 As will be stressed throughout the text, strategic HR has become a major driver for HR professionals.18

Discrete services outsourcing involves one element of a business process or a single set of high-volume repetitive functions to be outsourced.19 Benefits have often been the HR task most likely to be outsourced. Dan Thomas, president of Trivalent Benefits Consulting Inc., said, “Benefits administration has become so complex that it really takes someone who works with it every single day to keep track of all of the different laws and changes that are going on.”20 For example, a survey conducted by The Prudential Financial and CFO research revealed that the complexity of employee benefits regulation has prompted companies to outsource or consider out- sourcing parts of their benefits function: 46 percent (Affordable Care Act), 40 percent (Americans with Disabilities Act), and 38 percent (Family and Medical Leave Act).21

Business process outsourcing (BPO) is the transfer of the majority of HR services to a third party. Typically, larger companies are involved with BPO, both as a provider and a user. A major HR outsourcer is Accenture that has more than $32 billion in revenue.22 For instance, Levi Strauss & Company signed a multiyear BPO agreement in which Accenture took over recruitment and hiring for all of Levi Strauss’ 55,000 retail outlets in more than 110 countries.23 Florida created a Web-based HR information system and outsourced administration of most HR functions for approximately 240,000 state employees and retirees. Outsourced services included recruiting, payroll, and HR administration services and benefits administration.24

Human Resources Shared Service Centers A shared service center (SSC), also known as a center of expertise, takes routine, transaction- based activities dispersed throughout the organization and consolidates them in one place. For example, a company with 20 strategic business units might consolidate routine HR tasks and perform them in one location. Shared service centers provide an alternative to HRO and can often

HR outsourcing (HRO) Process of hiring external HR professionals to do the HR work that was previously done internally.

shared service center (SSC) A center that takes routine, transaction-based activities dispersed throughout the organization and consolidates them in one place.

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 9

provide the same cost savings and customer service. Fewer HR professionals are needed when shared service centers are used, resulting in significant cost savings. The most common HR func- tions that use SSCs are benefits and pension administration, payroll, relocation assistance and recruitment support, global training and development, succession planning, and talent retention.

Professional Employer Organizations A professional employer organization (PEO) is a company that leases employees to other busi- nesses. When a decision is made to use a PEO, the company releases its employees, who are then hired by the PEO. The PEO then manages the administrative needs associated with employees. It is the PEO that pays the employees’ salaries; it also pays workers’ compensation premiums, payroll-related taxes, and employee benefits. The PEO is responsible to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) if, for example, the payroll taxes go unpaid. The company reimburses the PEO, which typically charges a fee of from 2 to 7 percent of the customer’s gross wages, with percent- ages based on the number of leased employees. Because the PEO is the employees’ legal employer it has the right to hire, fire, discipline, and reassign an employee. However, the client company maintains enough control so it can run the day-to-day operations of its business. Although PEOs have been available since the early 1980s, they have recently become a multi-billion dollar indus- try. The industry size is valued between $136 billion and $156 billion.25 In fact, there is an esti- mated two to three million U.S. workers employed under a PEO-type arrangement, and that number is certain to grow.26 PEOs permit business owners to focus on their core business, whereas the PEO handles HR activities.27 Companies using a PEO typically have a high level of benefits and greater HR expertise than they could possibly have had on their own.

More about HR Professionals Various designations are used within the HR profession; among these are HR executives, general- ists, and specialists. An executive is a top-level manager who reports directly to the corporation’s chief executive officer (CEO) or to the head of a major division. A generalist, who may be an executive, performs tasks in a variety of HR-related areas. The generalist is involved in several, or all, of the six HRM functions. A specialist may be an HR executive, manager, or nonmanager who is typically concerned with only one of the six functional areas of HRM. Figure 1-3 helps clarify these distinctions.

The vice president of industrial relations, shown in Figure 1-3, specializes primarily in union- related matters. This person is both an executive and a specialist. An HR vice president is both an executive and a generalist, having responsibility for a wide variety of functions. The compensation manager is a specialist, as is the benefits analyst. Whereas a position level in the organization identifies an executive, the breadth of such positions distinguishes generalists and specialists.

professional employer organization (PEO) A company that leases employees to other businesses.

executive A top-level manager who reports directly to a corporation’s chief executive officer or to the head of a major division.

generalist A person who may be an executive and performs tasks in a variety of HR-related areas.

specialist An individual who may be a human resource executive, a human resource manager, or a nonmanager, and who is typically concerned with only one of the six functional areas of human resource management.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Staffing Stone Consulting Business at Stone Consulting is growing faster

than Shelly Stone expected. She just signed a contract on another big project that she believes secures her future in the consulting business.

However, she has been so busy selling the firm’s services that she has put little thought into how she is going to staff the projects she has recently sold. She opened the firm more than a year ago and quickly hired five consultants and an office manager to help her get the busi- ness off the ground.

Unfortunately, one of the consultants has already left the firm after making a huge mistake that caused Shelly to lose a client. Some of

the other consultants have raised some concerns with Shelly as well. They’ve asked about pay increases and also her promise to eventually provide them with health insurance. However, she hasn’t had time to even think about these issues because she has focused her attention on finding new clients. As she looks over her project list she realizes she needs to start thinking about staffing fast. Her current team is already committed to other projects and the new projects she has secured need to get started right away. The office manager interrupts her thoughts to tell her a potential client is on the line. Excited about yet another oppor- tunity, Shelly jumps on the call, quickly forgetting her staffing concerns.

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10 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

A profession is a vocation characterized by the existence of a common body of knowledge and a procedure for certifying members. Performance standards are established by members of the profession rather than by outsiders; that is, the profession is self-regulated. Most professions also have effective representative organizations that permit members to exchange ideas of mutual concern. These characteristics apply to the field of HR, and several well-known organizations serve the profession. Among the more prominent is the Society for Human Resource Management (www.shrm.org), the Human Resource Certification Institute (www.hrci.org), the Association for Talent Development (ATD, http://www.td.org), and WorldatWork (www.worldatwork.org). The HR profession is based on a variety of competencies. Figure 1-4 lists five competencies and brief descriptions. We will see throughout this book that effective HR professionals demonstrate these competencies. For example, we will look at the advocate competency, particularly, in Chapter 2 as it applies to ethics, corporate social responsibility, and sustainability. The HR expert compe- tency includes all of the knowledge we have already studied and to come in the remainder of this book, for example, staffing, training, and employee relations.

Opportunities for employment in the HRM profession are growing. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics:

Employment of human resources managers is projected to grow 9 percent from 2014 to 2024, faster than the average for all occupations.

Employment growth largely depends on the performance and growth of individual companies. However, as new companies form and organizations expand their operations, they will need more human resources managers to oversee and administer their programs.

Managers will also be needed to ensure that firms adhere to changing, complex employ- ment laws regarding occupational safety and health, equal employment opportunity, health- care, wages, and retirement plans. For example, adoption of the Affordable Care Act may spur the need to hire more managers to help implement this program.

Although job opportunities are expected to vary based on the staffing needs of indi- vidual companies, very strong competition can be expected for most positions.

Job opportunities should be best in the management of companies and enterprises industry as organizations continue to use outside firms to assist with some of their human resources functions.

Candidates with certification or a master’s degree—particularly those with a concen- tration in human resources management—should have the best job prospects. Those with a solid background in human resources programs, policies, and employment law should also have better job opportunities.28

The median annual compensation for HR managers was $106,910, which is nearly three times the median annual earnings for all jobs. Human resource specialist median salaries ranged

profession Vocation characterized by the existence of a common body of knowledge and a procedure for certifying members.

HR Web Wisdom

Human Resource Certification Institute (HRCI) www.hrci.org

A Professional Certification Program in HR Management is for individuals seeking to expand their formal HR training.

FIGURE 1-3 Human Resource Executives, Generalists, and Specialists

vice President, Industrial Relations

Human Resource Executives, Generalists, and Specialists

Benefits Analyst

Executive: Generalist: Specialist:

manager, Compensation

vice President, Human Resources

manager, Training and Development

manager, Staffing

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 11

between $59,020 for training and development specialists to $116,240 for compensation and benefits managers. Figure 1-5 lists the median annual salaries for various jobs in the HRM profes- sion. The salary levels vary on a number factors, including relevant work experience, educational credentials, and industry. For example, median annual salaries for HR managers were substantially higher in the management of companies and enterprises industry ($118,320) than in the health care and social assistance industry ($89,090).

FIGURE 1-4 Model of Human Resources Competencies Source: U.S. Office of Personnel Management. Online: http://archive.opm.gov/studies/ transapp.pdf. Accessed January 2, 2017.

Leader

Takes risks

Ethical

Decisive

Develops staff

Creates trust

Competency Model for HR Professionals

Business

mission oriented

Strategic planner

Systems innovator

understands team behavior

HR Expert

Knows HR principles

Customer oriented

Applies business procedures

manages resources

uses HR tools

NAPA

Change Agent manages change

Consults

Analyzes

uses coalition skills

Influences others Advocate

values diversity

Resolves conflict

Communicates well

Respects others

Occupation Job Duties 2016 Median Pay

Compensation and Benefits managers

Compensation managers plan, direct, and coordinate how much an organization pays its employees and how employees are paid. Benefits managers plan, direct, and coordi- nate retirement plans, health insurance, and other benefits that an organization offers its employees.

$116,240

Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists

Compensation, benefits, and job analysis spe- cialists help conduct an organization’s com- pensation and benefits programs. They also evaluate job positions to determine details such as classification and salary.

$62,080

Human Resources managers

Human resources managers plan, direct, and coordinate the administrative functions of an organization. They oversee the recruiting, inter- viewing, and hiring of new staff; consult with top executives on strategic planning; and serve as a link between an organization’s manage- ment and its employees.

$106,910

Human Resources Specialists and Labor Relations Specialists

Human resources specialists recruit, screen, interview, and place workers. They often han- dle other human resources work, such as those related to employee relations, payroll and ben- efits, and training. Labor relations specialists interpret and administer labor contracts regard- ing issues such as wages and salaries, employee welfare, healthcare, pensions, and union and management practices.

$59,180

FIGURE 1-5 HR Professional Annual Salaries Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Human Resources Managers,” Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2016–17 Edition,” Accessed January 2, 2017, at : www.bls.gov/ooh/ management/human-resources- managers.htm.

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12 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Human Resources as a Strategic Business Partner in a Dynamic Environment In the environment presently confronting HR, many HR professions are increasingly taking on the role of being a strategic partner with upper management.30 As a strategic business partner, HR professionals are able to focus on matters that are truly important to the company as a whole.31 For example, increasing sales and building customer loyalty to the brand are important goals of soft drink companies such as Coca Cola and PepsiCo. Increasing sales require hiring highly dedi- cated and motivated sales and distribution employees. As a strategic business partner, HR helps to identify and develop the employees necessary for excellent performance, builds recruitment systems, training programs for product distribution and interactions with customers, constructs performance management, and structures compensation programs that will greatly incentivize these employees to excel. The rapidly evolving world of HR will increasingly require HR profes- sionals to thoroughly understand all aspects of what the companies they work for do. Essentially, they must know more than just HR work.32 In moving from a transactional to a strategic model, HR professionals work toward solving strategic problems in the organization. No longer is an administrative and compliance role appropriate as their primary jobs. For instance, preparing the company’s affirmative action plan or administering the payroll system are compliance and administrative tasks. HR executives today need to think like the CEO to become a strategic partner in achieving organizational plans and results.33 In doing so, they understand the production side of the business and help to determine the strategic capabilities of the company’s workforce, both today and in the future. HR professionals need to be agile in their thinking as they adapt to the ebbs and flows of business. Therefore, HR executives are ensuring that human resources support the firm’s mission.

HR professionals have changed the way they work. Working as a strategic business partner requires a much deeper and broader understanding of business issues.34 What strategically should HR be doing exactly? Possible strategic tasks for HR include making workforce strategies fun- damental to company strategies and goals; increasing HR’s role in strategic planning, mergers, and acquisitions; developing awareness or an understanding of the business; and, helping line managers achieve their goals as in the previous example of soft drink companies.

HR professionals can give the CEO and chief financial officer (CFO) a powerful understand- ing of the role that employees play in the organization and the way it combines with business processes to expand or shrink shareholder value. HR professionals are integrating the goals of HR with the goals of the organization and focusing on expanding its strategic and high-level corpo- rate participation with an emphasis on adding value. In doing so, HR is demonstrating that it can produce a return on investment for its programs. It analyzes HR activities to determine whether

1.3 Explain how the HRM function serves as a strategic business partner and the elements of the dynamic HRM environment.

Occupation Job Duties 2016 Median Pay

Instructional Coordinators

Instructional coordinators oversee school cur- riculums and teaching standards. They develop instructional material, coordinate its implemen- tation with teachers and principals, and assess its effectiveness.

$62,460

Training and Development Specialists

Training and development specialists help plan, conduct, and administer programs that train employees and improve their skills and knowledge.

$59,020

☛ F Y I HR is now more likely to serve on a company’s board of directors or hold an executive position:

$$ 2014 to 2015: 66 percent $$ 2004: 41 percent29

FIGURE 1-5 (Continued)

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 13

they are maintaining acceptable profit margins. For example, HR professionals strive to develop cost-effective training strategies that boost sales revenue that far exceeds the cost of training. The CEO needs help in matters that HR professionals are qualified to handle. HR professionals are the enablers; they are the ones who should know about change and develop strategies to make it work.

Capital and Human Capital A useful way to better understand how HR serves as a strategic business partner is to think about the use of capital for value creation. Capital refers to the factors that enable companies to generate income, higher company stock prices, economic value, strong positive brand identity, and reputa- tion. There is a variety of capital that companies use to create value, including financial capital (cash) and capital equipment (state-of-the-art robotics used in manufacturing).

Employees represent a specific type of capital called human capital. Human capital, as defined by economists, refers to sets of collective skills, knowledge, and ability that employees can apply to create value for their employers. Companies purchase the use of human capital by paying employees an hourly wage, salary, or bonuses and providing benefits such as paid vacation and health insurance. Also, companies help develop human capital to their advantage by offering training programs aimed at further boosting employee productivity.

The meaning of value creation differs according to a company’s mission. It is useful to think about the differences between for-profit and not-for-profit organizations. For example, Microsoft and Frito Lay are for-profit companies that strive to generate annual earnings for company share- holders. These companies promote profit generation by selling quality software and quality snack products, respectively. The American Red Cross is an illustration of a not-for-profit organization that relies on charitable monetary contributions and grant money to create societal value. The people who contribute money and other resources do not seek monetary gain. Instead, they value supporting humanitarian causes such as disaster relief. The American Red Cross provides disaster relief after the occurrence of devastating events, including the wildfires in California, earthquakes in Oklahoma, and tornadoes in Florida.

Every organization relies on capital to create value, but the combination of capital used to create value differs from company to company. For example, Frito Lay uses state-of-the-art manu- facturing equipment, and the American Red Cross does not. However, every organization shares in common the employment of individuals and the necessity of managing employees to success- fully create value. Indeed, HRM is the business function of managing employees to facilitate an organization’s efforts to create value.

Dynamic Human Resource Management Environment Many interrelated factors affect HRM practice within and outside the organization. As illustrated in Figure 1-6, environmental factors include legal considerations, labor market, society, political parties, unions, shareholders, competition, customers, technology, the economy, and unantici- pated events. Each factor, either separately or in combination with others, can create constraints or opportunities for HRM.

LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS A significant external force affecting HRM relates to federal, state, and local legislation and the many court decisions interpreting this legislation. For example, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act is an example of a federal law that protects older workers from illegal discrimination. In addition, presidential executive orders have had a major impact on HRM. Executive Order 13145 protects all qualified individuals in federal employment based on protected genetic information, or information about a request for or the receipt of genetic services. These legal considerations affect virtually the entire spectrum of human resource policies. Laws, court decisions, and executive orders affecting other HRM activities will be described in the appropriate chapters.

LABOR MARKET Potential employees located within the geographic area from which employees are normally recruited comprise the labor market. The capabilities of a firm’s employees determine, to a large extent, how well the organization can perform its mission. Because new employees are hired from outside the firm, the labor market is considered an important environmental factor. The labor market is always changing, and these shifts inevitably cause changes in the workforce of an organization. For example, members of the aging baby boom cohort, the largest current

human capital As defined by economists, human capital refers to sets of collective skills, knowledge, and ability that employees can apply to create economic value for their employers.

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14 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

generation of employees, are retiring in large numbers; however, younger generations are smaller and less well-prepared to assume leadership roles because they have had much less time in the workforce to develop them.

SOCIETY Society may also exert pressure on HRM. The public is no longer content to accept, without question, the actions of business. To remain acceptable to the public, a firm must accomplish its purpose while complying with societal norms.

Ethics is the discipline dealing with what is good and bad, or right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is closely related to ethics. CSR is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves.35 We take up these subjects in Chapter 2.

POLITICAL PARTIES Closely related to society, but not the same, are political parties. The Democratic and Republican parties are the two major political parties in the United States. These parties often have differing opinions on how HRM should be accomplished. For example, Democrats tend to favor more government regulation that protects the rights of virtually all employees to receive at least a minimum wage (the Fair Labor Standards Act) and unpaid family leave (the Family and Medical Leave Act). Republicans, on the other hand, tend to favor less government regulation, believing that businesses should have as much flexibility as possible to operate profitably.

UNIONS Wage levels, benefits, and working conditions for millions of employees ref lect decisions made jointly by unions and management. A union consists of employees who have joined together for the purpose of negotiating terms of employment such as wages and work hours. The United Auto Workers is an example of a large labor union. Unions are treated as an environmental factor because, essentially, they become a third party when dealing with the company.

SHAREHOLDERS The owners of a corporation are called shareholders. Because shareholders, or stockholders, have invested money in the firm, they may at times challenge programs considered by management to be beneficial to the organization. Stockholders are wielding increasing influence, and management may be forced to justify the merits of a program in terms of how it will affect

union Consists of employees who have joined together for the purpose of negotiating terms of employment, such as wages and work hours.

shareholders Owners of a corporation.

FIGURE 1-6 Environment of Human Resource Management

Customers

Legal Considerations Labor market So

cie ty

E co

n o

m y

T e

ch n

o lo

g y

u n

a n

ti ci

p a te

d E

ve n

ts

Competition Shareholders unions

other Functional

Areas

operations

Finance

marketing

INTERNAL ENvIRoNmENT

EXTERNAL ENvIRoNmENT P o

litica l P

a rtie

s

Human Resource

management

St af fi ng

Human Resource Development

C o m

p en

satio n

Sa fe

ty a

nd H

ea lt

h

Employee and Labor Relations

Perform ance

m anagem

ent

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 15

future projects, costs, revenues, profits, and even benefits to society as a whole.36 Considerable pressure has recently been exerted by shareholders and lawmakers to control the salaries of corporate executives as we shall see in the discussion of the Dodd-Frank Act in Chapters 2 and 9.37

COMPETITION Firms may face intense global competition for both their product or service and labor markets. Unless an organization is in the unusual position of monopolizing the market it serves, other firms will be producing similar products or services. A firm must also maintain a supply of competent employees if it is to succeed, grow, and prosper. But other organizations are also striving for that same objective. A firm’s major task is to ensure that it obtains and retains a sufficient number of employees in various career fields to allow it to compete effectively. A bidding war often results when competitors attempt to fill certain critical positions in their firms. Even in a depressed economy, firms find creative ways to recruit and retain such employees. For example, a company may offer a signing bonus (that is, a one-time monetary payment) to offset lower pay.

CUSTOMERS The people who use a firm’s goods and services also are part of its external environment. Because sales are crucial to the firm’s survival, management has the task of ensuring that its employment practices provide excellent customer support service. Customers constantly demand high-quality products and after-purchase service. Therefore, a firm’s workforce should provide top-quality goods and after-sale customer support. These conditions relate directly to the skills, qualifications, and motivations of the organization’s employees.

☛ F Y I $$ In a survey of HR professionals, 36 percent have disqualified a job candidate because of troubling

information discovered on a public social media profile.38

HR TECHNOLOGY The rate of technological change is staggering. The development of technology has created new roles for HR professionals but also places additional pressures on them to keep abreast of the technology. As noted earlier, leveraging technology can help HR professionals to consider both internal and external data to aid in decision making. We will briefly review three applications: human resource information systems, cloud computing, and social media.

With the increased technology sophistication has come the ability to design a more useful human resource information system (HRIS), which is any organized approach for obtaining relevant and timely information on which to base HR decisions. The HRIS brings under one encom- passing technology system many human resource activities. Think of an HRIS as an umbrella for merging the various subsystems discussed throughout this text. Today, mainstay HR responsibilities such as planning, recruitment, selection, oversight of legal and regulatory compliance, benefits administration, and the safeguarding of confidential employee information cannot be carried out effectively without an HRIS. Throughout the text, topics will be highlighted that are part of an HRIS. In addition, all of the HRIS applications may be accessed through cloud computing.

A rapidly developing trend is the increased mobility of tasks performed by HR profession- als.39 A major factor contributing to HR mobility is cloud computing, a means of providing software and data via the Internet. Cloud computing and the use of mobile devices are changing the way HR work is performed, and the change is moving at an amazing pace.40 With the cloud there is no more expensive, capital-intensive hardware and infrastructure and no more expensive, time-consuming, staff-intensive upgrades.41 Cloud computing permits businesses to buy and use what they need, when they need it. It allows large organizations to move away from managing their own computer centers and focus on the core competencies of the firm. Cloud users can access the application securely from anywhere in the world.42 HR professionals can be virtually anywhere and access the cloud, all through any standard Web.

HR departments are leveraging the increasing popularity of social media, including LinkedIn, Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. In a 2015 Society for Human Resource Management survey, HR professionals revealed that social networking is an important tool for recruiting passive and active applicants. Most respondents, 84 percent, say that their organizations currently use social media and 9 percent plan to use it.43 There are two additional applications of social media. First, companies may use social media to promote knowledge sharing as well as training and development. Second, social media is often used to reinforce identification with the organization and promoting the brand.

human resource information system (HRIS) Any organized approach for obtaining relevant and timely information on which to base HR decisions.

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16 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

ECONOMY The economy of the nation and world is a major environmental factor affecting HRM. As a generalization, when the economy is booming, it is more difficult to recruit qualified workers. On the other hand, when a downturn is experienced, more applicants are typically available. To complicate this situation even further, one segment of the country may be experiencing an economic downturn, another a slow recovery, and another a boom. A major challenge facing HR is working within this dynamic, ever-changing economic environment because it impacts every aspect of HRM.44

UNANTICIPATED EVENTS Unanticipated events are occurrences in the environment that cannot be foreseen. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill off the Gulf Coast in 2010 caused major modifications in the performance of many HR functions. Every disaster—whether human-made or natural— likely requires a tremendous amount of adjustment with regard to HRM. For example, after Hurricane Katrina, Tulane University reduced their number of employees. On a global perspective, think of the many different ways HR was affected by the tsunami in Japan. Japanese automobile plants in the United States were forced to temporarily shut down because of a lack of parts produced in Japan. Other recent disasters, such as heat waves, earthquakes, tornadoes, floods, and fires have created their own type of difficulty.

The Role of HRM in Building Corporate Culture and Employer Branding

As an internal environment factor affecting HRM, corporate culture refers to the firm’s social and psychological climate. Corporate culture is defined as the system of shared values, beliefs, and habits within an organization that interacts with the formal structure to produce behavioral norms. Employer branding is an extension of product or business branding. Employer branding is the firm’s corporate image or culture created to attract and retain the type of employees the firm is seeking. It is what the company stands for in the public eye.46 Establishing a positive corporate culture and brand is another way HR professionals contribute to a company’s success. We discuss corporate culture and employer branding next.

Corporate Culture Culture gives people a sense of how to behave and what they ought to be doing. Each individual gradually forms such perceptions over a period of time as the person performs assigned activities under the general guidance of a superior and a set of organizational policies. The culture existing within a firm influences the employees’ degree of satisfaction with the job as well as the level and quality of their performance. The assessment of how desirable the organization’s culture is may differ for each employee. One person may perceive the environment as bad, and another may see the same environment as positive. An employee may actually leave an organization in the hope of finding a more compatible culture. Max Caldwell, a managing director at Towers Watson, said, “Maybe the best definition of company culture is what everyone does when no one is looking.”47 Topics related to corporate culture are presented throughout this text. Some corporate culture topics include the following:

$$ Employer branding is the firm’s corporate image or culture created to attract and retain the type of employees the firm is seeking. It is what the company stands for in the public eye.

$$ Diversity management is about pursuing an inclusive corporate culture in which newcomers feel welcome and everyone sees the value of his or her job.

$$ Organizational fit refers to management’s perception of the degree to which the prospec- tive employee will fit in with the firm’s culture or value system. A good Web site should provide a feeling of the kind of corporate culture that exists within the company.

$$ New hire orientation reflects the firm’s corporate culture by showing in effect, “How we do things around here.”

1.4 Discuss the role of HRM in building corporate culture and employer branding.

corporate culture System of shared values, beliefs, and habits within an organization that interacts with the formal structure to produce behavioral norms.

employer branding Firm’s corporate image or culture created to attract and retain the type of employees the firm is seeking.

☛ F Y I $$ A survey of more than 7,000 CEOs and HR leaders revealed that 82 percent consider culture a source

of competitive advantage.45

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 17

$$ Talent management is a strategic endeavor to optimize the use of employees and enables an organization to drive short- and long-term results by building culture, engagement, capabil- ity, and capacity through integrated talent acquisition, development, and deployment pro- cesses that are aligned to business goals.

$$ Organization development is a major means of achieving change in the corporate culture. $$ Anything that the company provides an employee is included in compensation, from pay

and benefits to the organization’s culture and environment. $$ A corporate culture that does not consider the needs of employees as individuals makes the

firm ripe for unionization. $$ Retaining the best employees often rests with the corporate culture that exists within the

organization. $$ Accident rates decline when the corporate culture encourages workers consciously or sub-

consciously to think about safety. $$ A country’s culture is the set of values, symbols, beliefs, languages, and norms that guide

human behavior within the country. Cultural differences are often the biggest barrier to doing business in the world market. Many of the global topics discussed throughout your text are influenced by the issue of corporate culture or country culture.

Employer Branding A colleague shared a memory about his mother, which bears directly on this subject. His mother would always buy a certain brand of canned fruit even though it was more expensive. The brand name itself caused her to buy a product that although higher priced was probably the same or similar quality as less expensive brands. The company had created a positive image that made her want to use the product. As with the canned fruit, companies want a brand that will entice individuals to join and remain with the firm.48 HR professionals play an essential role in creating and promot- ing a company’s brand. Effective branding communicates why the company is a cut above other workplaces by providing persuasive reasons for job seekers to choose the company over others.49 As such, the focus on employer branding has become increasingly important for organizations. Jeffrey St. Amour, national practice leader for PricewaterhouseCoopers’ HR Services strategic com- munication group said, “They’re both trying to create the same thing, which is product loyalty or a feeling that this is a high-quality company.”50 Employer branding has become a major recruitment and retention strategy and everyone in the company works to promote the image of the firm.51

Brands imply what employees will get from working there and why working for the company is a career and not just a job. For example, consulting firm PwC emphasizes its commitment to career development as part of its recruitment strategy: “Every career path is different. That’s why we help you design your own.”52 As more Gen-Yers enter the workforce, firms may need to alter their brand to attract and retain these young people who view having fun in an engaging work environment as important as a good salary. A well-paying job that is boring will not keep them for long. Cosmetic company L’Oréal understands this expectation. The company takes time to understand what employees value in their work experiences, and they incorporate much of these values in an employee value proposition. L’Oréal promises prospective employees a “thrilling experience” and an “environment that will inspire you.”53

An employer brand embodies the values and standards that guide people’s behavior. Through employer branding, people get to know what the company stands for, the people it hires, the fit between jobs and people, and the results it recognizes and rewards. Every company has a brand, which could be the company of choice or one of last resort. A robust employment brand attracts people and makes them want to stay. In fact, most workers want to belong to an organization that embraces the ideas and principles they share.54 Employer branding has become a driving force to engage and retain the firm’s most valuable employees.55 As the economy prospers, firms vigor- ously seek talent, and, employer branding is attracting more attention.

Achieving acknowledgment by an external source is a good way for a brand to be recognized. Being listed on Fortune magazine’s 100 Best Companies to Work For is so desirable that some organizations try to change their culture and philosophies to get on the list. Think about how being on the following lists might assist in a company’s recruitment and retention programs:

$$ Black Enterprise list of Best Companies for Diversity $$ Business Ethics magazine list of 100 Best Corporate Citizens $$ Computerworld list of Best Places to Work

country’s culture Set of values, symbols, beliefs, language, and norms that guide human behavior within the country.

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18 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

$$ Forbes magazine list of Best Companies for Work-Life Balance $$ Fortune magazine list of 100 Fastest-Growing Companies in the United States $$ Training magazine list of 125 Best Companies for Employee Development $$ Working Mother list of 100 Best Companies

As the previous discussion indicates, many companies embrace creating and maintaining a positive work culture, and they recognize it is “good” business because they are better able to recruit and retain valued employees. A company named Patagonia also recognizes the benefits of a positive work culture from the perspective of employees. The following Watch It video describes Patagonia’s efforts to maintain a positive work culture that emphasizes a culture of personal responsibility, flexibility, and development.

Human Resource Management in Small Businesses The Small Business Administration (SBA) defines a small business as one that is independently owned and operated, is organized for profit, and is not dominant in its field. More than 99 percent of the businesses in the United States are classified as small businesses and they are responsible for at least half of private sector employment.56 The discussion throughout this text has historically focused primarily on how HR is practiced with major corporations. However, today, many college graduates obtain jobs in small businesses. In fact, growth of small business is often a primary driver for the economy. Therefore, the practice of HR as it is conducted in small businesses is discussed at various times in your text.

Typically, the same HR functions previously identified must be accomplished by small busi- ness, but the manner in which they are accomplished may be altered.57 Small businesses often do not have a formal HR unit or an HRM specialist. Rather, line managers often handle the HR functions. The focus of their activities is generally on hiring and retaining capable employees. Some aspects of HR functions may actually be more significant in smaller firms than in larger ones. For example, a staffing mistake in hiring an incompetent employee who alienates customers may cause the business to fail. In a larger firm, such an error might be much less harmful. As the business grows, the need for a more sophisticated HR function usually is needed.58 This move typically occurs at the 25-employee level when concerns about compliance with labor laws often begin.59 Also, new small businesses are faced with a host of federal and state government regula- tory requirements, tax laws, and compensation demands.

1.5 Summarize human resource management issues for small businesses.

HR Web Wisdom

U.S. Small Business Administration www.sba.gov/

Small business is the most pow- erful engine of opportunity and economic growth in the United States. SBA offers a variety of pro- grams and support services to help owners navigate the issues they face with initial applications and resources to help after they open for business. Virtually all HR top- ics can be addressed from a small business standpoint.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Patagonia: Human Resource Management and to respond to questions.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Blackbird Guitars: Managing Human Resources in Entrepreneurial Firms and to respond to questions.

Country Culture and Global Business A country’s culture is the set of values, symbols, beliefs, languages, and norms that guide human behavior within the country. It is learned behavior that develops as individuals grow from child- hood to adulthood. As one goes from one side of this country to the other, a wide range of cultural differences will be experienced. The same can be said in traveling from north to south. Then, think about the cultural differences that exist in going from this country to another. Americans’ use of colloquialisms often creates cultural barriers. Perhaps surprisingly, misunderstanding can occur between two countries that share the same language such as is the case for the United States and the United Kingdom. For instance, Martin Brooks, Production and Export Manager of pet nutrition company Hilton Herbs considers the United States as one of the most challenging. “As an example,

1.6 Identify ways that coun- try culture influences global business.

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 19

we had a product for older horses and dogs called Veteran,” he says.60 Sales were flat until the company replaced the word “veteran” with “senior,” following the way people in the United States refer to older pets. Veteran is a commonplace descriptor in the UK. If a significant cultural divide can exist between two countries that share a common language, how much wider must the contrast be between countries that speak different languages? No doubt quite significant.

Even though the language may be the same, such as is the case with the United States and the United Kingdom, major cultural differences do exist. Dean Foster, a New York-based consultant on intercultural business issues said, “The United Kingdom really is a foreign country—and HR departments that ignore that fact are at their peril. It’s that expectation of similarity that throws everyone off.”61 A businessperson who travels from Switzerland to Italy goes from a country where meetings tend to be highly structured and expected to start on time to one where meetings can be more informal and punctuality is less important.62 Many believe that China has the most different culture for Americans to deal with.63

Throughout this text, cultural differences between countries will be identified as a major factor influencing global business. This borderless world adds dramatically to the difficulty of managing employees. Cultural differences reveal themselves in everything from the workplace environments to differences in the concept of time, space, and social interaction.64 Companies operating in the global environment recognize that national cultures differ and that such differ- ences cannot be ignored.65

Getting work done is less likely when individuals from one culture are tone deaf to cultural norms elsewhere. For example, L’Oréal’s decision making culture encourages open debate, which management maintain generates creativity.66 However, that style probably does not fit well with cultural differences in other countries. The company’s confrontational approach is inconsistent with the cultural values in Southeast Asia, which is a region where they conduct business. An Indonesian employee said, “To an Indonesian person, confrontation in a group setting is extremely negative, because it makes the other person lose face. So it’s something that we try strongly to avoid in any open manner.”67

Getting work done becomes especially more challenging when companies of different country origins merge. For instance, Chrysler Corporation employees have gone through major cultural changes in the last several years.68 The misfortune cost Daimler nearly $36 billion over a decade, which amounted to a loss of almost $10 million per day for 10 years.69 First, they were merged into a German firm, Daimler-Benz, then they were sold back to a U.S. company, and they are now merged into Fiat, an Italian firm. Each ownership change brought new cultural rules with which employees had to deal. Certainly, the Germans and Italians have two distinct cultures.70 InBev, based in Leuven, Belgium, purchased Anheuser-Busch several years ago, making it the leading global brewer and one of the world’s top five consumer products companies (AB InBev). Merg- ing two large corporate cultures after an acquisition is often not easy. In fact, InBev’s purchase of Anheuser-Busch was particularly difficult, even two-and-a-half years after the $52 billion deal closed, the story continues.71 AB InBev reached an agreement, valued at $100 billion, to acquire beer brewer SABMiller. No doubt, the companies will face further challenges as they merge their workforces and operations. For instance, AB InBev’s CEO Carlos Brito once said that he does not “like people at the company to have fun.”72 Brito’s sentiment does not fit with SABMiller’s work culture, which reportedly is more casual.

The cultural norms of Japan promote loyalty and teamwork. The work culture there is one in which honesty and hard work are prized assets. In Japan, most managers tend to remain with the same company for life. In the United States, senior executives often change companies, but the Japanese believe strongly that leaving a job is to be avoided out of respect for the business team.73 In Japan, if a boss gives detailed instructions to a subordinate, it is like saying the person is incompetent.74 Japan is not the only Asian country that promotes worker respect for their bosses and a team work ethic. For example, norms in Korean culture pressure workers to “pull late nights” because they feel the need to please their superiors. One observer described these workers: “They just sit in their chairs and they just watch their team leaders, and they’re thinking, ‘What time is he going to leave the office?”’75 Then, there is an expectation that the boss and employees will go out for drinks, and it is important that employees participate. In Korea, drinking together helps build workplace camaraderie and trust.76

Cultural misunderstandings are common, but they can be hazards to executives managing global workforces. Samuel Berner, head of HR of the private banking Asia Pacific division in

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20 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Singapore for Credit Suisse AG said, “Things that are perfectly natural in one culture offend in another.”77 Eric Rozenberg, CMM, CMP, president, Ince&Tive, of Brussels, Belgium, stated, “Even though people are aware that there are cultural differences between various nationalities, they’re still uncomfortable with it and are afraid of making mistakes.”78

Developing Skills for Your Career If you’re not an HRM major, you may be thinking that this section isn’t relevant to you. Let me assure you, it is. Whether or not you plan on a career in HRM, the lessons you learn in this course will help you in business and in your life. Also, it is only through the aggregate of your educational experience that you will have the opportunity to develop many of the skills that employers have identified as critical to success in the workplace. In this course, and, specifically in this text, you’ll have the opportunity to develop and practice seven important skills in the following ways: commu- nication, critical thinking, collaboration, knowledge application and analysis, business ethics and social responsibility, information technology application and computing skills, and data literacy.

Communication Communication is defined as effective use of oral, written, and nonverbal skills for multiple purposes (e.g., to inform, instruct, motivate, persuade, and share ideas); effective listening; using technology to communicate; and being able to evaluate the effectiveness of communication efforts—all within diverse contexts. The Working Together feature offers opportunities to col- laborate through sharing ideas, listening to others’ ideas, and coming up with a cohesive team response to the assignment. If assigned by your instructor, you may make brief oral presentations, creating an additional opportunity for working together. All the while, you will gain insight into your and your group members’ strengths and weaknesses pertaining to communication (and col- laboration) skills. Never pass up an opportunity to hone these skills.

Critical Thinking Critical thinking involves purposeful and goal-directed thinking used to define and solve prob- lems, make decisions or form judgments related to a situation or set of circumstances. The Chap- ter Review questions and a new feature in this edition, HRM by the Numbers, provide you with an excellent opportunity to think through concepts and their applications. HRM by the Numbers will also give you the chance to analyze quantitative data to facilitate problem solving. Analysis of the Incidents, which depict realistic scenarios that you will likely encounter in the workplace, requires your interpretation and an actionable response. Similarly, you will have the chance to think through and discuss your responses to common Ethics Dilemmas. More about the ethics dilemmas shortly. Critically thinking about situations is just one part of the story. The Personal Inventory Assessment feature, included in most chapters, gives you the opportunity for self- assessment and personal reflection. Understanding yourself and finding your voice will help you approach situations within and outside the employment setting with greater confidence.

Collaboration Collaborative learning takes place in a situation in which individuals actively work together on a task, constructing meaning and knowledge as a group through dialogue and negotiation resulting in a final product ref lective of their joint, interdependent actions. I’ve already made the case for Working Together. Your professor may similarly ask you to analyze Incidents in small groups. Another feature new in this edition, HRM is Everyone’s Business, explains how HR professionals and managers throughout the organization work together to address important workplace issues. This feature highlights the connections between managers and HR profes- sionals, and the reality that work is rarely performed in isolation.

1.7 Explore essential skills for developing your career in HR or any other career path.

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the Human Resource Management simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real world decisions.

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 21

Knowledge Application and Analysis Knowledge application and analysis is defined as the ability to learn a concept and then appro- priately apply that knowledge in another setting to achieve a higher level of understanding. All the activities discussed in this section provide you with multiple opportunities to think through solutions to specific problems and generalize these processes to other situations you will likely encounter in the future. Two additional features further help you develop this skill. Try It directs you to mini simulations and, in Watch It, you will review video clips that require a response to important workplace challenges.

Business Ethics and Social Responsibility Business ethics are sets of guiding principles that influence the way individuals and organizations behave within the society that they operate. Two additional issues require everyone’s attention. The first, CSR is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves. Second, corporate sustainability focuses on the possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment. Both issues are like ethics; however, ethics also focuses on individual decision making and behavior as well as the impact of ethical choices on employee welfare. The review questions, particularly in Chapter 2 on ethics, social responsibility, and sus- tainability, and the Ethics Dilemmas throughout your textbook, will keep these important matters in the forefront as you move ahead in your career.

Information Technology Application and Computing Skills Information technology application and computing skills are defined as the ability to select and use appropriate technology to accomplish a given task. The individual is also able to apply computing skills to solve problems. HRM by the Numbers gives you the opportunity to develop these skills.

Data Literacy Data literacy is the ability to access, assess, interpret, manipulate, summarize, and communicate data. Throughout this book, the newly created feature titled FYI provides tidbits of information from survey research and extensive databases (e.g., employment statistics) that illuminate trends, opinions, and the use of specific HR practices. These data should enable you to translate quantita- tive information for placement into the employment context. Further, you can expand this skill by thinking through when and how to create new policies or modify existing ones.

In summary, you will find opportunities throughout this book to develop several critical skills that provide a foundation of success on any career path that you follow. As you learn about HRM, consider how you can generalize these skills to other workplace situations. Best of luck whether you are preparing for the start of your career or are in the process of changing career paths!

S C O P E O F T H I S B O O K

Effective HRM is crucial to the success of every organization. To be effective, managers must understand and competently practice HRM. This book was designed to give you the following:

$$ An insight into the role of strategic HRM in today’s organizations and the strategic role of HR functions $$ An appreciation of the value of employees as human capital $$ An awareness of the importance of business ethics and corporate social responsibility $$ An understanding of job analysis, HR planning, recruitment, and selection $$ An awareness of the importance of HR development, including training and developing, for employ-

ees at all levels $$ An understanding of performance appraisal and its role in performance management $$ An appreciation of how compensation and employee benefits programs are formulated and

administered $$ An opportunity to understand employee and labor relations $$ An understanding of safety and health factors as they affect the firm’s profitability

An appreciation of the global impact on HRM This book is organized in six parts, as shown in Figure 1-7; combined, they provide a comprehensive view of HRM. As you read it, hopefully you will be stimulated to increase your knowledge in this rapidly changing and challenging field.

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22 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

FIGURE 1-7 Organization of This Book

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Define human resource management and the impor-

tance of studying it. Human resource management (HRM) is the utilization of employees to achieve organizational objectives. It is the business function of managing employees. HRM professionals embrace the idea that employees are essential to the success of organizations, and as such, they view employees as assets or human capital. Studying HRM is a worthwhile endeavor, whether you plan to become an HR professional. Possessing knowledge about HRM principles and practices will help you understand your rights and responsibilities as an employee. Also, if you eventually lead a department or supervise employees, you will seek guidance on issues such as appraising job performance. There are six func- tional areas associated with effective HRM: staffing, HR development, performance management, compensation, safety and health, and employee and labor relations.

2. Describe who performs HRM. Human resource manag- ers are individuals who normally act in an advisory or staff capacity, working with other managers to help them deal with human resource matters. HR outsourcing is the process of hiring an external provider to do the work that was previously done internally. HR shared service centers take routine, transaction-based activities that are dispersed throughout the organization and consolidate them in one

place. A professional employer organization is a company that leases employees to other businesses. Line managers in certain firms are being used more frequently than before to deliver HR services.

Various designations are used within the HR profes- sion; among these are HR executives, generalists, and specialists. A profession is a vocation characterized by the existence of a common body of knowledge and a proce- dure for certifying members.

Executives are top-level managers who report directly to the corporation’s CEO or the head of a major division. Generalists (who are often executives) are persons who perform tasks in a wide variety of HR-related areas. A specialist may be an HR executive, manager, or non manager who typically is concerned with only one of the functional areas of HRM.

Several well-known organizations serve the profes- sion. Among the more prominent are the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), the Human Resource Certification Institute (HRCI), the Association for Talent Development (ATD), and WorldatWork.

3. Explain how the HRM function serves as a strategic business partner and the elements of the dynamic HRM environment. Working as a strategic business partner requires a much deeper and broader understanding of

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, 15TH EDITION

PART ONE: SETTING THE STAGE Chapter 1: Human Resource management: An overview Chapter 2: Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability Chapter 3: Equal Employment opportunity, Affirmative Action, and workforce Diversity

PART TWO: STAFFING Chapter 4: Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning, and Job Analysis Chapter 5: Recruitment Chapter 6: Selection

PART THREE: PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING Chapter 7: Performance management and Appraisal Chapter 8: Training and Development

PART FOUR: COMPENSATION Chapter 9: Direct Financial Compensation (monetary Compensation) Chapter 10: Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits)

PART FIVE: LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY AND HEALTH Chapter 11: Labor unions and Collective Bargaining Chapter 12: Internal Employee Relations Chapter 13: Employee Safety, Health, and wellness

PART SIX: OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Chapter 14: Global Human Resource management

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 23

business issues. Possible strategic tasks for HR include making workforce strategies fundamental to company strategies and goals; increasing HR’s role in strategic plan- ning, mergers, and acquisitions; developing awareness or an understanding of the business; and helping line manag- ers achieve their goals. Also, as a strategic business partner, HR helps to identify and develop the human capital neces- sary for excellent performance, builds recruitment systems, training programs for product distribution and interactions with customers, constructs performance management, and structures compensation programs that will greatly incentivize these employees to excel. In the end, if HR is to be a strategic partner, HR executives must work with top management in achieving concrete plans and results. Fac- tors include legal considerations, the labor market, society, political parties, unions, shareholders, competition, cus- tomers, technology, economy, and unanticipated events.

4. Discuss the role of HRM in building corporate culture and employer branding. Corporate culture is the system of shared values, beliefs, and habits within an organiza- tion that interacts with the formal structure to produce behavioral norms. Culture gives people a sense of how to behave and what they ought to be doing. It often affects job performance throughout the organization and consequently

affects profitability. Employer branding is the firm’s corpo- rate image or culture created to attract and retain the type of employees the firm is seeking. It is what the company stands for in the public eye.

5. Summarize HRM issues for small businesses. Often the same HR functions previously identified must be accomplished by small business, but the manner in which they are accomplished may be altered. Small businesses often do not have a formal HR unit or HRM specialists. Rather, other line managers in the company handle HR functions.

6. Identify ways that country culture influences global business. Cultural differences reveal themselves in every- thing from the workplace environments to differences in the concepts of time, space, and social interaction. Cultural differences are often the biggest barrier to doing business in the world market.

7. Explore essential skills for developing your career in HR or any other career path. Whether you are embarking on a career in HRM on another path, there are seven essential skills needed for success: communication, critical thinking, collaboration, knowledge application and analysis, business ethics and social responsibility, information technology application and computing skills, and data literacy.

Key Terms human resource management (HRM) 3 staffing 4 performance management 5 human resource development (HRD) 5 direct financial compensation 5 indirect financial compensation

(benefits) 5 nonfinancial compensation 5 safety 6 health 6

human resource management professional 7

line managers 7 HR outsourcing (HRO) 8 shared service center (SSC) 9 professional employer organization

(PEO) 9 executive 9 generalist 9 specialist 10

profession 10 capital 13 human capital 13 union 15 shareholders 15 human resource information system

(HRIS) 15 corporate culture 16 country’s culture 17 employer branding 16

Questions for Review 1-1. Define human resource management. What HRM functions

must be performed regardless of the organization’s size? 1-2. Define profession. Do you believe that the field of HRM

is a profession? Explain your answer. 1-3. What are the environmental factors that affect HRM?

Describe each one. 1-4. How might HR technology affect the various HR

functions? 1-5. Define corporate culture. Explain why corporate culture

is a major internal environment factor.

1-6. This chapter describes HR’s changing role in business. Describe each component that is involved in HRM.

1-7. How does HRM become more complex as a company’s workforce reaches 25 employees?

1-8. What are the various designations associated with the HRM profession?

1-9. What has been the evolution of HRM? 1-10. Explain how the seven employability skills matter

regardless of your career aspirations.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

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24 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

Personal Inventory Assessment Additional Personal Inventory Assessments can be found on MyLab Management.

What’s My Comfort with Change? Change is a big part of the external environment and an organization’s culture. This PIA will assess how comfortable you are with change.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Many companies have moved from the personnel management model to the HR business partner model; however, some still look to HR to guarantee that policies are being enforced and the company mitigates legal risk. Depending on the company where you are employed—and whether you are a manager or HR professional—you may find yourself in a position to understand the competitive strategy of the business and align HR practices with the strategic thrust of the business.

Action checklist for managers and HR—aligning HR practice with competitive strategy HR takes the lead

Work with managers to fully understand which roles and types of employees will best support the execution of company strategy.

Collaborate with managers to run an analysis of market factors (e.g., competitors, industry standards, local labor market) to get indicators of norms and standards in order to keep your company’s HR practices competitive.

Create, together with managers, job structures wherein roles are placed into the organizational structure. Each job structure will have tailored pay ranges, performance standards, and training guidelines to help employees advance in the organization.

Managers take the lead

Educate employees, along with other managers and supervisors, about the company’s strategy and how everyone contributes to meeting strategic objectives.

Educate HR on certain aspects of roles (e.g., autonomy, skill variety, task significance, etc.) that, when enhanced, could improve motivation; thus, leading to benefits for employees and employers.

Work together with HR to implement a plan that promotes successful recruitment, training, and development, ensuring that the company is retaining the talent that is critical to the implementation and delivery of the strategic objectives.

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Broken Promises You’ve recently joined the HR department and

noticed that employee turnover has been higher than usual. Most of the departing employees are star performers who worked in the mar- keting department. Naturally, losing too many high performers is a detriment to the company’s efforts to meet its strategic objectives. You’ve decided to investigate the possible reasons for higher turnover and learned some unsettling facts. One of the recruiters entices top job candidates to join the company by conveying its commitment to

career development when, in fact, the company does not provide any career development opportunities. You also learned that most of these job candidates possessed other job offers that they turned down on the promise of career development opportunities in your company.

1-11. What would you do? 1-12. What factors in this ethics dilemma might influence a person to

make a less-than-ethical decision?

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CHAPTER 1 • HumAN RESouRCE mANAGEmENT: AN ovERvIEw 25

HRM by the Numbers Making a Sufficient Number of Job Offers to Maintain Staffing Levels

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals and other managers work together to calculate the number of employees needed to meet objectives. For instance, they determined that 100 full-time production workers are needed to assemble 2,500 children’s bicycles each day. Each year, a total of 20 percent of these workers are either promoted or they leave the company due to poor performance or better job opportunities elsewhere. Management can use your help in understanding the impact of understaffing on meeting production goals as well as calculating the number of job offers needed to maintain the necessary staffing level.

Questions 1-13. If the company does not replace the workers who leave, how many bikes must each employee produce on a given day

(assume that on any given day, there are 20 percent fewer workers than needed to meet the production goal)? 1-14. Assume that each job candidate accepts the company’s job offer. Calculate the number of job offers necessary to main-

tain the required staffing level of 100 employees on an annual basis. 1-15. Instead, assume that only 50 percent of the job candidates accept a job offer. Calculate the number of job offers necessary

to maintain the required staffing level of 100 employees on an annual basis.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives as you prepare your answers. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, identify a company with which members are familiar. On the company’s website, review its mission, products or services, and career opportunities.

1-16. How would you describe the company’s employment brand to your friends? 1-17. What information might lead you to choose working for the company?

I N C I D E N T 1 HR After a Disaster After Hurricane Rita struck Lake Charles in southwest Louisiana, many businesses wondered if they would ever return to their former selves. Massive destruction was everywhere. Lake Charles, known for its large and beautiful oak and pine trees, now had the job of removing those downed trees from homes, businesses, and lots. You could see for miles through what used to be thick forests. Huge trucks designed for removing massive tree trunks were everywhere. While driving down a street, downed trees could be seen stacked two stories high, waiting to be picked up. The town grew rapidly in size because of the increased number of repair crews working on recovery operations. The noise created by their chain saws could be heard from daylight until dark. The sounds of hammers were everywhere as homeowners scrambled to get their roofs repaired. Often repair crews would just find an empty lot and set up tents for the night because all motels were full. Traffic was unbelievably slow, and it appeared as if everyone was attempt- ing to get on the road at the same time. Just driving from Point A to Point B could often be quite an adventure. As might be expected in conditions such as these, accidents were numerous. Often police did not have the resources to ticket every fender bender, so unless there were injuries, insurance cards were exchanged and the police went on to the next accident.

Months after Hurricane Rita struck, large and small businesses were still frantically trying to find workers so they could start up again. It appeared that every business in the town had a “Help Wanted” sign out front. Individuals who wanted a job could get one and could

command a premium salary. Walmart, known for remaining open 24 hours a day, could only stay open on an abbreviated schedule. Employ- ers often had to bus employees from locations not affected by the hur- ricane each morning and returned them at night because there were not enough workers available in the local area. Restaurants that nor- mally remained open late into the evening closed at 6:00 p.m., if they opened at all. Compensation scales that were in use before the hur- ricane had to be thrown out and new plans implemented. Minimum- wage jobs were nonexistent. Employees who earned minimum wage before the storm could now command $10 per hour just for being a flagger (a person who directs traffic). Fast-food restaurants that nor- mally paid minimum wage now paid $10 or $11. Burger King was even offering a $1,500 bonus for entry-level workers. Upscale restaurants that normally paid minimum wage plus tips now paid premium rate plus tips. Restaurants that remained open often had a much younger staff, and it was evident that the managers and assistant managers were working overtime to train these new workers. Restaurant patrons had to learn patience because there would be mistakes by these eager, but largely untrained workers.

Questions 1-18. Which environment factor(s) did Hurricane Rita affect? Discuss. 1-19. How were the HR functions affected by Hurricane Rita? 1-20. Do you believe the HR situations described regarding Hurri-

cane Rita would be typical in a disaster? Explain.

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26 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

I N C I D E N T 2 Parental Leave at Yahoo Employer branding is an ongoing effort that requires a company to “puts its money where its mouth is.” In other words, building and maintaining a positive employer brand goes beyond written policy and good media coverage. Successful branding starts with executive leadership setting an example for employees. Take the Internet company Yahoo. Yahoo has a policy that provides generous paid parental leave and permits employees to work from home. The company had a golden opportunity to demon- strate commitment to its family leave policy after then CEO Marissa Mayer gave birth to her baby in 2012. Rather than taking several weeks to work from home, she built a nursery next to her office where she could be close to the baby. Then, in 2013, a leaked internal memo revealed that Yahoo would terminate its telecommuting policy that allowed employees to work from home. In the memo, she stated: “Speed and quality are often

sacrificed when we work from home.”79 In addition, “We need to be one Yahoo, and that starts with physically being together.” Media responses were mixed. On one hand, Mayer showed that she could continue to lead Yahoo as a new mother. On the other hand, media reports criticized her “for failing to set a realistic expectation for America’s working moms.”80 Since then, Yahoo expanded its parental leave policy for the birth or adop- tion of a child, foster child placement, or surrogacy.

1-21. How do these changes at Yahoo influence the company’s employment branding?

1-22. As an HR professional, what would you have done after Mayer chose not to take more time allowed under Yahoo’s parental leave policy?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

1-23. What is employer branding? How might employer branding affect a company’s ability to recruit?

1-24. How might a country’s culture be a barrier to global business?

Endnotes 1 Jean M. Phillips and Stanley M. Gully, Strategic

Staffing, 3rd ed. (Hoboken, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2015).

2 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employee Tenure in 2016 (September 22, 2016). USDL: 16-1867. Accessed January 2, 2017, at www.bls. gov/.

3 Heather Long, “The New Normal: 4 Job Changes by the Time You’re 32,” CNN Money online (April 12, 2016). Accessed on January 3, 2017, at www.money.cnn.com.

4 Joseph J. Martocchio, Strategic Compensation, 9th ed. (Hoboken, NJ: Pearson Education, 2017).

5 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee Compensation–September 2016 (December 8, 2016). USDL: 16-2255. Accessed January 2, 2017, at www.bls.gov/.

6 Travis Hessman, “Safety Is Productivity,” EHS Today (December 12, 2014). Accessed on January 3, 2017, at http://ehstoday. com/safety-leadership-conference-2015/ safety-productivity.

7 “The New Organization: Different by Design,” Global Human Capital Trends 2016 (2016). Accessed December 20, 2016, https://www2. deloitte.com/us/en/pages/human-capital/articles/ introduction-human-capital-trends.html.

8 Ibid. 9 U.S. Federal Trade Commission, “Big Data:

A Tool for Inclusion or Exclusion,” (January 2016): 29.

10 Lauren Weber, “One Reason Wal-Mart Is Rais- ing Pay: Turnover,” The Wall Street Journal online (February 19, 2015). Accessed January 2, 2017, at http://www.wsj.com.

11 Eric Krell, “Change Within,” HR Magazine 56 (August 2011): 42–50.

12 “Despite Recession, World-Class HR Organiza- tions Reduce Costs by 13 Percent,” Controller’s Report 2011 (August 2011): 1–19.

13 Jon Severs, “Supervisors on the Front Line,” PrintWeek (January 21, 2011): 20–21.

14 Mark Feffer, “More HR Professionals Are Strik- ing Out on Their Own to Work as Independent Contractors,” HR Magazine, (July/August 2016): 55–61.

15 “Focus on Cost Effective People Management Drives A doption of Human Resource Outsourc- ing, According to a New Report by Global Industry Analysts, Inc,” Global Industry Ana- lysts, Inc. (Web site). Accessed January 2, 2017, at www.strategyr.com/pressMCP-1516.asp.

16 Accenture Inc., “Achieving High Performance in BPO: Research Report,” (2012). Accessed December 30, 2013, at www.accenture.com.

17 Mark Feffer, “Meet the People Behind Your HR Outsourcing,” HR Magazine (July/August 2016) online. Accessed January 2, 2017, at www.shrm.org/hr-today/news/hr-maga- zine/0716/Pages/meet-the-people-behind-your- hr-outsourcing.aspx.

18 Erika Andersen, “4 Ways to Become a Strategic Business Partner (And Why You Should Want to): Forbes (September 6, 2013). Accessed October 10, 2013, at www.forbes.com.

19 Eric Krell, “Amid Consolidation, Clients Grow Selective,” HR Magazine 58 (July 2013): 49–51.

20 Joel Berg, “Employers Outsource HR Work in Recession,” Central Penn Business Journal 25 (November 13, 2009): 17–21.

21 CFO Research, “A Rising Interest in Outsourc- ing Benefits Administration,” (2016 Research Report). Accessed January 2, 2017, at http:// research.prudential.com/documents/rp/ CFO_Prudential_ADA_Report5_4_19.pdf.

22 “Leading in the New,” Accenture Annual Report 2016,” Accessed January 2, 2017, at www .accenture.com/t20161030T213116__w__/ us-en/_acnmedia/PDF-35/Accenture- 2016-Shareholder-Letter10-K006.pdf#zoom=50.

23 “Levi Strauss: Recruitment Process Outsourc- ing,” (Case Study). Accessed January 2, 2017, at https://acn-uat.ciotest.accenture.com/ng-en/ success-levi-strauss-recruitment-process- outsourcing.

24 Bill Leonard, “Salvage, Don’t Scrap,” HR  Magazine 56 (June 2011): 74–77.

25 Laurie Bassi and Dan McMurrer, “The State of the PEO Industry 2016: Markets, Value, and Trends,” National Association of Professional Employer Organizations (September 2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at www.napeo.org.

26 Ibid. 27 David Imbrogno, “The Outsourcing of HR,”

Quality 49 (December 2010): 34–35. 28 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Human

Resources Mangers,” Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2016–17 Edition.” Accessed January 2, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ooh/management/ human-resources-manages.htm.

29 Henry G. Jackson, “Being Strategic Is Not Optional,” HR Magazine, (November 2015): 6.

30 Adrienne Fox, “Reach New Height,” HR Maga- zine (July 2012): 34–39.

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31 Edward E. Lawler III and John W. Boudreau, “Creating an Effective Human Capital Strategy,” HR Magazine 57 (August 2012): 57–59.

32 “HR in 2020 Should Understand Clearly All Aspects of Business,” HR Focus 90 (February 2013): 8–9.

33 “Attorney Urges HR Professionals to Think Like the CEO,” HR Focus 89 (April 2012): 10.

34 Cam Caldwell, Do X. Truong, Pham T. Linh, and Anh Tuan, “Strategic Human Resource Management as Ethical Stewardship,” Journal of Business Ethics 98 (January 2011): 171–182.

35 Kenneth E. Goodpaster and John B. Matthews, Jr., “Can a Corporation Have a Conscience?” Harvard Business Review 60 (January–February 1982): 132–141.

36 Steve Bates, “Report: Prepare for Increased Shareholder Activism,” HR Magazine 54 (June 2009): 32.

37 Joseph J. Martocchio, Strategic Compensation, 9th ed. (Hoboken, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc., 2017).

38 Society for Human Resource Management, “Using Social Media for Talent Acquisition— Recruitment and Screening,” (January 7, 2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at www .shrm.org.

39 Jennifer Schramm, “A Cloud of Workers,” HR Magazine 58 (March 2013): 80; Bill Goodwin, “The Emerging Technologies Transforming How HR Works,” Computer Weekly (July 16, 2013): 16–18.

40 Katherine Noyes, “How the Cloud Is Trans- forming HR,” PC World (March 30, 2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at http://www. pcworld.com/article/3049645/how-the-cloud- is-transforming-hr.html; Bill Roberts, “The Grand Convergence,” HR Magazine 56 (October 2011): 39–46.

41 Jane Ward, “Structuring Your Selection Pro- cess,” Human Resources Magazine 16 (Febru- ary/March 2012): 22–23.

42 Susan Galer, “3 Benefits of Cloud Computing for Human Resources,” Forbes online (March 26, 2015). Accessed January 3, 2017, at www .forbes.com; Michael Custers, “HR Technologies Guide Employers to Better Benefits Offerings,” Employee Benefit Plan Review 67 (February 2013): 20–21.

43 Society for Human Resource Management, “Using Social Media for Talent Acquisition— Recruitment and Screening,” (January 7, 2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at www.shrm.org.

44 “As Economy Recovers, HR Will Have More Opportunities to Show Value,” HR Focus 89 (February 2012): 6.

45 “The New Organization: Different by Design,” Global Human Capital Trends 2016 (2016). Accessed December 20, 2016, www2.deloitte.

com/us/en/pages/human-capital/articles/ introduction-human-capital-trends.html.

46 Bob Duffy, “Rethinking Employer Brands,” Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership 5 (June 2010): 10–15.

47 Lydell C. Bridgeford, “Blinding Them with Science,” Employee Benefit News 25 (January 2011): 8–9.

48 Paul Jacobs, “Emergence of Human Techsourc- ing,” Human Resources Magazine 16 (February/ March 2012): 14–15.

49 Brandon Rigoni and Jim Asplund, “Strengths- Based Cultures Attract Top Talent,” Gallup (Web site), (January 3, 2017). Accessed January 4, 2017, www.gallup.com/businessjournal/ 200123/strengths-based-cultures-attract- top-talent.aspx?utm_source=alert&utm_ medium=email&utm_content=morelink&utm_ campaign=syndication.

50 Soumya Gaddam, “Modeling Employer Brand- ing Communication: The Softer Aspect of HR Marketing Management,” ICFAI Journal of Soft Skills 2 (2008): 45–55.

51 Kelly Borth, “Live Your Brand,” Smart Business Columbus 19 (March 2011): 6.

52 “Career Growth,” PwC Web site. Accessed January 3, 2017, at www.pwc.com/us/en/ careers/campus/why-pwc/career-growth.html.

53 “How L’Oréal developed a New Employee Value Proposition (EVP),” Link Human (Web site). Accessed January 3, 2017, at http://linkhumans.com/employer-branding/ loreal-employer-value.

54 Ronald J. Alsop, “Cultural Awareness,” Work- force Management 90 (July 2011): 42.

55 Brett Minchington, “Where to Next for Employer Branding?” Human Resources Maga- zine 16 (October/November 2011): 22.

56 Small Business Association, “Small Business Profile, 2016.” Accessed January 3, 2017, at www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/advocacy/ all_profiles_10_18_16.pdf.

57 Kelly Brent Massey and Nathanael Campbell, “Human Resource Management: Big Problem for Small Business,” Entrepreneurial Executive 18 (2013): 77–88.

58 Dan Emerson, “When to Outsource HR Duties and When to Hire,” Finance & Commerce (February 20 2013). Accessed May 7, 2014, at http://finance-commerce.com/2013/02/ when-to-outsource-hr-duties-and-when-to-hire/.

59 Susan J. Wells, “Big Fish, Small Ponds,” HR Magazine 58 (July 2013): 30–36.

60 Jenny Hirschkorn, “Business Etiquette: The Importance of Cultural Sensitivity,” The Tele- graph online (January 30, 2014). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.telegraph.co.uk.

61 DeeDee Doke, “Perfect Strangers,” HR Maga- zine 49 (December 2004): 62–68.

62 Richard Miller, “Taste for Risk Varies Across Europe,” Business Insurance 43 (September 28, 2009): 9–10.

63 Stanley Bing, “Big Questions in the Middle Kingdom,” Fortune 167 (January 14, 2013): 100.

64 Norm Kamikow, “Lost in Translation,” Chief Learning Officer 8 (September 2009): 4.

65 Pankaj Ghemawat, “The Cosmopolitan Corpora- tion,” Harvard Business Review 89 (May 2011): 92–99.

66 Erin Meyer, “When Culture Doesn’t Translate,” Harvard Business Review, October 2015, p. 6.

67 Ibid. 68 “Cultural Gaps Can Spell Merger Disaster,”

Executive Leadership 28 (March 2013): 4. 69 Robert Whipple, “Avoid Common Major Pitfalls

of Restructuring,” T+D 67 (September 2013): 60–63.

70 John Freivalds, “Nokia Comes to the US: Cul- tural Differences,” MultiLingual 20 (September 2009): 30–31.

71 David Kesmode, “Bitter Brew: The Continued Budweiser/InBev Culture Clash,” Wall Street Journal online (May 2, 2011). Accessed May 7, 2014, at http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2011/05/02/ bitter-brew-the-continued-budweiserinbev- culture-clash/.

72 Matthew Boyle, Matthew Campbell, and Thomas Buckley, “SABMiller Better Get Ready for a CEO Who Doesn’t Like to Have Fun,” Bloomberg online (October 9, 2015). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.bloomberg.com.

73 Anumeha Chaturvedi, “Loving It in Tokyo,” Business Today 20 (August 21, 2011): 127.

74 Brad Klontz, “Multi-Culti Competence,” On Wall Street 23 (August 2013): 32–34.

75 Kathy Novak, “Never Say No! South Korea’s Pressure-Cooker Work Culture,” CNN (July 23, 2015). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.cnn. com.

76 “South Korea’s Hangover,” Al Jazeera (February 5, 2016). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www. aljazeera.com.

77 Kathryn Tyler, “What Are Global Cultural Competencies?” HR Magazine 56 (May 2011): 44–46.

78 Julie Barker, “The Cultural Divide,” Incentive 182 (March 2008): 2–6. Cultural barriers are not easily overcome.

79 Susan Rohwer, “Balancing Family and Work Shouldn’t Be Hazardous to Your Employment,” The Los Angeles Times online (February 19, 2014). Accessed January 17, 2017, at www .latimes.com.

80 Lisa Fernandez and John Schuppe, “Yahoo Expands Maternity Leave After Banning Tele- commuting,” CNBC online (April 30, 2013). Accessed January 17, 2017, at http://www.cnbc .com/id/100689956.

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28

2.1 Discuss what ethics means and the sources of ethical guidance.

2.2 Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics.

2.3 Define human resource ethics.

2

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

2.4 Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability.

2.5 Describe a social audit.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 2 Warm-Up.

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29

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: Choosing how ethical and socially responsible an organization needs to be and when it should be brings up difficult issues all managers may have to address as they perform their duties. These issues can and do shape their decisions. HR professionals play a significant role in help- ing organizations start and stay on a path of ethical practice, corporate social responsibility, and sustainability. Let’s explore the role of HR professionals in managing ethical obligations and considerations related to corporate social responsibility and sustainability.

Defining Ethics and the Sources of Ethical Guidance Ethics is the discipline dealing with what is good and bad, right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation. Ethics at times may appear to be complicated because businesses are created to produce a short-term profit, which could potentially conflict with ethical behavior.1 Today most executives have a different view in that integrity and ethical values have an important place in business and should form the foundation of a company’s culture.2 Unfortunately, some companies and individuals still behave unethically, perhaps, because ethics moves to the back burner while executives focus on what they believe to be more important concerns.

Business Ethics The past corrupt conduct of corporations such as WorldCom and Enron and the senior managers who led them provides deplorable examples of just how unethical company leadership can be. We also forgot to guard against the type of ethical abuses that ultimately bankrupted companies such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. Unfortunately, unethical behavior manifests in other ways. For exam- ple, Volkswagen (VW) distinguished itself from the competition when it developed the so-called clean diesel engine. The company falsely advertised these engines as good for the environment

2.1 Discuss what ethics means and the sources of ethical guidance.

ethics Discipline dealing with what is good and bad, or right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation.

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30 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

because they emitted low levels of harmful nitrogen oxides. However, it was revealed that VW knowingly installed software, which, when the car was being tested for emissions, cleaned these pollutants from the exhaust. U.S. law enforcement agencies determined that the deception started in 1991 involving not only top executives but also lower level engineers.3 Since the news came to light, VW’s CEO resigned and numerous engineers were fired.4 Andrew McCabe, FBI deputy director, stated “It is now clear that Volkswagen’s top executives knew about this illegal activity and deliberately kept regulators, shareholders and consumers in the dark—and they did this for years.”5

CEOs should be clear that unethical behavior is not acceptable. In one survey, 67 percent of investors said they would move their account if they discovered the company was involved in unethical behavior.6 Jeff Immelt, General Electric’s (GE) CEO, begins and ends each annual meeting of 220 officers and 600 senior managers by restating the company’s fundamental integrity principles: “GE’s business success is built on our reputation with all stakeholders for lawful and ethical behavior.”7 At GE, when it comes to integrity violations, it is one strike and you are out. There are no second chances.8 The focus should be on just doing the right thing. The image of the business world would be in much better shape if this simple advice were followed. Hopefully, ethical standards are improving.

Most of the 500 largest corporations in the United States now have a code of ethics, which encompasses written conduct standards, internal education, and formal agreements on industry standards, ethics offices, social accounting, and social projects. Even so, business ethics scandals continue to be headline news. Lying on résumés, obstruction of justice, destruction of records, stock price manipulation, cutting corners to meet Wall Street’s expectations, fraud, waste, and abuse are unfortunately occurring all too often when those in business decide to make poor ethi- cal choices. Then, there are the corporate executives that took home millions even though their company failed and employees were laid off. Even more noteworthy is that some are rewarded for bad behavior. For instance, Jeff Smisek, former CEO of United Continental Holdings, was paid a severance package worth a whopping $36.8 million. He left the airline following alleged participation in a corruption scandal.9

However, business is not alone. There is virtually no occupation that has not had its own pain- ful ethical crises in recent years. There were the teachers who provided answers on standardized tests to improve their schools’ performance scores. Doctors who make money by falsely billing Medicare do not even make the headlines anymore. Certainly, a devastating blow to society has been dealt by business, and ethical breaches in business continue today.

Compliance with the law sets the minimum standard for ethical behavior; ethics, however, is much more. There must be leaders who are able and willing to instill ethics throughout the culture of the organization. Ethics is about deciding whether an action is good or bad and what to do about it if it is bad. Ethics is a philosophical discipline that describes and directs moral conduct. Those in management make ethical (or unethical) decisions every day. Do you hire the best-qualified person, who is a minority? Do you forget to tell a candidate about the dangerous aspect of a certain job? Some ethical decisions are major and some are minor. But decisions in small matters often set a pattern for the more important decisions a manager makes. Attitudes such as “It’s standard practice,” “It’s not a big deal,” “It’s not my responsibility,” and “I want to be loyal” are simply not acceptable.10 The Roman philosopher Cicero echoed this when he said, “It is a true saying that one falsehood leads easily to another.”11 In the sixteenth century, Sir Thomas More said, “If virtue were profitable, common sense would make us good and greed would make us saintly.”12 More knew that virtue is not profitable, so people must make hard choices from time to time.

Sources of Ethical Guidance The sources of ethical guidance should lead to our beliefs or a conviction about what is right or wrong. Most would agree that people have a responsibility to avail themselves to these sources of ethical guidance. In short, individuals should care about what is right and wrong and not just be concerned with what is expedient. One might use several sources to determine what is right or wrong, good or bad, and moral or immoral. These sources include the Bible and other holy books. They also include the small voice that many refer to as conscience. Many believe that conscience is a gift of God or the voice of God. Others see it as a developed response based on the internaliza- tion of societal mores. Another source of ethical guidance is the behavior and advice of the people psychologists call “significant others”—our parents, friends, and role models and members of our churches, clubs, and associations.

HR Web Wisdom

International Business Ethics Institute www.business-ethics.org

The Institute was founded in 1994 in response to the growing need for transnational organizations in the field of business ethics.

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Laws also offer guidance to ethical behavior, prohibiting acts that can be especially harmful to others. They codify what society has deemed to be unacceptable.13 If a certain behavior is ille- gal, most would consider it to be unethical as well. There are exceptions, of course. For example, through the 1950s, laws in most southern states relegated black Americans to the backs of buses and otherwise assigned them inferior status. Martin Luther King Jr. resisted such laws and, in fact, engaged in civil disobedience and other nonviolent forms of resistance to their enforcement. King won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts.

Two conditions must exist if an individual or organization is to be considered ethical. First, ethics consists of the strength of the relationship between what an individual or an organization believes to be moral and correct and what available sources of guidance suggest is morally cor- rect. For example, suppose a manager believes it is acceptable not to hire minorities, even though almost everyone condemns this practice. This person would not be considered ethical. Having strong beliefs about what is right and wrong and basing them on the proper sources may have little relationship to what one does.

Second, ethics consists of the strength of the relationship between what one believes and how one behaves. For example, if a manager knows that it is wrong to discriminate but does so anyway, the manager is also unethical. If a board of directors considers it wrong to pay exces- sively high salaries relative to the CEO’s job performance, yet pays salaries that are excessive in this context, this behavior is also unethical. Generally, a person is not considered ethical unless the person satisfies both conditions.

For most professionals, there are codes of ethics that prescribe certain behavior. Without this conscience that has developed, it might be easy to say, “Everyone does it,” “Just this once won’t hurt,” or “No one will ever know.” Some still believe that greed is acceptable if the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) or other regulatory agencies do not find out.14 Fortunately, the HRM profession subscribes to a code of ethics, which we discuss later in this chapter.

Legislating Ethics In 1907, Teddy Roosevelt said, “Men can never escape being governed. If from lawlessness or fickleness, from folly or self-indulgence, they refuse to govern themselves, then in the end they will be governed [by others].”15 Many contend that ethics cannot be legislated. Although laws cannot mandate ethics, they may be able to identify the baseline separating what is good and what is bad. Much of the current legislation was passed because of business ethics breakdowns. There have been at least four attempts to legislate business ethics since the late 1980s. We discuss some of these laws next.

PROCUREMENT INTEGRITY ACT The Procurement Integrity Act of 1988 prohibits the release by government employees of source selection and contractor (for the purposes of this act, a business that enters into contracts with government to provide goods or services) bid or proposal information. Examples of information contained in bids include employee pay rates and proprietary information about the contractor’s business processes. Further, this act applies this restriction to non-government employees who provided consulting services on procurement matters. Finally, a former government employee who served in certain positions on a procurement action or contract more than $10 million is barred from receiving compensation as an employee or consultant from that contractor for one year. The act was passed after there were reports of military contracts for $500 toilet seats. There was also a $5,000 hammer.

FEDERAL SENTENCING GUIDELINES FOR ORGANIZATIONS ACT The second attempt occurred with the passage of the 1992 Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizations (FSGO) Act, which outlined an effective ethics training program and explained the seven minimum requirements for an effective program to prevent and detect violations.16 The FSGO promised softer punishments for wayward corporations that already had ethics programs in place. In the law were recommendations regarding standards, ethics training, and a system to anonymously report unacceptable conduct. Executives were supposed to be responsible for the misconduct of those lower in the organization. If executives were proactive in their efforts to prevent white-collar crime, it would lessen a judgment against them and reduce the liability. Organizations responded

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32 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

by creating ethics officer positions, installing ethics hotlines, and developing codes of ethics. But it is one thing to have a code of ethics and quite another to have this code instilled in all employees from top to bottom.

CORPORATE AND AUDITING ACCOUNTABILITY, RESPONSIBILITY, AND TRANSPARENCY ACT The third attempt at legislating business ethics was the Corporate and Auditing Accountability, Responsibility and Transparency Act of 2002, which criminalized many corporate acts that were previously relegated to various regulatory structures. Known as the Sarbanes–Oxley Act, its primary focus is to redress accounting and financial reporting abuses in light of corporate scandals.17 The Sarbanes–Oxley Act was intended to eliminate or at least reduce conf licts of interest by requiring audit-committee-level pre-approval for non-audit services auditors at companies they audit and enforcing a code of ethics on senior client financial management.18 The act contains broad employee whistle-blower protections that subject corporations and their managerial personnel to significant civil and criminal penalties for retaliating, harassing, or discriminating against employees who report suspected corporate wrongdoing. The whistle- blower protections of the act apply to corporations listed on U.S. stock exchanges; companies otherwise obligated to file reports under the Securities and Exchange Act; and officers, employees, contractors, subcontractors, and agents of those companies.

The act states that management may not discharge, demote, suspend, threaten, harass, or in any other manner discriminate against an employee protected by the act. It protects any employee who lawfully provides information to governmental authorities concerning conduct he or she reasonably believes constitutes mail, wire, or securities fraud; violations of any rule or regulation issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); or violations of any other federal law relating to fraud against shareholders. The act evidently has teeth because in the Bechtel v. Competitive Technologies Inc. (2003) Supreme Court case involving wrongful termination under Sarbanes–Oxley’s whistle-blower protection rule, the Court ruled that the company violated the act by firing two employees and ordered them reinstated. They were fired because during a meet- ing they had raised concerns about the company’s decision not to report, on its SEC filing, an act they thought should have been disclosed.19

The law prohibits loans to executives and directors. It requires publicly traded companies to disclose whether they have adopted a code of ethics for senior officers. The act does not require banks and bank-holding companies that report to the SEC to have a code of ethics, but if an SEC reporting company does not have one, it must explain why.20 However, as former SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt said, “While the Sarbanes–Oxley Act has brought about significant change, the greatest change is being brought about not by regulation or legislation, but by humiliation and embarrassment and private rights of action.”21

DODD–FRANK WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT The fourth, the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd–Frank Act), was signed into law in 2010. The act was brought on by the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, which resulted in the loss of 8 million jobs, failed businesses, a drop in housing prices, and wiped out personal savings of many workers. As the financial crisis advanced, it became clear that executive compensation played a major role in the financial services sector as well as in the capital markets following the collapse of investment services firms such as Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, and AIG.22 The Dodd–Frank Act enhances the transparency of executive compensation practices. The act requires the companies that trade stock on public exchanges to comply with several provisions of which we describe three. The first provision requires say on pay. Say on pay gives company shareholders the right to vote yes or no on executive compensation. Although the say on pay provision guarantees shareholders the right to vote on executive compensation proposals, the vote is non-binding. The non-binding vote advises the company’s board of directors of possible concerns about the structure of executive compensation packages, including excessive perks and the lack of clarity between compensation and business results. The board may choose to modify the proposed compensation package.

The second provision details independence requirements for compensation committee members and their advisors, such as compensation consultants and legal counsel. Members of compensation committees typically receive compensation for their services, and this practice is acceptable. However, possible violations of the Dodd–Frank independence requirement may arise when at least one committee member also receives compensation as a company employee. For

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example, a compensation committee member who also serves as the company’s executive vice president may be considered violating the independence requirement.

The third provision addresses whistle-blower protection. In the legal use of the term, a whis- tle-blower is someone who participates in an activity that is protected. Corporate whistleblowing involves ethics, a topic of this chapter. It requires an individual to choose between personal ethics and the status quo. Often whistle-blowers view themselves as the company’s conscience.23 The use of whistle-blowers has been around since 1863 when President Abraham Lincoln signed into law the Federal False Claims Act, which was designed to protect the United States from purchases of fake gunpowder during the Civil War.24 The number of whistle-blower suits has increased dra- matically in recent years under federal and state laws aimed at uncovering fraud and protecting the public. Since 2007, the Justice Department recovered more than $3 billion in taxpayer funds thanks to whistle-blowers, who originated hundreds of lawsuits.25 In 2015 alone, whistle-blowers shared $501 million of the proceeds.26

☛ F Y I The number of whistle-blower tips has increased dramatically since the passage of the Dodd–Frank Act:

$ Fiscal Year 2011: 334 $ Fiscal Year 2012: 3,001 $ Fiscal Year 2013: 3,238 $ Fiscal Year 2014: 3,620 $ Fiscal Year 2015: 3,923 $ Fiscal Year 2016: 4,21827

The Dodd–Frank Act contains a whistle-blower protection provision, which is shaped after the successful IRS program. In passing the act, Congress believed that award programs were a good method to get people to provide fraud information to responsible law enforcement officials. The act requires the Securities SEC to give an award to qualified whistle-blowers of between 10 and 30 percent of the total amount obtained if the information is voluntarily provided and leads to a successful enforcement or related action. The act also improves whistle-blowers’ retaliation protection from their employers through the expansion of the whistle-blower protections of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002. Firms may not directly or indirectly discharge, demote, suspend, threaten, harass, or in any way discriminate against whistle-blowers that provide information to the SEC as specified in the program.28 This is important because in the past whistle-blowers often were fired, demoted, blacklisted, or quit under duress. Former SEC Chair Mary L. Scha- piro said, “While the SEC has a history of receiving a high volume of tips and complaints, the quality of the tips we have received has been better since Dodd–Frank became law, and we expect this trend to continue.”29 The most common complaint categories reported by whistle- blowers were corporate disclosures and financials (22 percent), fraud offerings (156 percent), and manipulation (11 percent).30 Until the end of 2016, the largest award to a whistle-blower totaled $30 million.31

Many believe that information provided by whistle-blowers is much more effective in uncov- ering wrongdoings than are external auditors. In testimony to the Senate Banking Committee, Certified Fraud Examiner Harry Markopolos stated that “whistle-blower tips detected 54.1 percent of uncovered fraud schemes in public companies. External auditors detected a mere 4.1 percent of fraud schemes.”32

Companies have some uneasiness regarding the whistle-blower provision of the Dodd–Frank Act.33 A recent survey of senior legal, compliance, and HR executives at publicly traded or highly regulated companies found that 96 percent expressed either moderate or great concerns about potential whistle-blower complaints.34 The major concern is that the rules run counter to a firm’s internal compliance efforts.35 Companies are afraid that employees will not go through internal channels first and instead go directly to government authorities to collect the reward.36 Another fear is that an employee might have another grievance with the company and use the whistle- blower provision to get back at the company.

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34 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Creating an Ethical Culture and a Code of Ethics Ethics is an important component of an organization’s culture. And it’s turning out to be more key for organizations to conduct business in an ethical fashion. Why? The public insists on it. Customers call for it. Most companies that take ethics seriously have a code of ethics that codifies ethical principles and guides employees to behave ethically. Let’s explore HR professionals’ roles in facilitating ethical cultures and codes of ethics.

Ethical Culture Mark Twain once said, “Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.”37 This is certainly good advice for both employees and employers if the firm wants to create an ethical culture. Saying that a company has an ethical culture and having one may be two differ- ent things. Culture is concerned with the way people think, which affects the way that they act. Changing an organization’s culture thus requires modifying the common way of thinking of its members.38 Organizations with strong ethical cultures take steps to ensure that their standards are widely accessible, promoted, and followed by their leaders and employees.39 For example, the Volkswagen debacle was not supposed to happen. The Volkswagen Code of Conduct was 24 pages long and had a foreword by Martin Winterkorn, who was then the company’s CEO, and other top executives saying, “We stand for respectable, honest, and actions in everyday business that are in accordance with rules, and we commit ourselves to the following Code of Conduct.”40 Even with the ethical code, it is apparent that Volkswagen’s top management pursued business as usual.

One way for a firm to create and sustain an ethical culture is to audit ethics, much like a company audits its finances each year.41 An ethics audit is simply a systematic, independent, and documented process for obtaining evidence regarding the status of an organization’s ethical culture. It takes a closer look at a firm’s ethical culture instead of just allowing it to remain unexamined. An ethical culture is made up of factors such as ethical leadership, accountability, and values. The climate with top management is fundamental to a company’s ethical culture.42 Ethical leadership begins with the board of directors and CEO and contin- ues to middle managers, supervisors, and employees.43 Building an ethical culture that lasts requires a foundation of practices that continue even when leaders change.44 The following Watch It video illustrates how employees and members of management are brought together to enact a change within the company. Their goal is to limit the negative environmental impacts of their company as much as possible by applying the best practices concept to their everyday activities.

2.2 Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Patagonia: Ethics and Social Responsibility and to respond to questions.

According to the Corporate Executive Board in Arlington, Virginia, companies with weak ethical cultures experience 10 times more misconduct than companies with strong ethical cul- tures.45 In workplaces with a strong ethical culture, only 4 percent of employees feel pressure to compromise standards and commit misconduct compared to 15 percent in a weaker culture.46 That’s a noteworthy difference. As important as endorsing ethical cultures is, more companies need to get on board. A survey of compliance and ethics professionals revealed that only half maintain that promoting an ethical culture is a priority.47 Perhaps this is the case because only 13.3 percent believe that management embraces an ethical culture as a primary objective of ethics programs. The results are not much better when it comes to their view of the board of directors’ values. Only 15.6 percent of the respondents saw creating an ethical culture as the board’s primary objective.

For organizations to grow and prosper, good people must be employed. Recent studies suggest that six personality characteristics are useful predictors of ethical individuals.48 Individuals who

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are conscientious and morally attentive are more likely to recognize whether activities are ethical. Dutiful employees and those who are customer-oriented are more likely to take ethical challenges seriously. Individuals who are highly proactive and assertive are more likely motivated to rectify them. Dov Seidman, a management guru who advocates corporate virtue to many companies, believes that companies that “outbehave” their competitors ethically will generally outperform them financially.49 Further, according to the National Association of Colleges and Employers, the ethical—or unethical—behavior of an organization is a critical factor for new college graduates seeking jobs.50

Selecting the right people doesn’t ensure a strong ethical culture. Unfortunately, good people sometimes make unethical choices because the organization has allowed and reinforced dysfunc- tional behavior. A body of research suggests that there are five common ways that companies may lead good employees to make unethical choices:

$ It is psychologically unsafe to speak up. $ There is excessive pressure to reach unrealistic performance targets. $ Conflicting goals provoke a sense of unfairness. $ Ethical behavior is not part of the routine conversation. $ A positive example isn’t being set.51

Organizations need to be willing to change their ways. By fostering a strong ethical culture, firms are better able to gain the confidence and loyalty of their employees and other stakeholders, which can result in reduced financial, legal, and reputation risks, as well as improvements in orga- nizational performance. Organizations are redesigning their ethics programs to facilitate a broader and more consistent process that incorporates the analysis of outcomes and continual improve- ment. To build and sustain an ethical culture, organizations need a comprehensive framework that encompasses communication of behavior expectations, training on ethics and compliance issues, stakeholder input, resolution of reported matters, and analysis of the entire ethics program. Well- designed training programs can educate employees about what is and is not ethical. Effective training starts with the recognition that problems such as conflicts of interest are not recogniz- able to many employees.52 Oftentimes, companies just assume that employees naturally know the difference, which is not always the case. To make it work, involvement by top management is certainly necessary.

Code of Ethics A distinction needs to be made between a code of conduct and a code of ethics; the former should tell employees what the rules of conduct are. A code of ethics establishes the rules that the organization lives by. It helps employees know what to do when there is not a rule for something.53 Jim Ward, associate vice president of ethics and compliance at Georgetown Uni- versity, summed it up by saying, “You can’t draft enough rules to cover everything.”54 A broad- based participation of those subject to the code is important. For a company to behave ethically, it must live and breathe its code of ethics, train its personnel, and communicate its code through its vision statements. It cannot just print a manual that sits on a corporate shelf. The code is a statement of the values adopted by the company, its employees, and its directors and sets the official tone of top management regarding expected behavior. Many industry associations adopt such codes, which are then recommended to members. There are many kinds of ethical codes. An excellent example of a code of ethics was developed by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM). The six core provisions in the SHRM code of ethics are professional responsibility, professional development, ethical leadership, fairness and justice, conf licts of interest, and use of information.55 Another excellent example is the code of ethics developed by the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA). The IESBA recognizes that accountants and auditors feel bound by client confidentiality rules, making them reluctant to report any wrong doing. These ethical standards are designed to guide accountants who face such conf licts of interest. Stavros Thomadakis, chairman of the IESBA, stated that “It’s trying to bring about early, early detection, if you will, but also early action by management authorities.”56

There are good reasons to encourage industry associations to develop and promote codes of ethics. It is difficult for a single firm to pioneer ethical practices if its competitors take advantage of

code of ethics Establishes the rules that the organization lives by.

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36 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

unethical shortcuts. For example, U.S. companies must comply with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which prohibits bribes of foreign government officials or business executives. Obvi- ously, this law does not prevent foreign competitors from bribing government or business officials to get business, and such practices are common in many countries. This reality sometimes puts U.S. companies at a disadvantage. For instance, Johnson Controls violated the FCPA because one of its Chinese subsidiaries made nearly $5 million in illegal payments to employees of Chinese government-owned shipyards. The company avoided charges for its violations because it took immediate actions to rectify the problem. Johnson Controls’ CEO Alex Molinaroli showed that the company is poised to address ethical problems. He said: “The ability to identify and address issues when they do occur, reflects the company’s commitment to ethics, responsible management practices and the good governance systems that uphold them.”57

Just what should be included in a code of ethics? Topics typically covered might be business conduct, fair competition, and workplace and HR issues. For example, employees in purchas- ing would be shown what constitutes a conflict of interest. The same would occur for sales. At Walmart, it is considered unethical to accept gifts from suppliers. Gifts are either destroyed or given to charity. Fidelity International recently fired two Hong Kong-based fund managers over breaches of its internal code of ethics. Fidelity said, “Our routine checks discovered a pattern of behavior that breached our internal policies.”58 Some companies even include the subject of romantic relationships, which can sometimes lead to conflicts of interest. For instance, Fifth Third Bancorp fired its general counsel because she was engaged in a romantic relationship with Fannie Mae’s CEO. Fifth Third’s code of ethics states: “We all must avoid actual or apparent conflict of interest with Fifth Third or its Customers.”59 Fifth Third Bancorp’s leadership considered the relationship a possible conflict of interest because both companies conduct business with each other, and the appearance of conflict of interest even where one has not occurred could lead to public perception of impropriety. Fannie Mae’s approach was less punitive because it did not fire its CEO. Instead, the company’s board of directors prohibited the CEO from conducting any business transactions with Fifth Third Bancorp.

To keep the code on the front burner for employees, larger firms appoint an ethics officer. The ethics officer is the point person in guiding everyone in the company toward ethical actions. This individual should be a person who understands the work environment. To obtain the involvement of others within the organization, an ethics committee is often established.

Even the criteria for winning the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award have changed, and an increased emphasis on ethics in leadership is now stressed. The criteria say senior lead- ers should serve as role models for the rest of their organizations. Baldrige applicants are asked questions about how senior leaders create an environment that fosters legal and ethical behavior. They need to show how the leaders address governance matters such as fiscal accountability and independence in audits.

We have made a case for creating both an ethical culture and code of ethics. Is one more important than the other in promoting ethical business practice and employee behavior? Not sur- prisingly, there are differing opinions. Some business experts weigh culture as more important. For instance, Melissa Stapleton Barnes, chief ethics and compliance officer at Eli Lilly, maintains that emphasizing rules over culture can be detrimental to the organization because employees might seek loopholes to get around them.60 Rather, she believes that promoting an ethical culture motivates employees to seek ways to act ethically. Others assert that culture is too vague and should not be relied on to guide ethical behavior. Brian Beeghly, vice president of compliance at Johnson Controls, suggests that culture should be aligned with concrete practices, including compliance programs, training, policies, and procedures.61 Perhaps maintaining an ethical culture and enforcing a code of ethics are likely to provide the best outcomes.

Human Resource Ethics Human resource ethics is the application of ethical principles to HR relationships and activities. It is vitally important that HR professionals know the practices that are acceptable and unaccept- able and work to ensure that organizational members also have this awareness in dealing with others.

2.3 Define human resource ethics.

human resource ethics Application of ethical principles to human resource relationships and activities.

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Some believe that those in HR have a great deal to do with establishing an organization’s conscience.62 In fact, according to a SHRM report, integrity and ethical behavior rank in the top five competencies needed for senior HR leaders.63 Certainly ethics is a quality the HR profes- sionals should possess; it is the duty of HR professionals to help create an ethical climate in their organization.64

HR professionals can help foster an ethical culture, but that means more than just hang- ing the ethics codes posters on walls. Instead, because the HR professionals’ primary job is dealing with people, they must help to instill ethical practices into the corporate culture. Those values must be clearly communicated to all employees, early and often, beginning with the interview process, reinforced during employee orientation, and regularly recognized during performance reviews, public ceremonies, celebrations, and awards. They need to help establish an environment in which employees throughout the organization work to reduce ethical lapses. The ethical bearing of those in HR goes a long way toward establishing the credibility of the entire organization.

There are many topics through which HR professionals can have a major impact on ethics, and therefore, on creating an ethical corporate culture. Some ethical questions that might be considered include:

$ Do you strive to create a diverse workforce? $ Do you insist that job descriptions are developed to accurately depict jobs that are danger-

ous or hazardous? $ Do you strive to recruit and select the best-qualified applicant for the job? $ Are your training initiatives geared so that everyone will have an opportunity to receive the

best training and development possible? $ Is your performance management and appraisal system able to identify those who are

indeed the best producers and rewarded accordingly? $ Is your compensation and benefit system developed so that employees will view it as fair

and impartial? $ Does your organization make a sincere attempt to provide a safe and healthy work

environment? $ Does your organization attempt to develop a work environment in which employees will

not feel compelled to join a union? $ Are you fair and impartial when dealing with disciplinary action, promotion, transfer,

demotion, resignation, discharge, layoff, and retirement? $ Does your firm adhere to ethical norms when operating in the global environment?

HR should review, develop, and enforce organizational policies to ensure a high level of eth- ics throughout the organization. All employees should know what is ethical and unethical in their specific area of operations. It is insufficient to say that everyone should behave ethically. Let’s turn our attention to two areas where HR professionals use their expertise to promote practices and employee behavior in organizations: pay and training.

Linking Pay to Ethical Behavior The City of Los Angeles sued Wells Fargo Bank based on allegations that the company engaged in unlawful and fraudulent conduct. Bank employees routinely opened customer accounts with- out their authorization, and those accounts came with monthly fees. Los Angeles City Attorney Michael Feuer maintained that bank management was regularly, “abusing employees and telling them ‘to do whatever it takes’ to reach quotas on the number of new accounts they must open.”65 Shortly after the suit was filed, Wells Fargo agreed to settle the case out of court without admit- ting wrongdoing.66 The bank also agreed to reimburse customers for all of the fees associated with accounts the accounts in question. Clearly, management sent the signal that performance would be rewarded based on opening a highly unrealistic number of new accounts, and employees felt pressure to perform. Since this incident took place, Wells Fargo restructured its compensa- tion plan. Spokeswoman Mary Eshet stated that the new compensation plan, “eliminates sales goals, measures performance based on customer experience and adds more oversight and risk management.”67

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38 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Wells Fargo is just one of many companies where the ethics of pay practices are in question, highlighting the importance of linking pay to performance when discussing ethics. It is well known in the compensation world that “what you reward is what you get.” If the statement is correct, then a problem exists because most companies do not link pay to ethical behavior but base pay on entitlement and custom.68 A survey of 358 compliance and ethics professionals by the Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics (SCCE) and Health Care Compliance Association found that only a few companies have made ethics and compliance a process for determining how employees are compensated, and only about one company in six ties employee bonuses and incentives to ethical performance.69 In another survey, when asked how much impact the ethics and compliance function has on the compensation process for executives, just 34 percent of respondents said it had some or a great deal of impact. The majority indicated that compliance and ethics played very little (27 percent) or no role (29 percent), and the balance was unsure of the role of ethics and compliance.70 CEO Roy Snell of SCCE said, “The net result is that there is more work to be done in aligning business practices with stated commitment to compliant, ethical behavior.”71 For example, ethical expectation could be made part of the performance review and the results tied to pay raises.72 As one author recently stated, “When employees behave in undesirable ways, it’s a good idea to look at what you’re encouraging them to do.”73

☛ F Y I $ Eighty-one percent of companies provide ethics training.74

Ethics Training The FSGO Act outlined an effective ethics training program and explained the seven minimum requirements for an effective program to prevent and detect violations. The fourth requirement stated, “Educate employees in the company’s standards and procedures through publications and training.” Companies train employees on many topics, but ethics training is often not considered, which is a major oversight. Because of its inclusion within the FSGO, a brief discussion of ethics training will be provided in this chapter.

Companies that consistently rank high on the lists of best corporate citizens tend to make eth- ics training part of a company-wide initiative to promote integrity.75 Ethics training should be part of a proactive, not reactive, strategy. Regular training builds awareness of common ethical issues and provides tools for effective problem solving. Warren Buffett once said, “Pick out associates whose behavior is better than yours and you’ll drift in that direction.”76 Ethics training should begin at the top and continue through all levels in the organization.77 Ethics training should also take into consideration the differences in these levels. Although boards of directors and top man- agement set the ethical tone, middle managers are the ones who will likely be the first to receive reports of unethical behavior. Unfortunately, many companies do not follow this prescription. A survey of ethics and compliance officers revealed that board members receive less training about important matters including cybersecurity, workplace harassment, and conflicts of interest than others in the company.78 For instance, only 12 percent provides training to board members about workplace harassment versus 76 percent for employees.

KPMG believes that there are three fundamental factors in handing ethics issues: provide multiple channels for raising alarms, eliminate fear of retaliation for those who raise questions, and ensure consistent investigation and resolution of all matters reported. Individuals who report potential ethics violations could be subject to retaliation, so KPMG monitors performance reviews and other metrics to proactively identify retaliatory behavior. The credibility of the program requires all reports to be consistently investigated and resolved.79

Cisco created a unique ethics training program that showcased cartoon contestants singing about various ethical workplace situations found in Cisco’s Code of Business Conduct. Jeremy Wilson, manager, ethics office for Cisco Systems, Inc., said, “We wanted what was right for our employees, based upon our own risk analysis.” When Cisco created its program, it invited input

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If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Sales Incentives at Pinser Pharmaceuticals Quarterly sales reports are in at Pinser Phar-

maceuticals and Ben Ross looks forward to sharing the reports with the sales team. As a compensation analyst, Ben calculates sales commissions for the sales representatives, and high sales mean big ­paychecks for­the­team.­The­sales­representatives­receive­incentive­pay­ bonuses based on how many times doctors in their sales territory pre- scribe Pinser drugs. The number of prescriptions has increased with several of the popular drugs Pinser makes and the sales representatives that have the doctors writing the most prescriptions stand to benefit significantly. Ben knows that they have steep competition on some of their products, but he has also heard some rumors about how they stay ahead of competitors.

Apparently, many of the sales representatives are using some of their own extra earnings to earn the favor of the doctors. Gifts, dinners, and other incentives are provided to the doctors to encourage them to write Pinser prescriptions. At first he thought there might be a problem with this practice, but Ben knows that Pinser has a Code of Ethics and provides ethics training to all employees, so the sales representatives must know that their practices are acceptable. Ben understands that this is just the way business is done, and Ben’s job is just to make sure they get paid what they have earned.

☛ F Y I $ Eighty-eight percent feel their job is more fulfilling when they are provided opportunities to make

a positive impact on social or environmental issues.83

from more than 120 people from departments across the organization, including legal, human resources, IT security, and records management.80

Ethics training for global organizations is more complicated than preparing the training for U.S. employees. One must also train for the country in which the global company operates. Since 1994, LRN has helped 15 million people at 700 companies across the world simultaneously navigate legal and regulatory environments and foster ethical cultures.81 A few of their customers include CBS, Dow Chemical, eBay, 3M, and Siemens. Chris Campbell, creative director at LRN, says, “Localization is as important as the accuracy of the translation process. Learners need to be able to connect in a way that is believable to them.”82

Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Related to ethics are the concepts of corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves, and corporate sustainability focuses on the possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment. CSR and corporate sustainability differ from ethics in an important way. Ethics focus on individual decision making and behavior and the impact of ethical choices on employee welfare. As noted, CSR and corporate sustainability consider the broader impact of corporate activities on society.

Ethics, CSR, and corporate sustainability are everyone’s business. HR professionals par- ticularly concern themselves with establishing policies to promote ethical behavior and discour- age unethical behavior. In addition, the HRM function’s leadership works with other executive leadership to identify training opportunities for educating employees about how they may make positive contributions to these objectives and developing performance-based pay programs that align employee performance with CSR and social responsibility goals.

2.4 Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corpo- rate sustainability.

corporate sustainability Concerns with possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment.

corporate social responsibility (CSR) Implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves.

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40 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Corporate Social Responsibility As previously stated, CSR is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capacity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves. A recent survey revealed that 86 percent of consumers wanted companies to tell them more about the results of CSR efforts.84 Another survey revealed that 58 percent of respondents consider a company’s social and environmental commitments when deciding where to work: 58 percent said they would choose to work for a socially responsible company, even if the salary was less, and 51 percent indicated they won’t work for a company that doesn’t have strong social or environmental commitments.85 Many companies are listening. About 60 percent of companies offer workers paid time off to volunteer, and 33 percent of them volunteered in 2015—up from 28 percent in 2013.What do the following U.S. companies have in common: Johnson & Johnson, Cisco Systems, Inc., McCormick & Co, Inc., Allergan, plc, and Prologis Inc.? They have been identified as having a commitment to excellence in CSR and are included in the 2017 Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World.86 These companies have demonstrated the ability to manage the “triple bottom line” of social responsibility (society, environment, and economy).87 They represent the top 5 percent of socially responsible companies.

CSR is the model in which economic, social, and environmental responsibilities are satisfied concurrently.88 Figure 2-1 illustrates the layers of responsibility associated with CSR. When a corporation behaves as if it has a conscience, it is said to be socially responsible. CSR considers the overall influence of corporations on society at large and goes beyond the interests of share- holders. It is how a company behaves toward society. In many companies, social responsibility has moved from nice to do to must do.89 More and more companies are issuing CSR reports that detail their environmental, labor, and corporate-giving practices. Some firms, such as Burger King, have created the position of director of CSR.

Apparently, socially responsible behavior pays off on the bottom line. When GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt announced that the company would double its spending on green technology research, it was no grand attempt to save the planet; it was an example of astute business strategy. Immelt said, “We plan to make money doing it.”90 Social responsibility has also impacted the recruiting process. College graduates of today often seek out corporations that have a reputation for being socially responsible, which was not often the case in the past. In fact, job seekers overall tend to be more attracted to organizations known for CSR.91

Procter & Gamble (P&G) has long believed it has a responsibility for the long-term benefit of society as well as the company. Over the years, P&G has pursued programs to strengthen U.S. education, to encourage employment opportunities for minorities and women, to develop and implement environment-protection technology, and to encourage employee involvement in civic activities and the political process.

Deborah Leipziger, an Ethical Corporation Institute researcher, said, “The more credible efforts tend to be led by key players within a company.”92 An organization’s top executives usually determine a corporation’s approach to social responsibility. For example, under executive chair- man and (former) CEO Howard Schultz, Starbucks Coffee focuses its corporate responsibility

HR Web Wisdom

Business for Social Responsibility www.bsr.org

This is a global organization that helps member companies achieve success in ways that respect ethi- cal values, people, communities, and the environment.

FIGURE 2-1 Carroll’s Pyramid of Corporate Social Responsibility Source: SHRM Foundation, “HRM’s Role in Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Sustainability,” 2012, Alexandria, VA: SHRM Foundation, page 4. Accessed January 14, 2017, at www. shrmfoundation.org.

discretionary

Ethical

legal

Economic Economic responsibilities: The first responsibility of any organization is to deliver an acceptable return for shareholders (while contributing to local and global economies through their core business).

Legal responsibilities: The second aspect of responsibility requires that organizations operate within the law at all locations in which they do business.

Ethical responsibilities: The third layer of the pyramid requires organizations to consider social and environmental impacts of their operations and, as far as possible, to do no harm while pursuing business interests.

Discretionary responsibilities: The fourth layer of responsibility is to proactively seek opportunities to make a positive contribution to society beyond profitability, compliance, and business ethics. At the discretionary, or voluntary level, organizations have a responsibility to understand broad stakeholder needs and to address societal concerns though their business practices.

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efforts on three main areas: ethical sourcing, environmental stewardship, and community involve- ment.93 Starbucks approaches ethical sourcing by helping the farmers and suppliers who grow and produce their products use responsible growing methods. Environmental stewardship has been one of the more difficult activities for Starbucks. After all, Starbucks sells billions of beverages in disposable cups each year in the United States, most of which end up in landfills. The company has invested substantial amounts of money to come up with recyclable cups—one that can be recycled into other paper products again and again. Not only has this process been time consum- ing and expensive, but Starbucks has had to devote substantial time and resources to educating its customers and encourage responsible disposal of empty cups. In addition, Starbucks also looks after the communities where stores are located. It provides financial support and employees are encouraged to get involved in volunteering in their communities. For instance, Starbucks spear- headed the 100,000 Opportunities Hiring Initiative, which is a coalition of companies that offer meaningful work to youths.

The same can be said about leadership’s role in supporting environmental sustainability. For instance, SC Johnson Company collaborated with a European company to develop an environmentally friendly alternative to the original formulation of Saran Wrap, which had come under criticism for containing polyvinyl chloride and is known to have ill side effects. Even though the reformulated Saran Wrap product does not work as well as the original, the company’s leadership decided not to return to the original formulation despite consumer prefer- ences. SC Johnson’s CEO Fisk Johnson III and leadership team faced a dilemma: jeopardize losing customers and market share by replacing the original product with a lesser one or the goodwill the company had developed over the years with consumers and other stakeholders.94 Ultimately, the company sacrificed substantial market share and profits in favor of helping to protect the environment.

One of the best benchmarks for defining social responsibility in manufacturing is the one- page set of operating principles developed 60 years ago by Robert Wood Johnson, then Johnson & Johnson’s chairman of the board. The document is still in use today and addresses supporting good works and charities.95

During the Vietnam War, Dow Chemical gained a bad reputation for not being socially responsible because it produced the deadly chemical agent napalm. As a result, Dow had dif- ficulty recruiting the best scientists and other professionals. To overcome this image, Dow built a campaign that highlighted how Dow has benefitted agricultural production. Once people saw the positive side of Dow, its ability to recruit and retain the best chemists improved.96 However, the chemical industry continues to face widespread public mistrust despite being an enabler of advances that are vital to solving global challenges as well as efforts to improve product and process safety.97

Thus far, only the virtues of CSR have been provided. However, the question of whether businesses should promote CSR is at times hotly debated and not all companies have embraced the concept.98 Some have challenged the concept that doing well is doing good (DWDG). They believe that although appealing to some, DWDG is also profoundly wrong.99 Milton Friedman was a U.S. economist, statistician, academic, and author who taught at the University of Chicago for more than three decades and was a recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. In his book Capitalism and Freedom, he argued that the only social responsibility of business was to increase its profits. According to Friedman, as a firm creates wealth for its shareholders, society will also be benefited.100 Friedman disciples continue to condemn CSR as a hodgepodge of “value-destroying nonsense.”101

These days, more employers are publicly endorsing a culture of ethics and social responsibil- ity. However, some believe that it is being done more as a public relations campaign. For instance, the Wounded Warrior Project is a not-for-profit organization that helps wounded military service members, particularly facilitating access to mental health services. Television campaigns that showcase service members’ testimonial about how they (and their families) have benefited from the organization’s generosity. However, several employees claimed that the organization’s lead- ership routinely diverted money away from helping wounded service members to throw lavish parties and executives of the organization were subsequently fired. Certainly, Wounded Warrior is a legitimate organization; however, this incident illustrates that leaders’ behavior may sometimes be inconsistent with the mission they declare to uphold.

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42 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Also, long before the enormous oil spill in 2010, BP promoted itself as being eco-friendly. Its literature stated that BP stood for “Beyond Petroleum.” BP marketed itself as a producer of alternative energies, an image that was seriously damaged by the devastating oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Instead of spending billions on eco-friendly energy and building an employer brand campaign around it, many believe that BP would have been much better off if it had spent more time and effort in training its employees on its oil drilling platforms, establishing stronger safety protocols, and waiting until they were safe to operate. Even during this public relations campaign, BP had a history of safety violation. BP had been “fined more than $100 million for safety violations that led to deaths of workers, explosions of refineries, and leaking pipelines.”102 The following Watch It video describes the environmental impact of another oil company’s spill and leadership’s reaction to the disaster.

☛ F Y I The 2017 Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations were most commonly found in the following countries:

$ United States: 19 companies $ France: 12 companies $ United Kingdom: 11 companies $ Canada and Germany: 6 companies $ Netherlands: 5 companies105

Corporate Sustainability Corporate sustainability has evolved from the more traditional view of CSR. According to the World Commission on Environment and Sustainability, the narrow definition of sustainability is, “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”106 The Dow Jones World Sustainability Index (DJSI) provides a good working definition of this term. They define it as, “An approach to creating long-term shareholder value by embracing opportunities and managing risks deriving from economic, environmental and social trends and challenges.”107 In recent years, sustainability has been

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Co Responsible for Oil Spill Under Fire and to respond to questions.

Brighter Planet, a sustainability technology company, discovered in a recent survey that although more firms are engaging in green activities, the effectiveness of these efforts has declined.103 Some believe that the problem with CSR is that it consists of a universal set of guidelines such as the “triple bottom line” (society, environment, and economy) mentioned previ- ously. To be “socially responsible,” each firm should follow the same guidelines instead of what would be the most appropriate strategy for each firm. Using this logic, it would be more logical for oil companies such as BP to focus on being profitable, yet be an environmentally conscious oil company. Fast-food restaurants such as McDonald’s and retailers such as Walmart should each use a different set of rules to do the same thing in their own industries.

There are those who believe that all shareholders should not be required to be involved in CSR investments. They think that only investors who want to be involved should participate. These investors would do so with the understanding that the objective is not just to make money but also to do good. For example, an oil company such as Exxon could establish an alternative-energy subsidiary. Exxon would own a controlling stake, but funding would come from new investors who want to support alternative energy and thus be socially responsible. If the subsidiary was unsuccessful, the losses would be confined to the new investors. If it succeeded, the profits would be shared by all shareholders.104

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expanded to include the social, economic, environmental, and cultural systems needed to support an organization. This type of organization can continue both now and in the future. A recent study revealed that 90 percent of the 250 world’s largest companies reported information about their corporate responsibility initiatives.108 Also, 154 U.S. companies voluntarily signed the American Business Act on Climate Pledge to demonstrate their additional commitment to promoting environmental sustainability.109 Among the companies signing the pledge, Berk- shire Hathaway Energy promised to retire more than 75 percent of its coal-fueled generating capacity in Nevada by 2019.

Corporate sustainability may be thought of as being a business and investment approach that strives to use the best business practices to meet the needs of current and future shareholders. According to Louis D. Coppola, executive vice president of the Government & Accountability Institute, “Leaders increasingly understand the critical importance of adopt- ing and implementing strategies, products, services, programs and initiatives that ref lect the twenty-first century business environment, and the interest of investors and important stake- holders.”110 HR professionals play an important role in promoting corporate sustainability objectives. Figure 2-2 illustrates how HR professionals can use their expertise toward this end. Today it relates to how an organization’s decisions could affect society and the environment. Essentially it is about how a firm handles its business while understanding how these decisions may affect others. One could think of corporate sustainability in a business sense as providing long-term profitability. Thus, sustainability should be a fundamental part of business strategy, product development, talent development, and capital investment. Some organizations have emphasized the importance of corporate sustainability by establishing the position of chief sustainability officer.111

Others such as Johnson & Johnson prefer to see it developed into the overall culture of the firm. Tish Lascelle, Johnson & Johnson’s senior director of environment, said, “Sustainability is embedded in our culture. It’s been a part of who we are for more than 65 years, long before the notion of sustainability became trendy.”112 The following Watch It video illustrates how a com- pany has taken to become, and remain, a “mission-driven business” with corporate social respon- sibility as one of its mission’s core values.

HR Web Wisdom

Deloitte Sustainability Are You Overlooking Opportunities? www.deloitte.com/us/ sustainability

Many executives are turning to sustainability to help improve the bottom line.

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Honest Tea: Corporate Social Responsibility and to respond to questions.

Source: SHRM Foundation, “HRM’s Role in Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Sustainability,” 2012, Alexandria, VA: SHRM Foundation, page 8. Accessed January 14, 2017, at www. shrmfoundation.org.

FIGURE 2-2 How to Embed Sustainability Using HRM Tools

$ Employee attraction: using the organization’s commitment to sustainability in recruitment helps attract more applicants and at the same time ensures the right “fit” with the company’s sustainability goals.

$ Employee attitudes: Although the research is unclear whether an organization’s commitment to sustainability leads to higher employee retention, it does have posi- tive effects on employee commitment and job satisfaction.

$ Employee skills and knowledge: Many organizations provide initial and ongoing training and development on the knowledge and skills needed to achieve their sustainability goals, although the research on the impact of achieving sustainability goals is still limited.

$ Employee sustainability goal attainment: Including sustainability targets in evalua- tion and compensation systems can lead to greater attention to and achievement of those goals.

$ Sustainability organizational climate: Though the research is lacking in this area, a sustainability strategy will likely fail if the company’s organizational climate does not appropriately support it.

$ Employee sustainability behaviors: Supervisory and organizational support can lead to more sustainability behaviors in employees.

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44 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Numerous companies are working toward becoming eco-friendly. In 2016, approximately 81 percent of the S&P 500 Index companies reported having an active sustainability program in place, up from 20 percent in 2011.113 For instance, Unilever has placed sustainability at the core of its business. The company promised by 2020 to double its sales even as it cuts its environ- mental footprint in half and sources all its agricultural products in ways that don’t degrade the Earth.114 Target’s waste-reduction efforts have cut waste by 70 percent. Home Depot attempts to make sure that wood and lumber sold in its stores come from sustainable forests. Corporate environmental responsibility for McDonald’s focuses on energy efficiency, sustainable packing and waste management, and green restaurant design.115 McDonald’s has eliminated the use of containers made with ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons, cut down on the amount and type of packaging it uses, and implemented a program of purchasing goods made from recycled materials. Walmart is working on sustainable initiatives. Solar panels are being installed in all the retailer’s super centers with unused energy being sold back into the energy grid, a cost-saving move for the community.116

Increasingly, environmentally sound and cost-cutting operating procedures are being included in firms’ business plans not only for their own employees, products, and facilities, but also for sup- pliers and trade partners. Walmart Stores Inc. has initiated and promoted sustainability not only in its own stores and production facilities, but also for its U.S. and global suppliers.117 Frito-Lay, which operates the world’s seventh-largest private delivery fleet, has put 176 all-electric box trucks on the road in places such as California, Texas, and the Pacific Northwest. The trucks are expected to cut diesel consumption by 500,000 gallons a year while limiting greenhouse emissions by 75 percent compared with combustion engines. The trucks will also cut annual maintenance costs by as much as $700,000.118 Coca-Cola Enterprises Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability Report stated that they have taken steps to reduce the number of calories per liter by 10 percent by 2020.119

PPG Industries recently issued a corporate sustainability report that provides information about the company’s financial performance, environmental metrics such as greenhouse gas emis- sions and energy use, safety statistics, stakeholder engagement, philanthropic activities, and awards and recognition. In the report, Charles E. Bunch, PPG chairman and CEO, said, “Sustainability is business as usual at PPG. An underlying principle for the company since its founding in 1883, a commitment to sustainability has been crucial to our long-term success.”120 Leading up to 2020, PPG will strive to reduce environmental impact, improve employees’ safety, health and well-being and encourage and report employee charitable donations and volunteerism.121 Dow Chemical’s way of thinking regarding sustainability is, “If you can’t do it better, why do it?” This philosophy is at the very heart of sustainability at Dow. Every decision is made with the future in mind.122

Institutional investors managing more than $1.6 trillion in assets are starting to put pressure on the world’s 30 largest stock exchanges to force companies to improve their sustainability reporting. Twenty-four institutional shareholders said they want it to be easier to judge the envi- ronmental, social, and governance risks of the firms in which they invest.123

Sustainability has also become extremely popular for companies operating in the global envi- ronment. Recently, Danone’s German division switched to a plastic made from plants (not oil) for its Activia yogurt packaging sold in Germany.124 Coca-Cola Enterprises in Great Britain has cut its carbon emissions by 470,000 tons, which is about a third of its 2020 target. It is also recycling 99 percent of the factory waste it produces, with five out of six of its production sites sending zero waste to landfills.125 Global polystyrene leader Styron LLC has more than 2,000 employees at 20 plants worldwide with annual sales of $5 billion. It begins each corporate meeting with the topic of sustainability. Employees’ bonuses are tied in to meeting sustainability goals. Recently, Styron introduced a recycled-content grade of polycarbonate at the Chinaplas trade show in Guangzhou, China.126 Renault partnered with Veolia Environment to build the world’s first zero-emissions, 100-percent renewable energy-reliant car manufacturing plant in Morocco.127

Conducting a Social Audit To overcome the negative publicity of corporate misdeeds and to restore trust, businesses are now conducting audits of their social responsibility activities and not just financial audits. A social  audit is a systematic assessment of a company’s activities in terms of its social impact.

2.5 Describe a social audit.

social audit Systematic assessment of a company’s activities in terms of its social impact.

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CHAPTER 2 • BuSINESS ETHICS, CoRPoRATE SoCIAl RESPoNSIBIlITy, ANd SuSTAINABIlITy 45

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the Management & Ethics simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Discuss what ethics means and the sources of ethical

guidance. Ethics is the discipline dealing with what is good and bad, right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation. Business ethics addresses matters of choices about right and wrong made by business leaders. One might use numerous sources to determine what is right or wrong, good or bad, and moral or immoral, such as holy books or one’s conscience. Another source of ethical guidance is the behavior and advice of people, including our parents, friends, and role models and members of our churches, clubs, and associations. For most professionals, there are codes of ethics that pre- scribe certain behavior.

2. Explore human resource management’s (HRM) role in creating an ethical culture and a code of ethics. An ethi- cal culture is made up of factors such as ethical leadership, accountability, and values. The climate at the top is funda- mental to a company’s ethical culture. Ethical leadership begins with the board of directors and CEO and continues to HR managers, all other managers, and supervisors. Building an ethical culture that lasts requires a foundation of practices that continue even when leaders change.

A code of ethics establishes the rules that the organi- zation lives by. Only a few companies have made ethics

and compliance a process for determining how employees are compensated.

3. Define human resource ethics. Human resource ethics is the application of ethical principles to HR relationships and activities.

4. Explain the concepts and practices related to corporate social responsibility and corporate sustainability. Cor- porate social responsibility is the implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capac- ity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves, and corporate sustainability focuses on the possible future impact of an organization on society, includ- ing social welfare, the economy, and the environment. According to the World Commission on Environment and Sustainability, the narrow definition of sustainability is, “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” In recent years, sustainability has been expanded to include the social, economic, environmental, and cultural systems needed to support an organization.

5. Describe a social audit. A social audit is a systematic assessment of a company’s activities in terms of its social impact.

Some of the topics included in the audit focus on core values such as social responsibility, open communication, treatment of employees, confidentiality, and leadership. Firms are now acknowledging responsibilities to various stakeholder groups other than corpo- rate owners.128

Some audits even set specific objectives in social areas. They are attempting to formally measure their contributions to various elements of society and to society. An increasing number of companies, as well as public and voluntary sector organizations, are trying to assess their social performance systematically. Three types of social audits are currently being used: (1) simple inven- tory of activities; (2) compilation of socially relevant expenditures; and (3) determination of social impact. The inventory is generally a good starting place. It consists of a listing of socially oriented activities undertaken by the firm. Here are some examples: minority employment and training, support of minority enterprises, pollution control, corporate giving, involvement in selected com- munity projects by executives, and a hard-core unemployment program. The ideal social audit would go well beyond a simple listing and involve determining the true benefits to society of any socially oriented business activity.

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46 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Ethical Leadership Assessment Organizations need ethical leadership from all employees, but especially from managers. In this PIA, you’ll see how much thought and effort goes into being ethical in your workplace behavior.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

Questions for Review 2-1. What are ethics and business ethics? 2-2. What are some sources of ethical guidance? 2-3. What laws have been passed to legislate ethics? 2-4. Why is it important to have a code of ethics? 2-5. Regarding business ethics, what does the statement

“what you reward is what you get” mean? 2-6. What are HR ethics?

2-7. What are the areas in which HR professionals can have a major impact on ethics?

2-8. What is corporate social responsibility? 2-9. What does corporate sustainability mean?

2-10. What are some of the practices companies can use to promote sustainability?

Key Terms ethics 29 code of ethics 35 human resource ethics 36

corporate social responsibility (CSR) 39

corporate sustainability 39 social audit 44

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

A Selection Quandary You are being promoted to a new assignment

within your company, and your boss has asked you to nominate one of your subordinates as your replacement. The possible candidates are Randy Carlton, who is obviously more qualified, and James Mitchell, who, though not as experienced, is much better liked by the workers. If Randy is given the promotion, you are not certain the workers will accept him as their leader. James, on the other hand, is a hard worker and is well liked and respected by the others, including Randy. As you labor over the decision, you think about how unfair it would be

to Randy if the feelings of the other workers kept him from getting a deserved promotion. At the same time, you feel that your primary responsibility should be to maintain the productivity of the work unit. If your former division fell apart after your departure, it would hurt your reputation, not to mention the company. 2-11. What would you do? 2-12. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethical decision?

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CHAPTER 2 • BuSINESS ETHICS, CoRPoRATE SoCIAl RESPoNSIBIlITy, ANd SuSTAINABIlITy 47

HRM by the Numbers Paying the Price for Underpaying Workers

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals should ensure that workers are paid for their work on a timely basis. Sometimes, companies pay workers less than what they should and there are various possible reasons such as intent to save money or in error. Either way, paying employ- ees lesser amounts than owed may violate the law. For instance, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which we will discuss in Chapter 3, requires employers to pay eligible workers a higher pay for overtime work. Specifically, the overtime pay rate equals 1.5 times the regular hourly pay rate for each additional hour exceeding 40 in a work week.

You’ve learned that the company has not been paying employees appropriately for overtime work hours. It is your responsibil- ity to calculate the amount of overtime pay owed to workers. After reviewing the payroll records, you discovered the following details:

1. Group 1: 225 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $18.00. For each of the past 15 work weeks, every- one worked 45 hours.

2. Group 2: 310 workers. Each worker earns a regular hourly pay rate of $21.00. For each of the past 20 work weeks, every- one worked 47 hours.

Every worker received regular pay for all their hours worked, but they did not receive an additional overtime pay amount.

Questions 2-13. Calculate the hourly overtime pay rate for each worker in (a) group 1 and (b) group 2. 2-14. How much money does the company owe all the workers in (a) group 1 over 15 weeks and (b) group 2 over 20 weeks? 2-15. How much money did the company save by not paying all the workers (groups 1 and 2 combined) overtime pay?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Most company leaders and employees will face ethical challenges at one time or another. Some employees will intentionally commit ethics violations for personal gain. Other employees may unknowingly do so. Whether you are a manager or HR profes- sional—an employee may bring concerns about possible ethical violations to your attention or you may observe them yourself. Once you are aware of a situation where ethics are in question, you are obligated to respond.

Action checklist for managers and HR—responding to allegations of unethical behavior HR takes the lead

Work with managers to ensure that they understand the company’s code of ethics and communicate the procedures for addressing instances of potential ethical violations.

Encourage managers to share the company’s code of ethics with employees, lead open discussions about everyone’s obliga- tion to behave ethically, and create a safe environment for employees to report their concerns about possible ethical violations to the appropriate authority.

Guide managers through the process of handling employees who are suspected of committing ethical violations.

Managers take the lead Educate HR on certain aspects of employee roles to better understand how unethical behavior may manifest in your depart- ment. Bringing HR up to speed creates a partnership for more effectively responding to possible ethical violations.

Discuss concerns with HR about possible ethical violations and follow through based on company policy and procedures. Work together with HR to implement a training plan on the company’s code of ethics and creating hypothetical scenarios illustrating ethical and unethical behavior relevant to your departmental activities.

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48 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

I N C I D E N T 1 An Ethical Flaw Amber Davis had recently graduated from college with a degree in general business. Amber was quite bright, although her grades did not reflect this. She had thoroughly enjoyed school, dating, playing tennis, and swimming, but found few stimulating academic endeavors. When she graduated, she had not found a job. Her dad was extremely upset when he discovered this, and he took it upon himself to see that Amber became employed.

Amber’s father, Allen Davis, was executive vice president of a medium-sized manufacturing firm. One of the people he contacted in seeking employment for Amber was Bill Garbo, the president of another firm in the area. Mr. Davis purchased many of his firm’s sup- plies from Garbo’s company. After telling Bill his problem, Allen was told to send Amber to Bill’s office for an interview. Amber went, as instructed by her father, and before she left Bill’s firm, she was surprised to learn that she had a job in the accounting department. Amber may have been lazy, but she certainly was not stupid. She realized that Bill had hired her because he hoped that his action would lead to future business from her father’s company. Although Amber’s work was not challenging, it paid better than the other jobs in the account- ing department.

It did not take long for the employees in the department to dis- cover the reason she had been hired; Amber told them. When a dif- ficult job was assigned to Amber, she normally got one of the other employees to do it, implying that Mr. Garbo would be pleased with that person if he or she helped her out. She developed a pattern of coming in late, taking long lunch breaks, and leaving early. When the department manager attempted to reprimand her for these unortho- dox activities, Amber would bring up the close relationship that her father had with the president of the firm. The department manager was at the end of his rope.

Questions 2-18. From an ethical standpoint, how would you evaluate the mer-

its of Mr. Garbo’s employing Amber? Discuss. 2-19. Now that she is employed, what course would you follow to

address her on-the-job behavior? 2-20. It may be that Mr. Garbo viewed the hiring of Amber as strictly

a business decision that would ensure receiving continued business from Amber’s father. What might be some negative results of this questionable ethical decision?

I N C I D E N T 2 Illegal Hiring The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) prohibits U.S. companies from bribing foreign officials; yet, the number of violations each year is stag- gering. Some violations center on the use of unethical HR practices. For example, the banking industry has been investigated for its internship and full-time employment hiring practices. The Bank of New York Mel- lon Corp. (BNY Mellon) gave internships to family members of foreign government officials. The bank’s leadership intended to maintain or increase business with a Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund. Intern- ship programs are legal and BNY Mellon has a legitimate internship program, but these internships were awarded outside the accepted pro- cedures and criteria used in its program. The U.S. SEC issued a cease- and-desist order, stating that “Delivering them [internships] ‘was seen

by certain relevant [bank] employees as a way to influence the officials’ decisions.”129 This is the first cease-and-desist order of which internship hiring was the subject. Phillip Bezanson, a Bracewell & Giuliani Law LLP (firm) partner stated that “the concept of ‘anything of value’ under the FCPA can be ‘really abstract.’. . .”130 In the end, the bank agreed to pay a $5 million penalty, give up $8.3 million, and pay $1.5 million in interest.131

2-21. What would you have done in response to learning about these facts?

2-22. What factors in this situation might influence a company to make less-than-ethical decisions?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

2-23. Why should a firm want to create an ethical culture?

2-24. Why is everyone not on board about corporate social responsibility?

As a group, identify a company that has been in the news for committing ethical violations, exhibiting poor social responsibil- ity, or engaging in practices that harmed the environment (sustainability). Consider those issues. In addition, review the company’s position on ethics, social responsibility, and sustainability (perhaps from its website). 2-16. What are the main issues pertaining to lapses in ethical practice, failure to be socially responsible, or harmful environ-

mental practices that were reported in the news about this company? 2-17. How does the company’s stated position on ethics, social responsibility, and sustainability (found on the website) differ

from what you have read in the news? Explain.

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CHAPTER 2 • BuSINESS ETHICS, CoRPoRATE SoCIAl RESPoNSIBIlITy, ANd SuSTAINABIlITy 49

Endnotes 1 Kyle Scott, “Business Ethics: Do What’s Right,

or What’s Right Now?” Supervision 72 (July 2011): 8–9.

2 Richard M. Steinberg, “Does Integrity and Ethi- cal Behavior Pay Off?” Compliance Week 10 (June 2013): 44–45.

3 William Boston, Arian Campo-Flores, and Aruna Viswanatha, “FBI Arrests Volkswagen Executive in Emissions Scandal,” The Wall Street Journal online (January 9, 2017). Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com; Aruna Viswanatha and Mike Spector, “VW Emissions Cheating Ran Deep and Wide, State Alleges,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 19, 2016). Accessed Janu- ary 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

4 Winthrop Quigley, “VW Case Shows Need for Ethics in Cost-Benefit Toolkit,” Albuquerque Journal online (October 15, 2015). Accessed December 1, 2016, at www.abqjournal.com; J. Plungis and D. Hull, “VW’s Emissions Cheating Found by Curious Clean-Air Group,” Bloomberg Business online (September 19, 2015). Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.bloomberg.com.

5 “6 VW Execs Indicted as Carmaker Agrees to $4.3 billion Diesel Cheat Settlement,” Fortune online (January 12, 2017). Accessed January 15, 2017, at www.fortune.com.

6 “Investors Are Looking Closely at Corporate Ethics,” Corporate Board 28 (September 2007): 28.

7 Ben W. Heineman, Jr., “Avoiding Integrity Land Mines,” Harvard Business Review 85 (April 2007): 100–108.

8 Steve Steckler, “The Leadership Challenges Facing HR: Top CHROs Share Learnings and Advice on What’s Next,” People & Strategy 33 (2010): 14–21.

9 Becky Yerak, “Ex-United CEO Got $36.8 Mil- lion Severance Package,” Chicago Tribune online (May 2, 2016). Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.chicagotribune.com.

10 Mary C. Gentile, “Keeping Your Colleagues Honest,” Harvard Business Review 88 (March 2010): 114–117.

11 T. L. Stanley, “Ethics in Action,” Supervision 69 (April 2008): 14–16.

12 Quoted in Robert Bolt, A Man for All Seasons. (New York: Random House) 1962.

13 Bill Streeter, “Regulation Is Not Ethics,” ABA Banking Journal 104 (January 2012): 6.

14 Ikujiro Nonaka and Hirotaka Takeuchi, “The Wise Leader,” Harvard Business Review 89 (May 2011): 58–67.

15 Kenneth D. Lewis, “The Responsibility of the CEO: Providing Ethical and Moral Leader- ship,” Vital Speeches of the Day 69 (October 15, 2002): 6–9.

16 Sheryl L. Hopkins, “How Effective Are Ethics Codes and Programs?” Financial Executive 29 (March 2013): 42–45.

17 Patrick Moran, “Executive Perspective: What We’ve Learned from Sarbanes-Oxley,” Pennsylvania CPA Journal 84 (Summer 2013): 32–35.

18 Thomas M. Behmer, “Sarbanes-Oxley Fails on Auditor Independence,” Accounting Today 27 (January 2013): 13–14.

19 Cathleen Flahardy, “SOX Gives DOL Power to Reinstate Whistleblowers,” Corporate Legal Times 15 (August 2005): 24–26.

20 Melissa Klein Aguilar, “Questions Arise on Timely Ethics Disclosure,” Compliance Week 7 (March 2010): 58–59.

21 Howard Stock, “Ethics Trump Rules, Levitt Says,” Investor Relations Business (April 7, 2003): 1.

22 Paul Schneider, “Dodd–Frank Financial Reform Legislation Addresses Executive Compensa- tion,” Journal of Financial Service Professionals 65 (January 2011): 27–31.

23 Dave Rebbitt, “The Dissenting Voice,” Profes- sional Safety 58 (April 2013): 58–61.

24 Jonathan Lawner and Denise Dickins, “Will There Be Whistleblowers?” Regulation 34 (Summer 2011): 36–40.

25 “IRS Whistleblower Program,” Fiscal Year 2015 Annual Report to Congress (Publication 5241).

26 Ibid. 27 “2016 Annual Report to Congress on the Dodd-

Frank Whistleblower Program,” U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at www.sec.gov/whistleblower/ reportspubs/annual-reports/owb-annual- report-2016.pdf.

28 Eileen Z. Taylor and Jordan A. Thomas, “Enhanced Protections for Whistleblowers under the Dodd-Frank Act,” CPA Journal 83 (January 2013): 66–71.

29 Curtis C. Verschoor, “New Whistleblower Rules Broaden Opportunities,” Strategic Finance 93 (September 2011): 13–69.

30 Ibid. 31 “Whistleblower Gets $22 Million from SEC

in Second-Biggest Award,” (August 30, 2016). Bloomberg Web site. Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.bloomberg.com.

32 Anthony M. Alexis, Marcia E. Goodman, and Scott A. Clafee, “New Whistleblower Provi- sions Provide Bounty Incentives and Greatly Expanded Protections,” Insights: The Corporate & Securities Law Advisor 24 (September 2010): 45–50.

33 “Companies Anticipate an Increase in Whistle- blower Claims,” Corporate Board 32 (January/ February 2012): 28–29.

34 “Whistleblower Claims in Dodd–Frank Era Expected,” Financial Executive 28 (January/ February 2012): 11.

35 Jason C. Schwartz and Porter N. Wilkinson, “2011 Year-End Update on Dodd–Frank and SOX Employee Whistleblower Provisions,” Insights: The Corporate & Securities Law Advi- sor 26 (January 2012): 15–22.

36 Michael Washburn, “Former SEC Counsel: Whistleblower Program Shortcomings,” Inter- national Financial Law Review (February 2013): 22.

37 Shele Bannon, Kelly Ford, and Linda Meltzer, “How to Instill a Strong Ethical Culture,” CPA Journal 80 (July 2010): 56–58.

38 Jean Francois Manzoni, “Nurturing a High Integrity Culture,” Rotman Magazine (Winter 2013): 22–27.

39 Janice Block, “Ethical Culture,” Inside Counsel 24 (April 2013): 10.

40 “The Volkswagen Group Code of Conduct,” (not dated). Accessed January 15, 2017, at http://en.volkswagen.com/content/medialib/ vwd4/de/Volkswagen/Nachhaltigkeit/service/ download/corporate_governance/Code_of_ Conduct/_jcr_content/renditions/rendition .file/the-volkswagen-group-code-of-conduct .pdf.

41 Eric Krell, “How to Conduct an Ethics Audit,” HR Magazine 55 (April 2010): 48–51.

42 Steve Watkins, “Build Top Ethical Culture,” Investor’s Business Daily (March 30, 2012): 3.

43 “High Levels of Corporate Stress, Flawed Remuneration Policies, Excessive Reliance on Takeovers, and Lax Financial Discipline May Indicate Poor Corporate Culture—New Report Concludes,” The Governance Institute (press release, March 7, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.ibe.org.uk/userassets/pressre- leases/icgn_ibe_icsa_pressrelease.pdf.

44 Patricia Harned, “Beyond Tone at the Top,” Boardroom Briefing 7 (Fall 2010): 39–40.

45 Dori Meinert, “Strong Ethical Culture Helps Bottom Line,” HR Magazine 55 (December 2010): 21.

46 Curtis C. Verschoor, “Top-Management Exam- ple and Peer Pressures Bring Benefits,” Strategic Finance 92 (September 2010): 15–63.

47 “2016 Compliance and Ethics Program Objec- tives Survey,” The Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics and the Health Care Compliance Association (July 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.corporatecompliance. org.

48 David De Cremer, “6 Traits That Predict Ethical Behavior at Work,” Harvard Business Review online (December 22, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

49 Richard McGill Murphy, “Why Doing Good Is Good for Business,” Fortune 161 (February 8, 2010): 90–95.

50 “Ethics as Recruiting Tool,” Journal of Accoun- tancy 207 (January 2009): 21.

51 Ron Carucci, “Why Ethical People Make Unethical Choices,” Harvard Business Review online (December 16, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

52 Ben Dipietro, “The Morning Risk Report: Report Details ‘Right Way’ to Teach Eth- ics,” The Wall Street Journal online (April 13, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

53 Christopher Bauer, “Baking Ethics into Com- pany Culture,” Financial Executive 25 (May 2009): 18–21.

54 Jaclyn Jaeger, “The ROI of a Strong Ethical Culture,” Compliance Week 10 (February 2013): 34–36.

55 Society for Human Resource Management, “SHRM Code of Ethics.” Accessed February 3, 2014, at www.shrm.org/about/Pages/code-of- ethics.aspx.

56 Richard Teitelbaum, “Accountants, Auditors to Get a New Ethics Rule Book,” The Wall Street

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50 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Journal online (July 11, 2016). Accessed Janu- ary 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

57 Stephen Dockery, “Johnson Controls Settles China Corruption Case with SEC,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 11, 2016). Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

58 “Fidelity Fires Hong Kong Managers,” Fund Action (February 22, 2010): 76.

59 Emily Glazer, Rachel Louise Ensign, and Nick Timiraos, “Romantic Relationships with Fannie Mae CEO Prompted Firing of Fifth Third Law- yer,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 10, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.wsj. com.

60 Ben Dipietro, “What Matters More: Focusing on Rules or Creating Ethical Culture?” The Wall Street Journal online (March 15, 2016). Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

61 Ibid. 62 Kathryn Mayer, “HR Is the ‘Conscience’ of

Workplace Culture,” BenefitsPro (Web site, June 29, 2015). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www. benefitspro.com.

63 “Competencies Senior HR Pros Need Now, in Five Years,” HR Focus 87 (June 2010): 12–13.

64 Ken Sloan and Joanne H. Gavin, “Human Resource Management: Meeting the Ethi- cal Obligations of the Function,” Business & Society Review 115 (Spring 2010): 57–74.

65 Peter Rudegeair, “Los Angeles Sues Wells Fargo Over Sales Tactics,” The Wall Street Journal online (May 5, 2015). Accessed January 7, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

66 James Rufus Koren, “Wells Fargo to Pay $185 Million Settlement for ‘Outrageous’ Sales Culture,” LA Times online (September 8, 2016). Accessed January 6, 2017, at www.latimes.com.

67 Emily Glazer, “Wells Fargo to Roll Out New Compensation Plan to Replace Sales Goals,” The Wall Street Journal online (January 6, 2017). Accessed January 6, 2017, at www.wsj. com.

68 Darnell Lattel, “The Slippery Slope,” T + D 66 (March 2012): 22.

69 Sven Erik Holmes, “Under Pressure: Main- taining an Effective Ethics and Compliance Program,” Directorship 35 (October/November 2009): 72.

70 “Few Tie Executive Pay or Bonuses to Compli- ance,” Compliance Week 6 (July 2009): 10.

71 S. Steffee, “Weak Link between Business Ethics and Executive Compensation,” Internal Auditor 66 (August 2009): 16.

72 Patricia J. Harned, “Encourage Ethical Behavior as Economy Recovers,” HR Specialist: Compen- sation & Benefits 5 (January 2010): 5.

73 Max H. Bazerman and Ann E. Tenbrunsel, “Eth- ical Breakdowns,” Harvard Business Review 89 (April 2011): 58–65.

74 National Business Ethics Survey of the U.S. Workforce, 2013, Ethics Resource Center, www. ethics.org/nbes, 2014.

75 Luis Ramos, “Outside-the-Box Ethics,” Leader- ship Excellence 26 (April 2009): 19.

76 Craig Mindrum, “Imitating Virtuous Behaviors,” Chief Learning Officer 12 (April 2013): 34–37.

77 Karen Kroll, “Ethics & Compliance Training for Hourly Workers,” Compliance Week 10 (June 2013): 42–66.

78 Ben Dipietro, “Survey Roundup: Companies Lagging on Training Directors,” The Wall Street

Journal online (July 29, 2016). Accessed Janu- ary 13, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

79 Jerry Maginnis and Joseph P. Charles, “Build a Strong Ethical Culture,” Pennsylvania CPA Journal 80 (Summer 2009): 1–2.

80 Cynthia Kincaid, “Corporate Ethics Training: The Right Stuff,” Training 46 (May 2009): 35.

81 LRN Corporation, “Who We Are.” Accessed February 21, 2012, at www.lrn.com/ who-we-are.

82 Ron Miller, “It’s a Small World After All,” EContent 31 (January/February 2008): 26–31.

83 “2016 Cone Communications: Employee Engagement Study,” (2016), Cone Communica- tions. Accessed December 20, 2016 at www. conecomm.com/research-blog/2016-employee- engagement-study.

84 Brittaney Kiefer, “CSR Moves from Planting Trees to Credible Business Strategies,” PRWeek 16 (February 2013): 12.

85 “2016 Cone Communications: Employee Engagement Study,” (2016), Cone Communica- tions. Accessed December 20, 2016 at www. conecomm.com/research-blog/2016-employee- engagement-study.

86 “The Results for the 2017 Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World Index,” Corporate Knights (Web site).” Accessed January 27, 2017, www.corporateknights.com/ reports/2017-global-100/.

87 Nguyen Thi Hong Ngoc, “Being Socially Responsible and Environmentally Friendly Improves the Corporate Competitiveness and Profitability?” Advances in Management 4 (March 2011): 21–25.

88 Paul Shum and Sharon Yam, “Ethics and Law: Guiding the Invisible Hand to Correct Cor- porate Social Responsibility Externalities,” Journal of Business Ethics 98 (February 2011): 549–571.

89 Mikhail Reider-Gordon, “Understanding Foreign States’ Mandatory Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting,” Litigation 39 (Winter 2013): 61–63.

90 Simon Zadek, “Responsibility Isn’t a Blame Game,” Fortune (Europe) 152 (October 3, 2005): 70–73.

91 Rachel Feintzeig, “Firms, Workers Boost Their Giving,” The Wall Street Journal online (June 8, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.wsj. com.

92 John S. McClenahen, “Defining Social Respon- sibility,” Industry Week 254 (March 2005): 64–65.

93 “2015 Global Sustainability Report,” Starbucks Corporation (Web site), Accessed January 14, 2017, at www.starbucks.com/responsibility/ global-report.

94 Fisk Johnson, “SC Johnson’s CEO on Doing the Right Thing, Even When It Hurts Busi- ness,” Harvard Business Review online (April 2015). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www. hbr.org.

95 Z. Jill Barclift, “Corporate Social Responsibil- ity and Financial Institutions: Beyond Dodd– Frank,” Banking & Financial Services Policy Report 31 (January 2012): 13–19.

96 Aneel Karnani, “Doing Well by Doing Good: The Grand Illusion,” California Management Review 53 (Winter 2011): 69–86.

97 Rebecca Coons, “Corporate Social Responsibility: Pursuing the Triple Bottom Line,” Chemical Week 175 (May 27, 2013): 21–23.

98 V. Sivarama Krishnan, “In Defense of Social Responsibility of Business,” Journal of Business & Ethics (2011): 31–37.

99 “Milton Friedman Goes on Tour,” Economist 398 (January 29, 2011): 63.

100 Ronald J. Alsop “Cultural Awareness,” Work- force Management 90 (July 2011): 42.

101 “Corporate Social Responsibility Heads for Oblivion,” Trends Magazine 94 (February 2011): 10–14.

102 “Corporate Social Responsibility Heads for Oblivion,” Trends Magazine 94 (February 2011): 10–14.

103 Adam Werbach, “Learning to Be Sustainable,” Chief Learning Officer 10 (May 2011): 46–49.

104 Lilli Monolis, “Sustainability: It Will Change Your Business . . . If It Hasn’t Already,” Plastics Technology 58 (January 2012): 34–63.

105 “The Results for the 2017 Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World Index,” Corporate Knights (Web site).” Accessed January 27, 2017, www.corporateknights.com/ reports/2017-global-100/.

106 “Johnson & Johnson: Sustainability Is Mission- Critical,” Site Selection 57 (January/February 2012): 42.

107 Alexandra R. Lajoux and Cheryl Soltis Martel, “Sustainability Rising,” NACD Directorship 39 (March/April 2013): 24–35.

108 “Currents of Change: The KPMG Survey of Corporate Responsibility Reporting,” (2015). KPMG. Accessed December 1, 2016, at www. kpmg.com.

109 White House Announces Additional Commit- ments to the American Business Act on Climate Package,” White House. Accessed December 1, 2015, at www.whitehouse.gov.

110 “CSR’s Mainstream Shift: 81 Percent of Lead- ing Companies Published Corporate Sustain- ability Reports in 2015,” Bulldog Reporter (Web site, March 16, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.bulldogreporter.com/csrs- mainstream-shift-81-of-leading-companies-pub- lished-corporate-sustainability-reports-in-2015/.

111 Nguyen Thi Hong Ngoc, “Profitability?” Advances in Management 4 (March 2011): 21–25.

112 Michael Laff, “Triple Bottom Line,” T + D 63 (February 2009): 34–39.

113 “CSR’s Mainstream Shift: 81 Percent of Leading Companies Published Corporate Sustainability Reports in 2015,” Bulldog Reporter (Web site, March 16, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.bulldogreporter. com/csrs-mainstream-shift-81-of-leading- companies- published-corporate-sustainability- reports-in-2015/.

114 Marc Gunther, “Unilever’s CEO Has a Green Thumb,” Fortune 167 July 10, 2013): 124.

115 Jaclyn Jaeger, “Choosing Among a Vast Array of CSR Initiatives,” Compliance Week 6 (Octo- ber 2009): 60–70.

116 “Social Responsibility: An Ongoing Mission for a Good Corporate Citizen,” Nation’s Restaurant News (April 11, 2005): 60–66.

117 Sean Milmo, “LCA Plays Key Role for Sustain- ability,” ICIS Chemical Business 280 (October 3, 2011): 13.

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118 “Institutional Investors Push for Increased Cor- porate Sustainability Reporting,” Business & the Environment with ISO 14000 Updates 22 (April 2011): 5–6.

119 “Coca-Cola Enterprises Corporate Respon- sibility & Sustainability Report 2015/2016,” Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.coca- colacompany.com/stories/sustainability-reports.

120 “Corporate Sustainability,” Industry Week 260 (February 2011): 49.

121 “PPG Launches New Sustainability Framework, Issues 2012 Sustainability Report,” Paintindia 63 (May 2013): 145.

122 “Sustainability by the Numbers,” Business & the Environment with ISO 14000 Updates 22 (July 2011): 13–14.

123 “PPG Issues 2010 Corporate Sustainability Report,” Paintindia 61 (May 2011): 128–130.

124 Jim Carper, “Danone Uses Plant-based Packag- ing for Activia Yogurt in Germany,” Dairy Foods 112 (August 2011): 10–11.

125 “Coca-Cola: Manufacturers Will Never Win the Battle of the Biodegradable Bottle,” Food Manufacture 86 (August 2011): 7.

126 Frank Esposito, “Styron’s Sustainability Goals, Progress Detailed in Report,” Plastics News 23 (July 18, 2011): 4.

127 Ann Moline, “Not Your Father’s Recycling Program,” Site Selection 57 (January/February 2012): 41–45.

128 John Peloza, “Using Corporate Social Respon- sibility as Insurance for Financial Performance,”

California Management Review 48 (Winter 2006): 52–72.

129 S. Rubenfeld, “Bank of New York Mel- lon Settles SEC Bribery Charges,” The Wall Street Journal online, www.wsj.com, August 18, 2015.

130 S. Rubenfeld, “The Morning Risk Report: Internships are Bribes in BNY Mellon Case,” The Wall Street Journal online, www.wsj.com, August 19, 2015.

131 S. Rubenfeld, “Bank of New York Mel- lon Settles SEC Bribery Charges,” The Wall Street Journal online, www.wsj.com, August 18, 2015.

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52

Equal Employment Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Workforce Diversity

3

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

3.1 Explain the concept of equal employment opportunity (EEO) and identify the federal laws affecting EEO.

3.2 Discuss who is responsible for ensuring equal employment opportunity.

3.3 Define the types of illegal employment discrimination and discuss affirmative action.

3.4 Explain the Uniform Guidelines related to various types of illegal employment

discrimination, including sexual harassment, national origin, religion, and caregiver (family responsibility) discrimination.

3.5 Describe the concept of diversity and diversity management.

3.6 Explain the various elements of a diverse workforce.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 3 Warm-Up.

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53

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

The workforce of today has become truly diverse. But this was not the case in the early 1960s; in fact, little of the workforce of those days remotely resembled that of today. Then, few mainstream opportunities were available to women, minorities, and those with disabilities. The Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s during which time blacks sought equality in employment and other areas of society led to a series of laws and executive orders, starting with Equal Employment Opportunity laws passed by the U.S. federal government. Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) refers to the set of laws and policies that requires all individuals’ rights to equal opportunity in the work- place, regardless of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, disability, or genetic information. Additional requirements, known as Affirmative Action, were established. Affirmative Action cre- ates the expectation and program requirements that companies make a positive effort to recruit, hire, train, and promote employees from groups who are underrepresented in the labor force.

Since the Civil Rights movement and the passage of EEO laws, most companies have chosen to embrace the idea of promoting diversity in the workplace. Diversity refers to any actual or per- ceived difference among people: age, race, religion, functional specialty, profession, sexual orienta- tion, gender identity, geographic origin, lifestyle, tenure with the organization or position, and any other perceived difference, including values and nontraditional work experiences. As you can see, characteristics of diversity go well beyond protected classes such as race in EEO law. Unlike EEO and Affirmative Action, promoting a diverse workforce is not required by law. Companies choose to embrace workforce diversity as a strategic choice. Capitalizing on a diverse workforce may be seen as contributing to a company’s objectives such as profit, productivity, and morale. Diversity is inclusive, encompassing everyone in the workplace. Diversity management is aimed at creating a workplace in which every employee fits, feels accepted, has value, and contributes.

The purpose of this chapter is to explore EEO and Affirmative Action requirements. Then, we will take up the subject of workplace diversity.

affirmative action Refers to the expectation and program requirements that companies make a positive effort to recruit, hire, train, and promote employees from groups who are underrepresented in the labor force.

equal employment opportunity (EEO) The set of laws and policies that requires all individuals’ rights to equal opportunity in the workplace, regardless of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, or disability.

diversity Any perceived difference among people: age, race, religion, functional specialty, profession, sexual orientation, geographic origin, lifestyle, tenure with the organization or position, and any other perceived difference.

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54 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Equal Employment Opportunity and the Federal Laws Affecting EEO Legislation (federal, state, and local), Supreme Court decisions, and executive orders have required both public and private organizations to tap the abilities of a workforce that was largely underused before the mid-1960s. The concept of EEO has undergone much modification and fine-tuning since the passage of the Equal Pay Act of 1963, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Age Dis- crimination in Employment Act of 1967.

Numerous amendments to these acts have been passed, as well as other acts in response to oversights in the initial legislation. Major Supreme Court decisions interpreting the provisions of the acts have also been handed down. A presidential executive order was signed into law that provided for affirmative action. More than five decades have passed since the introduction of the first legislation, and EEO has become an integral part of the workplace.

Although EEO has come a long way since the 1960s, continuing efforts are required because many problems still exist. Although perfection is elusive, most businesses today do attempt to make employment decisions based on who is the best qualified, as opposed to whether an indi- vidual is of a certain gender, race, religion, color, national origin, or age, or is disabled. Hiring standards to avoid will be identified based on some of the laws and executive orders that have had a major impact in creating this diverse workforce.

Numerous federal laws have been passed that have had an impact on EEO. The passage of these laws ref lects society’s attitude toward the changes that should be made to give everyone an equal opportunity for employment. The most significant of these laws will be described in the following sections after clarifying the sources of legislation based on the unit of govern- ment—federal government, state government, and local government. The federal government enacts and passes laws that apply throughout the entire United States. State government (for example, the states of Illinois and Louisiana) enacts legislation that applies throughout its jurisdiction within the state border. Local government may oversee the activities of a county or municipality within the state (e.g., Suffolk County in Massachusetts or New York City in New York). Our focus will be on federal laws, and we will make reference to state and local laws as necessary.

Constitutional Amendments and the Civil Rights Act of 1866 Although not an EEO law, one could say that the oldest federal legislation affecting staffing is the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which is based on the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery in the United States and provides that, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” The Civil Rights Act of 1866 granted citizenship and the same rights enjoyed by white citizens to all male persons in the United States, “without distinction of race or color, or previous condi- tion of slavery or involuntary servitude.” Subsequently, the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was enacted to ensure that the Civil Rights Act passed in 1866 would remain valid ensuring that, “all persons born in the United States . . . excluding Indians not taxed. . . . ” were citizens and were to be given, “full and equal benefit of all laws.”

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Amended in 1972 The statute that has had the greatest impact on EEO is Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended by the Equal Employment Act of 1972. Under Title VII, it is illegal for an employer to discriminate in hiring, firing, promoting, compensating, or in terms, conditions, or privileges of employment based on race, color, sex, religion, or national origin. The act also forbids retali- ation against an employee who has participated in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing. For instance, Merrill Lynch & Co. paid $160 million to settle an employment discrimination lawsuit filed by black broker George McReynolds on behalf of 700 black brokers who worked for Mer- rill (McReynolds, et al. v. Merrill Lynch & Co). McReynolds claimed that the company gave white brokers more lucrative accounts while also denying black employees equal pay and career advancement opportunities.

3.1 Explain the concept of equal employment opportunity (EEO) and identify the federal laws affecting EEO.

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Since the passage of this law, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC, discussed shortly), broadened its interpretation of sex discrimination and “enforces Title VII’s prohibition of sex discrimination as forbidding any employment discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.”1 In recent years, the EEOC has filed lawsuits in various courts tackling an assortment of LGBT discrimination-related issues including sexual orientation and transgender employees. For example, in EEOC v. Pallet Companies d/b/a IFCO Sys. North Am., Inc., the EEOC alleged that Pallet Companies illegally terminated a lesbian employee based on sexual orientation after she complained about harassment. Discrimination cases involving trans- gender employees are becoming increasingly common. For instance, in EEOC v. Lakeland Eye Clinic, P.A., the EEOC alleged that Lakeland Eye Clinic discriminated based on sex because it fired an employee who was transitioning from male to female and did not conform to gender-based expectations. In both cases, the employees’ job performance was satisfactory. The companies in each case settled the claims out of court. Issues such as these can present challenges in terms of how we perceive ourselves and those around us. The following Watch It video looks at ways in which managers may react to an employee’s gender transitioning.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled TLM-Workforce Diversity and to respond to questions.

Title VII covers employers engaged in or affecting interstate commerce who have 15 or more employees for each working day in each of 20 calendar weeks in the current or preceding calendar year. Also, included in the definition of employers are state and local governments, schools, col- leges, unions, and private employment agencies with 15 or more employees. All private employers who are subject to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended with 100 employees or more must annually submit an EEO-1 report (see Figure 3-1). The EEO-1 reports information about the number of employees by job category (e.g., professional employees), by sex and race or ethnicity, and pay data and hours worked. Just as this book went to press, the requirements of reporting pay data and hours worked were suspended, at least for a time.

Three notable exceptions to discrimination as covered by Title VII are bona fide occu- pational qualifications (BFOQs), seniority and merit systems, and testing and educational requirements. According to the act, it is not an unlawful employment practice for an employer to hire and employ employees based on his or her religion, sex, or national origin in those certain instances where religion, sex, or national origin is a BFOQ reasonably necessary to the normal operation of the business or enterprise. For example, religious institutions, such as churches or synagogues, may legally refuse to hire teachers whose religious conviction is different from that of the hiring institution. Likewise, a maximum-security correctional institu- tion housing only male inmates may decline to hire females as security guards. The concept of BFOQ was designed to be narrowly, not broadly, interpreted and has been so interpreted by the courts in many cases. For instance, historically women sales representatives were barred from working in a male clothing store because it was thought that men would not purchase from them. This stereotype has certainly been overcome because men regularly see female salespersons working in men’s clothing stores. The burden of proving necessity rests entirely on the employer.

The second exception to discrimination under Title VII is a bona fide seniority system such as the type normally contained in a union contract. Differences in employment conditions among workers are permitted, if such differences are not the result of an intention to discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Even if a bona fide seniority system has an adverse impact on those individuals protected by Title VII, the system can be invalidated only by evidence that the actual motives of the parties to the agreement were to discriminate.

Finally, in the matter of testing and educational requirements, Title VII states that it is not, “an unlawful employment practice for an employer to give, and to act upon, the results of any professionally developed ability test if such test, its administration, or action upon the results is not designed, intended or used to discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex, or national

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56 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

origin.” Employment testing and educational requirements must be job related, and when adverse impact is shown, the burden of proof is on the employer to establish that a demonstrable relation- ship exists between actual job performance and the test or educational requirement. For instance, the EEOC charged retailer Target Corporation for illegal discrimination based on race and sex. It claimed that the company’s hiring techniques disproportionately screened out racial minority and female applicants for professional positions.2 Target chose to discontinue using the hiring practices in question and agreed to conduct validation studies to establish whether the practices were related to job performance and whether the practices have potential to disproportionately exclude qualified applicants based on race, ethnicity, and gender.

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 also created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commis- sion (EEOC) and assigned enforcement of Title VII to this agency. Consisting of five members appointed by the president, the EEOC is empowered to investigate, conciliate, and litigate charges of discrimination arising under provisions of Title VII. In addition, the commission has the respon- sibility of issuing procedural regulations and interpretations of Title VII and the other statutes it enforces. The most significant regulation issued by EEOC is the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures. The EEOC enforces other EEO laws, with exceptions noted when those laws are discussed next.

FIGURE 3-1 Equal Employment Opportunity Employer Information Report

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Equal Pay Act of 1963, Amended in 1972 Passed as an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Equal Pay Act (EPA) of 1963 pro- hibits an employer from paying women less money than men if both employees do work that is substantially the same. The EPA was passed largely to overcome the outdated belief that a man should be paid more than a woman because he was the primary breadwinner. The pay gap has declined through the years; however, one still exists as indicated in the FYI feature.

The EPA covers work within the same physical place of business. For example, an employer could pay a female more in San Francisco than a male working in the same position in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, even if the jobs were substantially the same, because of the cost-of-living

☛ F Y I The gender wage gap is substantial:

$ All women working full time earn 79 percent of similar men’s earnings. $ Hispanic women earn 55 percent of white men’s earnings. $ African-American women earn 60 percent of white men’s earnings. $ Asian women earn 84 percent of white men’s earnings.3

FIGURE 3-1 (Continued)

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58 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

difference. A key point to remember is that the pay difference must be substantial and that small pay differences might be acceptable. Four exceptions that permit unequal pay for equal work include:

$ Seniority system $ Merit system $ System that measures earnings by quantity or quality of production $ Any other factor other than sex

More recently, new approaches to minimize the pay gap between women and men performing comparable work are being undertaken. For instance, Massachusetts’ Pay Equity Act prohibits companies from inquiring about an applicant’s pay history on job applications, interviews, and during pay negotiations. Companies are also prohibited from asking previous employers to verify pay amount prior to making a job offer. This law does have the potential to reduce the pay gap. For example, let’s say that an employer’s policy is to offer a salary that is 10 percent higher than the applicant’s previous salary. And, for this illustration, a female applicant making $50,000 would receive a salary offer of $55,000 under the company’s policy. A male applicant whose current sal- ary is $75,000 would receive a salary offer of $82,500, thus, perpetuating the pay gap. Prohibiting questions about salary history helps companies to focus on the market value of the job.

Some companies voluntarily attempt to reduce the pay gap by prohibiting salary negotiations. These actions are based on the belief that most men are presumably better negotiators than women. One such company known for prohibiting salary negotiations is Reddit. In the following Watch It video, (former) CEO Ellen Pao further discusses the rationale for choosing not to negotiate job offers with applicants.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Reddit’s Ellen Pao Bans Salary Negotiations and to respond to questions.

The EEOC enforces the EPA. The EEOC possesses the authority to investigate and reconcile charges of illegal discrimination. Title VII protects employees who work for all private sector employers; local, state, and federal governments; and educational institutions that employ 15 or more individuals. Title VII also applies to private and public employment agencies, labor organiza- tions, and joint labor management committees controlling apprenticeship and training. It should be noted that the remaining laws that follow are also enforced by the EEOC.

Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 Lilly Ledbetter worked as a supervisor for Goodyear Tire from 1979 until 1998. Just before retire- ment, she received information that compared her salary with salaries of male coworkers. She was earning $3,727 monthly compared with 15 male coworkers who earned between $4,286 and $5,236. She sued, claiming pay discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Equal Pay Act of 1963.4 In the 2007 Supreme Court case of Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Inc., the Court said that discrimination charges must be filed within 180 days after the allegedly discriminatory pay decision. Lilly Ledbetter had worked for Goodyear for many years but she did not realize until she was close to retirement that she was being discriminated against because of pay. Because she did not file a discrimination charge within 180 days of her employ- ment, the Supreme Court ruled against her. To reverse the Ledbetter decision, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act was passed by Congress and signed into law in 2009. The law creates a rolling or open time frame for filing wage discrimination claims. Each paycheck that unfairly pays a worker less than it should is a discriminatory act. The act gives the worker a fresh 180-day period (300 days in some states) to file a charge of discrimination with the EEOC.

Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 Prior to the passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA), most pregnant women did not receive the same protections afforded to others under Title VII. Many women argued that pregnancy should be specified as a protected class in Title VII. Efforts to amend Title VII were

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met with resistance by lawmakers, particularly following the Supreme Court decision in 1976. In General Electric v. Gilbert, the court ruled that excluding pregnancy as a condition qualifying for coverage under a disability plan did not constitute sex discrimination. Excluding pregnancy divided employees into two groups, one that was exclusively women and the other that included both women and men; thus, the distinction was not mainly sex-based. Members of the feminist movement and civil rights activists refused to accept this ruling, pressuring Congress to amend Title VII and overturn the Gilbert decision. Their efforts were successful. In 1978, Congress passed the PDA.

The Pregnancy Discrimination Act prohibits discrimination in employment based on preg- nancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. The basic principle of the act is that women affected by pregnancy and related conditions must be treated the same as other applicants and employees based on their ability or inability to work. A woman is therefore protected against such practices as being fired or refused a job or promotion merely because she is pregnant or has had an abortion. She usually cannot be forced to take a leave of absence if she can work. If other employees on disability leave are entitled to return to their jobs when they can work again, so too are women who have been unable to work because of pregnancy. Also, limiting job advancement opportunities while a woman is pregnant may be a violation of the act. Questions regarding a woman’s family and childbearing plans should not be asked. Such questions may be viewed as discriminatory because they are not asked of men.

The same principle applies in the employee benefits area, including disability benefits, sick leave, and health insurance. A woman unable to work for pregnancy-related reasons is entitled to disability benefits or sick leave on the same basis as employees unable to work for other medical reasons. Also, any health insurance provided must cover expenses for pregnancy-related condi- tions on the same basis as expenses for other medical conditions.

Civil Rights Act of 1991 During 1988–1989, the Supreme Court rendered six employment discrimination decisions of such magnitude that a congressional response was required to overturn these decisions. The result was passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1991. The act amended five statutes: (1) the Civil Rights Act of 1866; (2) Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as Amended; (3) the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as Amended; (4) the Rehabilitation Act of 1973; and (5) the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.

The Civil Rights Act of 1991 had the following purposes:

$ To provide appropriate remedies for intentional discrimination and unlawful harassment in the workplace.

$ To codify the concepts of business necessity and job-relatedness pronounced by the Supreme Court in Griggs v. Duke Power Company.

$ To confirm statutory authority and provide statutory guidelines for the adjudication of disparate impacts under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Disparate impact occurs when certain actions in the employment process work to the disadvantage of members of protected groups. Disparate impact will be discussed under the heading, “Adverse Impact.”

$ To respond to decisions of the Supreme Court by expanding the scope of relevant civil rights statutes to provide adequate protection to victims of discrimination.

Under this act, a complaining party may recover punitive damages if the complaining party demonstrates that the company engaged in a discriminatory practice with malice or with reckless indifference to the law. However, the following limits, based on the number of people employed by the company, were placed on the amount of the award:

$ Between 15 and 100 employees—$50,000 $ Between 101 and 200 employees—$100,000 $ Between 201 and 500 employees—$200,000 $ More than 500 employees—$300,000

In each case, aggrieved employees must be with the firm for 20 or more calendar weeks in the current or preceding calendar year.

Regarding burden of proof, a complaining party must show that an employment practice causes a disparate impact based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. It must also be

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60 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

shown that the company is unable to demonstrate that the challenged practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. The act also extends the coverage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to extraterritorial employment. However, the act does not apply to U.S. companies operating in other countries if compliance, “would cause such employer, or a corporation controlled by such employer, to violate the laws of the country in which such work- place is located.”5 The act also extends the nondiscrimination principles to Congress and other government agencies, such as the General Accounting Office.

Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, Amended in 1978, 1986, and 1990 Older workers were often discriminated against by employers based on the belief that they were less able to perform as well as younger workers. Also, many companies avoided hiring older workers because they expected to receive a lower return on investment from training. Statistically speaking, older workers will have fewer years remaining on the job than younger workers. In 2015, the median age of the labor force was 42.3 years, and nearly 55 percent of them were at least 40 years old.6 The number of older individuals will increase for many years to come, particularly among individuals at least 55 years of age.7

As originally enacted, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) prohibited employers from discriminating against individuals who were 40 to 65 years old. The 1978 amend- ment provided protection for individuals who were at least 40, but less than 70 years old. In a 1986 amendment, employer discrimination against anyone age 40 or older is illegal. Questions asked about an applicant’s age or date of birth may be ill-advised. Also, if only younger applicants are more eager and ready to learn new technology may bring an age discrimination suit because people of any age may possess these qualities. However, a firm may ask for age information to comply with the child labor law. For example, the question could be asked, “Are you under the age of 18?” Nonetheless, questions about the ages of children, if any, could be potentially discrimina- tory because a close approximation of the applicant’s age often is obtained through knowledge of the ages of the applicant’s children.

The Older Workers Benefit Protection Act—the 1990 amendment to the ADEA—focused on employer benefits practices. When employers require that all employees contribute toward coverage of benefits, under circumstances, they can also require older employees to pay more for health care, disability, or life insurance than younger employees. This is the case because these benefits generally become costlier with age (e.g., older workers may be more likely to incur seri- ous illnesses, thus, insurance companies may charge employers higher rates). However, an older employee may not be required to pay more for the benefit as a condition of employment. Where the premium has increased for an older employee, the employer must provide three options to older workers. First, the employee has the option of withdrawing from the benefit plan altogether. Second, the employee has the option of reducing his or her benefit coverage to keep the same cost. Third, an older employee may be offered the option of paying more for the benefit to avoid otherwise justified reductions in coverage.

The EEOC is responsible for administering the ADEA. This act pertains to employers who have 20 or more employees for 20 or more calendar weeks (either in the current or preceding calendar year); unions with 25 or more members; employment agencies; and federal, state, and local government subunits.

Enforcement begins when a charge is filed, but the EEOC can review compliance even if no charge is filed. The ADEA differs from Title VII of the Civil Rights Act because it provides for a trial by jury and carries possible criminal penalty for violation of the act. The trial-by-jury provi- sion is important because juries are thought to have great sympathy for older people who may have been discriminated against. The criminal penalty provision means that a person may receive more than lost wages if discrimination is proved. Further, an employer found to have wilfully violated the ADEA can be liable to the victimized person for “liquidated damages” or double damages.8 The 1978 amendment also makes class action suits possible.

Age Can Actually Be a Bona Fide Occupational Qualification Age can be a BFOQ when it is reasonably necessary to the essence of the business, and the employer has a rational or factual basis for believing that all, or substantially all, people within an age class would not be able to perform satisfactorily. Courts have continued to rule that the Federal

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Aviation Administration adequately explained its long-standing rule that it can force commercial pilots to retire at age 60. The age 60 rule was first imposed in 1959 and was long controversial. However, in 2007, the retirement age for commercial pilots was raised to 65.

This ruling supported the 1974 Seventh Circuit Court decision that Greyhound did not violate the ADEA when it refused to hire persons 35 years of age or older as intercity bus drivers. Again, the likelihood of risk or harm to its passengers was involved. Greyhound presented evidence concerning degenerative physical and sensory changes that humans undergo at about age 35 that have a detrimental effect on driving skills, and that the changes are not detectable by physical tests. These skills would gradually deteriorate with increased age.

Rehabilitation Act of 1973 The Rehabilitation Act prohibits discrimination against disabled workers who are employed by certain government contractors and subcontractors and organizations that receive federal grants more than $2,500. Individuals are considered disabled if they have a physical or mental impair- ment that substantially limits one or more major life activities or if they have a record of such impairment. Protected under the act are diseases and conditions such as epilepsy, cancer, cardio- vascular disorders, AIDS, blindness, deafness, mental retardation [language stated in the act], emotional disorders, and dyslexia.

There are two primary levels of the act. All federal contractors or subcontractors exceed- ing the $2,500 base are required to post notices that they agree to take affirmative action to recruit, employ, and promote qualified disabled individuals. If the contract or subcontract exceeds $50,000, or if the contractor has 50 or more employees, the employer must prepare a written affir- mative action plan for review by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP), which administers the act. In it, the contractor must specify that reasonable steps are being taken to hire and promote disabled persons.

In an interpretation of Section 8 of the Rehabilitation Act, federal technology buyers are forced to think about people who are blind, deaf, paralyzed, or have other disabilities before they buy software, computers, printers, copiers, fax machines, kiosks, telecommunications devices, or video and multimedia products. Federal employees with disabilities must have access to and use of information and data that is comparable to the access and use by federal employees who are not individuals with disabilities, unless an undue burden would be imposed on the agency.

Vietnam Era Veteran’s Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974 The Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act (VEVRAA) requires covered federal government contractors and subcontractors to take affirmative action to employ and advance in employment specified categories of veterans protected by the act and prohibits discrimina- tion against such veterans. In addition, VEVRAA requires contractors and subcontractors to list their employment openings with the appropriate employment service delivery system and that covered veterans receive priority in referral to such openings. Further, VEVRAA requires fed- eral contractors and subcontractors to compile and submit annually a report on the number of current employees who are covered veterans. The affirmative action and mandatory job-listing provisions of VEVRAA are enforced by the Employment Standards Administration’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) within the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL). DOL’s Veterans’ Employment and Training Service (VETS) administers the veterans’ employment reporting requirement.

Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as Amended Under VEVRAA, federal contractors and subcontractors are required to take affirmative action in hiring covered veterans. VEVRAA prohibits federal contractors from discriminating against specified categories of veterans and requires them to take affirmative action to recruit, employ, and promote protected veterans. Contractors with 50 or more employees (and $100,000 in federal contracts made on or after December 1, 2003) must maintain a written affirmative action plan.9 As originally passed, only covered honorably discharged persons who served more than 18 days on active duty between August 5, 1964, and May 7, 1975. Now the definition of “protected” or “covered” veteran has been expanded to include those who have served in a campaign or expedi- tion for which a campaign badge was issued.10 This includes campaigns such as current engage- ments in the Middle East.

HR Web Wisdom

Office of Contract Compliance Programs www.dol.gov/ofccp/

Home page for the OFCCP, the agency responsible for ensuring that employers doing business with the federal government com- ply with the laws and regulations requiring nondiscrimination and affirmative action.

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Recently, there have been rather significant changes in the OFCCP requirement regarding the Rehabilitation Act and the VEVRAA. The final regulations require contractors to establish a nationwide 7 percent utilization goal for disabled individuals and veterans in each job group of their workforce. If a contractor has less than 100 employees, the final rule requires the 7 percent goal to be applied to the entire workforce. In addition, OFCCP’s final rules provide two methods for contractors to establish hiring benchmarks for disabled individuals and veterans based on either the current national percentage of veterans in the workforce, which currently stands at 8 percent, or their own benchmark based on the best available data. The OFCCP stresses that goal is not a rigid and inflexible quota which must be met.

Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated that approximately 9.8 million disabled individuals were employed.11 The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities. The ADA prohibits discrimination in all employment prac- tices, including job application procedures, hiring, firing, advancement, compensation, training, and other terms, conditions, and privileges of employment. It applies to recruitment, advertising, tenure, layoffs, leaves, benefits, and all other employment-related activities. The employment provisions apply to private employers, state and local governments, employment agencies, and labor unions. Persons discriminated against because they have a known association or relationship with a disabled individual are also protected. Employers with 15 or more employees are covered. The ADA defines an individual with a disability as a person who has, or is regarded as having, a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities and has a record of such an impairment or is regarded as having such an impairment.

Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act of 2008 The Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act (ADAAA) brings millions more people within the ADA’s protection. The ADAAA expands the definition of “disability,” so that many more applicants and employees are eligible for reasonable accommodations.12 The ADAAA broadened the ADA’s definition of disability by expanding the term “major life activities,” doing away with the “substantially limited” requirement (previously mentioned) for those regarded as having a disability, and overturning two U.S. Supreme Court decisions that interpreted the ADA’s definition of disability narrowly.

According to the EEOC, one of the purposes of the ADAAA is the reinstatement of a broad scope of protection by expanding the definition of the term disability. Congress found that persons with many types of impairments—including epilepsy, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, major depres- sion, and bipolar disorder—had been unable to bring ADA claims because they were found not to meet the ADA’s definition of disability. The ADA still covers only qualified individuals with disabilities and provides that to be disabled, an individual must have “a physical or mental impair- ment that substantially limits one or more major life activities,” must have a record of such an impairment, or must be regarded as having such an impairment. The ADAAA also defines and vastly expands the term major life activities as including caring for oneself, performing manual tasks, seeing, hearing, eating, sleeping, walking, standing, lifting, bending, speaking, breathing, learning, reading, concentrating, thinking, communicating, and working. The amendment states that major life activities include the operation of a major bodily function, such as functions of the immune system, normal cell growth, digestive, bowel, bladder, neurological, brain, respiratory, cir- culatory, endocrine, and reproductive functions. The only exception to this rule is that if a person’s vision can be corrected with eyeglasses or contact lenses, he or she will not be considered disabled.

Questions about possible weight discrimination under this law have been raised, and it is not surprising. Obesity in the United States is on the rise. Overall, 38 percent of adults are obese and 17 percent of teenagers are as well.13 Federal court rulings and the EEOC do not consider “regular” obesity as a disability; however, morbid obesity is. The EEOC generally considers an individual to be morbidly obese when body weight is at least double the normal amount and substantially limits the person’s ability to walk, stand, kneel, stoop, and breathe. This guideline is not set in stone because a lesser overweight person could have these limitations. Also, employers should not discriminate against obese applicants or employees simply because they believe they cannot perform their jobs. According to EEOC General Counsel David Lopez, “All people with

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a disability who are qualified for their position are protected from unlawful discrimination.”14 He went on to say that, “Severe obesity is no exception. It is important for employers to realize that stereotypes, myths, and biases about that condition should not be the basis for employment decisions.” Employers would be prudent to consider requests for reasonable accommodation for obesity just as they would for other types of disabilities.

Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 The Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) makes it illegal for certain employers to fire or refuse to hire a person based on that person’s national origin or citizenship. This law also makes it illegal for an employer to request employment verification only from people of a certain national origin or only from people who appear to be from a foreign country. An employer who has citizen- ship requirements or gives preference to U.S. citizens also may violate IRCA.

Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 The Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA) provides pro- tection to Reserve and National Guard members. Under the USERRA, those workers are entitled to return to their civilian employment after completing their military service. The USERRA is intended to eliminate or minimize employment disadvantages to civilian careers that can result from service in the uniformed services. The USERRA was enacted to protect the reemployment benefits and nondiscrimination rights of individuals who voluntarily or involuntarily take a leave of absence from employment to serve in the military. As a rule, a returning employee is entitled to reemployment in the same job or position that he or she would have attained with reasonable certainty if not for the absence to serve in the military. Known as the escalator principle, this requirement is designed to ensure that a returning employee is not penalized (by losing a pay raise, promotion, etc.) for the time spent on active duty, not exceeding five years. To accomplish this, organizations should track factors ranging from compensation to promotions that employees would have received had they not been on military leave.15 There are no special rights under USERRA for temporary workers or the new hires taking over the Reserve or National Guide members’ jobs.

The Veterans Opportunity to Work (VOW) Act passed in 2011 amended the USERRA. It is now easier for employees to sue employers based on hostile work environment claims related to an employee’s military status. In 2015, 39.6 percent of USERRA cases contained allegations of discrimination based on past, present or future military service or status, and 18.7 percent involved allegations of improper reinstatement into civilian jobs following military service.16 USERRA is administered by the U.S. Department of Labor.

Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) of 2008 protects job applicants, current and former employees, labor union members, and apprentices and trainees from discrimination based on their genetic information by making unlawful the misuse of genetic information to dis- criminate in health insurance and employment. GINA contains two titles.

Title I of GINA applies to employer-sponsored group health plans. This title generally pro- hibits discrimination in group premiums based on genetic information and the use of genetic information as a basis for determining eligibility or setting health insurance premiums. Title I also places limitations on genetic testing and the collection of genetic information.

Title II of GINA prohibits the use of genetic information in the employment setting for mak- ing employment decisions such as hiring decisions, compensation, training, and termination. GINA further restricts the deliberate acquisition of genetic information by employers and others covered by Title II and strictly limits disclosing genetic information.

State and Local Laws Numerous state and local laws also affect EEO. Many states and some cities have passed fair employment practice laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Even prior to federal legislation, several states had antidiscrimination legislation relating to age and gender. For instance, New York protected individuals between the ages of 18 and 65 prior to the passing of the ADEA, and California had no upper limit on protected age. San

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Francisco has voted to ban weight discrimination. The Board of Supervisors added body size to city laws that already bar discrimination based on race, color, religion, age, ancestry, sex, sexual orientation, disability, place of birth, or gender identity. The state of California has a law that requires sexual harassment prevention training. Recently, New York City passed a law designed to protect unemployed job seekers from discrimination by employers.17 When EEOC regulations conflict with state or local civil rights regulations, the legislation more favorable to women and minorities applies. Of late, state laws have addressed drug and alcohol testing, EEO, human traf- ficking, immigration, time off, wages paid, and worker privacy.18

Who’s Responsible for Ensuring Equal Employment Opportunity? The main groups that take responsibility for establishing and supporting EEO include the govern- ment (EEOC and OFCCP) and employers.

3.2 Discuss who is responsible for ensuring equal employment opportunity.

☛ F Y I There were 91,503 charges of illegal discrimination in fiscal year 2016, of which are:

$ Retaliation: 45.9 percent $ Race: 35.3 percent $ Disability: 30.7 percent $ Sex: 29.4 percent $ Age: 22.8 percent $ National Origin: 10.8 percent $ Religion: 4.2 percent $ Color: 3.4 percent $ Equal Pay Act: 1.2 percent $ Genetic Information Non-Discrimination Act: 0.3 percent19

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, as amended, created the EEOC, which is charged with admin- istering most of the aforementioned laws. Under Title VII, filing a discrimination charge initiates EEOC action. The EEOC continually receives complaints. As shown in the FYI, employees filed 91,503 workplace discrimination charges in 2016. In 2016, the EEOC obtained approximately $52.2 million in monetary relief for thousands of discrimination victims as well as significant nonmonetary remedies from employers.20

Charges may be filed by one of the presidentially appointed EEOC commissioners, by any aggrieved person, or by anyone acting on behalf of an aggrieved person. Charges must be filed within 180 days of the alleged act; however, the time is extended to 300 days if a state or local agency is involved in the case.

Notice in Figure 3-2 that when a charge is filed, the EEOC first attempts a no-fault settlement. Essentially, the organization charged with the violation is invited to settle the case with no admis- sion of guilt. Most charges are settled at this stage. Failing settlement, the EEOC investigates the charges. Once the employer is notified that an investigation will take place, no records relating to the charge may be destroyed. During the investigative process, the employer is permitted to present a position statement. After the investigation, the district director of the EEOC will issue a probable cause or a no probable cause statement.

In the event of a probable cause statement, the next step involves attempted conciliation. In the event this effort fails, the case will be reviewed for litigation potential. Some of the factors that determine whether the EEOC will pursue litigation are (1) the number of people affected by the alleged practice; (2) the amount of money involved in the charge; (3) other charges against the employer; and (4) the type of charge. Recommendations for litigation are then passed on to the general counsel of the EEOC. If the recommendation is against litigation, a right-to-sue notice will be issued to the charging party.

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Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs The purpose of the OFCCP is to enforce the requirements of affirmative action and EEO required of those who do business with the federal government. The OFCCP is an agency within the U.S. DOL. According to the U.S. DOL, the OFCCP uses the following enforcement procedures:21

$ Offers technical assistance to federal contractors and subcontractors to help them under- stand the regulatory requirements and review process.

$ Conducts compliance evaluations and complaint investigations of federal contractors and subcontractors personnel policies and procedures.

$ Obtains conciliation agreements from contractors and subcontractors who are in viola- tion of regulatory requirements. When a compliance review discloses problems, OFCCP attempts to work with the contractor, often entering into a conciliation agreement. A con- ciliation agreement may include back pay, job offers, seniority credit, promotions or other forms of relief for victims of discrimination. It may also involve new training programs, special recruitment efforts, or other affirmative action measures

$ Monitors contractors and subcontractors progress in fulfilling the terms of their agreements through periodic compliance reports.

$ Forms linkage agreements between contractors and DOL job training programs to help employers identify and recruit qualified workers.

$ Recommends enforcement actions to the Solicitor of Labor. $ The ultimate sanction for violations is debarment—the loss of a company’s federal con-

tracts. Other forms of relief to victims of discrimination may also be available, including back pay for lost wages.

Employers Much has occurred since the first piece of EEO legislation was enacted approximately 50 years ago, and the basic hiring standards to avoid are largely understood by those in the workforce. In a perfect world, discrimination, retaliation, and harassment would not exist. However, despite a company’s best efforts to treat employees fairly, suits are still brought and won because of

HR Web Wisdom

EEOC www.eeoc.gov

The home page for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

FIGURE 3-2 EEOC Procedure Once a Charge Is Filed

Steps in Handling a discrimination Case

Charge filed

Attempt at a No-fault Settlement

Investigation by the EEoC

Issue a Probable Cause or a No Probable Cause Statement

Attempt at Conciliation

Recommendations for or Against litigation

Recommendation Against litigation — Right to Sue

Notice Issued to Charging Party

Recommendation for litigation — EEoC

Initiates Action

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mistakes in adherence to these standards.22 Perhaps, it was only a temporary lapse where a man- ager knowingly decides to hire a less-qualified friend over a qualified member of a protected group. Or the manager may sincerely believe that he or she has the best intention of abiding by the law but still makes a mistake perhaps because of some complexity in the law.

To limit the prospect of an EEO lawsuit, an organization can do a few things. First, and fore- most, it must have and enforce a strong EEO policy against discrimination. This policy must begin with top management and filter down to everyone in the organization. This policy should clearly spell out what standards are to be avoided. It should also conspicuously describe the complaint procedure and the various avenues that can be followed if the person in charge is the cause of the complaint. Certainly, the policy should provide a strong anti-retaliation clause. Workers need to believe that a complaint will result in immediate and appropriate action.

Even with a policy such as the one described, there may still be breakdowns. When they do occur, it becomes an opportunity to train employers how to handle an employee-relations prob- lem better the next time. By taking the high road in the solution of a suit, it provides a means of reinforcing the seriousness of the nondiscrimination policy.23

Illegal Discrimination and Affirmative Action Unfortunately, we hear about illegal discrimination in the workplace all too often in the news, through friends or family who may have been victims, or personally. At minimum, every employee should possess an awareness of how the law defines illegal workplace discrimination. Even a basic understanding may help employers and employees to minimize the prevalence of illegal discriminatory acts through self-monitoring or reporting concerns of possible illegal discrimina- tion to human resource management professionals.

Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures Prior to 1978, employers were faced with complying with several different selection guidelines. In 1978, the EEOC, the Civil Service Commission, the Department of Justice, and the DOL adopted the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures. These guidelines cover several federal EEO statutes and executive orders, including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, EO 11246, and the Equal Pay Act.

The Uniform Guidelines provide a single set of principles that were designed to assist employers, labor organizations, employment agencies, and licensing and certification boards in complying with federal prohibitions against employment practices that discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. The Uniform Guidelines provide a framework for making legal employment decisions about hiring, promotion, demotion, referral, retention, licens- ing and certification, the proper use of tests, and other selection procedures. Under the Uniform Guidelines, recruiting procedures are not considered selection procedures and therefore are not covered.

Regarding selection procedures, the Uniform Guidelines state that a test is any measure, combination of measures, or procedures used as a basis for any employment decision. Selection procedures include the full range of assessment techniques from traditional paper-and-pencil tests, performance tests, testing programs or probationary periods, and physical, education, and work experience requirement through informal or casual interviews and unscored application forms.

Using this definition, virtually any instrument or procedure used in the selection decision is considered a test.

Types of Unlawful Employment Discrimination Unlawful employment discrimination, as established through various Supreme Court decisions, can be divided into two broad categories: disparate treatment and adverse impact. We will review each type next.

DISPARATE TREATMENT Disparate treatment means that an employer treats some employees less favorably than others because of race, religion, color, sex, national origin, or age. It is the most easily understood form of discrimination.

For example, males are treated differently from females; Caucasians are treated differently from non-Caucasians. The crux of disparate treatment is different treatment based on some non-allowable

3.3 Define the types of illegal employment discrimination and discuss affirmative action.

Uniform Guidelines Provide a single set of principles that were designed to assist employers, labor organizations, employment agencies, and licensing and certification boards in complying with federal prohibitions against employment practices that discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, and national origin.

disparate treatment Employer treats some people less favorably than others because of race, religion, color, sex, national origin, or age.

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criterion. It may be thought of as intentional discrimination. Common forms of disparate treat- ment include selection rules with a racial, sexual, or other premise; prejudicial action; unequal treatment on an individual basis; and different hiring standards for different groups. McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Company offers an example of disparate treatment. Three of the company’s employees, two white people and one black person, had allegedly misappropriated 60 gallons of antifreeze. Santa Fe took disciplinary action against the workers by terminating the two white employees, but not the black employee. The discharged white workers filed suit against the company, charging that their termination violated both Title VII and the Civil Rights Act of 1866. The Supreme Court agreed with the plaintiffs that they had been the recipients of unequal treatment based on their race. Central to disparate treatment is the matter of proof. The plaintiff must first be able to establish a prima facie case (i.e., the appearance of possible illegal discrimination), and second, can establish that the employer was acting based on a discriminatory motive.

ADVERSE IMPACT Before the issuance of the Uniform Guidelines, the only way to prove job- relatedness was to validate each test. The Uniform Guidelines do not require validation in all cases. Essentially, it is required only in instances in which the test or other selection device produces an adverse impact on a minority group. Adverse impact takes place when an employment decision, practice or policy has a disproportionately negative effect on a protected group. Oftentimes, it may be thought of as unintentional discrimination. According to the Uniform Guidelines, adverse impact is said to occur if, “a substantially different rate of selection in hiring, promotion or other employment decision which works to the disadvantage of members of a race, sex or ethnic group” is evident.24 In practical terms, adverse impact may have occurred when women and minorities are not hired at the rate of at least 80 percent of the best-achieving group. This formula has also been called the “four-fifths” or “80 percent” rule, which is a guideline subject to interpretation by the EEOC.

Under the Uniform Guidelines, adverse impact has been described in terms of selection rates, the selection rate being the number of qualified applicants hired or promoted, divided by the total number of applicants in a particular group. The groups identified for analysis under the guidelines are (1) African Americans, (2) American Indians (including Alaskan natives), (3) Asians, (4) Hispanics, (5) Caucasian, (6) women, and (7) men.

The following formula is used to compute adverse impact for ethnic or racial group (numbers 1 through 4):

Selection rate for ethnic or racial minority applicants

Selection rate for Caucasian applicants = Assessment of possible adverse impact

For sex (group 6):

Selection rate for female applicants

Selection rate for male applicants = Assessment of possible adverse impact

The selection rate for the female or ethnic or racial minority group is determined by dividing the number of members of females, members of an ethnic group, or members of a racial group hired in a period by the number of applicants in the same group for the same period. The selection rate for the male or Caucasian group is determined by dividing the number of males or Caucasians hired in a period by the number of applicants in the same group for the same period.

Using the formula, let us determine whether there has been adverse impact in the following case. During 2017, 400 people were hired to fill as many vacant positions. Of the total number hired, 300 were Caucasian and 100 were African American. There were 1,500 applicants for these jobs, of whom 1,000 were Caucasian and 500 were African American. The selection rate for African Americans equals 0.2 (that is, 100/500). The selection rate for Caucasians is 0.3 (that is, 300/1,000). Using the adverse impact formula, you have:

100/500 300/1,000

= 0.2 0.3

= 66.67,

Thus, adverse impact likely exists because the ratio falls below the 80 percent guideline. Therefore, firms must monitor their recruitment efforts carefully. Obviously, firms should

attempt to recruit qualified individuals because once in the applicant pool, they will be used in computing whether adverse impact is evident.

adverse impact takes place when an employment decision, practice or policy has a disproportionately negative effect on a protected group. Oftentimes, it may be thought of as unintentional discrimination.

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If adverse impact is shown, employers have two avenues available to them if they still desire to use a particular selection standard. First, the employer may validate a selection device by showing that it is indeed a predictor of success. For instance, the employer may be able to show a strong relationship between the selection device and job performance, and that if it did not use this procedure, the firm’s training costs would become prohibitive. If the device has proved to be a predictor of job performance, business necessity has been established.

The second avenue available to employers should adverse impact be shown is the BFOQ defense. The BFOQ defense means that only one group can perform the job successfully. Courts have narrowly interpreted this defense because it almost always relates to sex discrimination. For instance, courts have rejected the concept that because most women cannot lift 100 pounds, all women should be eliminated from consideration for a job requiring heavy lifting.

The Uniform Guidelines adopted the bottom-line approach in assessing whether a firm’s employment practices are discriminatory. For example, if a few separate procedures are used in selecting applicants, the enforcement agencies will focus on the result of these procedures to determine whether adverse impact has occurred. Essentially, the EEOC is more concerned with what is occurring than how it occurs. It admits that discriminatory employment practices that can- not be validated may exist; however, the net effect, or the bottom line, of the selection procedures is the focus of the EEOC’s attention.

Affirmative Action An executive order (EO) is a directive issued by the president and has the force and effect of a law enacted by Congress because it applies to federal agencies and federal contractors. An exam- ple of a contractor is a company that provides carpentry work in federal government buildings. In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson established EO 11246 has two provisions. First, it prohibits federal contractors and subcontractors from engaging in illegal employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. This requirement applies to contractors and sub- contractors whose contracts with the federal government exceed $10,000. Second, contractors and sub contractors are required to take affirmative action to hire individuals from underrepresented groups. Contractors and subcontractors must prepare written affirmative action when their con- tracts exceed $50,000. The OFCCP is responsible for enforcing EO 11246. In 1968, EO 11375 changed the word creed to religion and added sex discrimination to the other prohibited items.

President Richard M. Nixon issued EO 11478 in 1969. It covers the federal civilian work- force. This EO prohibits discrimination in employment based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, and age. And it requires all federal government departments and agencies to take affirmative steps to promote employment opportunities for those classes it covered. In 1998, President Bill Clinton amended EO 11478 with EO 13087, which adds sexual orientation to the list of protected classes. These EOs are enforced by the DOL through the OFCCP. Recently the VEVRAA and the Rehabilitation Act have received additional attention from the OFCCP.25

Affirmative action, stipulated by EO 11246, requires covered employers to take positive steps to ensure that employment of applicants and treatment of employees during employment are without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin.

Covered human resource practices relate to employment, upgrading, demotion, transfer, recruitment or recruitment advertising, layoffs or termination, rates of pay or other forms of compensation, and selection for training, including apprenticeships. Employers are required to post notices explaining these requirements in conspicuous places in the workplace. In the event of contractor noncompliance, contracts can be canceled, terminated, or suspended in whole or in part, and the contractor may be declared ineligible for future government contracts.

An affirmative action program (AAP) is an approach developed by organizations with government contracts to demonstrate that workers are employed in proportion to their representa- tion in the firm’s relevant labor market.

An AAP may be voluntarily implemented by an organization. In such an event, goals are established and actions taken to hire and move minorities and women up in the organization. In other situations, an AAP may be mandated by the OFCCP. The degree of control the OFCCP will impose depends on the size of the contract, with contracts of $10,000 or less not covered. The first level of control involves contracts that exceed $10,000 but are less than $50,000. The second level of control occurs if the contractor (1) has 50 or more employees; (2) has a contract of $50,000 or more; (3) has contracts that, in any 12-month period, total $50,000 or more or reasonably may be

executive order (EO) Directive issued by the president that has the force and effect of law enacted by Congress as it applies to federal agencies and federal contractors.

affirmative action program (AAP) Approach developed by organizations with government contracts to demonstrate that workers are employed in proportion to their representation in the firm’s relevant labor market.

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expected to total $50,000 or more; or (4) is a financial institution that serves as a depository for government funds in any amount, acts as an issuing or redeeming agent for U.S. savings bonds and savings notes in any amount, or subscribes to federal deposit or share insurance. Contractors meeting these criteria must develop a written AAP for each of their establishments and file an annual EEO-1 report. Note that the threshold is 50 employees here, but it is 100 with regard to those covered by the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The third level of control on contractors is in effect when contracts exceed $1 million. All previously stated requirements must be met, and in addition, the OFCCP is authorized to con- duct pre-award compliance reviews. In determining whether to conduct a pre-award review, the OFCCP may consider, for example, the items presented in Table 3-1. Alcoa Mill Products Inc. paid $484,656.19 in back wages to 37 Hispanics and blacks as well as $35,516.88 to two women who were rejected for job positions at the company’s plant in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The OFCCP determined that the company had violated EO 11246 by failing to meet its obligations as a federal contractor. Alcoa holds contracts with the U.S. Army in excess of $50 million.

Recently every 25th supply and service federal contractor selected for a compliance evalua- tion by the OFCCP is subjected to a full compliance review that includes on-site visits by compli- ance officers, even though there are no indicators of potential discrimination or other violations. The “active case enforcement” directive also provides that the OFCCP will perform a full desk audit in every compliance evaluation to comprehensively analyze a contractor’s written AAPs.26 Before this decision, only 25 compliance reviews were made per year.27

If an investigation indicates a violation, the OFCCP first tries to secure compliance through persuasion. If persuasion fails to resolve the issue, the OFCCP serves a notice to show cause or a notice of violation. A show cause notice contains a list of the violations, a statement of how the OFCCP proposes that corrections be made, a request for a written response to the findings, and a suggested date for a conciliation conference. The firm usually has 30 days to respond. Successful conciliation results in a written contract between the OFCCP and the contractor. In a conciliation agreement, the contractor agrees to take specific steps to remedy noncompliance with an EO. Firms that do not correct violations can be passed over in the awarding of future contracts. The procedures for developing AAPs were published in the Federal Register of December 4, 1974. These regulations are referred to as Revised Order No. 4. Revised Order No. 4 is quite specific with regard to dissemination of a firm’s EEO policy, both internally and externally. An executive should be appointed to manage the firm’s EEO program. This person should be given the neces- sary support by top management to accomplish the assignment. Revised Order No. 4 specifies the minimum level of responsibility associated with the task of EEO manager. The OFCCP guide for compliance officers, outlining what to cover in a compliance review, is known as Order No. 14.

The OFCCP is specific about what should be included in an AAP. A policy statement must be developed that reflects the CEO’s attitude regarding EEO, assigns overall responsibility for preparing and implementing the AAP, and provides for reporting and monitoring procedures. The policy should state that the firm intends to recruit, hire, train, and promote persons in all job titles without regard to race, color, religion, gender, or national origin, except where gender is a BFOQ. Recently protected military veterans and individuals with disabilities have been included in affir- mative action. The policy should guarantee that all human resource actions involving areas such as compensation, benefits, transfers, layoffs, return from layoffs, company-sponsored training, education, tuition assistance, and social and recreational programs will be administered without regard to race, color, religion, gender, or national origin.

1. The past EEO performance of the contractor, including its current EEO profile and indications of underutilization.

2. The volume and nature of complaints filed by employees or applicants against the contractor. 3. Whether the contractor is in a growth industry. 4. The level of employment or promotional opportunities resulting from the expansion of, or turnover

in, the contractor’s workforce. 5. The employment opportunities likely to result from the contract in issue. 6. Whether resources are available to conduct the review.

TABLE 3-1

Factors That the OFCCP May Consider in Conducting a Pre-award Review

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An acceptable AAP must include an analysis of deficiencies in the utilization of minority groups and women. The first step in conducting a utilization analysis is to make a workforce analysis. The second step involves an analysis of all major job groups. An explanation of the situ- ation is required if members of protected groups are currently being underutilized. A job group is defined as one or more jobs having similar content, wage rates, and opportunities.

Underutilization is defined as having fewer minorities or women in a particular job group than would reasonably be expected by their availability. The utilization analysis is important because the calculations determine whether underutilization exists. For example, if the utilization analysis shows that the availability of black employees for a certain job group is 30 percent, the organization should have at least 30 percent black employment in that group. If actual employment is less than 30 percent, underutilization exists, and the firm should set a goal of 30 percent black employment for that job group. The goal of affirmative action is for a contractor’s workforce to generally reflect the gender, racial, and ethnic profile of the labor pools from which the contractor recruits and selects.

The primary focus of any AAP is on goals and timetables, with the issue being how many and by when. Goals and timetables developed by the firm should cover its entire AAP, including correction of deficiencies. These goals and timetables should be attainable; that is, they should be based on results that the firm, making good-faith efforts, could reasonably expect to achieve. Goals should be significant and measurable, as well as attainable. Two types of goals must be established regarding underutilization: annual and ultimate. The annual goal is to move toward elimination of underutilization, whereas the ultimate goal is to correct all underutilization. Goals should be specific in terms of planned results, with timetables for completion. However, goals should not establish inflexible quotas that must be met. Rather, they should be targets that are reasonably attainable. Some techniques that can be used to improve recruitment and increase the flow of minority and women applicants are shown in Table 3-2.

Uniform Guidelines on Preventing Specific Illegal Employment Discrimination Since the Uniform Guidelines were published in 1978, they have been modified several times. Some of these changes reflect Supreme Court decisions; others clarify implementation procedures. The five major changes discussed are the Guidelines on Sexual Harassment, Guidelines on Discrimi- nation because of National Origin, Guidelines on Discrimination because of Religion, Guidelines on Caregiver (Family Responsibility) Discrimination, and Discrimination because of Disability.

3.4 Explain the Uniform Guide- lines related to various types of illegal employment discrimina- tion, including sexual harass- ment, national origin, religion, and caregiver (family responsibil- ity) discrimination.

$ Identify referral organizations for minorities and women. $ Hold formal briefing sessions with representatives of referral organizations. $ Encourage minority and women employees to refer applicants to the firm. $ Include minorities and women on the personnel relations staff. $ Permit minorities and women to participate in career days, youth motivation programs, and related

activities in their community. $ Actively participate in job fairs and give company representatives the authority to make on-the-spot

commitments. $ Actively recruit at schools having predominant minority or female enrollments. $ Use special efforts to reach minorities and women during school recruitment drives. $ Undertake special employment programs whenever possible for women and minorities. These

might include technical and nontechnical co-op programs, after-school or work-study jobs, summer jobs for underprivileged individuals, summer work-study programs, and motivation, training, and employment programs for the hardcore unemployed.

$ Pictorially present minorities and women in recruiting brochures. $ Include the minority news media and women’s interest media when expending help wanted

advertising.

Source: Federal Register, 45, no. 251 (December 30, 2008): 86243.

TABLE 3-2

Techniques to Improve Recruitment of Minorities and Women

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Guidelines on Sexual Harassment As previously mentioned, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act generally prohibits discrimination in employment based on gender. The EEOC has also issued guidelines that state that employers have a duty to maintain a workplace that is free from sexual harassment. The OFCCP has issued simi- lar guidelines. Managers in both for-profit and not-for-profit organizations must be particularly alert to the issue of sexual harassment. The EEOC issued the guidelines because of the belief that sexual harassment was a widespread problem. Table 3-3 contains the EEOC’s definition of sexual harassment. As you see, there are two distinct types of sexual harassment: (1) where a hostile work environment is created, and (2) when there is a quid pro quo, for example, an offer of promotion or pay raise in exchange for sex.

According to these guidelines, employers are totally liable for the acts of their supervisors, regardless of whether the employer is aware of the sexual harassment act. In Faragher v. City of Boca Raton and Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, the Supreme Court held that an employer is strictly liable, meaning that it has absolutely no defense, when sexual harassment by a supervisor involves a tangible employment action. Courts expect employers to carefully train supervisors so they do not engage in any type of behavior that could be construed as sexual harassment. In addi- tion, all employees should be trained to understand their rights and responsibilities.28

As is the case for the Civil Rights Act of 1964, retaliation is forbidden against an employee who has participated in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing. Recently Z Foods, Inc. entered into a consent judgment requiring it to pay more than $1.47 million to settle an employment discrimination lawsuit filed by EEOC. The EEOC had charged Z Foods with subjecting several female farmworkers to sexual harassment. The harassment took the form of basing promotions and employment on sexual favors, continuous sexual advances, stalking female employees and unwanted physical touching and leering. Several male and female employees who reported the exploitation were retaliated against and fired soon after airing their objections. Melissa Barrios, director of EEOC’s Fresno Local Office, stated, “Workers have the right to voice their concerns about a sexually hostile work environment without fearing repercussions from their employer. With this ruling, the court sends the message that employers who ignore or punish employees for complaining of harassment leave themselves open to greater liability.”29

Where coworkers are concerned, the employer is responsible for such acts if the employer knew, or should have known, about them. The employer is not responsible when it can show that it took immediate and appropriate corrective action on learning of the problem. Another important aspect of these guidelines is that employers may be liable for acts committed by nonemployees in the workplace if the employer knew, or should have known, of the conduct and failed to take appropriate action.

Firms are responsible for developing programs and policies to prevent sexual harassment in the workplace. Managers must be trained to know what to do when there is a complaint. They must investigate all formal and informal complaints alleging sexual harassment.30 Failure to do so constitutes a violation of Title VII, as interpreted by the EEOC. To prevail in court, companies must have clear procedures for handling sexual harassment complaints. If the sexual harassment complaint appears legitimate, the company must take immediate and appropriate action.31 How- ever, this does not mean that everyone who is guilty of sexual harassment must be fired. A single incident does not mean that sexual harassment exists unless the employer ignores the incident and lets the situation worsen.32

Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature that occur under any of the following situations: 1. When submission to such conduct is made either explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of an

individual’s employment. 2. When submission to or rejection of such contact by an individual is used as the basis for employment

decisions affecting such individual. 3. When such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual’s work

performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment.

TABLE 3-3

EEOC Definition of Sexual Harassment

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72 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

The first sexual harassment case to reach the U.S. Supreme Court was the case of Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson in 1986. In the Vinson decision, the Supreme Court recognized for the first time that Title VII could be used for offensive-environment claims. According to the EEOC, spe- cific actions that could create a hostile workplace include a pattern of threatening, intimidating, or hostile acts and remarks, negative sexual stereotyping, or the display of written or graphic materials considered degrading. The 1993 Supreme Court decision in Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc. expanded the hostile-workplace concept and made it easier to win sexual harassment claims. In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court held that, “to be accountable as abusive work environment harassment, conduct need not seriously affect . . . the psychological well-being or lead the plaintiff to suffer injury.” No longer does severe psychological injury have to be proved. Under this ruling, the plaintiff only needs to show that his or her employer allowed a hostile-to-abusive work environment to exist.

Duane Reade, the New York/New Jersey drug store chain, agreed to settle an EEOC lawsuit for $240,000 for allowing the work environment at one of its New York stores to become hostile. The store manager frequently made vulgar remarks about women’s anatomy, sexually proposi- tioned female employees, made lewd comments about them during pregnancies, assigned pregnant women the least desirable store tasks, and sometimes grabbed female employees’ buttocks while they worked.33 Unchecked sexual harassment can be financially crippling. In a recent case, a jury awarded the plaintiff $95 million, including $80 million in punitive damages.34

Males are not precluded from sexual harassment. In 2016, 16.6 percent of charges alleging sexual harassment were filed by men.35 Recently, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that a female coworker’s “relentless” pursuit of a male employee could form the basis of a sexu- ally hostile environment claim, even without any physical conduct of a sexual nature. The Ninth Circuit pointed out that under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, “[b]oth sexes are protected from discrimination.”36

For a long time, an unresolved question in employment law has been whether same-sex harassment (for example, males harassing males) is unlawful under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Supreme Court, in the case of Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, held that same-sex sexual harassment may be unlawful under Title VII. The Supreme Court decided that a plaintiff could make a claim for sexual harassment if the harassing conduct was because of sex. The Court emphasized that Title VII does not prohibit all verbal or physical harassment in the workplace, only that which constitutes discrimination because of sex.

Guidelines on Discrimination Because of National Origin Both EEOC and the courts have interpreted national origin protection under Title VII as extending far beyond discrimination against individuals who came from, or whose forebears came from, a particular country. National origin protection also covers (1) marriage or association with a person of a specific national origin; (2) membership in, or association with, an organization identified with, or seeking to promote the interests of national groups; (3) attendance at, or participation in, schools, churches, temples, or mosques generally used by persons of a national origin group; and (4) use of an individual’s or spouse’s name that is associated with a national origin group. As Table 3-4 shows, the EEOC has identified certain selection procedures that may be discriminatory.

Harassment on the basis of national origin is a violation of Title VII. Employers have a duty to maintain a working environment free from such harassment. Ethnic slurs and other verbal or physical conduct relating to an individual’s national origin constitute harassment when this conduct (1) has the purpose or effect of creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working

1. Fluency in English requirements: One questionable practice involves denying employment opportu- nities because of an individual’s foreign accent or inability to communicate well in English. When this practice is continually followed, the EEOC will presume that such a rule violates Title VII and will study it closely. However, a firm may require that employees speak only in English at certain times if business necessity can be shown.

2. Training or education requirements: Denying employment opportunities to an individual because of his or her foreign training or education, or practices that require an individual to be foreign trained or educated may be discriminatory.

TABLE 3-4

Selection Procedures That May Be Discriminatory with Regard to National Origin

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environment; (2) has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual’s work performance; or (3) otherwise adversely affects an individual’s employment opportunity.

Of interest regarding national origin is the English-only rule. Courts have generally ruled in the employer’s favor if the rule would promote safety and product quality and stop harassment. For example, suppose a company has a rule that only English must be spoken except during breaks. That rule must be justified by a compelling business necessity. In Garcia v. Spun Steak, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals (the Supreme Court refused to review) concluded that the rule did not necessarily violate Title VII. Spun Steak’s management implemented the policy after some work- ers complained they were being harassed and insulted in a language they could not understand. The rule allowed workers to speak Spanish during breaks and lunch periods. A recent ruling supported the job-related aspect of the English-only rule. In Montes v. Vail Clinic, Inc., the Tenth Circuit Court agreed with the English-only rule prohibiting housekeepers from speaking Spanish while working in the operating room. However, English-only policies that are not job related have been challenged and eliminated. The EEOC settled a Title VII lawsuit against a company that enforced an English-only rule solely against Hispanics. “What was strange was that the rule was only tar- geted at Hispanics. Tagalog, a Spanish language spoken in the Philippines, was openly spoken,” said Anna Park, the EEOC’s regional attorney in Los Angeles. “This was very troublesome.”37

Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion The number of religion-related discrimination complaints filed with the EEOC continues to increase. According to the Supreme Court’s decision in TWA v. Hardison, employers have an obligation to accommodate sincerely held religious practices if the requested accommodation does not create more than a minimum cost to the employer.38 Courts generally do not require employers to hire additional employees just to cover for another employee who needs a religious accommodation. Consideration is given to identifiable costs in relation to the size and operat- ing costs of the employer and the number of individuals who need the accommodation. These guidelines recognize that regular payment of premium wages constitutes undue hardship, whereas these payments on an infrequent or temporary basis do not. Undue hardship would also exist if an accommodation required a firm to vary from its bona fide seniority system.

The most common claims filed under the religious accommodation provisions involve employees objecting to either Sabbath employment or membership in or financial support of labor unions. These guidelines identify several means of accommodating religious practices that prohibit working on certain days. Some of the methods suggested included voluntary substitutes, flexible scheduling, lateral transfer, and change of job assignments. Basically, employers that refuse to accommodate an employee’s religious practice may need to provide evidence that doing so would constitute an undue burden.39 However, if making an accommodation places a true hardship on the company, the accommodation does not have to be given.40 That was not the case for clothing retailer Abercrombie & Fitch, which refused to hire a Muslim woman because of her religious practice of wearing a hijab. The company chose not to hire her because she did not conform to the company’s “look policy.” In EEOC v. Abercrombie & Fitch, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an employer may not refuse to hire an applicant if the employer was driven by sidestepping the need to accommodate a religious practice. In this case, the employer “failed to accommodate her religious beliefs by not making an exception to its “look policy” prohibiting head coverings.”41

Some collective bargaining agreements include a provision that each employee must join the union or pay the union a sum equivalent to dues. When an employee’s religious beliefs prevent compliance, the union should accommodate the employee by permitting that person to make an equivalent donation to a charitable organization.

☛ F Y I Almost everyone will assume a caregiver role at some point:

$ Sixty percent of workers have or will provide unpaid care to an adult or child with special needs. $ Nearly 50 million employees have children under the age of 18. $ Fifty-three percent of individuals who are not working choose not to work because of family

responsibilities.42

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74 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

Guidelines on Caregiver (Family Responsibility) Discrimination Caregiver (family responsibility) discrimination is discrimination against employees based on their obligations to care for family members. The EEOC has issued a technical assistance docu- ment titled “Employer Best Practices for Workers with Caregiving Responsibilities” on how employers of workers with caregiving responsibilities can avoid violations of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and other fair employment laws and reduce the likelihood of discrimination complaints. This form of discrimination makes an assumption based on what a person assumes to be true about a group, including people with family responsibilities.

According to the EEOC, the guidance is not binding on employers but rather offers best prac- tices that are proactive measures that go beyond federal nondiscrimination requirements. Federal law does not prohibit discrimination based on “caregiver status,” but rather it is concerned when workers with caregiving responsibilities are treated differently based on a characteristic that is protected by laws, such as gender, race, or association with an individual with a disability.

Caregiver discrimination has become the new battleground in employment claims.43 Examples of possible caregiver discrimination violations include treating male caregivers more favorably than female caregivers; reassigning a woman to less desirable projects based on the assumption that, as a new mother, she will be less committed to her job; or lowering subjective evaluations of a female employee’s work performance after she becomes the primary caregiver of her grandchildren, despite the absence of an actual decline in work performance.44 Sometimes, it, “occurs when an employee suffers an adverse action that affects the terms and conditions of her employment based on unexamined biases about how women with family caregiving responsibilities will or should act.”45

For instance, in EEOC v. Denver Hotel Management Company, Inc., an employer suppos- edly told a female employee that she was denied consideration for a promotion because she “had a full-time job at home with her children.”46 According to the EEOC, the employee was never asked if she would be willing to relocate or work extended hours. Instead, the company’s leader- ship assumed that the employee would be unwilling to relocate or work extended hours because the complainant was the mother and primary caregiver for small children. The EEOC concluded that the company discriminated against this female employee based on stereotypical views of a woman’s caregiver status, calling it a form of sex discrimination prohibited by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

In recent years, employees have been filing more and more caregiver discrimination lawsuits. In the last decade alone, there has been a 267 percent increase.47 Most cases share a common ele- ment—the employee alleges that the caregiving responsibilities cause the alleged discriminatory action by the employer. Employees win 67 percent of the cases that go to trial, which is higher than other federal discrimination cases combined.48 The challenge for employers is to develop the right mix of flexibility and fairness in work scheduling, leave policies, dependent-care assistance, and benefits. This will promote positive employee relations, recruit and retain a diverse and well- qualified workforce, address and resolve job-related issues, and defend against claims of unfair or unlawful conduct. It will be ever more important for HR professionals to ensure flexibility in family responsibilities policies and educate line managers about policy guidelines. More and more employees will benefit from their employer’s flexibility.

Discrimination Because of Disability The ADA prohibits discrimination in employment because of one’s disability and requires that employers provide an employee or job applicant with a reasonable accommodation unless doing so would cause significant difficulty or expense for the employer. For example, drug store chain Walgreens agreed to pay $180,000 to settle a disability discrimination lawsuit filed by the EEOC. The EEOC had charged that Walgreens unlawfully fired a qualified employee because of her dis- ability after she ate a bag of chips prior to paying for it. The employee later explained that she was trying to stabilize her blood sugar during a hypoglycemic attack. Still, Walgreens denied a reason- able accommodation to a diabetic employee. EEOC San Francisco Regional Attorney William R. Tamayo said that, “People may think this case revolves around theft, but the real issue is how a company responded to a valued 18-year employee, whom it knew for 13 years to be diabetic, and who attempted to pay for the chips after she recovered from her hypoglycemic attack.”49

The EEOC guidelines on pre-employment inquiries and tests regarding disabilities prohibit inquiries and medical examinations intended to gain information about applicants’ disabilities

caregiver (family responsibility) discrimination Discrimination against employees based on their obligations to care for family members.

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before a conditional job offer. In the Supreme Court case of Leonel v. American Airlines, the Court ruled that the airline violated the ADA’s required sequence for pre-hire medical inquiries/ examinations by making medical inquiries and requiring individuals to take medical examinations before completing and making its hiring decisions.

The guiding principle is to ask only about potential employees’ ability to do the job, and not about their disabilities. Lawful inquiries include those regarding performance of specific functions or possession of training appropriate to the job, whereas illegal inquiries include those that ask about previous medical conditions or extent of prior drug use. The ADA does not protect people currently using illegal drugs. It does protect those in rehabilitation programs who are not currently using illegal drugs, those who have been rehabilitated, and those erroneously labeled as drug users. Coverage under the ADA continues to evolve as evidenced with the passing of the American with Disabilities Act Amendments Act of 2008.

Diversity and Diversity Management In decades past, diversity was primarily concerned with race and gender.50 Today, the defini- tion is quite different. As we defined in the chapter introduction, diversity refers to any actual or perceived difference among people: age, race, religion, functional specialty, profession, sexual orientation, gender identity, geographic origin, lifestyle, tenure with the organization or position, and any other perceived difference. Further, as companies have become more global, the work group itself has become more diverse.51 The challenge for managers is to recognize that people with characteristics that are common but are different from those in the mainstream, often think, act, learn, and communicate differently. Diversity is more than equal employment and affirmative action; the actual definition is constantly changing and expanding.

Diversity management is ensuring that factors are in place to provide for and encourage the continued development of a diverse workforce by combining these actual and perceived differ- ences among workers to achieve maximum productivity. Because every person, culture, and busi- ness situation is unique, there are no simple rules for managing diversity; but diversity experts say that employers need to develop patience, open-mindedness, acceptance, and cultural awareness. Diversity management focuses on the principle that all workers regardless of any factor are entitled to the same privileges and opportunities.52 According to R. Roosevelt Thomas Jr., former president of the American Institute for Managing Diversity, “diversity and diversity management are about managing and engaging people who are different and similar, all for the benefit of the organization and its goals.”53 In his book, The Future and the Work Ahead of Us, Harris Sussman writes, “Diversity is about our relatedness, our connectedness, our interactions, where the lines cross.”54

If organizations want to remain competitive in the marketplace, diversity should be a part of the strategic goal. Credit card giant MasterCard employs more than 11,000. It has a complex diversity program that includes a diversity advisory board, diversity networks, diversity recruit- ing, accountability mechanisms, scorecards, mandatory training, and a diversity officer. Donna Johnson, chief diversity officer, maintains that, “The diversity in thoughts and experiences of our people drives real business impact and makes meaningful contributions to society.”55

You will realize as you read the remainder of this chapter that diversity management and EEO are different. EEO focuses on laws, court decisions, and EOs. Diversity management is about pursuing an inclusive corporate culture in which newcomers feel welcome, and everyone sees the value of his or her job. It involves creating a supportive culture where all employees can be effective. In creating this culture, top management must strongly support workplace diversity as a company goal and include diversity initiatives in their companies’ business strategies. It has grown out of the need for organizations to recognize the changing workforce and other social pressures that often result. Achieving diversity is more than being politically correct; it is about fostering a culture that values individuals and their wide array of needs and contributions.

3.5 Describe the concept of diversity and diversity management.

diversity management Ensuring that factors are in place to provide for and encourage the continued development of a diverse workforce by melding actual and perceived differences among workers to achieve maximum productivity.

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR and Diversity simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

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Elements of the Diverse Workforce Several elements that combine to make up the diverse workforce will be discussed next.

Single Parents and Working Mothers The number of single-parent households in the United States is growing. Although the divorce rate peaked in the early 1980s, the percentage of marriages ending in divorce remains around 50 percent. Often, children are involved. Of course, there are always widows and widowers who have children, and there are some men and women who choose to raise children outside of wedlock.

Managers need to be sensitive to the needs of working parents. Many women who formerly remained at home to care for children and the household now need and want to work outside the home. In fact, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data, just more than 70 percent of U.S. women with school-age children work.56 If this valuable segment of the workforce is to be effectively used, organizations must fully recognize the importance of addressing work–family issues. Businesses are seeing that providing child-care services and workplace flexibility may influence workers’ choice of employers. Companies that were chosen in Working Mother maga- zine’s 100 best companies to work for placed greater emphasis on work–life balance, telecom- muting, and flextime. The number of single-parent men has also increased, thus making the same work friendly issues important. According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, in 2016 single fathers headed 7 percent of households with minor children, up from 1 percent in 1970.57

Women in Business Numerous factors have contributed to the growth and development of the U.S. labor force. However, nothing has been more prominent than the rise in the number of women in the labor force. More and more women are entering the labor force in high-paying, professional jobs and women dominate the health-care sector, which is one of the fastest-growing categories. In 2010, for the first time ever, women made up the majority of the U.S. workforce. Women-owned businesses now account for 38 percent of all enterprises in the market today. The American Express Open State of Women- Owned Businesses Report shows the number of women-owned firms from 2007 to 2016 increased by 45 percent.58 The report further indicates that among women of color, Latinas show the highest growth in the number of firms, Asian American women led in employment and revenue growth. Another study revealed that gender-diverse companies are 15 percent more likely to perform better than their peers and ethnically diverse companies are 35 percent more likely to do the same.59

Professional women are entering the workforce at the same rates as men. However, many opt out of the corporate life. Perhaps this is one of the reasons that women hold only 27 of the 500 CEO positions in Fortune’s 2016 list of the largest U.S. companies.60 But this does not mean that they are opting out of business careers. Instead, they are making their own career paths that allow them to combine work and life on their own terms. Thus, organizations are losing talented employees in whom they have made substantial investments. Numerous companies are working diligently keep professional women in the workforce although more work needs to be done.61

Women who chose to pursue advancement within corporations find it difficult to advance to the highest executive-level positions. A survey of 132 global companies revealed that women are underrepresented in senior management positions and C-level positions. Women accounted for 45 percent of entry-level professional jobs; however, only 32 percent were senior managers or directors, and fewer (17 percent) held positions in the C-suite.62

This phenomenon is often referred to as the glass ceiling. The glass ceiling is the invisible barrier in organizations that impedes women and minorities from career advancement. The Civil Rights Act of 1991 established a Glass Ceiling Commission to study the way businesses fill man- agement and decision-making positions, the developmental and skill-enhancing practices used to foster the necessary qualifications for advancement to such positions, and the compensation pro- grams and reward structures currently used in the workplace. It was also to study the limited progress made by minorities and women. One African-American female executive described the situation for minority females as more challenging than a glass ceiling. Annalisa Adams-Qualtiere said, “When I hear ‘glass ceiling,’ I think that’s great, you can break through glass. When it is concrete, you need a door and there need to be people on the other side of that door.”63 As you will learn in the following Watch It video, the challenges women face are particularly noteworthy in male-dominated professions.

3.6 Explain the various elements of a diverse workforce.

glass ceiling Invisible barrier in organizations that impedes women and minorities from career advancement.

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Mothers Returning to the Workforce (on Ramping) Today, many recruiters are focusing on educated women who have taken career breaks as a significant source of potential talent (on ramping).64 To get them to return, companies are going beyond federal law and giving mothers a year or more for maternity leave. Other businesses are specifically trying to recruit them to return to the labor force.

Although some companies are recruiting these women, other employers have programs that help their employees leave and later return. IBM has a program that allows employees to take up to three years off. Typically, working mothers who use the program take a year or more off, and then they use the remainder of their leave to re-enter work on a part-time basis. After the three years are up, they have the option of returning either full- or part-time. IBM surveyed employees who had taken the leave and found that 59 percent would have left the company if the program had not been available. “We didn’t want a situation where women had to opt out,” says Maria Ferris, manager of work–life and women’s initiatives at IBM. “We’ve invested in them, trained them. We want to retain them.”65

A concept called returnships is being used to let organizations try-out professionals who are resuming their careers. It provides a vehicle for relaunching a career after a break (most often for full-time parenting). Essentially it is an internship for experienced workers who have been out of work for a while whose résumés might scare recruiters away.66

Dual-Career Families The increasing number of dual-career families—in which both spouses or partners have jobs and family responsibilities—presents both challenges and opportunities for organizations. Most chil- dren growing up today have both parents working outside the home. In the twenty-first century the proportion of U.S. households with only a male wage earner is less than 20 percent.67 This fact stands in contrast to the 1950s when most households consisted of a male breadwinner mar- ried to a traditional housewife.

Today, employees have turned down relocations because of spouses’ jobs and concerns about their children. Of the top three reasons employees turn down assignments, family or spouse’s career is cited almost twice as often as concern with the employee’s career or compensation.68 Thus, firms are developing polices to assist the spouse of an employee who is transferred. Some are helping in finding a position for the spouse of a transferred employee. However, companies may need to learn more about how to handle dual-career couples in a global environment. If com- panies make the willingness to locate globally a requirement for promotion, many in this group will reject the offer, thereby reducing the size of the labor pool.

Ethnicity and Race According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the percentage of the U.S. labor force made up of white employees will decline while growth is expected for other racial groups.69 These include Hispanics, African Americans, and Asians. Unfortunately, at times, these individuals may be sub- ject to stereotyping. They may encounter misunderstandings and expectations based on ethnic or cultural differences. Members of ethnic or racial groups are socialized within their culture. Peo- ple’s attitudes are influenced by the ancestral and cultural experiences of their childhood. Many are socialized as members of two cultural groups—the dominant culture and their racial or ethnic culture. Ella Bell refers to this dual membership as biculturalism. In her study of black women, Bell identifies the stress of coping with membership in two cultures simultaneously as bicultural stress. She indicates that role conflict (competing roles from two cultures) and role overload (too many expectations to comfortably fulfill) are common characteristics of bicultural stress. Although these issues can be applied to other minority groups, they are particularly intense for women of color because this group experiences dynamics affecting both minorities and women.70

Socialization in one’s culture of origin can lead to misunderstandings in the workplace. This is particularly true when the manager relies solely on the cultural norms of the majority group.

dual-career family A situation in which both spouses or partners have jobs and family responsibilities.

HR Web Wisdom

Bureau of Labor Statistics www.bls.gov/

Principal fact-finding agency for the federal government in the broad field of labor economics and statistics.

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Woman on Track to Become First NFL Rep and to respond to questions.

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According to norms within U.S. culture it is acceptable, even considered positive, to publicly praise an individual for a job well done. However, in cultures that place primary value on group harmony and collective achievement, this method of rewarding an employee may cause emotional discomfort. Some employees feel that, if praised publicly, they will lose face within their group.

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to com- plete the Diversity simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

Older Workers Today, employees age 40 and older represent about 55 percent of the U.S. workforce.71 In 2011, the first baby boomers turned 65, and approximately 10,000 more will continue to do so every day for the next 20 years. In recent years, many boomers deferred retirement because of a falter- ing economy and concerns about the viability of the Social Security retirement program.72 As the economy improves, plans must be in place to handle a rapid departure of boomers from the workforce. Even so, many boomers will resist retirement, some because they feel healthy enough to continue work and others because their retirement income was hit hard by the economy. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that nearly 13.5 million workers 65 and older will be working in 2024, up from about 8 million today.73

Many companies try to keep the worker older than 55. This may be the result, in part, of legal concerns based on the ADEA, discussed previously in this chapter, which protects workers 40 and older against discrimination. However, a large part of this movement is the desire to keep the experienced workers on board because they are often more productive than younger work- ers. Employing older workers may boost overall workplace productivity. In one study, research- ers found that, “An older worker’s experience increases not only his own productivity but also the productivity of working with him.”74 Other companies actively recruit older workers. For instance, Barclays Bank expanded its internship program to include workers older than age 50. Mike Thompson, head of apprenticeships at Barclays, said, “We see real benefit in employing a workforce that reflects the diversity of our customer base.”75 He went on to explain that, “indi- viduals who have had previous careers and greater life experience can have empathy and are able to really understand and support our customers.”

People with Disabilities According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, approximately 20 percent of the labor force possesses one or more disabilities.76 Common disabilities include limited hearing or sight, limited mobility, mental or emotional deficiencies, and various nerve disorders. Such disabilities limit the amount or kind of work a person can do or make its achievement unusually difficult. In jobs for which they are qualified, however, disabled workers do as well as unimpaired workers in terms of productivity, attendance, and average tenure. In fact, in certain high-turnover occupations, disabled workers have lower turnover rates. A DOL survey found that many large businesses are hiring people with disabilities and discovering that costs for accommodations differ very little from those for the general employee population. In fact, the typical one-time expenditure is about $500, according the U.S. DOL’s Office of Disability Employment Policy.77 Further, once an employer hires one person with a disability, it is much more likely to hire other people with disabilities. Starbucks Coffee actively hires individuals with disabilities, providing a range of accommoda- tions. For instance, the company makes iPads available in stores with deaf partners (employees) to provide immediate video remote interpreting as needed.78

Immigrants Large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America have settled in many parts of the United States. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that 26.3 million foreign-born indi- viduals are in the U.S. workforce, representing 24.1 percent of the total.79 Some are highly skilled and well educated and others are only minimally qualified and have little education. Overall,

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the weekly earnings of foreign-born workers are substantially lower than for native-born work- ers—$681 versus $837. Despite these differences, they have one thing in common: an eagerness to work. For instance, the labor force participation rate of foreign-born men was recently 78.2 percent, which is higher than the 67.3 percent participation rate for native-born men. They have brought with them attitudes, values, and mores to their home country cultures.

After the end of hostilities in Vietnam, Vietnamese immigrants settled along the Mississippi and Texas Gulf Coast. At about the same time, thousands of Thais fleeing the upheaval in Thailand came to the Boston area to work and live. New York’s Puerto Rican community has long been an eco- nomic and political force there. Cubans who fled Castro’s regime congregated in southern Florida, especially Miami. A flood of Mexicans and other Hispanics continues across the southern border of the United States. The Irish, the Polish, the Italians, and others who came here in past decades have long since assimilated into, and indeed became, the culture. Newer immigrants require time to adapt. Meanwhile, they generally take low-paying and menial jobs, live in substandard housing, and form enclaves where they cling to some semblance of the cultures they left.

Wherever they settle, members of these ethnic groups soon begin to become part of the regular workforce in certain occupations and break out of their isolation. They begin to adopt the English language and U.S. customs. They learn new skills and adapt old skills to their new country. Managers can place these individuals in jobs appropriate to their skills, with excellent results for the organization. As corporations employ more foreign nationals in this country, managers must work to understand the different cultures of their employees.

Foreign Workers In 2017, the H-1B employment visa brings in approximately 80,000 skilled foreign workers annu- ally, including some 20,000 researchers and academicians not subject to the annual visa cap set by Congress. Of those 80,000, the majority are distributed to employers through a lottery system each April held by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an arm of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. However, the exact number of H-1B visa holders is difficult to determine. A three-year initial visa can be renewed for another three years, and if a worker is on track for a green card, H-1B status can be renewed annually.

Until the recent recession, demand far outpaced supply, and companies constantly encour- aged Congress to raise the cap. Many employers say the H-1B visa program provided the only practical avenue for finding high-tech workers with cutting-edge skills. Others do not agree, and there continues to be a debate regarding the hiring of foreign workers. Still, U.S. employers at both ends of the skills spectrum say they have no choice.

Young Persons, Some with Limited Education or Skills A lower labor force participation rate for young people is being experienced for all those younger than 24 years of age and not merely young persons with limited education and skills, as was so often the case in the past. The recent recession denied many young workers the opportunity of entering the workforce, so a large number decided to gain additional education to be more competitive.80

The downturn was especially harsh for 16- to 24-year-olds when the unemployment rate was the highest recorded since the government began monitoring it in the 1940s. Even so, each year, thousands of young, unskilled workers are hired, especially during peak periods, such as holiday buying seasons. These workers generally have limited education, sometimes even less than a high school diploma. Those who have completed high school often find that their educa- tion hardly fits the work they are expected to do. Many of these young adults and teenagers have poor work habits; they tend to be tardy or absent more often than experienced or better- educated workers.

Although the negative attributes of these workers at times seem to outweigh the positive ones, they are a permanent part of the workforce. Certainly, when teenagers are hired, an organization is not hiring maturity or experience; but young people possess many qualities, such as energy, enthusiasm, excitement, and eagerness to prove themselves. There are many jobs they can do well. More jobs can be de-skilled, making it possible for lower-skilled workers to do them. A well- known example of de-skilling is McDonald’s use of pictures on its cash register keys. Managers should also look for ways to train unskilled workers and to further their formal education.

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Baby Boomers, Gen X, Gen Y, and Gen Z Never in the history of the United States has so many different generations with such different views and attitudes been asked to work together. There have been tremendous changes since the boomers first entered the workplace. Each generation has its unique culture that has shaped its nature. Although generalizations about a group are risky, the following discussion may provide additional insight into each group. The discussion begins with baby boomers fully realizing that there remain some members of the Silent Generation in the workforce, those born during the Great Depression and World War II.81

BABY BOOMERS Baby boomers were born just after World War II through the mid-1960s. Corporate downsizing in the 1980s and 1990s cast aside millions of baby boomers. Companies now want to keep the boomers. Employers seek out boomers because they bring a wealth of skills and experience to the workplace, as well as have low turnover rates and high engagement levels. Companies today place considerable value on their skill, experience, and a strong work ethic, characteristics that many boomers possess.82

GENERATION X Generation X is the label affixed to the approximately 41 million U.S. workers born between the mid-1960s and late 1970s. Many organizations have a growing cadre of Generation X employees who possess lots of energy and promise. Ranjan Dutta, a director at PwC Saratoga said, “Gen X workers will be the largest part of the workforce for years to come, and increasingly make up senior leadership ranks in organizations.”83 They are one of the most widely misunderstood phenomena facing management today. Generation Xers differ from previous generations in some significant ways, including their natural affinity for technology and their entrepreneurial spirit. Job instability and the breakdown of traditional employer–employee relationships brought a realization to Generation Xers that it is necessary to approach the world of work differently from past generations.

Generation Xers recognize that their careers cannot be founded securely on a relationship with any one employer. They are skeptical, particularly when it comes to the business world and job security. They worry about their jobs being outsourced and how they are going to pay for their children’s education. They think of themselves more as free agents in a mobile workforce and expect to build career security, not job security, by acquiring marketable skills and expertise. Gen Xers are focused on gaining transferrable skills so that they can be ready should they no longer have a job.84 They are not afraid of changing jobs quite often. The surest way to gain Gen Xers’ loyalty is to help them develop career security. When a company helps them expand their knowledge and skills, it is preparing them for the job market. Gen Xers will often want to stay on board to learn those very skills.

baby boomers People born just after World War II through the mid-1960s.

Generation X Label affixed to the approximately 41 million U.S. workers born between the mid-1960s and late 1970s.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Affirmative Action and Workforce Diversity Anne Johnson is a newly hired human

resources (HR) associate for Capitol Manufacturing Company. Her first assignment was to develop and propose a plan to increase the diver- sity of the company’s workforce. Anne spent two weeks preparing her ideas and creating a presentation for the company’s HR leadership team and department managers throughout the company. She started her presentation by saying that she is not a fan of jargon because it creates confusion. To that end, Anne told the audience, “Diversity is just Affirmative Action with a new coat of paint.” And she made a similar statement about the relationship between diversity and EEO.

About workforce diversity and affirmative action, Anne claimed that both are enforced by the Fair Labor Standards Board. She went on to state that affirmative action, equal opportunity, and workforce diversity are numbers oriented and have little to do with the company’s culture. All are simply aimed at changing the demographic composition of the workforce. Anne continued by telling the audience that ensuring EEO is nothing more than a marketing ploy. Finally, she concluded her pre- sentation by saying that only the leadership of the HR and marketing departments within the company is responsible for promoting diversity, affirmative action, and EEO.

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GENERATION Y Generation Y comprises people born between the late 1970s and mid-1990s. Estimates are that Gen Yers (or Millennials) account for approximately half of all employees in the United States.85 They have never wound a watch, dialed a rotary phone, or plunked the keys of a manual typewriter. But without a thought, they download music from the Internet and insert pictures of events on Facebook. Kevin C. Carlson, CEO of Brill Street + Company said, “They may not have lots of experience in the traditional sense, but they’ve grown up with technology and social media, which are skills many companies look for today.”86 They cannot imagine how the world ever got along without computers. These individuals are the leading edge of a generation that promises to be the richest, smartest, and savviest ever. They are well educated, well versed in technology, and bursting with confidence.87 Generation Yers—often referred to as the echo boomers, Millennials, and Nexters—are the coddled, confident offspring of post–World War II baby boomers. Generation Y individuals are a most privileged generation, who came of age during the hottest domestic economy in memory.

Gen Yers tend to have a strong sense of morality and civic-mindedness.88 They are more ethnically diverse than previous generations, and nearly one-third of them have been raised in single-parent households. They want a workplace that is both fun and rewarding. They want jobs where there is a balance between work and family. They want jobs that conform to their interests and do not accept the way things have been done in the past. Generation Y employees want flex- ible working hours, which is a benefit that they are very enthusiastic about. They also tend to have more of a sense of entitlement not found in other generation of workers. However, Gen Yers’ childhoods have been short-lived because they have been exposed to some of the worst things in life: schoolyard shootings, drug use, terrorism, sex scandals, and war.

GENERATION Z OR DIGITAL NATIVES After Generation Y came Generation Z or Digital Natives, the Internet-assimilated children born between 1995 and 2009. Gen Zers are more worldly, high- tech, and confident in their ability to multitask; they tend to have short attention spans and desire speed over accuracy; and they enjoy media that provides live social interaction.89 They tend to use social networks to avoid the complications of dealing with face-to-face situations. In a recent survey, almost 25 percent of respondents found their relationship with their significant other was over by first seeing it on Facebook.90 Digital Natives do not trust politicians, social institutions, the media, or corporations. Rather, they rely largely on themselves and their peers to decide what to think, what to do, and what to buy. The main thrust of the book 2018: Digital Natives Grow Up and Rule the World was that, “Digital natives are protagonists for massive technology adoption and a consequent adaption of human behavior.”91 Two Gen Z children sitting in the back seat of the family car may now be texting each other instead of speaking with each other.

GENERATION ALPHA Some have suggested that the next generation, born from 2010 forward, will be called Generation Alpha. Although Generation Z is often referred to as the twenty-first- century generation, Generation Alpha will be the first true millennial generation, as they will be the first born into the 21st century.

Multigenerational Diversity Four generations are now participating in the workforce and each has different defining character- istics and nicknames. The concept of generational differences as a legitimate workplace diversity issue has gained increasing recognition. Baby boomers are remaining on the job longer because of the economy and often find themselves working with Generation Y employees. Traditionally, discussions of workplace diversity tended to focus on topics of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual ori- entation, and disability. Shirley A. Davis, SHRM’s director of diversity and inclusion initiatives, said, “In all parts of the world, there is another category of diversity that cannot be overlooked: multigenerational diversity.”92 Today, there are greater numbers of workers from each segment that bring both new opportunities and challenges. At times, there are significant differences in communication style which has the potential to harm communication. Dana Brownlee, president of corporate training firm Professionalism Matters in Atlanta, Georgia said, “Typically the older generations prefer talking face-to-face or on the phone, and the younger generations tend toward text-based messages like email and instant message.”93 If organizations want to thrive in this competitive environment of global talent management, they need employees and managers who are aware of and skilled in dealing with the different generations that make up the workforce.

Generation Y Comprises people born between the late 1970s and mid-1990s.

Generation Z or Digital Natives Internet-assimilated children born between 1995 and 2009.

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Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Employees There has been an increased focus in the political and workforce arena with regard to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) employees. In addressing the United Nations General Assembly, President Barack Obama said, “No country should deny people their rights to freedom of speech and freedom of religion, but also no country should deny people their rights because of who they love, which is why we must stand up for the rights of gays and lesbians everywhere.”95 President Obama also decided that the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that bars federal recognition of same-sex marriages was unconstitutional and told the Justice Department to stop defending the law in court, bringing harsh criticism from many congressional members.96 This became a moot point because in 2013, the Supreme Court in its landmark decision (United States vs. Windsor) struck down Section 3 of the act, which prohibited federal recognition of state-sanctioned, same- sex marriages.97 Then, in 2015, the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriage is protected under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, which means that same-sex marriages performed out-of-state must be recognized in other states (Obergefell v. Hodges). In the same year, the Family and Medical Leave Act, (FMLA) was amended to recognize eligible employees in legal same-sex marriages, enabling them to take FMLA leave to care for their spouse or family member, regardless of where they live.

Many companies have policies supporting LGBT employees perhaps because of legal require- ments. Other firms have policies to recruit and retain qualified employees no matter their sexual orientation.98 Over the last decade, corporations have increasingly created a more-welcoming environment for LGBT employees. An estimated 89 percent of Fortune 500 firms now ban dis- crimination on the basis of sexual orientation, up from 61 percent in 2002, and approximately 66 percent also ban discrimination against transsexuals, compared with 3 percent in 2002.99 Nonethe- less, surveys show that many LGBT employees still view their sexual orientation as a hindrance on the job, and approximately 48 percent of those surveyed remain “closeted” at work.100 However, by 2013, 59 percent of gay workers reported they were “out” at work, a 7 point increase from the previous year.101

☛ F Y I Eighty-four percent of employees who work for LGBT-inclusive companies say that:

$ They are proud to work there. $ They are more likely to “go the extra” mile for company success.94

PREPARING FOR EXAM/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Explain the concept of equal employment opportunity

(EEO) and identify the federal laws affecting EEO. Equal employment opportunity (EEO) refers to the prin- ciples and the set of laws and policies that requires all individuals’ rights to equal opportunity in the workplace, regardless of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, or disability. Major laws include the Civil Rights Act of 1866; Equal Pay Act (EPA) of 1963, amended in 1972; Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009; Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, amended in 1972; Preg- nancy Discrimination Act of 1978; Civil Rights Act of 1991; Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) of 1967, amended in 1978, 1986, and 1990; Rehabilita- tion Act of 1973; Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990; Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments

Act (ADAAA) of 2008; Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) of 1986; the Uniformed Services Employ- ment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA) of 1994; the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act (VEVRAA) of 1974, as amended, and the Genetic Infor- mation Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) of 2008.

2. Discuss who is responsible for ensuring equal employ- ment opportunity. The government and employers are responsible for ensuring EEO in the workplace. Two government agencies are charged with this responsibility: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP).

3. Define the types of illegal employment discrimination and discuss affirmative action. With disparate treatment,

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Key Terms equal employment opportunity

(EEO) 53 Affirmative Action 53 Diversity 53 Uniform Guidelines 68 disparate treatment 66

adverse impact 67 executive order (EO) 68 affirmative action program (AAP) 68 caregiver (family responsibility)

discrimination 74 diversity management 75

glass ceiling 76 dual-career family 77 baby boomers 80 Generation X 80 Generation Y 81 Generation Z or Digital Natives 81

an employer treats some people less favorably than oth- ers because of race, religion, sex, national origin, or age. Adverse impact occurs if women and minorities are not hired at the rate of at least 80 percent of the best-achieving group. Affirmative Action creates the expectation and pro- gram requirements that companies make a positive effort to recruit, hire, train, and promote employees from groups who are underrepresented in the labor force. An affirmative action program is an approach that an organization with government contracts develops to demonstrate that women or minorities are employed in proportion to their represen- tation in the firm’s relevant labor market.

4. Explain the Uniform Guidelines related to various types of illegal employment discrimination, including sexual harassment, national origin, religion, and caregiver (fam- ily responsibility) discrimination. The Uniform Guidelines adopted a single set of principles that were designed to assist employers, labor organizations, employment agen- cies, and licensing and certification boards to comply with requirements of federal law prohibiting employment prac- tices that discriminated on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. Employers have an affirmative duty to maintain a workplace free from sexual harassment. Discrimination on the basis of national origin is the denial

of EEO because of an individual’s ancestors or place of birth or because an individual has the physical, cultural, or linguistic characteristics of a national origin group. Employers have an obligation to accommodate religious practices unless they can demonstrate a resulting hardship. Caregiver (family responsibility) discrimination is discrimi- nation against employees based on their obligations to care for family members.

5. Describe the concept of diversity and diversity management. Diversity refers to any perceived difference among people: age, race, religion, functional specialty, profession, sexual orientation, geographic origin, lifestyle, tenure with the organization, or position, and any other perceived difference. Diversity management is ensuring that factors are in place to provide for and encourage the continued development of a diverse workforce by melding these actual and perceived dif- ferences among workers to achieve maximum productivity.

6. Explain the various elements of a diverse workforce. The workforce may include single parents and working moth- ers, women in business, mothers returning to the workforce, dual-career families, workers of color, older workers, peo- ple with disabilities, immigrants, foreign workers, young persons (some with limited education or skills), and multi- generational workers.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

Questions for Review 3-1. What are the components that combine to make up the

present diverse workforce? Briefly describe each. 3-2. Briefly describe the following laws:

(a) Civil Rights Act of 1866 (b) Equal Pay Act of 1963 (c) Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 (d) Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as

amended in 1972 (e) Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 (f) Civil Rights Act of 1991 (g) Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as

amended in 1978 and 1986

(h) Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (i) Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (j) Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act

of 2008 (k) Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (l) Uniformed Services Employment and

Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (m) Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act

of 1974 (n) Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008

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84 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Intercultural Sensitivity Scale The workforce is increasingly more diverse than ever before. As an employee, you will work with people who differ from you in a variety of ways that we discussed in this chapter. Cultural differences are among those factors. This PIA will assess your level of cultural sensitivity.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business It is critical for HR professionals to have a working knowledge of legislative imperatives and organizational policies designed to oversee the development and implementation of HR practices. Together with the legal department, HR has the responsibility to educate managers and other decision makers in the organization as to what should and should not be done. While ultimately the administration of HR programs will be the responsibility of HR, managers must have enough awareness to make informed deci- sions which will both protect the company from certain liabilities as well as ensure the retention and engagement of employees critical to the success of the organization. The most successful managers are often quite adept at explaining these nuances and are respected by their employees for their concern with the factors that influence the employee experience.

3-3. Briefly discuss who is responsible for ensuring equal employment opportunity.

3-4. What are the significant U.S. Supreme Court deci- sions that have had an impact on EEO? On Affirmative Action?

3-5. What are the steps that the EEOC uses once a charge is filed?

3-6. What is the purpose of the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures?

3-7. What is the difference between disparate treatment and adverse impact?

3-8. How does the EEOC define sexual harassment? 3-9. How does the EEOC interpret the national origin

guidelines? 3-10. What are some guidelines to follow regarding religion-

related discrimination? 3-11. What is meant by the term caregiver discrimination? 3-12. What is the purpose of the OFCCP? 3-13. Define what the four-fifths rule is. 3-14. What is an affirmative action program? 3-15. Define diversity and diversity management.

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

How About Me? The number of older workers is expected to

grow for many years to come. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act prohibits employment discrimination against individuals age 40 and older. Yet, age discrimination continues to be prevalent in the workplace. For example, Maria has a limited training budget. She wants to invest in management development seminars for her well-performing super- visors. Maria has six high potential supervisors, but can only afford to send five. Ultimately, she selected five supervisors who graduated from

college six years ago at age 21. Maria excluded Jonathan from consider- ation even though he has been a stellar performer for the last 30 years. When Jonathan heard about the decision, he asked Maria, “How about me?” Maria was surprised by Jonathan’s question, saying, “I thought you were planning to retire within the next couple of years.” 3-16. What would you do? 3-17. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethical decision?

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HRM by the Numbers Detecting Adverse Impact

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Adverse impact usually takes place when an employment decision, practice, or policy has a disproportionately negative effect on a protected group. HR professionals rely on the “four-fifths” or “80 percent” rule to judge whether adverse impact may have occurred. Consider the situation for men and for women:

Sex Total Applicants Selected Applicants Selection Rate

Female 750 375 Male 1,050 450 Total 1,800 825

3-18. Calculate (a) the selection rate for females and (b) the selection rate for males. 3-19. What is the ratio of the female selection rate to the male selection rate? 3-20. Based on your answer to question 3-19, is there evidence of possible adverse impact?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Most schools actively seek to admit a highly diversified student body. As a group, discuss student diversity at your school. Think about visible characteristics (e.g., race) and characteristics not visible (e.g., political party affiliation) that describe diversity. Besides your experiences, consider your school’s registered student organizations.

3-21. What are some of the features that shape diversity at your school? Explain your reasoning. 3-22. How would your student experience be different if your school’s student body was not diverse? Explain.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and applying the legal landscape HR takes the lead

Work with the legal department to conduct training sessions designed to educate managers on some of the most important legislation that will govern employee-related actions (e.g., Civil Rights Acts, ADEA, and ADA).

Conduct an audit to identify potential for disparate impact; disparate impact training is conducted to ensure that managers and other decision makers are aware of the pitfalls.

Consider private sector companies that hold government contracts to understand what additional standards may be placed on them because of their relationship with the federal government.

Provide legal updates to managers because legislation is changing quickly (particularly in these times). Many law firms provide these services via pro bono teleconferences. In-house employment lawyers can also provide these updates. For instance, we learned in this chapter that the EEOC considers treating gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender employees less favorably than others as a form of sex discrimination under the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Make sure that the legislative necessities create a starting point for establishing company policy and not merely the justifica- tion for doing the bare minimum.

Managers take the lead Speak openly about the importance of mutual respect and lead by example. Identify employees who fall into a group addressed specifically by law or company policy (e.g., ADA) which may be a new experience for you to work with as a manager (e.g., in most jobs, you will have more experience working with minority employees than disabled employees or transgender employees).

Encourage employees to discuss in confidence with managers and HR professionals any concerns they may have about instances of possible illegal discrimination whether it be about themselves or out of concern for their coworkers. It is impor- tant to provide a safe haven for employees who come forward.

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86 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

3-29. What is the purpose of the EEOC? 3-30. How do equal employment opportunity laws differ from diversity management?

I N C I D E N T 1 You’re Not a Good Employee Ricardo Balart, director of the recruiting for Sabena Company, asked four employees to evaluate the effectiveness of its employee orienta- tion program and make recommendations for improvement. Mr. Balart selected members from different departments: Committee chair Bill Jameson, director of the customer service department, Mary Hodge, manager of the accounts receivables department, Maria Diaz, newly hired staff member in the marketing department, and Enza Peroni, payroll clerk. (It just so happened that Ms. Hodge and Mr. Jameson were Baby Boomers, Ms. Diaz was a member of Generation X, and Ms. Peroni was a member of Generation Y.)

The committee got off to a rocky start, in part, because members disagreed about where and when to get the work done. Mr. Jameson called for a face-to-face meeting in the conference room and got the following reactions: Ms. Hodge asked for the time and place of the meeting as well as what she should prepare in advance of the meet- ing. Ms. Diaz and Ms. Peroni were of the same mind, disagreeing with the need to meet face-to-face. Ms. Diaz commented, “It’s difficult to anticipate whether I will be working in the office or from home on a particular day because my child care arrangements are unpredictable.” She went on to say, “Let’s get this done over e-mail.”

Mr. Jameson expressed frustration, saying, “The flexible approach to getting the work done is unacceptable! For years, we always completed our committee assignments together in the con- ference room.” He went a step further by asserting, “Young mothers should never be considered for positions of significant responsibility because they are unreliable and not serious about their work.” Ms. Diaz, visibly upset by Mr. Jameson’s comment, instructed him to review the company’s telecommuting policy. His response: “That policy does nothing other than permit young employees to work only when they feel like it and for women with children to work less than others.”

Questions 3-23. Do you agree with Mr. Jameson’s approach to addressing the

situation? Discuss. 3-24. What actions should Mr. Jameson have taken to avoid his cur-

rent predicament? 3-25. What might occur if Mr. Jameson tells Ms. Diaz’s supervisor

that she is an unreliable employee?

I N C I D E N T 2 So, What’s Affirmative Action? Supreme Construction Company began as a small commercial builder located in Baytown, Texas. Until the early 2000s, Alex Boyd, Supreme’s founder, concentrated his efforts on small, freestanding shops and offices. Up to that time, Alex had never employed more than 15 people.

In 2008, Alex’s son Michael graduated from college with a degree in construction management and immediately joined the company full-time. Michael had worked on a variety of Supreme jobs while in school, and Alex felt his son was cut out for the construction business. Michael was given increasing responsibility, and the company contin- ued its success, although with a few more projects and a few more employees than before. In 2012, Michael approached his father with a proposition: “Let’s get into some of the bigger projects now. We have the capital to expand and I really believe we can do it.” Alex approved, and Supreme began doing small shopping centers and multistory office buildings in addition to work in its traditional area of specialization. Soon, the number of employees had grown to 75.

In 2013, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) released construction specifications for two aircraft hangars

to be built southeast of Houston. Although Supreme had never done any construction work for the government, Michael and Alex consid- ered the job within the company’s capabilities. Michael worked up the $1,982,000 bid and submitted it to the NASA procurement office.

Several weeks later the bids were opened. Supreme had the low bid. However, the acceptance letter was contingent on submission of a satisfactory affirmative action program.

Questions 3-26. Explain why Supreme must submit an affirmative action

program. 3-27. Generally, what should the program be designed to

accomplish? 3-28. In conducting a utilization analysis, Michael discovers that

although 30 percent of the general population of construction workers are black, only 10 percent of Supreme’s employees are black. According to affirmative action, what is Supreme Con- struction required to do?

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CHAPTER 3 • EquAl EmPloymENT oPPoRTuNITy, AffIRmATIvE ACTIoN, ANd WoRkfoRCE dIvERSITy 87

Endnotes 1 “What You Should Know About EEOC and the

Enforcement Protections for LGBT Workers,” Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Accessed January 24, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/ eeoc/newsroom/wysk/enforcement_protec- tions_lgbt_workers.cfm.

2 “Target Corporation to Pay $2.8 Million to Resolve EEOC Discrimination Finding,” Equal Employment Opportunity press release (August 24, 2015). Accessed January 26, 2017, at www. eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/8-24-15.cfm.

3 Jean Sahadi, “6 Things to Know about the Gen- der Pay Gap,” (April 12, 2016). CNN. Accessed December 20, 2016, at http://money.cnn.com.

4 Dick Weaver, “How Is Lilly Ledbetter Helping You Sell EPLI,” National Underwriter / P&C 115 (March 28, 2011): 26.

5 Tyler M. Paetkau, “When Does a Foreign Law Compel a U.S. Employer to Discriminate Against U.S. Expatriates?” A Modest Proposal for Reform,” Labor Law Journal 60 (Summer 2009): 92–103.

6 “Employment Status of the Civilian Noninstitu- tional Population by Age, Sex, and Race,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed January 26, 2017, at www.bls.gov/cps/demographics. htm#age.

7 Mitra Toossi, “Labor Force Projections to 2024: The Labor Force Is Growing, but Slowly,” Monthly Labor Review (December 2015): 1–33.

8 Reduction in Force Tainted by Willful Age Discrimination,” HR Magazine 58 (August 2013): 8.

9 “OFCCP Issues Proposed Revision of Veterans’ Affirmative Action Rules,” HR Focus 88 (June 2011): 12.

10 U.S. Department of Labor, “Compliance Assistance—Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjust- ment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended,” U.S. Department of Labor, Accessed May 12, 2014, at www.dol.gov/ofccp/regs/compliance/ ca_vevraa.htm.

11 “Persons with a Disability: Labor Force Char- acteristics,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (USDL-16-1248, June 21, 2016). Accessed Jan- uary 24, 2017, at www.bls.gov; Give Employees with Disabilities an Assist,” HR Magazine 58 (August 2013): 79–82.

12 “EEOC’s Views on Accommodation under Amended ADA Discussed,” HR Focus 89 (Janu- ary 2012): 3–6.

13 Maggie Fox, “America’s Obesity Epidemic Hits a New High,” CNBC online (June 7, 2016). Accessed January 26, 2017, at www.cnbc. com/2016/06/07/americas-obesity-epidemic- hits-a-new-high.html.

14 “Resources for Human Development Settles EEOC Disability Suit for $125,000,” Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (April 10, 2012). Accessed January 27, 2017, at www. eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/4-10-12a.cfm.

15 Common Pitfalls: The Devil Is in the Details,” HR Magazine 58 (February 2013): 26.

16 “FY 2015 Annual Report to Congress,” U.S. Department of Labor, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Veterans’ Employment and Train- ing (July 2016). Accessed January 27, 2017, at www.dol.gov/vets/programs/userra/USERRA_ Annual_FY2015.pdf.

17 New York City Outlaws Discrimination Against Unemployed Job Hunters,” HR Magazine 58 (August 2013): 14.

18 David P. Twomey, “Employee Retaliation Claims under the Supreme Court’s Burlington, Crawford and Thompson Decisions: Important Implications for Employers,” Labor Law Jour- nal 62 (Summer 2011): 57–66.

19 “Charge Statistics: FY 1997 Through FY 2016,” Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Accessed January 23, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/ eeoc/statistics/enforcement/charges.cfm.

20 “Charge Statistics: FY 1997 Through FY 2016,” Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Accessed January 23, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/ eeoc/statistics/enforcement/charges.cfm.

21 U.S. Department of Labor, “Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs,” U.S. Depart- ment of Labor. Accessed January 23, 2017, at www.dol.gov/ofccp/aboutof.html.

22 Todd H. Girshon, “Jury or Nonjury Trials,” HR Magazine 57 (February 2012): 79–85.

23 Effective Responses to EEOC Charges,” HR Magazine 58 (October 2013): 73–75.

24 “Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Part 1607—Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures,” Code of Federal Regu- lations 29 C.F.R. §1607.16 (1978). Accessed January 26, 2017, at www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/ CFR-2006-title29-vol4/xml/CFR-2006-title29- vol4-sec1607-16.xml.

25 Alissa A. Horvitz and Lance E. Gibbons, “Fed- eral Contractors Get New Scrutiny,” HR Maga- zine 56 (November 2011): 71–82.

26 “New Directive Calls for More Full Compliance Evaluations,” HR Focus 88 (April 2011): 4–5.

27 Nadine Vogel, “The OFCCP Ramps Up Enforcement,” Profiles in Diversity Journal 13 (January/February 2011): 18.

28 “Andrew Slobodien and Elizabeth Peters, “Beyond Harassment Prohibitions,” HR Maga- zine 57 (November 2012): 75–78.

29 “Federal Judge Awards $1,470,000 in EEOC Sexual Harassment and Retaliation Case Against Z Foods,” (July 22, 2016). Accessed January 27, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/ release/7-22-16a.cfm.

30 “Preventing Workplace Sexual Harassment Should Be HR Priority, Attorney Tells Webinar,” HR Focus 89 (March 2012): 16.

31 David B. Ritter and Mari Kaluza, “Lesson from Walmart: How to Cut Risk when a Co-worker Harasses,” HR Specialist: Illinois Employment Law 5 (May 2011): 6.

32 “Delete Your Liability: Copy Xerox Response to Harassment Complaint,” HR Specialist: Employ- ment Law 40 (May 2011): 3.

33 “Duane Reade Settles Sex Harassment Law- suit,” HR Specialist: New York Employment Law 4 (August 2009): 5.

34 “Price of Supervisor Pleasuring Himself Over an Employee: $95 Million,” Legal Alert for Supervisors 6 (June 24, 2011): 4.

35 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, “Charges Alleging Sex-Based Harassment: FY 2010—FY 2016, ” Equal Employment Oppor- tunity Commission. Accessed January 27, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/statistics/enforcement/ sexual_harassment_new.cfm.

36 Maria Greco Danaher, “Men Entitled to Title VII Protection,” HR Magazine 55 (December 2010): 93.

37 Allen Smith, “EEOC Settlement Reflects Chal- lenges of English-Only Policies,” HR Magazine 54 (June 2009): 26.

38 Tanya Marcum and Sandra J. Perry, “Dressed for Success: Can a Claim of Religious Discrimi- nation Be Successful?” Labor Law Journal 61 (Winter 2010): 184–191.

39 Orthopedic Manufacturer Settles Religious Bias Suit,” HR Specialist: North Carolina Employ- ment Law 7 (January 2013): 5.

40 Does Boss Have to Excuse Key Worker from Crucial Job Duty so Man Can Go to Church?” Alert for Supervisors 8 (March 1, 2013): 1–2.

41 “Abercrombie Resolves Religious Discrimina- tion Case Following Supreme Court Ruling in Favor of EEOC,” Equal Employment Oppor- tunity Commission (July 28, 2015). Accessed January 27, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/news- room/release/7-28-15.cfm.

42 “Employment Characteristics of Families Summary,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (April 22, 2016). Accessed January 20, 2017, at www.bls.gov; Cynthia Thomas Calvert, “Caregivers in the Workplace,” The Center for WorkLife Law (2016). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.worklifelaw.org/pubs/FRDup- date2016.pdf.

43 Abigail Crouse, “Be Careful! Caregiver Dis- crimination Claims Are on the Rise,” HR Spe- cialist: Minnesota Employment Law 3 (April 2010): 6.

44 Gerald E. Calvasina, Richard V. Calvasina, and Eugene J. Calvasina, “Caregiver Responsibility Discrimination and the Equal Employment Oppor- tunity Commission (EEOC) Guidelines: Policy Issues for Employers,” Journal of Legal, Ethical & Regulatory Issues 13 (June 2010): 1–10.

45 Cynthia Thomas Calvert, “The New Sex Dis- crimination: Family Responsibilities,” Univer- sity of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, and Class (Vol. 9, No. 1): 33-44.

46 “Denver Hotel Management Company to Pay $105,000 to Settle EEOC Sex Discrimination Suit,” Equal Employment Opportunity Com- mission (December 8, 2010). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/ release/12-8-10.cfm.

47 Cynthia Thomas Calvert, “Caregivers in the Workplace.” The Center for WorkLife Law (2016). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www. worklifelaw.org/pubs/FRDupdate2016.pdf.

48 Ibid. 49 “America’s Largest Drug Store Chain to Pay

$180,000 to Settle EEOC Disability Discrimi- nation Suit,” Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (July 12, 2014), Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/ release/7-2-14b.cfm.

50 Marie Y. Philippe, “Corporate Diversity Train- ing: Is Yours Meeting 21st Century Needs?” Profiles in Diversity Journal 12 (January/Febru- ary 2010): 60.

51 Andrew L. Molinsky, Thomas H. Davenport, Bala Iyer, and Cathy Davidson, “3 Skills Every 21-Century Manager Needs,” Harvard Business Review 90 (January/February 2012): 139–143.

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88 PART 1 • SETTING THE STAGE

52 Mike Brennan, “The Measuring Stick,” Chief Learning Officer 10 (August 2011): 22–25.

53 “R. Roosevelt Thomas,” T + D (May 2011): 66–67.

54 Pamela Arnold, “The Role of Diversity Management in the Global Talent Retention Race,” Profiles in Diversity Journal 13 (May/ June 2011): 16.

55 “No. 7 | MasterCard | DiversityInc Top 50,” DiversityInc online. Accessed January 25, 2017, at www.diversityinc.com/masterrcard/.

56 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Women in the Labor Force: A Databook,” BLS Reports (Report 1059, December 2015). Accessed January 21, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

57 “Families by Presence of Own Children Under 18: 1950 to Present,” U.S. Bureau of the Census (Table FM-1). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.census.gov/hhes/families/data/families. html.

58 “The 2016 State of Women-Owned Businesses Report,” American Express OPEN (2016). Accessed January 23, 2017, at http://www.wom- enable.com/content/userfiles/2016_State_of_ Women-Owned_Businesses_Executive_Report. pdf.

59 Josh Bersin, “Why Diversity and Inclusion Will Be a Top Priority for 2016,” Forbes (December 6, 2015). Access January 4, 2017, at www. forbes.com.

60 “Female CEO’s Are at Record Level in 2016, But It’s Still Only 5%,” CNN Money (Sep- tember 29, 2016). Accessed January 3, 2017, at money.cnn.com/2016/09/29/investing/ female-ceos-record-high/.

61 Saundra Stroope and Bonnie Hagemann, “Women, Water, + Leadership: Are We Mak- ing Progress?” T + D 65 (March 2011): 50–53.

62 “Women in the Workplace,” McKinsey & Company (September 2015). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.mckinsey.com/ business-functions/organization/our-insights/ women-in-the-workplace.

63 Jo Piazza, “Women of Color Hit a ‘Concrete Ceiling’ in Business,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 27, 2016). Accessed Decem- ber 2, 2016, at www.wsj.com.

64 Jennifer Schramm, “On-Ramps Lead Back to Work,” HR Magazine 57 (September 2012): 120.

65 Kelley M. Butler, “Today’s Working Women Seek Mentors, Motherhood Transition,” Employee Benefit News 20 (April 2006): 17–19.

66 The 40-Year-Old Intern,” Harvard Business Review 90 (November 2012): 21–23.

67 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Women in the Labor Force: A Databook,” BLS Reports (Report 1059, December 2015). Accessed January 30, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

68 Lorraine Bello and Galen Tinder, “Dual Career Implications on Workforce Mobility: The Evolu- tion of the Relocating Spouse/Partner,” Benefits

& Compensation Digest 46 (September 2009): 36–39.

69 Mitra Toossi, “Labor Force Projections to 2020: A More Slowly Growing Workforce,” Monthly Labor Review (January 2012): 43–64.

70 Ella Bell, “The Bicultural Life Experience of Career Oriented Black Women,” Journal of Organizational Behavior 11 (November 1990): 459–478.

71 “Employment Status of the Civilian Noninstitu- tional Population by Age, Sex, and Race,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed January 26, 2017, at www.bls.gov/cps/demographics.htm#age.

72 Companies Tweaking Policies and Practices for Older Workers,” HR Focus 90 (May 2013): 4–6.

73 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Labor Force Projections to 2024: The Labor Force Participa- tion Rate Continues to Fall,” Monthly Labor Review (December 2015). Accessed January 26, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

74 Greg Ip, “For Economy, Aging Population Poses Double Whammy,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 3, 2016). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

75 Hunter Ruthven, “Barclays Shifts Perception by Rolling Out Apprenticeship Scheme for Those Over 50,” Real Business online (February 9, 2015). Accessed January 4, 2017, at http:// realbusiness.co.uk/current-affairs/2015/02/09/ barclays-shifts-perception-by-rolling-out- apprenticeship-scheme-for-those-over-50/.

76 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Persons with a Disability: Labor Force Characteristics—2012,” (USDL 13-1141, June 12, 2013). Accessed May 12, 2014 at www.bls.gov.

77 Dori Meinert, “Opening Doors,” HR Magazine 57 (June 2012): 55–57.

78 Sarah Blahoveck, “Why Disabled Workers? 4 Powerful (and Inclusive) Companies Answer,” Huffington Post online (February 24, 2016). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.huffing- tonpost.com; “Starbucks Recognized as a “Best Place to Work”,” Starbucks Newsroom (July 13, 2016). Accessed January 28, 2017, at https:// news.starbucks.com/starbucks-is-recognized-as- a-best-oace-to-work-for-disability.

79 “Foreign-Born Workers: Labor Force Character- istics – 2015,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (USDL-16-0989, May 19, 2016). Accessed January 29, 2017, at www.bls.com.

80 Jennifer Schramm, “Planning for Population Shifts,” HR Magazine 56 (February 2011): 80.

81 Beverly Kaye, “Four Generations,” Leadership Excellence 29 (January 2012): 20.

82 Amy Bladen Shatto, “In Practice Two Sides of the Retention Dilemma,” Chief Learning Officer 10 (August 2011): 34.

83 “Turnover, Globalization Among Emerging Challenges Facing HR,” HR Focus 88 (Septem- ber 2011): 10–11.

84 Adrienne Fox, “Talkin’ Bout My Generation,” HR Magazine 56 (May 2011): 26–27.

85 “Employment Status of The Civilian Noninstitu- tional Population by Age, Sex, And Race,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat03.pdf.

86 Engaging Young Workers with Tailor Made Pro- grams,” Employee Benefit News 27 (June 2013): 19–21.

87 “How ‘Recession-Proof’ Will Millennial Work- ers Be?” HR Focus 86 (March 2009): 6–7.

88 “Winning Over the Next Generation of Lead- ers,” The 2016 Deloitte Millennial Survey. Accessed January 15, 2017, at www2.deloitte. com/content/dam/Deloitte/global/Documents/ About-Deloitte/gx-millenial-survey-2016-exec- summary.pdf.

89 Sharon Williams, “Welcome to Generation Z,” B&T Magazine 60 (December 10, 2010): 12.

90 Eric Lauzon, “Paradox: The Anti-Social Genera- tion,” Enterprise Innovation 7 (February/March 2011): 44.

91 Jerry Selitto, “Anyone Up for Some Time Travel?” Mortgage Banking 71 (March 2011): 22–23.

92 “The Multigenerational Workforce: Opportunity for Competitive Success,” HR Magazine 54 (March 2009): Special section 1–9.

93 How to Communicate in the New Multigen- erational Office,” Forbes.com (February 14, 2013): 26.

94 Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Kenji Yoshino, “LGBT- Inclusive Companies Are Better at 3 Big Things,” Harvard Business Review online, (Feb- ruary 2, 2016). Accessed December 20, 2016 at www.hbr.org.

95 Samantha Power, “We Must Stand Up for the Rights of Gays and Lesbians Everywhere,” Press Release (September 22, 2011). Accessed May 12, 2014 at www.whitehouse.gov.

96 Todd A. Solomon, Joseph S. Adams, and Brett R. Johnson, “How Conf licting Same-Sex Union Laws Are Impacting Employee Ben- efits,” Benefits Magazine 49 (January 2012): 14–21.

97 In Strongly Worded Decision, Supreme Court Finds Defense of Marriage Act Unconstitu- tional,” Forbes.com (July 26, 2013): 30.

98 Nadine Vogel, “Disability & LGBT—Similari- ties and Difference and How to Support Them in the Workplace,” Profiles in Diversity Journal 13 (March/April 2011): 124.

99 “LGBTQ Equality at the Fortune 500,” Human Rights Campaign, Accessed January 4, 2017, at www.hrc.org/resources/lgbt-equality-at-the- fortune-500; “Of Companies and Closets,” Economist 402 (February 11, 2012): 70.

100 Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Karen Sumberg, “For LGBT Workers, Being ‘Out’ Brings Advan- tages,” Harvard Business Review 89 (July/ August 2011): 28.

101 “‘Out’ Is In: Gay Workers Find Workplaces More Welcoming,” BusinessWeek.com (Febru- ary 13, 2013): 3.

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Part Two Staffing Chapter 4

Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning,

and Job Analysis

Chapter 5

Recruitment

Chapter 6

Selection

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90

Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning, and Job Analysis4

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

4.1 Describe the HR strategic planning process.

4.2 Explain the human resource planning process.

4.3 Describe the job analysis process and methods.

4.4 Summarize the components of a job description.

4.5 Explain what competencies and competency modeling are.

4.6 Summarize job design concepts.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 4 Warm-Up.

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91

The tools we describe in this chapter and in Chapters 5 and 6 provide human resources (HR) professionals with a foundation to harness the capability of a company’s human capital to its competitive advantage. Let’s consider a metaphor to bring the opening sentence to life. Take, for example, your favorite hit movie or television show. Many factors contribute to the show’s success, which we might measure as the size of enduring viewership and awards recognizing excellent talent. Among the most important are the story line, character development and scripts, and casting actors into roles.

From an HR standpoint, the story line can be thought of as a strategy to create a distinctive narrative that is unique from others, character development and scripts as job analysis and work flow, and casting requirements as HR planning. We take up these topics in this chapter.

HR Strategic Planning Process As discussed in Chapter 1, HR executives are now focusing their attention on how HR can help the organization achieve its business objectives through strategic planning, which is the process by which top management determines overall organizational purposes and objectives and how they are achieved. More specifically, strategic planning entails a series of judgments under uncertainty that companies direct toward achieving specific goals.1 Companies base strategy formulation on environmental scanning activities, which we discuss later. HR executives are increasingly highly involved in the strategic planning process. In the past they often waited until the strategic plan was formulated before becoming a part of the conversation.2

Strategic planning is an ongoing process that is constantly changing to find a competitive advantage. At times an organization may see the need to diversify and increase the variety of the goods that are made or sold. At other times, downsizing may be required in response to the external environment. Or the strategic plan may see integration, the unified control of many suc- cessive or similar operations, as their driving force. Strategic planning attempts to position the organization in terms of the external environment. For example, the so-called Great Recession in 2007-2009 showed weakness in the marketplace for some firms, which led to lower company

4.1 Describe the HR strategic planning process.

strategic planning Process by which top management determines overall organizational purposes and objectives and how they are achieved.

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92 PART 2 • STAFFING

valuations, increased business failures, and selling off their noncore business units. Forward- thinking companies found opportunities that were not available when business was booming, such as expanding their company through acquisition.3 Companies always need to look for ways to stay competitive, gain market share, and be the first to innovate a new product or service. For instance, automobile manufacturers have set their sights on building and selling affordable all-electric cars of similar or better quality than Tesla Motors’ vehicles.

Strategic planning at all levels of the organization can be divided into four steps: (1) deter- mination of the organizational mission; (2) assessment of the organization and its environment; (3) setting of specific objectives or direction; and (4) determination of strategies to accomplish those objectives (see Figure 4-1). The strategic planning process described here is basically a derivative of the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) framework that affects organizational performance, but it is less structured.

In strategic planning discussions, HR professionals’ primary focus must be on talent. We define human resource management (HRM) as the use of individuals to achieve organizational objectives. According to HRM expert Edward E. Lawler III, “Positioning the HR function and talent manage- ment to contribute to the overall effectiveness and financial performance of the organization is the best way the HR function can add value to corporations.”4 Focusing on recruiting, developing, and retaining talent provides the rationale for choosing various HR strategies and practices.

Mission Determination The first step in the strategic planning process is to determine the corporate mission. The mission is a company’s continuing purpose or reason for being. The corporate mission is the sum of the organization’s ongoing purpose. Arriving at a mission statement should involve answering questions such as: What are we in management attempting to do for whom? Should we maximize profit so shareholders will receive higher dividends or so share price will increase? Or should we emphasize stability of earnings so employees will remain secure? In the case of not-for-profit companies, is the focus on extending its humanitarian reach from tragic events in the United States to tragic events in other countries? Certainly, HR can provide valuable assistance in answering these questions.

There are many other mission possibilities. Mission determination also requires deciding on the principles on which management decisions will be based. Will the corporation be socially

mission Company’s continuing purpose or reason for being.

FIGURE 4-1 Strategic Planning Process

MISSION DETERMINATION decide what is to be accomplished (purpose)

determine principles that will guide the effort

OBJECTIVE SETTING

STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION

STRATEGY SETTING Specifying and documenting corporate–level strategies and planning

Specifying corporate–level objectives that are: * Challenging, but attainable * measurable * Time specific * documented (written)

ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT External Internal

determining external conditions, threats, and opportunities determining competencies, strengths, and weaknesses within the organization

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CHAPTER 4 • STRATEGIC PlANNING, HumAN RESouRCE PlANNING, ANd Job ANAlySIS 93

responsible and environmentally friendly (sustainability)? Will the company be forthright in deal- ing with its various constituents such as its customers? The answers to these questions tend to become embedded in a corporate culture and help determine the organizational mission. Top management expects HR activities to be closely aligned to this mission and add value toward achieving these goals. The following is a part of General Mills’ corporate mission:

We serve the world by making food people love.5

General Mills also includes two additional objectives: environmental sustainability (Nourish- ing the Future) and community enhancement (Nourishing Communities). For instance, General Mills employees helped prepare and serve food, renovated buildings, and participated in activities to benefit impoverished children and teenagers in Brazil.

ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT Once the mission has been determined, the organization should assess its strengths and weaknesses in the internal environment and the threats and opportunities from the external environment (often referred as a SWOT analysis). Making strategic plans involves information flows from both the internal and the external environments. From inside comes information about organizational competencies, strengths, and weaknesses. Scanning the external environment allows organizational strategists to identify threats and opportunities, as well as constraints. In brief, the strategy would be to take advantage of the company’s strengths and minimize its weaknesses to grasp opportunities and avoid threats. For example, social networking company LinkedIn can capitalize on the following opportunities, which include the growing adoption of LinkedIn’s recruitment services among corporations, growing urbanization, changing attitudes toward employment, and increasing premium subscriptions.6

HR professionals can take advantage of LinkedIn technology and services by connecting to more candidates who subscribe to LinkedIn than would typically otherwise be the case for traditional recruitment methods such as career portals on corporate Web sites, campus hiring, recruitment agencies, and job boards. Also, HR professionals are in the best position to identify workforce strengths and weaknesses. Should the company be considering, for instance, a merger or acquisition, HR would be able to work with top management to determine whether the present workforce can be effectively integrated into the workforce of the merged company. For example, does the workforce of the merged company improve the overall value of the company, or is there only duplication of talent? Any reorganization affects people and HR professionals must be in the forefront of people-related matters.

There are always threats that counterbalance opportunities. For example, LinkedIn faces at least two significant future threats.7 Competitors such as Google and Facebook could challenge LinkedIn’s success by offering similar services to customers such as mixing social networking with recruitment services. In addition, although LinkedIn has established a presence in Latin America, South America, and Asia-Pacific regions, the growth in average revenue per customer will be much lower than in the United States because of lower purchasing power of countries in these international regions.

LinkedIn’s revenue challenges are relevant to the work of its HR professionals. Research and development (R&D) costs and sales and marketing costs are likely to rise. R&D costs increase when a company is enhancing current services or developing new ones. In addition, sales and marketing costs stand to increase when a company is expanding its reach to prospective customers. These activities are likely to translate into stepped up recruitment efforts for software engineers and sales professionals. As well, establishing competitive compensation and benefits programs stand to represent a significant challenge.

In the following Watch It video, learn about iRobot, which is best known for the iRobot Roomba® vacuum cleaning robot. This product helped to change how people view robots. iRobot continues to develop robotic products to change the way customers include robots in their daily life. This video will provide an appreciation of SWOT analysis.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled iRobot: Competitive Strategy of Home Robots and respond to questions.

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OBJECTIVE SETTING Objectives are the desired end results of any activity. Objectives should have four basic characteristics: (1) They should be expressed in writing; (2) they should be measurable; (3) they should be specific as to time; and (4) they should be challenging but attainable. Strategic objectives might be directed at factors such as profitability, customer satisfaction, financial returns, technological leadership, and operating efficiency. Objectives should be developed only after a cost–benefit analysis of each alternative is considered. Because HR professionals are in the people business, it is difficult to imagine any strategic objective that would not involve them in some manner, and the LinkedIn example illustrates this point.

STRATEGY SETTING Strategies can now be developed for accomplishing those objectives. Strategies should be developed to take advantage of the company’s strengths and minimize its weaknesses to grasp opportunities and avoid threats. HR professionals should be highly involved in these activities because the composition of the workforce will certainly influence the strategies chosen. For the sake of illustration, let’s consider two fundamental strategies: lowest cost and differentiation.

Lowest-cost strategy focuses on gaining competitive advantage by being the lowest-cost producer of a product or service within the marketplace, while selling the product or service at a price advantage relative to the industry average. Lowest-cost strategies require aggressive construction of efficient- scale facilities and vigorous pursuit of cost minimization in such areas as operations, marketing, and HR. For example, you won’t find many extras in clothes retailer Ross Stores. “We believe in “no frills”—no window displays, mannequins, fancy fixtures or decorations in our stores so we can pass more savings on to our customers.”8 Low overhead costs allow Ross to sell quality apparel and home items at 20 to 60 percent less than most department store prices, and the company is profitable.9

Companies adopt differentiation strategies to develop products or services that are unique from those of their competitors. Differentiation strategies lead to competitive advantage through building brand loyalty among devoted consumers. Brand-loyal consumers are less sensitive to price increases, which enables companies to invest in R&D initiatives to further differentiate themselves from competing companies. Differentiation strategy can take many forms, including design or brand image, technology, features, customer service, and price. Take retailer L.L. Bean for instance. The company allows customers to return merchandise at any time if not completely satisfied: “We make pieces that last, and if they don’t, we want to know about it. So, if it’s not working or fitting or standing up to its task, we’ll take it back. L.L. himself always said that he didn’t consider a sale complete ‘until goods are worn out and the customer still satisfied.”’10 Similarly, the Ritz-Carlton hotel established its Customer Loyalty Anticipation Satisfaction System, which is designed to fulfill, “even the unexpressed wishes and needs of our guests.”11 In addition, most Ritz-Carlton employees have the authority to spend up to $2,000 each day, per guest, to resolve any complaint.

In the following Watch It video, learn about the online retailer Zappos’ competitive strategy. In many retail sectors, the goal is product differentiation to create brand-loyal customers and generate pricing power. Companies achieve differentiation through formulating and implement- ing competitive strategies that define how organizations will compete in their businesses. Zappo’s strategy is to “be about the very best customer service.”

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Zappos: Competitive Strategy and respond to questions.

☛ F Y I $ HR expert Edward E. Lawler III stated: “HR professionals are well positioned to facilitate the imple-

mentation of business strategies by ensuring that employees are working consistently with the mandates of strategic planning.”12

EMPLOYEE ROLES ASSOCIATED WITH COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES Common wisdom and experience tell us that HR professionals must decide which employee roles are instrumental to the attainment of competitive strategies. Knowledge of these required roles should enable HR professionals to implement HR practices that encourage enactment of these roles. For instance, HR professionals are responsible for designing and implementing practices that elicit strategy-consistent employee

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roles. As we’ve noted in the introduction, job analysis is a critical tool used by HR professionals to define employee jobs; thus, the role behavior that is expected of them.

For the lowest-cost strategy, the imperative is to reduce output costs per employee. The desired employee roles for attaining a lowest-cost strategy include repetitive and predictable behaviors, a relatively short-term focus, primarily autonomous or individual activity, high concern for quantity of output, and a primary concern for results.

The key employees’ roles for differentiation strategies include highly creative behavior, a rela- tively long-term focus, cooperative and interdependent behavior, and more risk taking. Compared with lowest-cost strategies, successful attainment of differentiation strategies depends on employee creativ- ity, openness to novel work approaches, and willingness to take risks. In addition, differentiation strate- gies require longer time frames to provide sufficient opportunity to yield the benefits of these behaviors.

STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION Once the strategic planning process is complete, the strategy must be implemented. Some people argue that strategy implementation is the most difficult and important part of strategic management. No matter how creative and well formulated the strategic plan, the organization will not benefit if it is incorrectly implemented. Strategy implementation requires changes in the organization’s behavior, which can be brought about by changing one or more organizational dimensions, including management’s leadership style, organizational structure, information and control systems, production technology, and HR.13

LEADERSHIP A leader can get others to do what he or she wants them to do. Managers must influence organization members to adopt the behaviors needed for strategy implementation. Top-level managers seeking to implement a new strategy may find it useful to build coalitions and persuade others to go along with the strategic plan and its implementation. HR must take the leadership role in dealing with HR matters. Basically, leadership is used to encourage employees to adopt supportive behaviors, and when necessary, to accept the required new values and attitudes.

ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE A company’s organizational structure is typically illustrated by its organizational chart. The form of structure needed is determined by the needs of the firm. It may be informal and highly changeable in small, uncomplicated businesses. By contrast, large, diverse, and complex organizations usually have a highly-formalized structure. But that should not mean the structure is so rigid that it does not change, perhaps even frequently. Newly formed high-tech companies are most likely to restructure or reorganize frequently, but even some of the largest Fortune 500 firms, such as General Motors and Chrysler, have experienced major reorganizations. Many variations of organizational structures are available for use today. HR should be in a good position to recommend the most effective structure needed by the organization.

INFORMATION AND CONTROL SYSTEMS Among the information and control systems are reward systems; incentives; objectives-oriented systems; budgets for allocating resources; information systems; and the organization’s rules, policies, and implementations. Certainly, HR should be a asset in developing and working with these systems. A proper mix of information and control systems must be developed to support the implementation of the strategic plan.

TECHNOLOGY The knowledge, tools, and equipment used to accomplish an organization’s assignments comprise its technology. The appropriate level of technology must be found for proper implementation of the strategic plan. Certainly, technology is revolutionizing how organizations operate today. This is the case for HR professionals.

HUMAN RESOURCES The HR functions must be properly aligned to successfully implement the strategic plan. HR will be central to understanding the future of an asset that is increasingly important to the organization—the intellectual and productive capacity of its workforce. A proper balance of HR must be developed to support strategy implementation. Once strategic planning has taken place, HR planning may be developed to help implement the strategic plan.

☛ F Y I According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2016:

$ 74.7 percent of all jobs required on-the-job training. $ 47.8 percent required prior work experience. $ 21.8 percent required a professional certification, license, or other pre-employment training.14

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96 PART 2 • STAFFING

Ironically, companies in the manufacturing sector are experiencing a shortage of qualified workers because the use of complex robotic and automated equipment has risen more quickly than the supply of individuals who possess the necessary skills to function in such environments.19

When employee requirements and availability have been analyzed, the firm can determine whether it will have a surplus or shortage of employees. Ways must be found to reduce the num- ber of employees if a surplus is projected. If a worker shortage is forecast, the firm must obtain the proper quantity and quality of workers from outside the organization. In this case, external recruitment and selection are required.

Because conditions in the external and internal environments can change quickly, the HR planning process must be continuous. Changing conditions could affect the entire organization, thereby requiring extensive modification to the forecasts. For instance, companies laid off millions of workers as business demand dropped precipitously. And, as the economy improved, plans were made to increase the size of the workforce.

Forecasting Human Resource Requirements Before HR requirements can be projected, demand for the firm’s goods or services must be fore- casted. This forecast is then converted into people requirements for the activities necessary to meet this demand. For a firm that manufactures personal computers, activities might be stated in terms of the number of units to be produced, number of sales calls to be made, number of vouchers to be processed, or a variety of other activities. For example, manufacturing 1,000 laptop computers each week might require 10,000 hours of work by assemblers during a 40-hour week. Dividing the 10,000 hours by the 40 hours in the workweek gives 250 assembly workers needed. Similar calculations are performed for the other jobs needed to produce and market the computers.

Several techniques for forecasting HR requirements are currently used. Some of the tech- niques are qualitative in nature, and others are quantitative.

ZERO-BASE FORECAST The zero-base forecast uses the organization’s current level of employment as the starting point for determining future staffing needs. Essentially, the same procedure is used for HR planning as for zero-base budgeting, whereby each budget must be justified again each year. If an employee retires, is fired, or leaves the firm for any reason, the position is not automatically filled. Instead, an analysis is made to determine whether the firm can justify filling it. Equal concern is shown for creating new positions when they appear to be needed. The key to zero-base forecasting is a thorough analysis of HR needs. Frequently, the position is not filled and the work is spread out among remaining employees, as often is the case with firms that downsize. Plans may also involve outsourcing or other approaches as an alternative to hiring.

availability forecast Determination of whether the firm will be able to secure employees with the necessary skills, and from what sources.

HR Web Wisdom

HR Planning Organization www.hrps.org

This is the Web site for the Human Resource People and Strategy organization.

zero-base forecast Forecasting method that uses the organization’s current level of employment as the starting point for determining future staffing needs.

Human Resource Planning Human resource planning (workforce planning) is the systematic process of matching the inter- nal and external supply of people with job openings anticipated in the organization over a specific period. Workforce planning has evolved from a knee-jerk planning undertaking to a fundamental strategic function. It includes business plan, HR data, and statistical analyses of those data. It is also incorporated into the business and financial planning process, so it provides a foundation for a plan that is aligned with the business strategy. As we discussed in Chapter 1, analyzing employ- ment data and business outcomes has empowered HR professionals to quantify its influence, and more HR professionals have gotten on board. In 2016, 51 percent of companies correlated business outcomes with HR programs, which is up from 38 percent just one year earlier.15

The HR planning process is illustrated in Figure 4-2. Note that strategic planning precedes HR planning. HR planning has two components: requirements and availability. A requirements forecast involves determining the number, skill, and location of employees the organization will need at future dates to meet its goals. For example, discount retailer Dollar General launched a campaign to hire 10,000 workers in one month because it was planning to open more than 900 stores.16 Since 2008, the company increased its staff by more than 70 percent.17 Require- ment forecasts also focus on seasonal hiring. For instance, UPS hired approximately 95,000 temporary workers for the holiday season when package delivery activity is at its peak.18

The determination of whether the firm will be able to secure employees with the necessary skills, and from what sources, is called an availability forecast. We can look to the manufacturing sector of the economy as an illustration. It’s true that many manufacturing jobs in the United States were eliminated because so many companies moved their operations to other countries where the cost of doing business is often lower. This shift in operations effectively increased the supply of available workers relative to job openings (demand for workers), leaving scores of workers unemployed.

4.2 Explain the human resource planning process.

human resource planning Systematic process of matching the internal and external supply of people with job openings anticipated in the organization over a specified period.

requirements forecast Determining the number, skill, and location of employees the organization will need at future dates to meet its goals.

FIGURE 4-2 The Human Resource Planning Process

Human Resource Planning

Forecasting Human Resource

Availability

Forecasting Human Resource

Requirements

Strategic Planning

INTERNAl ENVIRoNmENT

EXTERNAl ENVIRoNmENT

Comparing Requirements

and Availability

Surplus of

Workers

Restricted Hiring, Reduced Hours,

Early Retirement, layoffs, downsizing

demand =

Supply

No Action

Shortage of Workers

Recruitment

Selection

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Ironically, companies in the manufacturing sector are experiencing a shortage of qualified workers because the use of complex robotic and automated equipment has risen more quickly than the supply of individuals who possess the necessary skills to function in such environments.19

When employee requirements and availability have been analyzed, the firm can determine whether it will have a surplus or shortage of employees. Ways must be found to reduce the num- ber of employees if a surplus is projected. If a worker shortage is forecast, the firm must obtain the proper quantity and quality of workers from outside the organization. In this case, external recruitment and selection are required.

Because conditions in the external and internal environments can change quickly, the HR planning process must be continuous. Changing conditions could affect the entire organization, thereby requiring extensive modification to the forecasts. For instance, companies laid off millions of workers as business demand dropped precipitously. And, as the economy improved, plans were made to increase the size of the workforce.

Forecasting Human Resource Requirements Before HR requirements can be projected, demand for the firm’s goods or services must be fore- casted. This forecast is then converted into people requirements for the activities necessary to meet this demand. For a firm that manufactures personal computers, activities might be stated in terms of the number of units to be produced, number of sales calls to be made, number of vouchers to be processed, or a variety of other activities. For example, manufacturing 1,000 laptop computers each week might require 10,000 hours of work by assemblers during a 40-hour week. Dividing the 10,000 hours by the 40 hours in the workweek gives 250 assembly workers needed. Similar calculations are performed for the other jobs needed to produce and market the computers.

Several techniques for forecasting HR requirements are currently used. Some of the tech- niques are qualitative in nature, and others are quantitative.

ZERO-BASE FORECAST The zero-base forecast uses the organization’s current level of employment as the starting point for determining future staffing needs. Essentially, the same procedure is used for HR planning as for zero-base budgeting, whereby each budget must be justified again each year. If an employee retires, is fired, or leaves the firm for any reason, the position is not automatically filled. Instead, an analysis is made to determine whether the firm can justify filling it. Equal concern is shown for creating new positions when they appear to be needed. The key to zero-base forecasting is a thorough analysis of HR needs. Frequently, the position is not filled and the work is spread out among remaining employees, as often is the case with firms that downsize. Plans may also involve outsourcing or other approaches as an alternative to hiring.

availability forecast Determination of whether the firm will be able to secure employees with the necessary skills, and from what sources.

HR Web Wisdom

HR Planning Organization www.hrps.org

This is the Web site for the Human Resource People and Strategy organization.

zero-base forecast Forecasting method that uses the organization’s current level of employment as the starting point for determining future staffing needs.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Workforce Planning at Master Cleaners Master Cleaners provides residential cleaning

services through more than 100 cleaning employees throughout their geographic area. As the HR manager hired just more than a year ago, Jack Potts has worked hard to establish many of their HR practices. As the company’s first HR manager, Jack believes his primary responsibil- ity is to make sure administrative processes are in place. He has been attending senior leadership meetings regarding the organization’s strat- egy and knows there are some plans to expand into the commercial market. However, he hasn’t paid much attention to those discussions because there is just too much work to do to get HR processes estab- lished. Now he’s received a request from one of the cleaning managers

about hiring 25 new commercial cleaners and he’s worried about find- ing these new hires. The problem is that because the commercial clean- ers must work at night after the office buildings are closed for the day, his current recruiting strategy won’t necessarily work. Jack now must find experienced cleaners willing to work in the evening and that is a challenging task. Further, turnover is already high in the residential cleaning business. Exit interviews with employees who have quit sug- gest that they find the work tedious. Jack expresses his concerns about these staffing challenges to the cleaning manager. But the cleaning manager reminds him they have been talking about this expansion for a while and suggests that Jack should have been planning for this.

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98 PART 2 • STAFFING

BOTTOM-UP FORECAST In the bottom-up forecast, each successive level in the organization, starting with the lowest, forecasts its requirements, ultimately providing an aggregate forecast of employees needed.

It is based on the reasoning that the manager in each unit is most knowledgeable about employ- ment requirements. Beginning with the lowest-level work units in the organization, each unit man- ager makes an estimate of personnel needs for the period encompassed by the planning cycle. As the process moves upward in the company, each successively higher level of management in turn makes its own estimates of needs, incorporating the input from each of the immediately preceding levels. The result, ultimately, is an aggregate forecast of needs for the entire organization. This process is often highly interactive in that estimated requirements from the previous level are discussed, nego- tiated, and re-estimated with the next level of management as the forecast moves upward through the organization. The interactive aspect of managerial estimating is one of the advantages of this procedure because it forces managers to justify their anticipated staffing needs.

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN VOLUME OF SALES AND NUMBER OF WORKERS REQUIRED Historically, one of the most useful predictors of employment levels is sales volume. The relationship between demand and the number of employees needed is a positive one. As you can see in Figure 4-3, a firm’s sales volume is depicted on the horizontal axis and the number of employees required is shown on the vertical axis. In this illustration, as sales decrease, so does the number of employees. Using such a method, managers can approximate the number of employees required at different demand levels. Quantitative methods such as regression analysis can be helpful in determining the number of workers needed.

Forecasting Human Resource Availability To forecast availability, the HR manager looks to both internal sources (current employees) and external sources (the labor market). The determination of whether the firm will be able to secure employees with the necessary skills, and from what sources, is an availability forecast. It helps to show whether the needed employees may be obtained from within the company, from outside the organization, or from a combination of the two sources. Another possibility is that the required skills are not immediately available from any feasible source. Consider the following example:

A large manufacturing firm on the West Coast was preparing to begin operations in a new plant. Analysts had already determined there was a large long-term demand for the new prod- uct. Financing was available and equipment was in place, but production did not begin for two years! Management had made a critical mistake: it had studied the demand side of HR, but not the supply side. There were not enough qualified workers in the local labor market to operate the new plant. New workers had to receive extensive training before they could move into the newly created jobs.

This illustration provides one more instance of the importance of HR involvement in strategic planning.

Shortage or Surplus of Workers Forecasted When firms are faced with a shortage of workers, organizations should intensify their efforts to recruit the necessary people to meet the needs of the firm. Some possible actions will be discussed next.

bottom-up forecast Forecasting method in which each successive level in the organization, starting with the lowest, forecasts its requirements, ultimately providing an aggregate forecast of employees needed.

FIGURE 4-3 Relationship of Sales Volume to Number of Employees

N u

m b

e r

o f

E m

p lo

ye e s

100

0 10 20 Sales (thousands)

30 40 50 60

200

300

400

500

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Information technology occupations are expected to grow rapidly from 2014 to 2024. The employment of information security analysts is expected to increase 18 percent during this period, which is faster than average for all occupations. According the U.S. Labor of Bureau of Statistics, multiple factors are contributing to increased demand for information security analysts:

Information security analysts plan and carry out security measures to protect an organiza- tion’s computer networks and systems. Their responsibilities are continually expanding as the number of cyberattacks increases. Demand for information security analysts is expected to be very high, as these analysts will be needed to create innovative solutions to prevent hackers from stealing critical information or causing problems for computer networks.20

Job openings by major occupational group are expected to vary widely from 2012 to 2022. Two factors contribute to the expected values: growth in a profession given demand (such as in the case of information security analysts) and company replacement needs, likely as employees retire or choose to work elsewhere. Figure 4-4 shows these projections for several occupational groups. The greatest growth in job openings is predicted to be in office and administrative sup- port followed by food preparation and related services. The lowest growth is expected in the legal profession as well as in farming, fishing, and forestry.

INNOVATIVE RECRUITING A shortage of personnel often means that new approaches to recruiting must be used. The organization may have to recruit different kinds of candidates, search in different geographic areas than in the past, and explore new recruitment methods. For instance, Ikea launched an innovative, cost-effective recruitment campaign in Australia. The company advertised job opportunities to its customers with a “Careers Instructions” sheet packed inside

FIGURE 4-4 Job openings by major occupational group, projected 2014–2024, in thousands of openings Source: Career Outlook (December 2015). Accessed February 17, 2017, at https://www.bls.gov/ careeroutlook/2015/article/ projections-occupation.htm.

Office and administrative support

Sales and related

Food preparation and serving related

Healthcare practitioners and technical

Transportation and material moving

Education, training, and library

Management

Construction and extraction

Business and financial operations

Personal care and service

Production

Healthcare support

Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance

Installation, maintenance, and repair

Computer and mathematical

Community and social service

Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media

Architecture and engineering

Life, physical, and social science

Legal

Farming, fishing, and forestry

Protective service

Job openings

0 2,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000

From growth

From replacement needs

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100 PART 2 • STAFFING

product boxes. Customers were instructed to apply for a job. The campaign was highly successful for generating nearly 4,300 quality applicants that yielded 280 new hires.21

In using innovative recruiting, businesses must attempt to determine who their prospective employees are and what motivates them. For example, given the physical and emotional demands of the nursing profession, many organizations offer f lexible work schedules, child care, and educational benefits. Other practices for other occupational groups may be required to attract employees to a firm, such as four-day workweeks (compressed workweeks), telecommuting, and part-time employment.

COMPENSATION INCENTIVES Firms competing for workers in a high-demand situation may have to rely on pay incentives. Premium pay is one obvious method, however, this approach may trigger a bidding war that the organization cannot sustain for an extended period. To offset the bidding war, some organizations use signing bonuses to entice individuals to join the firm. In 2016, 76 percent of companies surveyed use signing bonuses.22 Even the military uses signing bonuses. For example, the U.S. Army Corps offers a signing bonus up to $40,000 for translators who speak certain Middle-Eastern languages and enlist as translator aides in the U.S. Army.23

As more people shop online, places such as Amazon.com, Inc. and Ikea have added additional warehousing facilities to handle rising demand. The limited supply of candidates for warehouse jobs has led to significant pay increases as these companies compete for talent. Sometimes, higher hourly pay alone is not sufficient to staff these facilities. Radial, an operations management company that manages the operations of retailer warehouses and fulfillment centers, awards additional compensa- tion incentives, including attendance bonuses during the peak holiday season, gift cards, and monetary incentives for exceeding performance targets.24 The company pays individuals an extra dollar for every hour an employee meets or exceeds the performance target of picking items off the shelves.

ALTERNATIVES TO LAYOFFS Special training programs may be needed to prepare previously unemployable individuals for positions with a firm. Remedial skills and training are two types of programs that may enable companies to reassign employees to other positions within the company. For example, a small firm in Los Angeles expanded its market by hiring people with few, if any, qualifications. The firm was willing to spend the necessary time and money needed to provide even basic training.

When a comparison of requirements and availability indicates that a worker surplus will result, most companies look to alternatives to layoffs but downsizing may ultimately be required. At times, layoffs can be a necessary cost-cutting measure. However, there are counterproductive problems associated with layoffs, such as increased turnover, especially among the best, most productive workers, and the creation of anxiety among remaining staff, resulting in lower morale, reduced worker engagement, and decreased productivity. Therefore, whenever financially feasible, firms need to look for alternatives to layoff and retain as many workers as possible. We consider four of these alternatives.

First, some companies choose to implement a restricted hiring policy that reduces the workforce by not replacing employees who leave. There are basically three forms of freezes. A hard freeze means that no new workers are hired to replace a vacated position. A soft freeze means that the com- pany is only hiring to fill critical positions. New workers are hired only when the overall performance of the organization may be affected. For instance, President Donald J. Trump ordered a soft hiring freeze in most federal government agencies in 2017, excluding the military. A goal of this freeze was to save millions of dollars for working individuals whose income taxes fund much of federal govern- ment employment.25 At the same time, he authorized that the head of any executive department or agency may fill vacant jobs that are deemed necessary to promote national security or public safety. Still, many concerns have been raised about the soft freeze. For example, Bill Valdez, President of the Senior Executives Association, expressed concerns, “that the freeze, coupled with negative views of federal workers in recent years in Congress and the press, will have a chilling effect on the ability of the federal government to attract and recruit talent it needs . . . ”26 A new term, smart freeze has entered HR vocabulary. HR and managers evaluate every position to determine the ones the company could not survive without and those that are difficult to fill and continue to hire them. Some critics of the federal government’s hiring freeze argued for the need to adopt a smart freeze approach. Renee M. Johnson, President of the Federal Managers Association, said, “The American taxpayer would be better served with improvements to the workforce, not blind cuts. All federal agencies should be allowed to match hiring actions that align with essential mission and funding.”27

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Second, many companies are considering the use of voluntary severance packages to reduce workforce size and operating costs. Severance packages, also known as buyouts, refer to pay and benefits awarded to employees for a period after they leave the company. Oftentimes, buyouts include bonus payments that vary in amount based on salary and years of service. Recently, The Wall Street Journal offered an “enhanced voluntary severance benefit” to all news employees worldwide as an alternative to layoffs.28 Several newspaper companies have experienced precipitous drops in advertising revenue, subscription fees, and profits because many reputable news sources are avail- able free of charge on the internet.29 As readership drops, advertisers choose to spend their money elsewhere to capitalize on larger audiences. Poor business performance is not the only trigger for buyouts. For instance, online shoe and apparel retailer Zappos transformed its organization from one with multiple layers of management and individual decision making to a self-managed arrangement where there were no formal titles or reporting relationships.30 Instead, the company gave decision making power to flexible teams. Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh recognized that this change would not be a good fit for all employees. He decided to offer a voluntary buyout to anyone who wanted to leave the company. Nearly 20 percent of the workforce accepted the buyout.31

Third, early retirement is another way to reduce the number of workers. Some employees will be delighted to retire, but others will be somewhat reluctant. However, the latter may be willing to accept early retirement if the total retirement package is made sufficiently attractive. A tactic that is popular in the construction market is swapping employees. Some companies loan out staff to partner companies during slow times, while promising to hire back the workers when conditions improve. While the workers were away, they learned new skills and those left behind learned the skills to replace them.

Fourth, some companies permit an employee to go from full-time to 30 hours a week without losing health benefits.32 Some companies may offer job-sharing arrangements. This arrangement can enable organizations to retain top talent in lieu of layoffs while having minimal impact on the overall labor budget. For example, employee benefits can be fairly managed on a per-employee basis, as two 20-hour-a-week part timers may have comparably pro-rated, scaled back benefits. Other companies may reduce the workweek from five days to four thereby having a 20 percent reduction in wages. Some companies may offer an unpaid holiday option where instead of taking two weeks off, employees are being asked to take five, with three being unpaid.

The classic case of a firm that believes a no-layoff policy is best for continuous well-being of the firm is Cleveland’s Lincoln Electric, a manufacturer of arc welding equipment. Lincoln Elec- tric offers its Guaranteed Continuous Employment Plan, which provides covered employees with security against layoffs because of lack of work.33 The company has faithfully honored its com- mitment through the past 68 years (as of 2016, which was the latest available data) even through difficult economic climates.34 Since the 1930s, this $3 billion company has kept its promise to its U.S. employees to never lay them off for economic reasons. For decades, wages were 20 to 30 percent above industry averages. The firm believes that a stable workforce provides a long-term competitive advantage. In difficult times, hours are reduced, people are reassigned, and white- collar salaries are cut. If workers meet the firm’s performance standards, no one is laid off.

☛ F Y I One survey of organizations revealed that only 21 percent had identified their workforce needs six to 10 years into the future. 35

Succession Planning: A Component of Strategic Planning Succession planning is the process of ensuring that qualified persons are available to assume key managerial positions once the positions are vacant. Nothing could be as important to the strategic well-being of a company as ensuring that a qualified person is in place to lead the company both now and in the future. This succession planning definition includes untimely deaths, resignations, terminations, or the orderly retirements of key managerial personnel. The goal is to help ensure a smooth transition and operational efficiency, but the transition is often difficult. The Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp) paper “Succession Planning Highlight Report” found that succes- sion planning will be among the top five challenges executives face in the future.36 However, in another survey, more than half of United States and Canadian companies surveyed could not immediately name a successor to their organization’s chief executive officer.

succession planning Process of ensuring that qualified persons are available to assume key managerial positions once the positions are vacant.

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General Electric (GE) provides an example of a company with an excellent succession plan. At GE, the goal is same-day succession. When senior vice president Larry Johnston quit to become the CEO at Albertsons, the position was filled the same day. Bill Conaty, former senior vice president of HR at General Electric said, “We had candidates with two or three backups for all key positions—including the C-suite and all business units. And the board already knew who was lined up thanks to six-month reviews.”37 This process is in sharp contrast to the difficulty that Hewlett-Packard has experienced in the selection of a new CEO. HP has its third CEO in slightly more than a year38 and its eighth CEO since 1999.39 None of the former CEOs at HP had implemented a succession plan that would have at least identified internal candidates who were qualified to take over should the need arise.40 This form of disruption can be a serious drain on both morale and the financial well-being of the firm.

Should companies focus exclusively on internal or external candidates? Joseph L. Bower, author of The CEO Within, found that CEOs who were promoted from within the company are generally more successful than CEOs recruited from other companies. Still, the succession plan needs to consider both external and internal candidates. One approach for increasing the success of external hires is to have them serve in an executive role for a short period before promoting them to the CEO position.41

Because of the tremendous changes that will confront management this century, succession planning is taking on more importance than ever before. Deaths are not the only challenges that have created an increased focus on succession planning. For example, the premature firing of CEOs is no longer a rare event. CEOs are being terminated more quickly than in the past.

In recent years, succession planning is going much deeper into the workforce. A firm might have a good succession plan for top-level positions but few plans for the levels where all the work is performed. There is a movement away from traditional succession planning, which was focused only on top executives of the company. Succession management is now involving middle managers, where they are developed to help ensure that key roles below the C-suite have ready replacements.42

Companies that do not engage in succession planning now will eventually be forced to do it in the future. Members of the baby boom generation—born between 1946 and 1964—are mostly in their 50s and 60s. In 2024, this cohort will be ages 60 to 78.43 Although more people are working longer than ever before, companies will lose employees in leadership positions at an alarming rate. How can companies address this problem? It is in a company’s best interests to ensure that there is a transfer of knowledge from older employees to younger employees. Establishing men- toring programs may help. Also, companies should not abruptly lay off older workers, but rather to ensure that there is a smooth transition of leadership as they retire.44 Oftentimes, this goal can be accomplished with phased in retirement programs that permit full-time employees to gradually reduce their work hours over a few years.

Succession planning is often neglected in small businesses because it is generally thought of in terms of replacing CEOs and key executives within larger businesses. But, succession planning is just as, or more, important for small businesses. A problem, however, is that only 31 percent of small busi- ness owners say their businesses are extremely or very prepared for such an event.45 Without proper succession planning, the company could face economic and tax disasters. Often the small business owner’s argument against succession planning may be “we’re too small,” “we’re too new,” “we have good people in place,” or “I’m not going anywhere soon.”46 Many of today’s small businesses will not survive to the next generation of same family ownership. In fact, it is estimated that only 30 percent of businesses make it to the second generation, and just 10 percent survive to the third generation.47 Peter Handal, president, CEO, and chairman of Dale Carnegie Training, said, “The failure to establish a comprehensive succession plan is a leading cause of this phenomenon.”48

Job Analysis: Process and Methods Job analysis is the systematic process of determining the skills, duties, and knowledge required for performing jobs in an organization. With job analysis, the tasks needed to perform the job are identi- fied. Traditionally, it is an essential and pervasive HR technique and the starting point for other HR activities. In today’s rapidly changing work environment, the need for a sound job analysis system is critical. New jobs are being created, and old jobs are being redesigned or eliminated. A job analy- sis that was conducted only a few years ago may now be obsolete and must be redone. Some have even suggested that changes are occurring too fast to maintain an effective job analysis system.

4.3 Describe the job analysis process and methods.

job analysis Systematic process of determining the skills, duties, and knowledge required for performing jobs in an organization.

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A job consists of a group of tasks that must be performed for an organization to achieve its goals. A job may require the services of one person, such as that of the president, or the services of 75, as might be the case with machine operators in a large manufacturing firm. A position is the collection of tasks and responsibilities performed by one person; there is a position for every individual in an organization.

In a work group consisting of a supervisor, two senior analysts, and four analysts, there are three jobs and seven positions. A small company might have 25 jobs for its 75 employees, whereas in a large company 2,000 jobs may exist for 50,000 employees. In some firms, as few as 10 jobs may make up 90 percent of the workforce.

The purpose of job analysis is to obtain answers to six important questions:

1. What physical and mental tasks does the worker accomplish? 2. When is the job to be completed? 3. Where is the job to be accomplished? 4. How does the worker do the job? 5. Why is the job done? 6. What qualifications are needed to perform the job?

Job analysis provides a summary of a job’s duties and responsibilities, its relationship to other jobs, the knowledge and skills required, and working conditions under which it is performed. Job facts are gathered, analyzed, and recorded, as the job exists, not as the job should exist. Determin- ing how the job should exist is most often assigned to industrial engineers, methods analysts, or others. Job analysis is conducted after the job has been designed, the worker has been trained, and the job is being performed.

Job analysis is performed on three occasions: (1) when the organization is founded and a job analysis program is initiated for the first time; (2) when new jobs are created; and (3) when jobs are changed significantly because of new technologies, methods, procedures, or systems. Jobs also change when there is increased emphasis on teamwork in organizations, empowerment of employees, or other managerial interventions such as quality management systems. Job analysis is most often performed because of changes jobs. From job analysis information, both job descrip- tions and job specifications can be prepared.

The job description is a document that provides information regarding the essential tasks, duties, and responsibilities of the job. The minimum acceptable qualifications a person should possess to perform a job are contained in the job specification.49 Both types of documents will be discussed in greater detail later in this chapter.

Reasons for Conducting Job Analysis As Figure 4-5 shows, data derived from job analysis in the form of the job description/specifica- tion can have an impact on virtually every aspect of HR management. In practice, both the job description and job specification are combined into one document with the job specification presented after the job description.

job Group of tasks that must be performed for an organization to achieve its goals.

position Collection of tasks and responsibilities performed by one person.

job description Document that provides information regarding the essential tasks, duties, and responsibilities of a job.

job specification A document that outlines the minimum acceptable qualifications a person should possess to perform a job.

FIGURE 4-5 Job Analysis: A Basic Human Resource Management Tool

Job Analysis

Tasks Responsibilities

Job descriptions

Job Specifications

Knowledge Skills Abilities

• Staffing

• Training and Development

• Performance Appraisal

• Compensation

• Safety and Health

• Employee and Labor Relations

• Legal Considerations

duties

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STAFFING All areas of staffing would be haphazard if the organization did not know the qualifications needed to perform the various jobs. A major use of job analysis data is found in HR planning (as discussed earlier in this chapter). Merely knowing that the firm will need l,000 new employees to produce goods or services to satisfy sales demand is insufficient. Each job requires different knowledge, skills, and ability levels. Obviously, effective HR planning must take these job requirements into consideration. Also, lacking up-to-date job descriptions and specifications, a firm would have to recruit and select employees for jobs without having clear guidelines, a practice that could have disastrous consequences.

TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT Job description information often proves beneficial in identifying training and development needs. If it suggests that the job requires a knowledge, skill, or ability, and the person filling the position does not possess all the qualifications required, training or development are probably in order. Training should be directed at assisting workers in performing duties specified in their present job descriptions or at developing skills for broader responsibilities.

PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL Most workers want to know what they are supposed to accomplish and good job descriptions provide that. Then, employees should be evaluated in terms of how well they accomplish the duties specified in their job descriptions and any other specific goals that may have been established. A manager who evaluates an employee on factors not clearly predetermined is left open to allegations of discrimination.

COMPENSATION In the area of compensation, it is helpful to know the relative value of a job to the company before a dollar value is placed on it. Jobs that require greater knowledge, skills, and abilities should be worth more to the firm. For example, the relative value of a job calling for a master’s degree normally would be higher than that of a job that requires a high school diploma. This might not be the case if the market value of the job requiring only a high school diploma was higher, however. Such a situation occurred in a major West Coast city many years ago. It came to light that city sanitation engineers (garbage collectors) were paid more than better-educated public schoolteachers.

SAFETY AND HEALTH Information derived from job analysis is also valuable in identifying safety and health considerations. For example, employers are required to inform workers when a job is hazardous. The job description/specification should reflect this condition. In addition, in certain hazardous jobs, workers may need specific information about the hazards to perform their jobs safely.

EMPLOYEE AND LABOR RELATIONS Job analysis information is also important in employee and labor relations. When employees are considered for promotion, transfer, or demotion, the job description provides a standard for evaluation and comparison of talent. Information obtained through job analysis can often lead to more objective human resource decisions.

LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS A properly prepared job analysis is particularly important for supporting the legality of employment practices. Before the equal employment opportunity movement in the early 1960s and 1970s, few firms had effective job analysis systems.50 But the need to validate basic job requirements hastened the growth in the use of job analysis to prepare job descriptions/ specifications. The importance of job analysis is well documented in the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures. 51 Job analysis data are needed to defend decisions involving termination, promotion, transfers, and demotions. Job analysis provides the basis for tying the HR functions together and the foundation for developing a sound HR program. Although the law does not require that companies use job analysis, a successful defense against claims of alleged violations of the following laws may depend on the appropriate use of job analysis:

$ Fair Labor Standards Act: Jobs are categorized as exempt or nonexempt, and job analysis is basic to this determination. Workers in nonexempt jobs must be paid time and a half when they work more than 40 hours per week. Overtime pay is not required for exempt employees.

$ Equal Pay Act: If jobs are not substantially different, employees performing them must receive similar pay. When pay differences exist, job descriptions can be used to show whether jobs are substantially equal in terms of skill, effort, responsibility, and working conditions.

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$ Civil Rights Act: HR management has focused on job analysis because selection methods need to be clearly job related. Job descriptions may provide the basis for an equitable com- pensation system and an adequate defense against unfair discrimination charges in initial selection, promotion, and all other areas of HR administration. When job analysis is not performed, defending certain qualifications established for the job is usually difficult. In the Griggs v. Duke Power Company case, the company stated that supervisors must have a high school diploma. However, the company could show no business necessity for this standard. Placing a selection standard in the job specification without having determined its necessity through job analysis makes the firm vulnerable in discrimination suits.

$ Occupational Safety and Health Act: Job descriptions are required to specify elements of the job that endanger health or are considered unsatisfactory or distasteful by much of the population. Showing the job description to the employee in advance is a good defense.

$ Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)/ADA Amendments Act: Employers are required to make reasonable accommodations for workers with disabilities who can perform the essen- tial functions of a job and job analysis is needed to obtain this information. Key elements used to determine essential functions include physical skills, mental skills, job duties, and behavioral skills.52 The EEOC defines reasonable accommodation as any modification or adjustment to a job, an employment practice, or the work environment that makes it possi- ble for an individual with a disability to enjoy an equal employment opportunity. The ADA Amendments Act expands the definition of “disability” and many more applicants and employees are eligible for reasonable accommodations. Certainly, stating that every task in a job is essential sends a red flag to the EEOC.53

Job Analysis Methods Considerable information is needed for the successful accomplishment of job analysis. The job analyst identifies the job’s actual duties and responsibilities and gathers the other types of data such as work activities; worker-oriented activities; machines, tools, equipment, and work aids used; and personal requirements. This information is used to help determine the job skills needed. In addition, the job analyst looks at job-related tangibles and intangibles, such as the knowledge needed, the materials processed, and the goods made or services performed. Essential functions of the job are determined in this process.

Some job analysis systems identify job standards. Work measurement studies may be needed to determine how long it takes to perform a task. Regarding job content, the analyst studies the work schedule, financial and nonfinancial incentives, and physical working conditions. Education, training, and work experience pertinent to the job are identified. Because many jobs are often performed in conjunction with others, organizational and social contexts are also noted. Subjec- tive skills required, such as strong interpersonal skills, should be identified if the job requires the jobholder to be personable.

Job analysis has traditionally been conducted in several different ways because organizational needs and resources for conducting job analysis differ. Selection of a specific method should be based on the purposes for which the information is to be used (job evaluation, pay increases, development, and so on) and the approach that is most feasible for a organization. The historically most common methods of job analysis are discussed in the following sections.

QUESTIONNAIRES Questionnaires are typically quick and economical to use. The job analyst may administer a structured questionnaire to employees, who identify the tasks they perform. However, in some cases, employees may lack verbal skills, a condition that makes this method less useful. Also, some employees may tend to exaggerate the significance of their tasks, suggesting more responsibility than exists.

OBSERVATION When using the observation method, the job analyst watches the worker perform job tasks and records his or her observations. This method is used primarily to gather information on jobs emphasizing manual skills, such as those of a machine operator. It can also help the analyst identify interrelationships between physical and mental tasks. Observation alone is usually an insufficient means of conducting job analysis, however, particularly when mental skills are dominant in a job. Observing a financial analyst at work would not reveal much about the requirements of the job.

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INTERVIEWS An understanding of the job may also be gained through interviewing both the employee and the supervisor. Usually, the analyst interviews the employee first, helping him or her describe the duties performed. Then, the analyst normally contacts the supervisor for additional information, to check the accuracy of the information obtained from the employee, and to clarify certain points.

EMPLOYEE RECORDING In some instances, job analysis information is gathered by having employees describe their daily work activities in a diary or log. With this method, the problem of employees exaggerating job importance may have to be overcome. Even so, valuable understanding of highly specialized jobs, such as recreational therapist, may be obtained in this way.

COMBINATION OF METHODS Usually an analyst does not use one job analysis method exclusively. A combination of methods is often more appropriate. In analyzing clerical and administrative jobs, the analyst might use questionnaires supported by interviews and limited observation. In studying production jobs, interviews supplemented by extensive work observations may provide the necessary data. Basically, the analyst should use the combination of techniques needed for accurate job descriptions/specifications.

Over the years, attempts have been made to provide more systematic methods of conducting job analysis. Several of these approaches are discussed in Table 4-1.

The person who conducts job analysis is interested in gathering data on what is involved in performing a job. The people who participate in job analysis should include, at a minimum, the employee and the employee’s immediate supervisor. Large organizations may have one or more job analysts, but in small organizations line supervisors may be responsible for the task. Orga- nizations that lack the technical expertise may use outside consultants to perform job analysis.

Regardless of the approach taken, before conducting job analysis, the analyst should learn as much as possible about the job by reviewing organizational charts and talking with individu- als acquainted with the jobs to be studied. Before beginning, the supervisor should introduce the analyst to the employees and explain the purpose of the job analysis. Upon completion of the job

Functional Job Analysis

Functional job analysis (FJA) is a comprehensive job analysis approach that concentrates on the inter- actions among the work, the worker, and the organization. This approach is a modification of the job analysis schedule. It assesses specific job outputs and identifies job tasks in terms of task statements.

Position Analysis Questionnaire

The position analysis questionnaire (PAQ) is a structured job analysis questionnaire that uses a checklist approach to identify job elements. It focuses on general worker behaviors instead of tasks. Some 194 job descriptors relate to job-oriented elements. Advocates of the PAQ believe that its ability to identify job elements, behaviors required of job incumbents, and other job characteristics makes this procedure appli- cable to the analysis of virtually any type of job. Each job descriptor is evaluated on a specified scale such as extent of use, amount of time, importance of job, possibility of occurrence, and applicability.

Each job being studied is scored relative to the 32 job dimensions. The score derived represents a profile of the job; this can be compared with standard profiles to group jobs into known job families, that is, job of a similar nature. In essence, the PAQ identifies significant job behaviors and classifies jobs. Using the PAQ, job descriptions can be based on the relative importance and emphasis placed on various job elements. The PAQ has been called one of the most useful job analysis methods.

Management Position Description Questionnaire

The management position description questionnaire (MPDQ) is a method of job analysis designed for management positions; it uses a checklist to analyze jobs. The MPDQ has been used to determine the training needs of individuals who are slated to move into managerial positions. It has also been used to evaluate and set compensation rates for managerial jobs and to assign the jobs to job families.

Guidelines-Oriented Job Analysis

The guidelines-oriented job analysis (GOJA) responds to the legislation affecting staffing and involves a step-by-step procedure to define the work of a job classification. It is also used for developing selec- tion tools, such as application forms, and for documenting compliance with various legal requirements. The GOJA obtains the following types of information: (1) machines, tools, and equipment; (2) supervi- sion; (3) contacts; (4) duties; (5) knowledge, skills, and abilities; (6) physical and other requirements; and (7) differentiating requirements.

TABLE 4-1

Other Methods Available for Conducting Job Analysis

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analysis, two basic HR documents—job descriptions and job specifications—can be prepared. As previously mentioned, in practice, both the job description and job specification are combined into one document with the job specification presented after the job description.

Job Descriptions Information obtained through job analysis is crucial to the development of job descriptions. It is vitally important that job descriptions are both relevant and accurate.54 They should provide con- cise statements of what employees are expected to do on the job, how they do it, and the conditions under which the duties are performed. Concise job descriptions put an end to the possibility of hearing, “That’s not my job.” Among the items frequently included in a job description are these:

$ Major duties performed $ Percentage of time devoted to each duty $ Performance standards to be achieved $ Working conditions and possible hazards $ Number of employees performing the job, and to whom they report $ The machines and equipment used on the job

Having accurate job descriptions is the starting point for most HR tasks. Table 4-2 provides some suggestions for the proper language to be used in job descriptions.

The contents of the job description vary somewhat with the purpose for which it will be used. The next sections address the parts of a job description.

Job Identification The job identification section includes the job title, the department, the reporting relationship, and a job number or code. A good title will closely approximate the nature of the work content and will distinguish that job from others. Unfortunately, job titles are often misleading. An executive assistant in one organization may be little more than a highly paid clerk, whereas a person with the same title in another firm may practically run the company. For instance, one former student’s first job after graduation was with a major tire and rubber company as an assistant district service manager. Because the primary duties of the job were to unload tires from trucks, check tread wear, and stack tires in boxcars, a more appropriate title would probably have been tire checker and stacker.

Date of the Job Analysis The job analysis date is placed on the job description to aid in identifying job changes that would make the description obsolete. Some firms have found it useful to place an expiration date on the document. This practice ensures periodic review of job content and minimizes the number of obsolete job descriptions.

4.4 Summarize the components of a job description.

Keep each statement in the job description crisp and clear:

$ Structure your sentences in classic verb/object and explanatory phrases. Since the occupant of the job is your sentences’ implied subject, it may be eliminated. For example, a sentence pertaining to the description of a receptionist position might read, “Greets office visitors and personnel in a friendly and sincere manner.”

$ Always use the present tense of verbs. $ If necessary, use explanatory phrases telling why, how, where, or how often to add meaning and

clarity. For example, “Collects all employee time sheets on a biweekly basis for payroll purposes.” $ Omit any unnecessary articles such as “a,” “an,” “the,” or other words for an easy-to-understand

description. Using the above example, the statement could have read, “Greets all visitors and the of- fice personnel to the building in a friendly and a sincere manner.”

$ Use unbiased terminology. For example, use the ‘he/she’ approach or construct sentences in such a way that gender pronouns are not required.

$ Avoid using words which are subject to differing interpretations. Try not to use words such as “fre- quently,” “some,” “complex,” “occasional,” and “several.”

Source: www.sba.gov/content/writing-effective-job-descriptions

TABLE 4-2

Proper Language in the Job Description

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Job Summary The job summary provides a concise overview of the job. It is generally a short paragraph that states job content.

Duties Performed The body of the job description delineates the major duties to be performed. Usually, one sentence beginning with an action verb (such as receives, performs, establishes, or assembles) adequately explains each duty. Essential functions may be shown in a separate section to aid in complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act. An example of a job description/specification of a records clerk is shown in Figure 4-6.

Job Specification Job specifications should always reflect the minimum, not the ideal qualifications for a job. Sev- eral problems may result if specifications are inflated. First, if specifications are set too high, they might systematically eliminate minorities or women from consideration for jobs. Therefore, the organization runs the risk of being charged with discrimination. Second, compensation costs will increase because ideal candidates should be compensated more than candidates with lesser skills. Third, job vacancies will be harder to fill because ideal candidates are more difficult to find than minimally qualified candidates. Finally, including an unnecessary requirement in the job specifica- tion may keep qualified applicants out of the selection pool.55

Determining the appropriate qualifications for a job is undoubtedly the most difficult part of job analysis. It requires a great deal of probing on the part of the job analyst as well as a broad

Administrative Information Job Title: Records Clerk department: loan operations eports To: loan operation manager Job Number: 11

Date of Job Analysis January 3, 2018

Expiration Date January 2021

Job Summary Returns all consumer paid loan documents to customers. Supervises the daily activities of two clerks.

Essential Functions Performed Receives monthly files for accounts that have been paid in full and require the return of contracts, mortgage documents, auto titles, and other documents. Answers telephone and e-mail inquiries from customers or loan officers concerning documents. maintains file on temporary automobile titles until permanent title is received. Files permanent automobile titles, contracts, mortgage documents, and other documents in customer files daily. Supervises two file clerks who maintain correspondence and other general files. Performs file clerk duties as needed. Performs other duties, as required, on a temporary basis, to maintain section or depart- mental operations and services.

Job Specifications Education High school diploma preferred, but not required Experience Six months or more in a financial institution and familiarity with various loan documents Skills Required Working knowledge of microsoft Word and Excel Ability to enter data at a rate of 35 words per minute

FIGURE 4-6 Job Description/ Specification Example

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understanding of the skills needed to perform varieties of work. Items typically included in the job specification are factors that are job related, such as educational requirements, experience, and job-related personality traits and physical abilities. As previously mentioned, in practice, job specifications are often included as a major section of job descriptions.

After jobs have been analyzed and the descriptions written, the results should be reviewed with the supervisor and the worker to ensure that they are accurate, clear, and understandable. The courtesy of reviewing results with employees also helps to gain their acceptance.

☛ F Y I The Standard Occupational Classification:

$ Classifies all workers into one of 840 detailed occupations according to their occupational definition. $ Detailed occupations are combined to form 461 broad occupations, 97 minor groups, and 23 major

groups.56

13-1071 Human Resources Specialists

Perform activities in the human resource area. Includes employment specialists who screen, recruit, interview, and place workers. Excludes “Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists” (13-1141) and “Training and Development Specialists” (13-1151).

Illustrative examples: Staffing Coordinator, Personnel Recruiter, Human Resources Generalist

11-3111 Compensation and Benefits Managers

Plan, direct, or coordinate compensation and benefits activities of an organization. Job analysis and position description managers are included in “Human Resource Managers” (11-3121).

Illustrative examples: Wage and Salary Administrator, Employee Benefits Director, Compensation Director

13-1141 Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists

Conduct programs of compensation and benefits and job analysis for employer. May specialize in specific areas, such as position classification and pension programs.

Illustrative examples: Employee Benefits Specialist, Retirement Plan Specialist, Job Analyst

11-3131 Training and Development Managers

Plan, direct, or coordinate the training and development activities and staff of an organization.

Illustrative examples: Labor Training Manager, Employee Development Director, E-Learning Manager

17-2111 Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors

Promote worksite or product safety by applying knowledge of industrial processes, mechanics, chemistry, psychology, and industrial health and safety laws. Includes industrial product safety engineers.

Illustrative examples: Product Safety Engineer, Fire Protection Engineer, Industrial Safety Engineer

Source: www.bls.gov/soc.

TABLE 4-3

Representative SOC Descriptions for HR Professionals

Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics created and updates the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system, which is used by federal statistical agencies to classify workers into occupational categories for the purpose of collecting, calculating, or disseminating data. Detailed occupations in the SOC with similar job duties, and in some cases skills, education, or training, are grouped together. The federal government updates job descriptions for all U.S. workers every 10 years. The SOC’s substantive structural changes are based on actual changes in the nature or organization of work activities being performed in the economy. The update also provides an opportunity for professional organizations and labor groups to seek recognition or a higher profile for their mem- bers’ occupations by gaining a separate listing or reclassification. Most current occupations will be unaffected, except perhaps for a change in the description’s wording. Some representative SOC descriptions for HR professionals may be seen in Table 4-3.57

HR Web Wisdom

Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) www.bls.gov/soc/2010/soc_ alph.htm

Provides an alphabetical list of SOC occupations.

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The Occupational Information Network (O*NET) The Occupational Information Network (O*NET) is a comprehensive database of worker attri- butes and job characteristics, which is administered by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employ- ment and Training Administration and developed in collaboration with a variety of private and public companies. O*NET is comprehensive because it incorporates information about both jobs and workers. The O*NET Content Model lists six categories of job and worker information. Job information contains the components that relate to the actual work activities of a job (i.e., informa- tion that HR professionals should include in the summary and duties sections of job descriptions). Worker information represents characteristics of employees that contribute to successful job per- formance. Figure 4-7 shows the six categories of the O*NET Content Model. According to the creators of O*NET, the Content Model was developed using research on job and organizational analysis. It embodies a view that reflects the character of occupations (via job-oriented descrip- tors) and people (via worker-oriented descriptors). The Content Model also allows occupational information to be applied across jobs, sectors, or industries and within occupations.

O*NET is a flexible, easy-to-use database system that provides a common language for defin- ing and describing occupations. Its flexible design also captures rapidly changing job requirements. It provides the essential foundation for facilitating career counseling, education, employment, and training activities by providing information about knowledge, skills, abilities, interests, general work activities, and work context.58 Portions of the information included in an O*NET description for a Human Resources Specialist may be seen in Table 4-4. A particularly useful tool, available on the U.S. Department of Labor’s Career One Stop web site, enables you to prepare job descriptions using O*NET data (https://www.careeronestop.org/BusinessCenter/JDW/GettingStarted.aspx).

Competencies and Competency Modeling The term competency has become an increasingly important topic in HR practice because of the changing nature of work. Competencies build on the use of knowledge, skills, and abilities, which we describe with job analysis, to describe work. Competencies refer to an individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently over time to perform work successfully in the required work situations. Traditionally, as we have seen, work has been described by many dimensions including knowledge, skills, and abilities; and, this infor- mation is reported in job descriptions. Indeed, although this is largely still the case, HR profes- sionals have embraced the ideas of competencies as the field has increasingly taken on strategic importance.

HR Web Wisdom

O*NET OnLine www.onetonline.org/

O*NET OnLine has detailed descriptions of the world of work for use by job seekers, workforce development and HR profession- als, students, researchers, and more!

4.5 Explain what competencies and competency modeling are.

competencies An individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently over time to perform work successfully in the required work situations.

FIGURE 4-7 O*NET Content Model

Worker Requirements

Skills•Knowledge Education

Experience Requirements

Experience and Training Skills – Entry Requirement

licensing

Worker Characteristics

Abilities occupational Interests

Work Values Work Styles

Workforce Characteristics

labor market Information occupational outlook

Occupation-Specific Information

Job-oriented

Worker-oriented

Cross occupation

occupation Specific

Title•description Alternate Titles

Tasks Tools and Technology

occupational Requirements

Work Activities: General•Intermediate•detailed

organizational Context Work Context

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Tasks Prepare or maintain employment records related to events such as hiring, termination, leaves, transfers, or promotions, using human resources management system software.

Interpret and explain human resources policies, procedures, laws, standards, or regulations.

Hire employees and process hiring-related paperwork.

Inform job applicants of details such as duties and responsibilities, compensation, benefits, schedules, working conditions, or promotion opportunities.

Address employee relations issues, such as harassment allegations, work complaints, or other employee concerns.

Maintain current knowledge of Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) and affirmative action guide- lines and laws, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

Knowledge Personnel and Human Resources—Knowledge of principles and procedures for personnel recruit- ment, selection, training, compensation and benefits, labor relations and negotiation, and personnel information systems.

English Language—Knowledge of the structure and content of the English language including the meaning and spelling of words, rules of composition, and grammar.

Clerical—Knowledge of administrative and clerical procedures and systems such as word process- ing, managing files and records, stenography and transcription, designing forms, and other office procedures and terminology.

Administration and Management—Knowledge of business and management principles involved in strategic planning, resource allocation, human resources modeling, leadership technique, production methods, and coordination of people and resources.

Skills Active Listening—Giving full attention to what other people are saying, taking time to understand the points being made, asking questions as appropriate, and not interrupting at inappropriate times.

Speaking—Talking to others to convey information effectively. Reading Comprehension—Understanding written sentences and paragraphs in work related documents.

Oral Comprehension—The ability to listen to and understand information and ideas presented through spoken words and sentences.

Oral Expression—The ability to communicate information and ideas in speaking so others will understand.

Written Comprehension—The ability to read and understand information and ideas presented in writing.

Source: http://online.onetcenter.org/

TABLE 4-4

Human Resources Specialist

Oftentimes, HR professionals’ identification of competencies is derived from an analysis of the overall strategic statements of companies. For example, GE emphasizes three strategic goals for corporate growth: Globalization, Product Services, and Six Sigma (quality improvement). GE’s top management relies on four core competencies to drive business success, which they call the four “Es”: high Energy, the ability to Energize others, Edge (i.e., the ability to make tough calls), and Execute (i.e., the ability to turn vision into results).

Apart from the work of many private consulting firms, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration developed a framework for describing competencies and for building competency models. Competency modeling specifies and defines all the compe- tencies necessary for success in a group of jobs that are set within an industry context. Figure 4-8 shows the basic framework for the Department of Labor’s competency model structure. According to the U.S. Department of Labor:

competency modeling Specifies and defines all the competencies necessary for success in a group of jobs that are set within an industry context.

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112 PART 2 • STAFFING

Foundational Competencies

At the base of the model, Tiers 1 through 3 represent competencies that provide the founda- tion for success in school and in the world of work. Foundational competencies are essential to a large number of occupations and industries. Employers have identified a link between foundational competencies and job performance and have also discovered that foundational competencies are a prerequisite for workers to learn industry-specific skills.

Industry-Related Competencies

The competencies shown on Tiers 4 and 5 are referred to as Industry Competencies and are specific to an industry or industry sector. Industry-wide technical competencies cut across industry subsectors making it possible to create career lattices where a worker can move eas- ily across industry subsectors. Rather than narrowly following a single occupational career ladder, this model supports the development of an agile workforce.

Occupation-Related Competencies

The competencies on Tiers 6, 7, 8, and 9 are referred to as Occupational Competencies. Occu- pational competency models are frequently developed to define performance in a workplace, to design competency-based curriculum, or to articulate the requirements for an occupational credential such as a license or certification.59

Figure 4-9 illustrates an example of a competency model for Solar Photovoltaic Installers who work in the renewable energy industry. The lower tiers, from personal effectiveness competencies through industry-sector technical competencies, apply to most jobs within the renewable energy industry. Hydroelectric production managers and wind engineers are examples of jobs within this industry. The top tiers, in this case, management competencies and occupation-specific competen- cies, apply to one or more, but not all, jobs within this industry. Figure 4-9 lists sample manage- ment competencies and occupation-specific competencies for the solar photovoltaic installer job. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Career One Stop Web site contains interactive tools for building competency models and career ladders (https://www.careeronestop.org/competencymodel/).

Job Design Concepts We previously said that new jobs were being created at a rapid pace. If this is so, jobs should be designed. Job design is the process of determining the specific tasks to be performed, the meth- ods used in performing these tasks, and how the job relates to other work in the organization. Several concepts related to job design will be discussed next. First, consider how Blackbird Guitars gets work done. Blackbird Guitars is a very small firm that requires employees to com- bine the tasks of multiple jobs. It is an excellent illustration of the importance of careful job design.

4.6 Summarize job design concepts.

job design Process of determining the specific tasks to be performed, the methods used in performing these tasks, and how the job relates to other work in an organization.

FIGURE 4-8 U.S. Department of Labor Competency Model Source: U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration, “Competency Model General Instructions,” CareerOneStop. Accessed February 10, 2017, at http://www.careeronestop. org/CompetencyModel/ CareerPathway/ CPWGenInstructions.aspx.

Occupation-Related Competencies

Tier 9 – management Competencies Tier 8 – occupation-Specific Requirements Tier 7 – occupation-Specific Technical Competencies Tier 6 – occupation-Specific Knowledge Competencies

Industry-Related Competencies

Tier 5 – Industry-Sector Technical Competencies Tier 4 – Industry-Wide Technical Competencies

Foundational Competencies

Tier 3 – Workplace Competencies Tier 2 – Academic Competencies Tier 1 – Personal Effectiveness Competencies

Occupation Related

Industry Related

Foundational

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JOB ENRICHMENT Strongly advocated by Frederick Herzberg, job enrichment consists of basic changes in the content and level of responsibility of a job to provide greater challenges to the worker. Job enrichment provides a vertical expansion of responsibilities.

The worker can derive a feeling of achievement, recognition, responsibility, and personal growth in performing the job. Although job enrichment programs do not always achieve positive results, they have often brought about improvements in job performance and in the level of worker satisfaction in many organizations. Today, job enrichment is moving toward the team level, as more teams become autonomous, or self-managed.

JOB ENLARGEMENT There is a clear distinction between job enrichment and job enlargement. Job enlargement is defined as increasing the number of tasks a worker performs, with all the tasks at the same level of responsibility.

Job enlargement, sometimes called cross-training, involves providing greater variety to the worker. For example, instead of knowing how to operate only one machine, a person is taught to operate two or even three, but no higher level of responsibility is required. Workers with broad skills may become increasingly important as fewer workers are needed because of tight budgets. Some employers have found that providing job enlargement opportunities improves employee engagement and prevents stagnation.60

JOB ROTATION Job rotation (cross-training) moves employees from one job to another to broaden their experience. Higher-level tasks often require this breadth of knowledge. Rotational

job enrichment Changes in the content and level of responsibility of a job to provide greater challenges to the worker.

job enlargement Increasing the number of tasks a worker performs, with all the tasks at the same level of responsibility.

job rotation Moves workers from one job to another to broaden their experience.

FIGURE 4-9 Renewable Energy Industry Competency Model Source: U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration, “Renewable Energy,” CareerOneStop. Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.careeronestop.org/ CompetencyModel/pyramid. aspx?RE=Y.

Integrity Professionalism

Personal Effectiveness Competencies

Initiative Dependability & Reliability Lifelong Learning

Interpersonal Skills

Science Basic

Computer Skills

Teamwork Business Funda- mentals

Fundamentals of Energy and Power

Biomass Solar Wind

Industry-Sector Technical Competencies

Geothermal Water Fuel Cells and

Hydrogen Energy

Energy Efficiency

Renewable Energy

Technologies

Industry-Wide Technical Competencies Quality Assurance

and Continuous

Improvement

Policies, Laws and

Regulations

Health, Safety, and

Security

Adaptability/ Flexibility

Mathematics Reading Writing Communication-

Listening & Speaking

Critical & Analytic Thinking

Information Literacy

Sustainable Practices

Checking, Examining &

Recording

Working with

Tools & Technology

Problem Solving & Decision Making

Planning, Organizing,

and Scheduling

Marketing & Customer

Focus

Management Competencies

Monitor Processes, Materials, or Surroundings

Organizing, Planning, and Prioritizing Work

Identify installation locations with proper orientation, area,

solar access, or structural integrity for photovoltaic (PV) arrays.

Install photovoltaic (PV) systems in accordance with codes and

standards using drawings, schematics, and instructions.

Occupation-Specific Requirements

Workplace Competencies

Academic Competencies

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Blackbird Guitars: Managing HR Entrepreneurial Firms and respond to questions.

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114 PART 2 • STAFFING

training programs help employees understand a variety of jobs and their interrelationships, thereby improving productivity. Job rotation is often used by organizations to relieve boredom, stimulate better performance, reduce absenteeism, and provide additional flexibility in job assignments. Also, if the task to be accomplished is boring or distasteful, job rotation means that one person will not be stuck with it for all times.61 Individuals who know how to accomplish more than one task are more valuable both to themselves and to the firm. Staffing then becomes more flexible and these multiskilled workers are then more insulated from layoffs.62 If job rotation is to be effective, management must be sure to provide sufficient training so that everyone in the rotation can perform the task in a similar manner.63

REENGINEERING Reengineering is “the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service, and speed.”64

Reengineering essentially involves the firm rethinking and redesigning its business system to become more competitive. It emphasizes the radical redesign of work in which companies organizes around process instead of by functional departments. Incremental change is not what is desired; instead, deep-seated changes are wanted that will alter entire operations at one time. Essentially, the firm must rethink and redesign its business system from the ground up.

Reengineering focuses on the overall aspects of job designs, organizational structures, and management systems. It stresses that work should be organized around outcomes as opposed to tasks or functions. Reengineering should never be confused with downsizing even though a workforce reduction often results from this strategy. Naturally, job design considerations are of paramount concern because as the process changes, so do essential elements of jobs. Through an initiative called Project Accelerate, Family Dollar reengineered its merchandising and supply chain processes to enable better performance by store teams. In doing so, it produced a new store layout that is easier and more convenient to shop.65

LG Electronics provides another example of how reengineering can work. LG management previously let each division deal with suppliers. That meant a procurement manager in Seoul did not know how much his counterpart at a flat-screen TV factory in Mexico paid for chips from the same company. Then Chief Executive Nam Yong decided to reengineer and rethink the company where managers seldom shared information. Today no one at LG can issue a purchase order with- out clearance from procurement engineering. By centralizing purchases, LG has cut more than $2 billion from its annual $30 billion purchases.66

reengineering Fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical, contemporary measures of performance such as cost, quality, service, and speed.

PREPARING FOR EXAM/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Describe the HR strategic planning process. If HR

is to be a strategic partner, HR executives must work with top management in achieving concrete plans and results. Strategic planning is the process by which top management determines overall organizational purposes and objectives and how they will be achieved. Strategic planning at all levels of the organization can be divided into four steps: (1) determination of the organizational mission; (2) assessment of the organization and its envi- ronment; (3) setting of specific objectives or direction; and (4) determination of strategies to accomplish those objectives.

2. Explain the human resource planning process. Human resource planning (sometimes called workforce planning) is the systematic process of matching the internal and external supply of people with job openings anticipated in the organization over a specified period.

3. Describe the job analysis process and methods. Job analysis is the systematic process of determining the skills, duties, and knowledge required for performing jobs in an organization. It is an essential and pervasive HR technique. Without a properly conducted job analysis, it would be difficult, if not impossible, to satisfactorily perform the other HR-related functions.

Work activities, worker-oriented activities, and the types of machines, tools, equipment, and work aids used in the job are important. This information is used to help determine the job skills needed. In addition, the job ana- lyst looks at job-related tangibles and intangibles.

The job analyst may administer a structured question- naire or witness the work being performed, or he or she may interview both the employee and the supervisor or ask them to describe their daily work activities in a diary or log. A combination of methods is often used.

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4. Summarize the components of a job description. Compo- nents include the job identification section, which includes the job title, department, reporting relationship, and a job number or code; the job analysis date; the job summary; and the body of the job description that delineates the major duties to be performed.

5. Explain what competencies and competency modeling are. The term competency has become an increasingly important topic in HR practice because of the changing nature of work. Competencies build on the use of knowledge, skills, and abilities, which we describe with job analysis, to describe work. Competencies refer to an individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently over time to perform work successfully in the required work situation. A competency model speci- fies and defines all the competencies necessary for success in a group of jobs that are set within an industry context.

6. Summarize job design concepts. Job design is the pro- cess of determining the specific tasks to be performed, the methods used in performing the tasks, and how the job relates to other work in the organization. Job enrich- ment consists of basic changes in the content and level of responsibility of a job to provide greater challenge to the worker. Job enlargement is increasing the number of tasks a worker performs, with all the tasks at the same level of responsibility. Job rotation (sometimes called cross-train- ing) moves employees from one job to another to broaden their experience. Reengineering is the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service, and speed.

Key Terms strategic planning 91 mission 92 human resource planning 96 requirements forecast 96 availability forecast 96 zero-base forecast 97 bottom-up forecast 98

severance packages 101 succession planning 101 job analysis 102 job 103 position 103 job description 103 job specification 103

competencies 110 competency modeling 111 job design 112 job enrichment 113 job enlargement 113 job rotation 113 reengineering 114

Questions for Review 4-1. What are the steps involved in the strategic planning

process? 4-2. What are the steps involved in the HR planning process? 4-3. What are the HR forecasting techniques? 4-4. Distinguish between forecasting HR requirements and

availability. 4-5. What are the purposes of strategic planning? 4-6. What actions could a firm take if it forecasted a shortage

of workers? 4-7. What are some alternatives to layoffs?

4-8. Define succession planning. Why is it important? 4-9. What is the distinction between a job and a position?

Define job analysis. 4-10. When is job analysis performed? 4-11. What are the types of information required for job

analysis? 4-12. What are the methods used to conduct job analysis?

Describe each type. 4-13. What are the basic components of a job description?

Briefly describe each.

4-14. What is the purpose of the Standard Occupational Clas- sification (SOC)?

4-15. What is the purpose of the Occupational Information Network (O*NET)?

4-16. What is meant by the statement “With team design, there are no narrow jobs”?

4-17. Describe how effective job analysis can be used to satisfy each of the following statutes: (a) Fair Labor Standards Act (b) Equal Pay Act (c) Civil Rights Act (d) Occupational Safety and Health Act (e) Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)/ADA

Amendments Act 4-18. Why is competency modeling an important practice? 4-19. Define each of the following:

(a) job design (b) job enrichment (c) job enlargement (d) job rotation (e) reengineering

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

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116 PART 2 • STAFFING

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Problem Solving, Creativity, and Innovation As you saw in this chapter, strategic decision making is conducted under conditions of uncertainty and requires the skills and ability to find solutions amidst the uncertainty. This PIA will assess your decision making approach under these circumstances.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business HR professionals should always stay abreast of current and anticipated changes in the labor market. These include knowing about the current and anticipated supply of well qualified individuals in pertinent occupations relative to business demand for them. Additional important information includes changes in skill requirements and compensation trends. HR possesses the responsibility to work with managers and other decision makers to ensure that they maintain appropriate staffing levels. While HR planning is ultimately the responsibility of the company’s HR leadership, managers must have enough awareness to participate in the planning process by making well-informed, proactive decisions about current and future departmental staffing requirements.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and engaging in effective HR planning HR takes the lead

Work with managers to learn about their current and anticipated staffing needs. Understand the particulars of education, prior work experience, and unique skill sets required of new hires to perform their jobs effectively. Learn about the strengths and weaknesses of employees’ preparation to perform well.

HR planning should not be limited to considering the availability of qualified job candidates, it should also be about retention. HR professionals use information to develop actionable plans for designing and implementing onboarding programs, perfor- mance plans, and training opportunities to promote employee engagement and commitment.

Managers take the lead Based on current staffing levels and the mix of skill sets represented in the current workforce, consider additional anticipated staffing needs, including the time frame, number of employees, and job-relevant requirements such as prior work experience. Particularly communicate changes in job requirements and where there may currently be skills mismatches for current employees based on anticipated job modifications and changing technology.

Provide HR with draft job descriptions to communicate details about job duties, responsibilities for new hires and job specifications. Discuss the department’s budgetary resources available to provide competitive pay and benefits, and indicate where shortfalls may occur.

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Which “Thinker” Should Go? Your company is a leading producer of

advanced microchips. You are the chief researcher in your firm’s think tank, which consists of eight people with various specialties. Your group has generated most of the ideas and product innovations that have kept the company an industry leader for 10 years. In fact, the think tank has been so successful that another one has been organized to support the company’s newest manufacturing operation on the West Coast. The individuals included in the new think tank have already been selected, but your boss has just assigned you the task of deciding who from your group of thinkers will head the new organization.

The person best qualified for the job is Tim Matherson. Tim is an MIT graduate, the informal team leader, and the individual who

personally spearheaded three of the team’s five most successful prod- uct advancements. However, if Tim receives the promotion, the void created by his leaving will be difficult to fill. On the other hand, the boss forced his nephew, Robert Jones, into your group. He is a sharp graduate of the local state university, but he is not a team player and he is always trying to push you around. You can either recommend Tim, illustrating that those who produce the most benefit, or you can recommend Robert, making the boss happy, getting rid of a problem, and, most important of all, keeping your best performer. 4-20. What would you do? 4-21. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less than ethical decision?

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CHAPTER 4 • STRATEGIC PlANNING, HumAN RESouRCE PlANNING, ANd Job ANAlySIS 117

HRM by the Numbers Severance Pay at Miller Furniture

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Since its establishment in 1940, Miller Furniture, a family owned furniture retailer, has successfully honored its no layoff policy. Founders Robert and Frances Miller believed that the company’s success depended, in large part, on its dedicated work- force. In recent years, small family-owned furniture retailers have struggled to survive because large retail chains sell furniture at much lower prices. Recognizing this reality, the Miller family realizes that maintaining full staffing will lead to bankruptcy. Determined not to lay off employees, the Miller’s decided to offer buyouts to its workforce of 500 employees.

4-22. How many employees would remain if 30 percent of the total workforce accepted the buyout offer? 4-23. Employees who accept the buyout offer will receive 2 weeks of severance pay for each year of service. Of the total who

accepted the buyout (carefully consider your answer to Question 4-22), 20 percent completed 5 years of service, 40 percent completed 7 years of service, 20 percent completed 10 years of service, and 20 percent completed 15 years of service. How many total weeks of severance will Miller Furniture pay?

4-24. As part of the buyout package, the company will continue to pay its share of health insurance during the severance period. If Miller Furniture pays $100 per week for each employee to have health insurance, what is the total cost of health insurance based on the number of employees who have taken the buyout offer?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As noted earlier in the chapter, a SWOT analysis assesses an organization’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. As a group, select a company with which members are familiar. Conduct a brief SWOT analysis of this company.

4-25. Based on your analysis, which strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats that you identified do you judge most important? Explain.

4-26. How might HR professionals help build upon the company’s strengths and capitalize on its opportunities? How might they help address some of the weaknesses and threats? Explain.

I N C I D E N T 1 Competitive Strategy at Buddy Dog Foods Buddy Dog Foods makes and sells dog food for puppies and adults. It has been a leader in the industry for more than 25 years. Until recently, the company has successfully pursued a low-cost strategy by selling a limited number of food recipes and holding down manufac- turing costs. However, Buddy Dog has lately been struggling to main- tain profitability because many new competitors offer low-cost food choices. Thus, the leadership team has decided it is time to change its strategic focus.

Buddy Dog’s extensive market research shows that niche dog food markets have emerged where pet owners are willing to pay more for hypoallergenic food made only with all-natural ingredients. There are only a few competitors in this market space, and most do not have Buddy Dog’s excellent reputation. The company’s leadership believes they can manufacture hypoallergenic dog food to dominate niche mar- kets. By distinguishing itself from the competition, Buddy Dog’s lead- ership believes they can create a sustainable competitive advantage.

Having considered market factors and its manufacturing capacity, Buddy Dog will shift from a current low-cost strategy to a differentia- tion strategy by manufacturing hypoallergenic dog food. Buddy Dog

must now make many tactical decisions in various functional areas of the company to support its new strategic approach. Its priority is to restructure the product development function. They will hire and retain talented veterinary nutritionists and food allergists. The company will also hire operations specialists. Finally, the leadership recognizes that job redesign will be needed and they must consider how to bring current employees up to speed. Clearly, Buddy Dog has a lot of work to do to ensure a successful implementation of its new strategic approach.

Questions 4-27. Strategic planning at all levels of the organization can be

divided into four steps. Which step in the strategic planning process led Buddy Dog Food’s management to change its focus?

4-28. Following Buddy Dog’s shift in competitive strategy, what must the company’s HR professionals consider?

4-29. What kinds of challenges could Buddy Dog face in the areas of recruitment, training, and compensation?

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118 PART 2 • STAFFING

Endnotes 1 Cynthia A. Lengnick-Hall and Mark L.

Lengnick-Hall, M. L, Interactive Human Resource Management and Strategic Planning (1990). New York: Quorum Books.

2 Juan Pablo Gonzalez and Dane Tyson, “How to Develop and HR Strategic Plan,” Workspan (May 2016): 25– 28.

3 Rory Cooper, “Smart HR Strategies in an Unpredictable Economy,” Maryland Banker (Third Quarter 2009): 8.

4 Edward E. Lawler III, “What Should HR Leaders Focus On In 2016?” Forbes (February 4, 2016). Accessed February 7, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

5 General Mills, Purpose, General Mills’ Corporate Mission Statement (2017). Accessed February 7, 2017, at www.generalmills.com/en/ Company/purpose.

6 Trefis Team, “LinkedIn: Opportunities & Threats (Part 1), Forbes (December 12, 2013). Accessed January 1, 2014, at www.forbes. com.

7 Trefis Team, “LinkedIn: Opportunities & Threats (Part 2), Forbes (December 18, 2013). Accessed January 1, 2014, at www.forbes.com.

8 From the Ross Stores website, “About Us,” www.rossstores.com/about-us, accessed February 6, 2017.

9 J. Bennett, “Ross Stores: Rare Winer Amid the Retail Rubble,” Barrons online, www.barrons. com, February 6, 2017.

10 From the L.L. Bean website, “100% Satisfaction Guarantee.” Accessed February 7, 2017, at www.llbean.com/llb/shop/513705?nav=sr&term =guarantee.

11 Micah Solomon, “What Steve Jobs Stole from Ritz-Carlton (and You Should Steal from Apple,” Inc. online (June 16, 2015). Accessed February 7, 2017, at www.inc.com.

12 Edward E. Lawler III, “HR Should Own Organizational Effectiveness,” Forbes online (February 11, 2014). Accessed December 29, 2016, at www.forbes.com.

13 J. R. Gallbraith and Robert K. Kazannian, Strategy Implementation: Structure, Systems, and Process, 2nd ed. (St. Paul, MN: West Publishing, 1986), 115.

14 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Prior Work Experience Required for 47.8 Percent of All Civilian Jobs in 2016,” The Economics Daily online (February 3, 2017). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

15 “The New Organization: Different by Design,” Global Human Capital Trends 2016 (2016). Accessed December 20, 2016, www2.deloitte. com/us/en/pages/human-capital/articles/ introduction-human-capital-trends.html.

16 Tess Stynes, “Dollar General Seeks to Hire 10,000 Workers Within the Next Month,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 15, 2016). Accessed December 30, 2016, at www.wsj.com.

17 “Dollar General Will Add 10,000 Jobs This Year,” Times Free Press online (February 7, 2017). Accessed February 7, 2017, at www.timesfreepress.com/news/business/ aroundregion/story/2017/feb/07/dollar-general- will-add-10000-jobs-year/411521/.

18 “UPS to Hire 95,000 Seasonal Workers for Upcoming Holidays,” The Wall Street Journal

online (September 14, 2016). Accessed January 15, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

19 Anna Louie Sussman, “As Skill Requirements Increase, More Manufacturing Jobs Go Unfilled,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 1, 2016). Accessed January 6, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

20 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “ Information Security Analysts,” Occupational Outlook Handbook (2016-17 Edition). Accessed February 7, 2017, www.bls.gov/ooh/ computer-and-information-technology/ information-security-analysts.htm.

21 Y. Bahgat, “The Top 10 Most Innovative Recruitment Campaigns,” Zoomforth Blog, www.blog.zoomforth.com, May 18, 2015.

22 WorldatWork, “Bonus Programs and Practices,” A Report by WorldatWork (July 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www. worldatwork.org/waw/adimLink?id=80398.

23 U.S. Army, “Bonuses,” (February 2017). Accessed February 7, 2017, at http:// myarmybenefits.us.army.mil/Home/ Benefit_ Library/Federal_Benefits_Page/Bonuses. html?serv=147.

24 Jennifer Smith, “Online Retailers’ New Ware- houses Heat Up Local Job Markets,” The Wall Street Journal online (April 9, 2017). Accessed May 25, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

25 Juliet Eilperin, “Trump Freezes Hiring of Many Federal Workers,” The Washington Post online (January 23, 2017). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.washingtonpost.com.

26 Joe Davidson, “Federal Managers Say Trump’s Hiring Freeze Hurts Government,”

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

4-30. Why is job analysis considered to be a basic HR tool?

4-33. Why does the HR manager need to be a strategic partner with top management?

I N C I D E N T 2 Who’s Flying the Plane? Many industries face a shortage of individuals to fill essential jobs. Among them is the commercial airline industry where a pilot short- age is expected to swell to 20,000 by 202267 and more than 30,000 by 2034.68 This trend weighs heavily on most airlines. Greg Muccio, a senior manager at Southwest Airlines Company lamented, “That is one of the things in my job I get to worry about every day and when I got to bed at night.”69 He sees an overall lack of interest in becoming a commercial pilot as a key problem; “That’s what puts us in the most jeopardy.”70

There are many factors that may be contributing to this lack of interest. Most commercial pilots spend the first several years work- ing for regional airlines where annual pay has been traditionally quite low—in the $20,000 range. Eventually, many of these airlines doubled starting pay. Still, raising pay has done little to move the needle. The cost of flight-training is quite high, surpassing the $100,000 mark after

factoring in the cost of tuition and living expenses. And, recent tighter government regulation requires substantially more flight hours and other experience, typically, at lower paying jobs, before they are eligible for co-pilot positions at commercial airlines. Undoubtedly, tightening regulations will make preparation for becoming a commercial pilot even more expensive.

Questions 4-30. What are some of the challenges facing the commercial airline

industry? Discuss. 4-31. Given the changing landscape for staffing commercial airlines

with qualified pilots, what are some considerations for the air- lines’ human resource management practices?

4-32. What role has recent government regulation played in this situation? Discuss.

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CHAPTER 4 • STRATEGIC PlANNING, HumAN RESouRCE PlANNING, ANd Job ANAlySIS 119

The Washington Post online (February 10, 2017). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www. washingtonpost.com.

27 Ibid. 28 Tom Kludt, “Wall Street Journal Seeks

‘Substantial Number’ of Buyouts,” CNN Money online (October 21, 2016). Accessed February 10, 2017, at http://money.cnn.com.

29 Anne Steele, “The Wall Street Journal Offers Buyouts to News Employees,” The Wall Street Journal online (October 21, 2016). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

30 Ethan Bernstein, John Bunch, Niko Canner, and Michael Lee, “Beyond the Holocracy Hype,” Harvard Business Review online (July-August 2016). Accessed February 11, 2017, at www. hbr.org.

31 Bourree Lam, “What Are So Many Zappos Employees Leaving?” The Atlantic online (January 15, 2016). Accessed February 11, 2017, at https://www.theatlantic.com.

32 Darryl Demos, “Flexible Staffing Meets Branch Needs,” CU360 35 (July 7, 2009): 4–5.

33 Lincoln Electric, “Why Lincoln Electric,” Accessed February 22, 2014, at http://www. lincolnelectric.com/en-us/company/careers/ Pages/lincoln-tradition.aspx.

34 Frank Koller, “2016 Ends at Lincoln Electric, No Layoffs for, Now, 68 Years and 83 Years of Amazing Profit-Sharing Bonuses,” Frank Koller’s Blog (December 9, 2016). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.frankkoller. com/2016/12/2016-ends-at-lincoln-electric- no-layoffs-for-now-68-years-and-83-years-of- amazing-profit-sharing-bonuses/.

35 Heather Tinsley-Fix, “Succession Planning: Why It’s Critical Now,” Workspan (February 2017): 23–26.

36 Robert Kleinsorge, “Expanding the Role of Succession Planning,” T + D 64 (April 2010): 66–69.

37 Robert J. Grossman, “Rough Road to Succes- sion,” HR Magazine 56 (June 2011): 46–51.

38 Jeffrey Burt, “IBM, Apple, HP: Stark Contrasts in CEO Succession,” eWeek 28 (November 7, 2011): 10.

39 “‘HP Matters’ Says Incoming CEO Meg Whitman,” Channel Insider (September 23, 2011): 1–2.

40 A. G. Lafley and Noel M. Tichy, “The Art and Science of Finding the Right CEO,” Harvard Business Review 89 (October 2011): 66–74.

41 Joseph L. Bower, “More Insiders Are Becom- ing CEOs, and That’s a Good Thing,” Harvard

Business Review online (March 18, 2016). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

42 Victoria Luby and Jane Stevenson, “7 Tenets of a Good CEO Succession Process,” Harvard Business Review online (December 7, 2016). Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.hbr.org; Joe Shaheen, “Talent Acquisition as a Potent Tool of Succession Management,” Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership 5 (November 2010): 9–12.

43 Mitra Toossi, “Labor Force Projections to 2024: The Labor Force Is Growing, but Slowly,” Monthly Labor Review online (December 2015). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ opub/mlr/2015/article/labor-force-projections- to-2024-1.htm.

44 Heather Tinsley-Fix, “Succession Planning: Why It’s Critical Now,” Workspan (February 2017): 23–26.

45 “Business Owners Fall Short on Contingency Planning,” North Western Financial Review 196 (September 15, 2011): 22.

46 Sara LaForest and Tony Kubiac, “Understand- ing the Role of Succession Planning for Small Business Success,” Alaska Business Monthly 27 (June 2011): 26–28.

47 David Harvey, “A Family Affair,” Commercial Motor 216 (September 22, 2011): 48–49.

48 Joanne L. Stewart, “Train for the Future,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 54–57.

49 Jonathan A. Segal, “Hiring Days Are Here Again,” HR Magazine 56 (July 2011): 58–60.

50 Thomas A. Stetz, Scott B. Button, and W. Benjamin Poor, “New Tricks for an Old Dog: Visualizing Job Analysis Results,” Public Per- sonnel Management 38 (Spring 2009): 91–100.

51 Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Pro- cedures, Federal Register, Friday, August 25, 1978, Part IV.

52 “Get It in Writing: Creating Effective and Legal Job Descriptions,” HR Specialist: California Employment Law 4 (November 2010): 4.

53 “Is Every Function Really Essential? Be Flexible about Disabled Employees’ Duties,” HR Specialist: Illinois Employment Law 6 (January 2012): 3.

54 Laurie Burkhard, “Define Employees’ Roles and Responsibilities,” Advisor Today 104 (January 2009): 59–60.

55 Liz Ryan, “10 Ways to Fix Broken Corporate Recruiting Systems,” BusinessWeek.com (July 13, 2011): 3.

56 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Alpha- betical List of SOC Occupations,” Standard

Occupational Classification. Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.bls.gov/soc/home.htm.

57 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Alphabetical List of SOC Occupations,” Standard Occupa- tional Classification. Accessed February 10, 2017, at www.bls.gov/soc/2010/soc_alph.htm.

58 National Center for O*NET Development, O*Net OnLine. Accessed February 10, 2017, at http://online.onetcenter.org/.

59 U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, “Competency Model General Instructions.” CareerOne- Stop.Org. Accessed February 10, 2017, at www. careeronestop.org/CompetencyModel/ CareerPathway/CPWGenInstructions.aspx.

60 Yvette Lee, Shari Lau, and Patricia Graves, “Job Swapping, I-9 Forms, Travel Pay,” HR Magazine 56 (April 2011): 24–25.

61 Wendi Everton, “Keeping Your Best & Brightest Workers,” Nonprofit World 28 (November/ December 2010): 12–13.

62 “Training Budgets Bounce Back: Where to Spend,” HR Specialist 9 (March 2011): 1–5.

63 Jill Jusko, “When One Job Becomes Three,” Industry Week 260 (July 2011): 16–17.

64 Michael Hammer and James Champy, Reen- gineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution (New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1993), 32.

65 “Initiatives Pay Dividends for Family Dollar,” MMR 28 (May 16, 2011): 94.

66 Moon Ihlaw and Kevin Cho, “Creative When No One’s Looking,” BusinessWeek (April 25, 2010): 37.

67 “The Coming U.S. Pilot Shortage Is Real,” Aviation Week online (February 16, 2015). Accessed February 11, 2017, at www. aviationweek.com.

68 Brian Prentice and Philippe Gouel, “Pilot Short- age Threatens to Slow U.S. Airline Growth,” Forbes online (January 28, 2016). Accessed February 11, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

69 Mary Schlangenstein and Michael Sasso, “Shrinking Pool of Future Pilots Keeps Major Airlines on Edge,” Bloomberg News online (June 29, 2016). Accessed February 11, 2017, at www.bloomberg.com.

70 Ibid.

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120

5.1 Define recruitment and describe the recruitment process.

5.2 Summarize the environment of recruitment.

5.3 Explain internal recruitment methods.

5

MyLab Management® Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Recruitment

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

5.4 Identify external recruitment sources.

5.5 Summarize external recruitment methods.

5.6 Describe alternatives to recruitment.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 5 Warm-Up.

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121

Recruitment and the Recruitment Process Recruitment is the process of attracting individuals on a timely basis, in sufficient numbers, and with appropriate qualifications to apply for jobs with an organization. The firm may then select those applicants with qualifications most closely related to job descriptions. Finding the appropri- ate way of encouraging qualified candidates to apply for employment is extremely important, however, because recruiting costs can be expensive. Thus, a properly functioning recruiting pro- gram can have a major impact on the bottom line of a company.

The recruitment process is critical because employees quickly become either assets or liabili- ties based on how they contribute to the value of the company.1 How many times have we heard CEOs state, “Our employees are our most important asset”? Instead they should be saying, “The right employees are our most important asset.” Hiring the best people available has never been more critical than it is today because of the economy and global competition. A company’s ability to recruit and manage talent has become the measure for the overall health and longevity of the organization.2 It is estimated that just the cost of replacing an employee alone when a bad deci- sion is made is two to three times the employee’s annual salary.3 Therefore, it is crucial to have a finely tuned recruitment process if the selection process is to function properly.

When human resource planning indicates a need for employees, the firm may evaluate alter- natives to hiring (see Figure 5-1). Frequently, recruitment begins when a manager initiates an employee requisition, a document that specifies job title, department, the date the employee is needed for work, and other details. With this information, managers can refer to the appropriate job description to determine the qualifications the recruited person needs.

The next step in the recruitment process is to determine whether qualified employees are available within the firm (the internal source) or if it is necessary to look to external sources, such as colleges, universities, and other organizations. Because of the high cost of recruitment, organi- zations need to use the most productive recruitment sources and methods available.

recruitment Process of attracting individuals on a timely basis, in sufficient numbers, and with appropriate qualifications to apply for jobs with an organization.

employee requisition Document that specifies job title, department, the date the employee is needed for work, and other details.

5.1 Define recruitment and describe the recruitment process.

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122 PART 2 • STAFFING

Recruitment sources are where qualified candidates are located, such as colleges or competi- tors. Recruitment methods are the specific means used to attract potential employees to the firm, such as online recruiting.

Identifying productive sources of applicants and using suitable recruitment methods are essential to maximizing recruiting efficiency and effectiveness. When a firm identifies the sources of candidates, it uses appropriate methods for either internal or external recruitment to accom- plish recruitment objectives. A candidate responds to the firm’s recruitment efforts by submitting professional and personal data on either an application for employment or a résumé, depending on the company’s policy.

Companies may discover that some recruitment sources and methods are superior to others for locating and attracting potential talent. Smart recruiters want to post their job where the best prospects are likely to be. For instance, one large, heavy-equipment manufacturer determined that medium-sized, state-supported colleges and universities located in rural areas were good sources of potential managers. Far fewer companies advertise job openings in newspapers. Instead, recruit- ers are now placing their recruiting money in areas that are most productive, such as with the use of social media. To maximize recruiting effectiveness, using recruitment sources and methods tailored to specific needs is vitally important (a topic discussed later in this chapter).

Environment of Recruitment Like other human resource functions, the recruitment process does not occur in a vacuum. Factors external to the firm can significantly affect its recruitment efforts.

Labor Market Conditions Of importance to the success of recruitment is the demand for and supply of specific skills in the labor market. In general, a firm’s recruitment process is often simplified when the unemployment rate in an organization’s labor market is high. The number of unsolicited applicants is usually greater, and the increased size of the labor pool provides a better opportunity for attracting quali- fied applicants. However, if demand for a certain skill is high relative to supply, an extraordinary recruiting effort may be required. Further, the area where recruitment takes place often impacts the labor market conditions. Today, the labor market for many professional and technical positions is much broader and truly global particularly as new technologies take hold. For example, wind turbine technicians are in considerably high demand.4

Possessing a college degree used to be the passport to secure a good job.5 This largely remains to be the case when we consider unemployment rates and average weekly earnings by educational attainment. Figure 5-2 shows lower unemployment rates and higher average weekly earnings for progressively highly educational attainment. However, the type of degree

recruitment sources Where qualified candidates are located.

recruitment methods Specific means used to attract potential employees to the firm.

HR Web Wisdom

Social Network Recruiting www.linkedin.com

LinkedIn is an online social net- work Web site.

5.2 Summarize the environment of recruitment.

FIGURE 5-1 The Recruitment Process

Recruited Individuals

Recruitment

Human Resource Planning

INTERNAL ENVIRONmENT

EXTERNAL ENVIRONmENT

Internal Sources External Sources

Internal methods External methods

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CHAPTER 5 • RECRuITmENT 123

awarded may mean the difference between getting a job that does not require a college degree and obtaining a professional well-paying position.6 Also, many of the jobs available today do not require a college degree. Rather, skills to perform crafts such as welders, pipe fitters, painters, and machinists are needed. In fact, today there is a critical shortage of such skills, particularly in the construction industry.7

According to a recent McKinsey Global Institute report, 40 percent of full-time job open- ings in companies planning to hire remain unfilled for six months or longer because they cannot find qualified applicants.8 New technology may require that workers have a specialized degree even though one was unnecessary 10 years ago.9 There has been a “skill-based technology” change in the job market. According to CareerBuilder’s Brent Rasmussen, “Two in five employers (41  percent) reported that they continuously recruit throughout the year so that they have can- didates in their pipeline in case a position opens up down the road. The skills gap that exists for high-growth, specialized occupations will become even more pronounced in the years to come, prompting the need to place a greater emphasis on reskilling workers through formal education and on-the-job training.”10 Computers have automated many of the repetitive physical and mental tasks. Workers are now being recruited who can perform tasks that cannot be automated and are nonrepetitive and more sophisticated.11

Active or Passive Job Seekers The recruitment method that proves to be most successful will depend to an extent on whether the recruited individual is an active or passive job seeker. Active job seekers are individuals who are committed to finding another job whether presently employed or not. These individuals are usually easier to identify because their names have been placed in the job market. Their résumés are on job boards and friends, associates, or companies have been contacted directly to learn about job opportunities. Passive job seekers, on the other hand, are potential job candidates who are typi- cally employed, satisfied with their employer, and content in their current role. But if the right opportunity came along, they might like to learn more. These individuals want to move slower and will ask a lot of questions before making a job change. They are more hesitant to risk leaving a good job for a new challenge and increased risk. Inevitably, opinions differ regarding whether one type of job seeker turned out to be a better employee than the other. A prevalent view favors active job seekers. B/E Aerospace routinely considered both active and passive job seekers. Over time, they concluded that active job seekers were better employees and stayed longer than passive job seekers. B/E Aerospace HR Director Jonathan Turner reasoned, “Active candidates are already looking and fundamentally prepared to switch companies, locations, or careers.”12 He went on to say that passive candidates are, “more difficult to find, engage with, and motivate to make major life changes, which leads to longer times to fill.”

This chapter identifies numerous recruitment methods. Some are more useful in identifying active job seekers and others are better used in recruiting passive job seekers. Naturally, some will be directed at both groups.

active job seekers Individuals committed to finding another job whether presently employed or not.

passive job seekers Potential job candidates, who are typically employed, satisfied with their employer, and content in their current role but if the right opportunity came along, they might like to learn more.

FIGURE 5-2 Earnings and Unemployment Rates by Educational Attainment Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Survey

All workers: $860

Median usual weekly earning

Some college, no degree

Associate’s degree

Bachelor’s degree

master’s degree

Professional degree

Doctoral degree

High School diploma

Less than a high school diploma $493

$678

$738

$798

$1,137

$1,341

$1,730

$1,623

All workers: 4.3%

5.4%

8.0%

5.0%

3.8%

2.8%

2.4%

1.5%

1.7%

Unemployment rate

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124 PART 2 • STAFFING

Legal Considerations Legal matters also play a significant role in recruitment practices in the United States. This is not surprising because the candidate and the employer first make contact during the recruitment process. A poorly conceived recruiting process can do much to create problems in the selection process. Therefore, it is essential for organizations to emphasize nondiscriminatory practices at this stage.

The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) has issued guidelines con- cerning the online recruiting policies of federal contractors and subcontractors. Companies must keep detailed records of each online job search. They must also identify what selection criteria were used and can explain why a person with protected status was not hired. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) guidelines suggest that companies with more than 100 employ- ees keep staffing records for a minimum of two years. The threshold coverage is 50 employees if dealing with the OFCCP.

A dramatic increase in firms using the Internet for recruiting has added to management’s challenge to comply with the OFCCP. Under the rule, there are four criteria to determine whether an individual is an Internet applicant:

$$ The job seeker has expressed interest through the Internet. Applicants have gone to the cor- porate career Web site and applied for a job that is listed.

$$ The employer considers the job seeker for employment in an open position. If the applicant does not meet specific qualifications spelled out in the job-specification section of the job description, the résumé does not have to be considered.

$$ The job seeker has indicated that he or she meets the position’s basic qualifications. If the position description calls for three years of work experience, and the individual has three years of experience in previous jobs, he or she would believe they meet the basic qualifications.

$$ The applicant has not indicated he or she is no longer interested in the position.14

Employers must keep records of all expressions of interest through the Internet, including online résumés and internal databases. Employers are also expected to obtain the gender, race, and ethnicity of each applicant, when possible. This information enables a compilation of demographic data, such as age, race, and gender, based on that applicant pool. This data is used to determine whether a company’s hiring practices are discriminatory.

Internal Recruitment Methods Management should be able to identify current employees who are capable of filling positions as they become available. Helpful tools used for internal recruitment include human resource databases, job postings and job bidding, and employee referrals.

Human Resource Databases Human resource databases permit organizations to determine whether current employees possess the qualifications for filling open positions. As a recruitment device, these databases have proven to be extremely valuable to organizations. Databases can be valuable in locating talent internally and supporting the concept of promotion from within.

Job Posting and Job Bidding Job posting is a procedure for informing employees that job openings exist. Job bidding is a procedure that permits employees who believe that they possess the required qualifications to apply for a posted job.

Hiring managers usually want to give internal candidates priority to improve employees’ attitudes and stimulate their interest in the company. The job posting and bidding procedures can

5.3 Explain internal recruitment methods.

job posting Procedure for informing employees that job openings exist.

job bidding Procedure that permits employees who believe that they possess the required qualifications to apply for a posted position.

☛ $F Y I A recent study revealed that 90 percent of recent hires were actively searching for a new job. Of these, 44 percent relied on online job alerts.13

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help minimize the commonly heard complaint that insiders never hear of a job opening until it is filled. Typically, vacant jobs are posted to internal candidates before external recruiting takes place. Several forums are available today to advise employees that a vacancy exists. In years past, jobs were literally posted on a bulletin board. Today, companies use the intranet, the Internet, or post the job on the company Web site or company Facebook page. Some companies send out e-mails and voice mail to selected managers and employees advising them that a vacancy exists.

Many organizations, including Whirlpool, BMW, Kellogg, Hyatt, and Hewlett-Packard, man- age internal candidates with Web-based applications. Employees create profiles that detail their skills and interests for their next ideal position and are notified when such a position exists. FedEx’s philosophy is that employees should be doing the kind of work they want to do. Its Web site helps candidates identify their ideal job. Using drop-down lists, it prompts them to enter data about desires, location, type of work, and so forth; it also asks them to describe their skills. When jobs open, managers have instant access to these electronic résumés in which the candidates have specified what they can and want to do.

Today, if a worker does not know about a vacancy, it is usually because he or she did not check the internal posting system regularly. Yet, even with an online system, a job posting and bid- ding system has some potential negative features. For one thing, an effective system requires the expenditure of time, effort, and money. Organizations need to be sure to treat internal candidates properly so they will not be discouraged or prompted to leave if they do not get the job. When bidders are unsuccessful, someone must explain to them why they were not selected. Management must choose the most qualified applicant or else the system will lack credibility. Still, complaints may occur, even in a well-designed and well-implemented system.

Employee Referrals Employee referrals involve an employee of the company recommending a friend or associate as a possible member of the company; this continues to be the way that top performers are identified. In many organizations, the use of employee referrals produces the most and best-qualified appli- cants. Organizations such as Southwest Airlines, Microsoft, Disney, and Ritz-Carlton typically employ many of their new hires exclusively through employee referrals. It is just human nature that employees do not want to recommend a person unless they believe they are going to fit in and be productive. Thus, it is a powerful recruiting tool. Because of this, many companies have strengthened their employee referral program. These organizations have found that their employ- ees can serve an important role in the recruitment process by actively soliciting applications from among their friends and associates.

employee referral An employee of the company recommends a friend or associate as a possible member of the company; this continues to be the way that top performers are identified.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Recruiting Skilled Machinists Two months into her new position as Lead

Recruiter at New World Manufacturing, Emily Lang is starting to feel frustrated. Emily was promoted to the Lead Recruiter position after three years as a recruiter for the company’s management training pro- gram. In that position, Emily impressed upper management with her ability to fill the trainee positions quickly and cost-effectively. Emily’s expertise in using social media helped her develop an impressive pipe- line of talented candidates. Thus, she was promoted to a Lead Recruiter in the manufacturing division to help address their challenging staffing issues. The unemployment rate in the area is high and the company is having problems finding skilled machinists to staff their manufacturing

positions. Emily immediately put her expertise to work to attempt to build a solid pipeline of candidates for the multitude of entry level posi- tions in the factory. She started an online recruiting campaign including a LinkedIn and a Facebook page specifically for the division. She also started using the company Twitter account to spread the word about the open positions. Knowing that many of the applicants for these entry-level positions didn’t have résumés, she also created an easy to use online application on the company Web site. But her recruiting savvy doesn’t seem to be paying off. The manufacturing manager has informed her that there are still a dozen open positions and she doesn’t have any new applicants to share.

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126 PART 2 • STAFFING

Some firms give incentives to their employees for successful referrals. A WorldatWork Bonus Program Practices survey found that 63 percent of companies offer referral bonuses and an addi- tional 15 percent are considering one.15 Typically, the types of positions that a company would pay referral bonuses include professionals, technical, IT staff, and sales.16 Most often, bonuses range from $1,000 to $2,500 per successful referral, but, it is not unheard of to find substantially larger bonuses. For instance, Intel offers bonuses amounts as high as $4,000 for job candidate referrals that help the company meet its diversity objectives.17 Intel, like many technology companies, has come under criticism for not taking extra measures to recruit qualified women and minority candidates. In addition, it should be noted that employee referral practices have also proven valu- able for other professions.

☛ $F Y I The percentage of companies that use employee referral bonuses pay them after the new employee completes:

$$ At least 45 days: 23 percent $$ Between 1.5 and 3 months: 44 percent $$ Between 3 and 6 months: 28 percent $$ More than 6 months: 5 percent18

Typically, those who are referred by a present employee are more productive. Costs can be much lower than using advertising or agencies. Using referrals also reduces turnover among both new and existing employees because applicants come prescreened for culture fit. Small companies especially prefer to find candidates through referrals and networks of people they trust. Groupon, the online discounter, grew from 37 to 7,100 employees in 21 months. It acquires about 40 percent of new hires through employee referrals.19 A recent study found that referrals are twice as more likely to be interviewed than those who are not referred.20 Also, referrals are 40 percent more likely to be hired than those who are not referred.

Employee enlistment is a unique form of employee referral in which every employee becomes a company recruiter. This is different from merely asking employees to refer friends to the com- pany. The firm supplies employees with simple business cards that do not contain names or posi- tions. Instead, these cards have a message like, “We are always looking for great. For additional information, log on to our Web site.” Employees then distribute the cards wherever they go, at parties, sports events, family gatherings, picnics, or the park. The purpose is to let people know that the company does want people to apply. An interesting way of using e-mail in the recruitment process is to ask employees to put a footer in their e-mails reminding people that their company is hiring. It might say something like the following: “Note: We’re hiring amazing engineers, BD people, and a star Ops person. Refer a friend and get a fully paid trip to Hawaii for two.”21

Recruiters can often obtain referrals from new employees when they first join the firm. These new hires may provide leads regarding other candidates that have the skills and competences that the organization needs. Information from such candidates is often easy to obtain because the new hire is excited about joining the company and would like to have their friends and associates join them. Recruiters may simply ask, “Do you know anyone in your field who might like to work here?” A capable recruiter can then develop a list of good candidates with special skills who can be recruited.

A note of caution should be observed about the extensive use of employee referrals. The EEOC Compliance Manual explicitly warns that recruiting only at select colleges or relying on word-of-mouth recruiting, which includes employee referral programs, may generate applicant pools that do not reflect diversity in the labor market.

External Recruitment Sources At times, a firm must look beyond its own borders to find employees, particularly when expand- ing its workforce. External recruitment is needed to (1) fill entry-level jobs; (2) acquire skills not possessed by current employees; and (3) obtain employees with different backgrounds to provide a diversity of ideas. As Figure 5-3 shows, even with internal promotions, firms still must

5.4 Identify external recruitment sources.

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CHAPTER 5 • RECRuITmENT 127

fill entry-level jobs from the outside. Thus, after the president of a firm retires, a series of inter- nal promotions follows. Ultimately, however, the firm must recruit externally for the entry-level position of salary analyst. If an outside candidate was selected for the president’s position, the chain reaction of promotions from within would not have occurred. If no current employee has the desired qualifications, candidates may be attracted from many outside sources.

High Schools and Vocational Schools High schools and vocational schools play an important role in preparing individuals for the work- force. Approximately 39 percent of the jobs in the U.S. labor force require a high school diploma or equivalent.22 Understandably, organizations concerned with recruiting clerical and other entry- level employees often depend on high schools and vocational schools. Many of these institutions have outstanding training programs for specific occupational skills, such as home appliance repair and small engine mechanics. Some companies work with schools to ensure a constant supply of trained individuals with specific job skills. In some areas, companies even loan employees to schools to assist in the training programs.

Community Colleges Many community colleges are sensitive to the specific employment needs in their local labor markets and graduate highly sought-after students with marketable skills. Typically, community colleges have two-year programs designed for both a terminal education and preparation for a four-year university degree program. Many community colleges also have excellent mid-man- agement programs combined with training for specific trades. For example, San Juan College located in Farmington, New Mexico, has a well-respected veterinary technology program that is known nationwide. Career centers often provide a place for employers to contact students, thereby facilitating the recruitment process.

Colleges and Universities Colleges and universities represent a major recruitment source for potential professional, techni- cal, and management employees. Placement directors, faculty, and administrators can be helpful to organizations in their search for recruits. Establishing a relationship with faculty members is important because most professors are aware of their students’ academic performance and abilities. Because on-campus recruitment is mutually beneficial, both employers and universities should take steps to develop and maintain close relationships. It is important that the firm knows the school and the school knows the firm.

HR Web Wisdom

HR Internet Guides www.hr-guide.com

This Web site contains links to other Internet-based resources for topics such as recruitment, selection, and equal employment opportunity.

FIGURE 5-3 Internal Promotion and External Recruitment A. L. Weaver

Vice President, Human Resources

R. E. Lewis

manager, Human Resource

Development

m. L. Denney

manager, Employment

R. R. Jackson

manager, Compensation

J. Hicks

Salary Analyst

B. massenburg B.B.S., State university

External Recruit

Promotion

Promotion

Promotion Retirement

G. L. Newman

President and Chief Executive

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128 PART 2 • STAFFING

Competitors in the Labor Market When recent experience is required, competitors and other firms in the same industry or geographic area may be the most important source of recruits. Another name for actively recruiting employees from competitors is called poaching. It has been estimated that poaching may account for 30 percent of the movement in labor.23 In fact, the most highly qualified applicants often come directly from competitors in the same labor market. Competitors and other firms serve as external sources of recruitment for high-quality talent. Even organizations that have policies of promotion from within actively recruit employees from competitors’ most productive workers. For example, tech companies are aggressively recruiting engineers, designers, computer scientists, and executives who could com- pete and adapt to the rapid changes that are occurring in the industry.24 This competition for specific skills has driven up pay for certain job skills. The competition for qualified applicants has been especially aggressive among workers involved in social media, mobile technology, and e-commerce even when the unemployment rate remained relatively high. With an improved economy, more organizations are susceptible to having employees lured away by competitors. In addition, manag- ers are likely to be facing even more challenges than ever before because of business, demographic trends, and poor leadership development practices within firms.25 John Sullivan, author of 1000 Ways to Recruit Top Talent, states two problems when competitors “steal” employees; “One, you have to replace the talent, and in a time of tight labor markets, that’s a very hard—and very expen- sive—endeavor.” He goes on to say, “And two, the talent is taking ideas with them to a competitor.”26

Smaller firms look for employees trained by larger organizations that have greater develop- mental resources. For instance, one optical firm believes that its own operation is not large enough to provide extensive training and development programs. Therefore, a person recruited by this firm for a significant management role is likely to have held at least two previous positions with a competitor. In the following Watch It video, Hanno Holm, Chief Operating Office of Rudi’s Organic Bakery, discusses how his small, dynamic, and fast-growing company searches for the right employees and how the process differs from large companies.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Rudi’s Bakery: Human Resource Management and respond to questions.

Former Employees At one time, when employees quit, their managers and peers tended to view them as being dis- loyal and ungrateful, and they were “punished” with no-return policies. A common attitude was that if you left your firm, you did not appreciate what the company had done for you. Those days are gone and often “goodbye” may not be forever. In fact, according to a recent survey, only 11 percent of human resources (HR) professionals said that they would not rehire departing workers if they wished to return.27 Today’s young workers are more likely to change jobs and later return to a former employer than their counterparts who entered the workforce 20 or 30 years ago, and smart employers try to get their best ex-employees to come back. The boomerang effect might happen because there was a strong bond with previous coworkers or the new job was not what the employee envisioned. Van Alstyne, HR manager for Staffing Plus, based in Haverford, Pennsyl- vania, said, “If employees depart on good terms, contact should be maintained through proactive networking efforts by the company. It keeps the door open for good employees to return.”28

The advantage of tracking former employees is that the firm knows their strengths and weak- nesses and the ex-employees know the company. Tracking, recruiting, and hiring a former employee can be a tremendous benefit and can encourage others to stay with the firm. It sends the message that things are not always greener on the other side of the fence. The large number of people who will change jobs during their lifetime means businesses would be foolish to lose touch with them.

Unemployed The unemployed often provide a valuable source of recruits. Qualified applicants join the unem- ployment rolls every day for various reasons. Companies may downsize their operations, go out of business, or merge with other firms, leaving qualified workers without jobs. Employees are also

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fired sometimes merely because of personality differences with their bosses. Frequently, employ- ees become frustrated with their jobs and quit. Even individuals who have been out of work for extended periods should not be overlooked. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the total number of job openings in 2016 was 5.5 million,29 with more than 7.5 million unemployed workers.30 In January 2017, the unemployment rate was 4.9 percent. However, if discouraged workers and marginally attached workers are counted, the total unemployment rate rose to about 6.2 percent.31 Who are discouraged and marginally attached workers? Discouraged workers have given up looking for jobs, and marginally attached workers wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. It should be noted that the unemploy- ment rate has dropped steadily from more than 10 percent since the Great Recession ended in 2009. While the unemployed represents a source of potential employees, the improved economy will leave companies with fewer choices.

Military Personnel Hiring former service members makes sense to a lot of employers because many of these indi- viduals have a proven work history, are f lexible and highly motivated. General Electric (GE) recognizes the value of military veterans as employees; “Your service made you a leader and a disciplined, strategic thinker with a level of loyalty that is unmatched.”32 Many other companies have discovered the benefits of recruiting military talent. For instance, Starbucks launched an initiative in 2003 to hire 10,000 veterans and their spouses by 2018. By early 2017, the company made great strides toward meeting its goal by having already hired 8,000 new employees.33 AT&T pledged to hire 20,000 veterans by 2020.34 These statistics show that many companies successfully recruit veterans; however, they do not remain for very long. A 2016 U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation survey revealed that 44 percent of veteran hires left their first post-military jobs within a year.35 According to Brian Stann, a former captain in the Marines and head of Hire Heroes USA, a nonprofit that helps veterans find jobs and prepare for the corporate world, “One of the biggest mistakes employers can make is not understanding how to take advantage of veterans’ skills” despite wanting to hire them.”36 Some companies are working diligently to retain veteran hires. For example, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. instituted Pathfinder, an experimental project that pairs newly recruited veterans with a more established veteran to help them set goals, understand the differences between civilian and military cultures, and offer support. Besides active company campaigns, service members nationwide looking for jobs can consider visiting the HirePatriots. com web site. “We help citizens and businesses to thank our current military, veterans, and their spouses by posting their job opportunities on our free military job posting and search Web site,” said Mark Baird, president of Patriotic Hearts.37

Self-Employed Workers The self-employed worker may also be a good potential source. These individuals may be true entrepreneurs who are ingenious and creative. For many firms, these qualities are essential for continued competitiveness. Such individuals may constitute a source of applicants for any number of jobs requiring technical, professional, administrative, or entrepreneurial expertise within a firm.

Ex-Offenders Some organizations have found it beneficial to hire ex-offenders. A recent analysis by the National Employment Law Project shows that more than one in four U.S. adults has an arrest or conviction that would appear in a routine criminal background check.38 Studies estimate that as many as 60 to 75 percent of ex-offenders are unemployed.39 Many are nonviolent substance abusers who were locked up because of federal and state drug laws. This statistic is not surprising because of an increase in the use of criminal background checks in the employment process, and most employers indicate that they would “probably” or “definitely” not be willing to hire an applicant with a criminal record.40

As of this writing, 25 states and several U.S. cities and counties have Ban the Box laws or poli- cies that reduce unfair barriers to employment of people with criminal records.41 The box refers to the job application question that asks whether the person has a criminal history. Most of these laws ban including questions about an applicant’s criminal history. The ban the box laws require companies to do more than simply eliminate the question. Variations in the law are evident across

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the states, however, most include additional requirements such as placing limits on the scope or type of criminal record that can be considered. Angela Preston, vice president of compliance and general counsel at background screening firm EmployeeScreenIQ said, “No two versions of ban the box are the same, and they often conflict or overlap with existing anti-discrimination laws, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), and others requiring or relating to background screening,”42 These differences are creating challenges for HR professionals, particularly for ones that have facilities in multiple states.

According to Multicultural Foodservice & Hospitality Alliance President Gerry Fernandez, “I’m aware of several chains that have programs to hire ex-offenders, though they do not want publicity. Who do you think works third shift, where they don’t come in contact with custom- ers?”43 In another example, supermarket retail consultant and restaurateur Howard Solganik has launched a program that puts ex-offenders to work helping area farmers increase the supply of local, seasonal produce to consumers. Solganik said, “My experience in the restaurant business exposed me to ex-offenders. I saw that most were hard workers and were grateful for the jobs they were given.”44

External Recruitment Methods The use of online and mobile recruiting methods has revolutionized the way companies recruit employees and job seekers search and apply for jobs. Using technology for recruitment provides HR professionals with additional choices besides traditional methods, which we review shortly.

Online and Mobile Recruiting Owen Williams, executive recruiting director at Macys Inc., provides an example of the power of mobile recruiting. During the three-block walk to his office, Owen regularly uses his mobile device and the mobile version of LinkedIn to post job listings and connect to potential candidates. Time is money for Owen because he personally fills more than 80 store manager and regional buyer positions a year. “It’s amazing what work I can get done in that walk,” he says.45

The world of recruiting via mobile technology is moving at lightning speed. When LinkedIn was new, recruiters saw mobile technology as a complement to the time-honored paper résumés and face-to-face interviews.46 As mobile apps have improved, many organizations are successfully using mobile devices in the recruiting process. Recruiters use mobile apps to post jobs, run text message–based recruiting campaigns, create online communities for potential new hires to learn about their companies, monitor social networks for news about industries they hire for, and keep in touch with staff and outside agencies. Their efforts have been paying off. One survey found that approximately 14.4 million U.S. workers have used social media to find employment, and 73 percent of companies surveyed have successfully hired job candidates using social media.47

The number of mobile apps for conducting job searches is on the rise. And, many of the newer apps are setting themselves apart from the pack. For instance, one innovative app follows the model of many dating sites where people are matched based on compatible interests and personality. For job searches, of course, the matches are based on work experience and other job- related qualifications. The following Watch It video describes a job search app that oftentimes is compared to dating sites such as Tinder where users swipe right if they “like” the potential match.

5.5 Summarize external recruit- ment methods.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Swipe Right for Employment: New App is Tinder for Job Seekers and re- spond to questions.

INTERNET RECRUITER The Internet recruiter, also called a cyber recruiter, is a person whose primary responsibility is to use the Internet in the recruitment process.

Most companies currently post jobs on their corporate career Web site. Individuals must be in place to monitor and coordinate these activities. The more companies recruit on the Internet, the greater the need for Internet recruiters. Currently, high-tech firms have the greatest needs.

Internet recruiter Person whose primary responsibility is to use the Internet in the recruitment process (also called cyber recruiter).

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VIRTUAL JOB FAIR A virtual job fair is an online recruiting method engaged in by a single employer or group of employers to attract many applicants. They are designed to be a first step in the recruitment process. Many recruiters have found that traditional job fairs where applicants and recruiters go to a physical location are ineffective. In addition to the time and expense of attending them in person, recruiters often find them wasteful because many people who stop by their booth do not possess the right skills.

At virtual job fairs, recruiters prescreen résumés, contact candidates who are a potential fit, and store e-mail addresses. If applicants pass the initial screening, they typically must complete a questionnaire, take a behavioral test, and do a telephone interview before meeting a recruiter in person. Virtual fairs usually last about five hours, though recruiters can receive résumés online for as long as a week after the event. In their virtual “booth,” recruiters often provide links to their online career site, obtained résumés from candidates, and interact with applicants in a live chat room.

CORPORATE CAREER WEB SITES Corporate career Web sites are job sites accessible from a company home page that list the company positions available and provide a way for applicants to apply for specific jobs. They have become a major resource for both job seekers and companies seeking new employees.

A career Web site should be relevant and engaging, informing the reader about the company and the specific position being advertised. It should be used as a selling device that promotes the company to prospective job candidates. Writing effective recruitment ads on the Internet is differ- ent from the short, one-inch-column ads in the Sunday newspaper. The Internet provides enough space to fully describe the job, location, and company. It provides an opportunity to convert con- sumers into great employees. A good Web site should provide a feeling of the kind of corporate culture that exists within the company.

WEBLOGS (BLOGS FOR SHORT) Weblogs, or blogs, have changed the ways in which individuals access information. Google or a blog search engine such as Technorati.com can be used. All a person must do is type in a key phrase like marketing jobs. The blogs themselves make it easy to find, with names like HRJobs.com and SalesJobs.com. Some employers and employment agencies have also discovered that blogging is a way to do detailed and stealthy background checks.

GENERAL-PURPOSE JOB BOARDS Firms use general-purpose job boards by typing in key job criteria, skills, and experience, and indicating their geographic location. Job seekers can search for jobs by category, experience, education, location, or any combination of categories. Many believe that the general-purpose big job boards are best for job seekers in professions that experience high turnover like sales but often are less effective for highly qualified applicants or those looking for work in smaller industries. We review some of the more visible services here.

CareerBuilder offers a vast online network to help job seekers connect with employers. CareerBuilder.com powers the career sites for more than 1,000 Web sites, including 300 newspa- pers and various other online portals.48

Facebook started out exclusively as a social media website. More recently, Facebook recog- nized an opportunity to extend its services to more subscribers. The company learned that many small businesses are struggling to hire as well as many people are willing to consider a better, higher paying job.49

Glassdoor is a job posting site and more. Subscribers have access to millions of employees’ reviews of their companies, CEO approval ratings, salary reports, interview reviews, and employee benefits reviews, office photos, and more.50 The company distinguishes itself from other sites by relying exclusively on employees’ input.

LinkedIn connects individuals who want to build their professional networks and stay abreast of the latest trends in business. This service also permits job postings. The company reported that it has more than 450 million subscribers from approximately 200 countries.51 Its success may be attributed in part to publishing the site in a multitude of languages including traditional Chinese, German, and Malay.

Monster Worldwide, Inc. is the parent company of Monster. It is a premier global online employment solution for people seeking jobs and the employers who need people. Information helpful to job seekers such as résumé tips, interview tips, salary information, and networking information is available on the site.

virtual job fair Online recruiting method engaged in by a single employer or group of employers to attract a large number of applicants.

corporate career Web sites Job sites accessible from a company home page that list available company positions and provide a way for applicants to apply for specific jobs.

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132 PART 2 • STAFFING

Twitter is a well-known social media site. Increasingly, companies are taking to Twitter to post job openings.52 Examples include package delivery service UPS, Google, Ernst & Young, Disney Parks, and PepsiCo.53

NACELINK NETWORK The NACElink Network, the result of an alliance among the National Association of Colleges and Employers, DirectEmployers Association, and Symplicity Corporation, is a national recruiting network and suite of Web-based recruiting and career services automation tools serving the needs of colleges, employers, and job candidates. Currently more than 900 colleges use the NACElink system. The system includes three components: job posting, résumé database, and interview scheduling. It is available to employers to post jobs and search for students and new graduates. DirectEmployers Association has also created an employment Web site for returning veterans that uses military codes to help veterans identify jobs in their fields.

.JOBS .Jobs is a network of employment Web sites where any company can list job openings for free. There are 40,000 sites, with all Web addresses ending in “.jobs.” The initiative is being backed by nearly 600 hundred companies such as Whirlpool and Disney Parks. Finding jobs on the sites is simple. Possible searches might include Nurse.jobs and Sales.jobs. For someone looking for a job in the Washington, D.C. area, there’s districtofcolumbia.jobs. It works for many professions and is available in every state and any U.S. city with more than 5,000 people.

ALLIANCEQ AllianceQ is a group of Fortune 500 companies, along with more than 3,000 small and medium-sized companies, that have collaborated to create a pool of job candidates. AllianceQ provides a way for candidates to be found by top employers.54 Those passed over by one company are invited to submit their résumés to the AllianceQ database. “It’s a no-brainer,” says Phil Hendrickson, a recruiting manager at member company Starbucks.55

NICHE SITES Niche sites are Web sites that cater to highly specialized job markets, such as a profession, industry, education, location, or any combination of these specialties. They continue to grow in popularity and are giving general-purpose job boards major competition.56 There seems to be a site for virtually everyone. A few catchy ones include:

$$ cfo.com (a comprehensive online resource center for senior finance executives) $$ dice.com (a leading provider of online recruiting services for technology professionals) $$ internships.com (employers who are exclusively looking for interns) $$ justtechjobs.com (focuses on the recruiting needs of the technology companies) $$ coolworks.com (find seasonal job or career in places such as Yellowstone, Yosemite, or

other national parks) $$ college.monster.com (job listings and résumé service that targets college students and

alumni) $$ Job.com (maintains sites specialized by geography) $$ HirePatriots.com (job listings for service members)

A niche site is also available for professors who desire to change jobs. Formerly, college and university professors went to the campus library and thumbed through the many pages of The Chronicle of Higher Education to hunt for a job. Now all they need to do is enter www.chronicle. com, The Chronicle of Higher Education Web site. All the jobs listed with the Chronicle are avail- able to view for free. Each position announcement has a hot link to a university home page where additional information can be obtained. The universities pay the fees.

CONTINGENT WORKERS’ SITES Contract workers are a part of the contingent workforce. Recruiting technology also serves the benefit of these workers. Sites are available to assist contingent workers. Specialized Web sites let workers advertise their skills, set their price, and pick an employer. Two such sites are:

$$ Freelance.com (a company that offers to clients the services of talented freelancers) $$ Guru.com (an online marketplace for freelance talent)

But who are contingent workers? According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, contin- gent workers57 are those who do not have an implicit or explicit contract for ongoing employment. Persons who do not expect to continue in their jobs for such personal reasons as retirement or returning to school are not considered contingent workers, if they would have the option of

NACElink Network The result of an alliance among the National Association of Colleges and Employers, DirectEmployers Association, and Symplicity Corporation, it is a national recruiting network and suite of Web-based recruiting and career services automation tools serving the needs of colleges, employers, and job candidates.

.jobs Network of employment Web sites where any company can list job openings for free.

AllianceQ Group of Fortune 500 companies, along with more than 3,000 small and medium-sized companies, that have collaborated to create a pool of job candidates.

niche sites Web sites that cater to highly specialized job markets such as a profession, industry, education, location, or any combination of these specialties.

contingent workers Described as the “disposable American workforce” by a former secretary of labor, they have a nontraditional relationship with the worksite employer, and work as part-timers, temporaries, or independent contractors.

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continuing in the job were it not for these reasons. These individuals account for 40.2 percent of the U.S. labor force, which is up from 30.6 percent in 2005.58 Figure 5-4 details questions that determine whether workers expect their employment to continue, that is, whether their work arrangement is considered to be contingent.

Contingent workers are the human equivalents of just-in-time inventory. These workers per- mit maximum flexibility for the employer and lower labor costs. Historically, contingent workers have been called the bookends of recessions. They are the first to go when a recession begins and the last to be recalled when the economy gets better. However, toward the end of the recent reces- sion, many companies were reversing this trend and following the strategy of holding off on the hiring of regular full-time employees and choosing instead to use contingent workers. Companies are now using contingent workers as a continuing strategy in both good and bad times.59

After the recession ended in 2009, companies rethinking about the way work gets done. This brought a refocus on the use of contingent workers, who can be added or cut as demand requires. In fact, the pace of contingent job growth suggests a shift toward more use of temporary labor at the expense of permanent jobs.60 Garry Mathiason, vice chairman of Littler Mendelson in San Francisco, said, “In the future companies will likely make wider use of staffing methods like those practiced by the film industry. There, entire crews of contingent production workers are assembled for a movie then disbanded once it is finished.”61 A study by the Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp) found that high-performing organizations have increased their use

FIGURE 5-4 Questions that Determine Whether Workers Expect Their Employment to Continue Source: Polivka, A. E. (1996). Contingent and alternative work arrangements, defined. Monthly Labor Review, 119(10), p. 5.

Employment expected to continue

more than a year

8. What is the main reason you expect to

stay at your current job for less than a year?

9. If it were not for this reason, could you have kept working at the job you had

last week?

A year or less,and

responded “no” to7. How much longer do

you expect to work in your current job?

6. Is your job a year- round job or is it only

available during certain times of the

year?

5. Were you hired for a fixed period of time?

4. Were you hired to temporarily replace

another worker?

No

Yes

No

Yes

No

No

No

3. Are you working only until a specific

project is completed?

1. Some people are in temporary jobs that last only for a limited

time or until the completion of a project. Is your job temporary?

2. Provided the economy does not change and your

job performance is adequate, can you continue to work for

your current employer as long as you wish?

Yes

Yes

Yes

Year-round or certain times

A year or less, and responded “yes” to Q 3, 4, or 5 or “certain times” to Q6

Yes

Personal reason

Economic reason

Employment not expected to continue

No

Q 3, 4, 5, and “year round”

to Q6

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of contingent workers from traditional administrative positions to technical support, operations, and high-skilled professional positions, including engineering, legal, and finance.62 If the use of contingent workers is indeed the trend, the manner that human resource is practiced will experi- ence considerable change.

☛ $F Y I The U.S. General Accountability Office estimates that 40.2 of the U.S. labor force are contingent workers. Some of the more common categories of contingent workers are:

$$ Temporary employees: 1.3 percent $$ On-call workers: 3.5 percent $$ Contract company workers: 3.0 percent $$ Independent contractors: 12.9 percent $$ Self-employed workers: 3.3 percent $$ Standard part-time workers: 5 percent63

Traditional Methods Although online recruiting has greatly impacted how recruiting is accomplished, traditional meth- ods are still used.

MEDIA ADVERTISING Advertising communicates the firm’s employment needs to the public through media such as newspapers, trade journals, radio, television, and billboards found along highways. The firm’s previous experience with various media should suggest the most effective approach for specific types of jobs. Although few individuals base their decision to change jobs on advertising, ads create awareness, generate interest, and encourage a prospect to seek more information about the firm and the job opportunities that it provides. A traditional common form of advertising that provides broad coverage at a relatively low cost is the newspaper ad. Firms using the newspaper ad attempt to appeal to the self-interest of prospective employees, emphasizing the job’s unique qualities. Recently, the use of newspaper advertising has declined because other recruiting methods are more effective and less expensive.

Television media has sometimes been considered a way to broadcast information other than products and services. For instance, Super Bowl games often attract more than 100 million viewers and is a good way to promote products and services. In 2017, 84 Lumber Company, a building supply chain, purchased a 90-second advertising slot not only to advertise its products, but also to launch a national recruiting campaign. The company hoped that qualified individuals would apply for various jobs, including 400 management trainee positions to support the company’s planned growth.64

Certain media attract audiences that are more homogeneous in terms of employment skills, education, and orientation. Advertisements placed in publications such as the The Wall Street Journal relate primarily to managerial, professional, and technical positions. The readers of these publications are generally individuals qualified for many of the positions advertised. Focusing on a specific labor market minimizes the likelihood of receiving marginally qualified or even totally unqualified applicants. Like most professional publications, jobs that are adver- tised in the paper copy of the Journal are also available on the publication’s Web site. Journals specific to trades are also widely used. For example, Automotive News might have jobs related to the automobile industry and American Drycleaner likely will list jobs in the dry-cleaning business.

Qualified prospects who read job ads in newspapers and professional and trade journals may not be so dissatisfied with their present jobs that they will pursue opportunities advertised. Therefore, in high-demand situations, a firm needs to consider all available media resources such as radio, billboards, and television. These methods are likely more expensive than newspapers or journals, but in specific situations, they may prove successful. For instance, a regional medical center used billboards effectively to attract registered nurses. One large manufacturing firm had

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considerable success in advertising for production trainees by means of spot advertisements on the radio. A large electronics firm used television to attract experienced engineers when it opened a new facility and needed more engineers immediately. Thus, in situations where hiring needs are urgent, television and radio may provide good results. Broadcast messages can let people know that an organization is seeking recruits. A primary limitation is the amount of information they can transmit.

PRIVATE EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES Private employment agencies, often called “headhunters,” are best known for recruiting white-collar employees and offer an important service in bringing qualified applicants and open positions together.65 Firms and job hunters use private employment agencies for virtually every type position. Job seekers should carefully select the employment agency to use because there are both good and bad recruiters. Today, private employment agencies often specialize in filling a niche in the job market. Agencies should be selected based on knowledge of the industry and the specific position being sought.

Private employment agencies fees can range up to 35 percent of a person’s first year salary. The one-time fees that some agencies charge often turn off candidates, although many private employment agencies also deal with firms that pay the fees. Either way, the headhunter does not get paid until a person is placed. The recent recession has significantly impacted the use of private employment agencies, which has resulted in a general retrenchment of the industry.

PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES Public employment agencies are operated by each state but receive overall policy direction from the U.S. Employment Service. Public employment agencies have become increasingly involved in matching people with technical, professional, and managerial positions. They typically use computerized job-matching systems to aid in the recruitment process, and they provide their services without charge to either the employer or the prospective employee.

EXECUTIVE SEARCH FIRMS Executive search firms are used by some firms to locate experienced professionals and executives when other sources prove inadequate. The key benefit of executive search firms is the targeting of ideal candidates. In addition, the executive search firm can often find passive candidates, those not actively looking for a job.

An executive search firm’s representatives often visit the client’s offices and interview the company’s management. This enables them to gain a clear understanding of the company’s goals and the job qualifications required. After obtaining this information, they contact and interview potential candidates, check references, and refer the best-qualified person to the client for the selection decision. Search firms maintain databases of résumés for this process. Other sources used include networking contacts, files from previous searches, specialized directories, personal calls, previous clients, colleagues, and unsolicited résumés. The search firm’s task is to present candidates who are eminently qualified to do the job; it is the company’s decision whom to hire.

There are two types of executive search firms: contingency and retained. Contingency search firms receive fees only on successful placement of a candidate in a job opening. The search firm’s fee is generally a percentage of the individual’s compensation for the first year. The client pays expenses, as well as the fee. A contingency recruiter goes to work when there is an urgent need to fill a position, when an opening exists for a difficult position, or when a hiring executive wants to know about top-notch talent as those people surface, regardless of whether there is an opening.

Retained search firms are considered consultants to their client organizations, serving on an exclusive contractual basis, and typically recruit top business executives. With a retained search firm, the company typically gets a firmer commitment from their search firm, as well as more personalized attention, dedicated time, and customized searches.66

RECRUITERS Recruiters most commonly focus on technical and vocational schools, community colleges, colleges, and universities. The key contact for recruiters on college and university campuses is often the student placement director. This administrator is in an excellent position to arrange interviews with students possessing the qualifications desired by the firm. Placement

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services help organizations use their recruiters efficiently. They identify qualified candidates, schedule interviews, and provide suitable rooms for interviews.

The company recruiter plays a vital role in attracting applicants. The interviewee often perceives the recruiter’s actions as a ref lection of the character of the firm. If the recruiter is dull, the interviewee may think the company is dull; if the recruiter is apathetic, discourteous, or vulgar, the interviewee may well attribute these negative characteristics to the firm. Recruiters must always be aware of the image they present because it makes a lasting impression. Recruit- ment success comes down to good personal selling, appealing to the candidate’s priorities, and addressing his or her concerns. The recruiter should underscore the job’s opportunities and keep the lines of communication open.

A recent trend is the use of videoconferencing with equipment at both corporate headquarters and on college campuses. Recruiters can communicate with college career counselors and inter- view students through a videoconferencing system without leaving the office.

JOB FAIRS A job fair is a recruiting method engaged in by a single employer or group of employers to attract many applicants to one location for interviews.

From an employer’s viewpoint, a primary advantage of job fairs is the opportunity to meet many candidates in a short time. Conversely, applicants may have convenient access to several employers. As a recruitment method, job fairs offer the potential for a much lower cost per hire than traditional approaches. Job fairs are often organized by universities to assist their students in obtaining jobs. Here, employers from many organizations meet at a single point on the campus. The job fair is available from disciplines from across the university. Students and employers can meet here to ask and answer questions.

At times job fairs are tailored to recruit specific types of individuals. At a job fair in Tucson, Arizona, the event was designed to bring together senior citizens and companies looking to hire them, as well as offer assistance to those seeking to improve their job skills as a first step toward employment. The job fair attracted two dozen companies seeking to fill positions for everything from teachers’ aides to bank tellers to tour bus drivers and call-center staff.67 Job fairs are also held to bring together military service members and companies with openings to fill. Recently the Veterans Career Fair and Expo was held in Washington, D.C. Employers representing companies across the private sector, as well as several government agencies, were on site to discuss career and job opportunities to thousands of veterans from the mid-Atlantic region.68

INTERNSHIPS An internship is a special form of recruitment that involves placing a student in a temporary job with no obligation either by the company to hire the student permanently or by the student to accept a permanent position with the firm following graduation.

An internship typically involves a temporary job for the summer months or a part-time job during the school year. It may also take the form of working full-time one semester and going to school full-time the next. Recently nontraditional virtual internships are being used by businesses for students who would be required to commute long distances with Skype, e-mail, and confer- ence calls.69 Employers can try out future employees prior to making a job offer. If the trial period proves unsuccessful, there is no obligation on either side. Google has long been known for using the internship as a recruiting method. Google offers interns competitive pay and on-site perks that include free gourmet food, a gym, fitness classes, massage therapy, bike repair, dry cleaning, a hair stylist, oil changes, and car washes.70

During the internship, the student gets to view business practices firsthand. At the same time, the intern contributes to the firm by performing needed tasks. In addition to other benefits, internships provide opportunities for students to bridge the gap from business theory to practice. Through this relationship, a student can determine whether a company would be a desirable employer. Similarly, having a relatively lengthy time to observe the student’s job performance, the firm can make a better judgment regarding the person’s qualifications.

In today’s job market, just having a degree is often not enough to get a job offer; intern- ships are often the deciding factor in getting a good job or not. Students with internship and co-op experience are often able to find jobs easier, and they progress much further and faster in the business world than those without. Paid internships for college students have become even more valuable in recent years for both new graduates and companies. In a NACE 2015

job fair Recruiting method engaged in by a single employer or group of employers to attract many applicants to one location for interviews.

internship Special form of recruitment that involves placing a student in a temporary job with no obligation either by the company to hire the student permanently or by the student to accept a permanent position with the firm following graduation.

HR Web Wisdom

Internship Web Site www.internships.com

The world’s largest internship marketplace.

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Student Survey, more than half of the interns were paid, and 72 percent of students with a paid summer internship received at least one full-time job offer after graduation; the median starting salary for subsequent full-time jobs was about 55 percent higher than students with unpaid or no internship experience.71 Steve Canale, manager, global recruiting and staffing services, at General Electric Co., based in Fairfield, Connecticut, said, “If I had my budget slashed and only had $100 to spend, I’d spend it all on my internship program. They become my brand ambassadors.”72

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS Virtually every professional group publishes a journal and has a Web site that is widely used by its members. Many professional associations in business areas including finance, marketing, accounting, and human resources provide recruitment and placement services for their members. Jobs advertised are placed in the journal in hard copy and advertised on the professional group’s Web site. The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), for example, operates a job referral service for members seeking new positions and employers with positions to fill.

UNSOLICITED APPLICANTS A company must have a positive image or employer brand to attract unsolicited applicants. If an organization has the reputation of being a good place to work, it may be able to attract qualified prospects even without extensive recruitment efforts. Acting on their own initiative, well-qualified workers may seek out a specific company to apply for a job. Unsolicited applicants who apply because they are favorably impressed with the firm’s reputation often prove to be valuable employees. In the Internet age, applicants can go to the firm’s corporate career Web site and walk in by making an application online.

OPEN HOUSES Open houses pair potential hires and recruiters in a warm, casual environment that encourages on-the-spot job offers. Open houses are cheaper and faster than hiring through recruitment agencies, and they are also more popular than job fairs. There are pros and cons to holding a truly open house. If the event is open, it may draw a large turnout, but it also may attract many unqualified candidates. Some companies prefer to control the types of candidates they host, and so they conduct invitation-only sessions. In this scenario, someone screens résumés in response to ads, then invites only preselected candidates. Open house advertising may be through both conventional media and the Internet, where a firm might feature its open house on its home page.

EVENT RECRUITING Event recruiting involves having recruiters go to events being attended by individuals the company is seeking. Cisco Systems pioneered event recruiting as a recruitment approach. In the case of programmers in the Silicon Valley, the choice spots have been marathons and bike races. Companies that participate in these events become involved in some way that promotes their name and cause. For example, they might sponsor or cosponsor an event, pass out refreshments, and give away prizes. Individuals get to know that the company is recruiting and the types of workers it is seeking. Event recruiting gives a company the opportunity to reflect its image.

SIGN-ON BONUSES Employers use sign-on bonuses to attract top talent, particularly in high- demand fields such as health care, sales, marketing, and accounting. Bonuses allow a firm to pay a premium to attract individuals without dramatically upsetting its salary scale. Even as Wall Street continued to lay off workers, some firms were offering sign-on bonuses for top management talent. NACE’s Job Outlook 2016 survey revealed that 51.8 percent of employers planned to offer signing bonuses to college graduates. Signing bonuses are most commonly found in the utilities, food and beverage manufacturing, finance, insurance and real estate, and pharmaceutical manufacturing industries.73

COMPETITIVE GAMES Many companies in the software industry use public competitions to identify talented prospects.74 For instance, Google established Code Jam, which is an international programming competition. The competition began in 2003 as a means to identify top engineering talent for potential employment at Google. The competition consists of a set of algorithmic problems that must be solved in a fixed amount of time. Competitors may use any programming language and development environment to obtain their solutions.

event recruiting Recruiters going to events being attended by individuals the company is seeking.

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138 PART 2 • STAFFING

Tailoring Recruitment Methods to Sources Because each organization is unique, so are the needed types and qualifications of workers to fill positions. Thus, to be successful, a firm must tailor its recruitment sources and methods to its specific needs.

Suppose, for example, that a large firm has an immediate need for an experienced infor- mation technology manager and no one within the firm has these qualifications. Figure 5-5 shows a matrix that depicts sources and methods of recruitment for such a manager. Managers must first identify the source (where prospective employees are located) before choosing the methods (how to attract them). It is likely that other firms, possibly competitors, employ such individuals. After considering the recruitment source, the recruiter must then choose the method (or methods) of recruitment that offers the best prospects for attracting qualified candidates. Perhaps it would be appropriate to advertise the job in the classified section of The Wall Street Journal and use online recruiting. Alternatively, an executive search firm, such as Korn Ferry International, may serve as a viable option. In addition, the recruiter may attend meetings of professional information technology associations, such as the Association of Information Technology Professionals. One or more of these methods will likely yield a pool of qualified applicants.

In another scenario, consider a firm’s need for 20 entry-level machine operators, whom the firm is willing to train. High schools and vocational schools would probably be good recruitment sources. Methods of recruitment might include newspaper ads, public employment agencies, recruiters, visiting vocational schools, and employee referrals.

Alternatives to Recruitment Even when HR planning indicates a need for additional employees, a firm may decide against increasing the size of its workforce. Recruitment and selection costs are significant when you consider all the related expenses. Estimates vary. For instance, the cost of replacing a person mak- ing $50,000 per year can easily reach $75,000.75 Therefore, a firm should consider alternatives carefully before engaging in recruitment.

5.6 Describe alternatives to recruitment.

FIGURE 5-5 Methods and Sources of Recruitment for an Information Technology Manager

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CHAPTER 5 • RECRuITmENT 139

Promotion Policies Promotion from within (PFW) is the policy of filling vacancies above entry-level positions with current employees. An organization’s promotion policy can have a significant impact on recruitment. A firm can stress a policy of promoting from within its own ranks or one in which positions are generally filled from outside the organization. Depending on specific circum- stances, either approach may have merit, but usually a combination of the two approaches proves best.

When an organization emphasizes PFW, its workers have an incentive to strive for advance- ment. When employees see coworkers promoted, they become more aware of their own opportu- nities. General Motors and Cisco fill approximately 60 to 80 percent of their senior management positions internally.76 As another example, employees with Royal Caribbean Cruises can progress over time based on performance from an entry-level position such as assistant cabin steward to an officer position. Motivation provided by PFW often improves employee morale. PFW also communicates to the workers that the firm wants them to succeed.

Another advantage of internal recruitment is that the organization is usually aware of its employees’ capabilities. Internal candidates have knowledge of the firm, its policies, and its peo- ple.77 An employee’s present job performance, by itself, may not be a reliable criterion for pro- motion. Nevertheless, management will know many of the employee’s personal and job-related qualities. The employee has a track record, as opposed to being an unknown entity. Also, the company’s investment in the individual may yield a higher return.

It is unlikely, however, that a firm can, or would even desire to, adhere rigidly to a practice of PFW. A strictly applied PFW policy eventually leads to inbreeding, a lack of cross-fertilization, and a lack of creativity. Although seldom achieved, a good goal would be to fill 80 percent of openings above entry-level positions from within. Frequently, new blood provides new ideas and innovation that must take place for firms to remain competitive. In such cases, even organiza- tions with PFW policies may opt to look outside the organization for new talent. In any event, a promotion policy that first considers insiders is great for employee morale and motivation, which is beneficial to the organization.

In the following Watch It video, learn about the online fashion retailer Hautelook, which is growing quickly and needs to recruit new employees at a rapid rate. Hautelook prefers most of all to promote internal job candidates, but also to employ applicants who are most familiar with the company: ideally, previous customers. The company’s methods for recruiting job applicants as well as finding the best potential employees from among its applicants are discussed.

promotion from within (PFW) Policy of filling vacancies above entry-level positions with current employees.

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Hautelook: Recruiting and respond to questions.

Overtime Perhaps the most commonly used alternative to recruitment, especially in meeting short-term fluctuations in work volume, is overtime. Overtime may help both employer and employee. The employer benefits by avoiding recruitment, selection, and training costs. The employees gain from increased income during the overtime period.

There are potential problems with overtime, however. Some managers believe that when employees work for unusually long periods, the company pays more and receives less in return. Employees may become fatigued and lack the energy to perform at a normal rate. Two additional possible problems relate to the use of prolonged overtime. Consciously or not, employees may pace themselves to ensure overtime. They may also become accustomed to the added income resulting from overtime pay. Employees may even elevate their standard of living to the level permitted by this additional income. Then, when a firm tightens its belt and overtime is limited, employee morale may deteriorate along with the pay.

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140 PART 2 • STAFFING

PREPARING FOR EXAM/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary By Learning Objectives 1. Define recruitment and describe the recruitment

process. Recruitment is the process of attracting individu- als on a timely basis, in sufficient numbers, and with appropriate qualifications to apply for jobs with an orga- nization. Recruitment frequently begins when a manager initiates an employee requisition. Next, the firm deter- mines whether qualified employees are available from within (the internal source) or must be recruited externally from sources such as colleges, universities, and other firms. Sources and methods are then identified.

2. Summarize the environment of recruitment. Of impor- tance to the success of recruitment is the demand for and supply of specific skills in the labor market. The recruit- ment method that proves to be most successful will depend to an extent on whether the recruited individual is an active or passive job seeker. Legal matters also play a significant role in recruitment practices in the United States. This is not surprising because the candidate and the employer first make contact during the recruitment process. A poorly con- ceived recruiting process can do much to create problems in the selection process. Therefore, it is essential for orga- nizations to emphasize nondiscriminatory practices at this stage. The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) has issued guidelines concerning the online recruiting policies of federal contractors and subcontractors.

3. Explain internal recruitment methods. Human resource databases permit organizations to determine whether cur- rent employees possess the qualifications for filling open positions. Job posting is a method of internal recruitment that is used to communicate the fact that job openings exist. Job bidding is a system that permits individuals in an orga- nization to apply for a specific job within the organization.

Employee referrals involves an employee of the company recommending to management a friend or associate as a possible member of the company and continues to be the way that top performers are identified.

4. Identify external recruitment sources. External sources of recruitment include high schools and vocational schools, community colleges, colleges and universities, competitors and other firms, the unemployed, older individuals, military personnel, self-employed workers, and ex-offenders.

5. Summarize external recruitment methods. The world of recruiting via mobile technology is moving at lightning speed. More and more people are adopting mobile technol- ogy, and many organizations are trying to figure out how to start using mobile devices in the recruiting process. Some online methods include Internet recruiter, virtual job fairs, corporate career Web sites, blogs, general-purpose job boards, NACElink Network, .jobs, AllianceQ, niche sites, and contract workers’ sites. Traditional external recruitment methods include media advertising, private employment agencies, public employment agencies, recruiters, job fairs, internships, executive search firms, professional associa- tions, unsolicited applicants, open houses, event recruiting, sign-on bonuses, and high-tech competition. Recruitment must be tailored to the needs of each firm. In addition, recruitment sources and methods often vary according to the type of position being filled.

6. Describe alternatives to recruitment. Even when HR plan- ning indicates a need for additional employees, a firm may decide against increasing the size of its workforce. Recruit- ment and selection costs are significant when you consider all the related expenses. Alternatives include promotion policies, overtime, and onshoring.

Key Terms recruitment 121 employee requisition 121 recruitment sources 122 recruitment methods 140 active job seekers 123 passive job seekers 123 job posting 124 job bidding 124

employee referral 125 Internet recruiter 130 virtual job fair 131 corporate career Web sites 131 NACElink Network 132 .jobs 132 AllianceQ 132 niche sites 132

contingent workers 132 job fair 136 internship 136 event recruiting 137 promotion from within (PFW) 139 onshoring 140

Onshoring Onshoring involves moving jobs not to another country but to lower-cost U.S. cities. Some com- panies might like to offshore their jobs but the government may require onshore handling of certain financial, health, and defense data. This requirement often represents more than 15 percent of all IT service work. As an example, one global company opened a midwestern U.S. facility with more than 1,000 IT service employees. Wages at the facility were 35 percent lower than at headquarters, and the company also received $50 million in government incentives.78

onshoring Moving jobs not to another country but to lower-cost U.S. cities.

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CHAPTER 5 • RECRuITmENT 141

Questions for Review 5-1. Define recruitment. 5-2. What are factors external to the organization that can

significantly affect the firm’s recruitment efforts? 5-3. How has social media emerged as an important force in

recruiting? 5-4. What are the steps involved in the recruitment process? 5-5. Distinguish between recruitment sources and recruit-

ment methods. 5-6. What are some internal recruitment methods? 5-7. Why is employee referral so important in the recruit-

ment process?

5-8. What external methods of recruitment are available? 5-9. What external sources of recruitment are available? 5-10. What might be some advantages of using mobile

recruiting? 5-11. What online recruitment methods are available? 5-12. What are the typical alternatives to recruitment that a

firm may use? 5-13. What is meant by the policy of promotion from within?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Unfair Advantage? You are the vice-president of human resources

for a high-tech company that is competing for a major government project. You believe that one of your key competitors is ahead of you in project development and you would like to recruit some of its engineers who are knowledgeable about the project. You receive an anonymous e-mail that includes the names and phone numbers of key people involved in your competitor’s project. If you use the information and

can hire some of the competitor’s key people, your company has a chance to beat the competitor and you will become a hero. If you do not use the information, your company may lose a great deal of money. 5-14. What would you do? 5-15. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less than ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business One of the goals of how HR professionals and managers conduct HR planning is to identify current and future staffing needs. HR professionals and managers use that information to formulate recruitment plans that will help generate a pool of qualified external and internal candidates. Recruitment must be tailored to the needs of each firm and the types of positions being filled. Successful recruitment requires collaboration between HR professionals and managers who bring different perspectives to com- pleting the task.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and applying recruitment sources and methods HR takes the lead

Write new or modify existing job descriptions to ensure that the job duties and applicant requirements match and are clearly stated. Discuss whether it makes sense to recruit internally or externally and the pros and cons of each approach.

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142 PART 2 • STAFFING

HRM by the Numbers Recruitment Source Cost Effectiveness

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

HR professionals regularly stay abreast of recruitment costs and the number of new hires associated with each recruitment source. Below is a listing of this information.

Recruitment Source Cost Number of New Hires

Employment Agency Fees $250,000 30 Employee Referral Bonuses 5,000 5 Career Website Subscription Fees 10,000 15 Newspaper Advertising (online and print) 125,000 45

Questions 5-16. How much did recruitment cost based on all the sources listed in the table? 5-17. Calculate the cost per hire for each recruitment source. 5-18. Which of the sources is most cost effective?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a brief team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, think about a job you could imagine getting five years after graduation. Also, think about the main objectives of the job and the kinds of knowledge and skills you believe are necessary to perform the job well. 5-19. What is the most likely recruitment source of candidates for this job? Explain. 5-20. What is the most likely recruitment method for identifying qualified applicants for this job? Explain.

I N C I D E N T 1 A Problem Ad? Dorothy Bryant was the new recruiting supervisor for International Man- ufacturing Company in Salt Lake City, Utah. One of Dorothy’s first assign- ments was to recruit two software design engineers for International. Design engineers are hard to recruit because of the difficulty of their training and the high demand for them. After considering various recruit- ment alternatives, Dorothy placed the following ad in a local newspaper with a circulation more than 1,000,000:

Employment Opportunity for Software Design Engineers

2 positions available for engineers desiring career in growth industry.

Prefer recent college graduates with good appearance.

Ask managers to identify external sources of potential employees such as professional associations, college or universities with excellent reputations for preparing prospective employees, and job search websites; and, suggest additional methods to round out a comprehensive recruitment plan.

Discuss the relevant legal requirements that must be taken into consideration when recruiting prospective employees.

Managers take the lead Inform HR about staffing needs and prepare employee requisitions. Emphasize job-relevant skills and abilities of importance such as software knowledge, project management skills, or leadership.

Share with HR whether the company already employs qualified individuals for the new job and consider possible external sources.

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CHAPTER 5 • RECRuITmENT 143

I N C I D E N T 2 I Am Qualified, Why Not Me? Five years ago, when Bobby Bret joined Crystal Productions as a junior accountant, he felt that he was on his way up. He had just graduated with a B + average from college where he was well liked by his peers and by the faculty, and had been an officer in several student organizations. Bobby had shown a natural ability to get along with people as well as to get things done. He remembered what Roger Friedman, the controller at Crystal, had told him when he was hired, “I think you will do well here, Bobby. You’ve come highly recommended. You are the kind of guy that can expect to move right on up the ladder.”

Bobby felt that he had done a good job at Crystal, and everybody seemed to like him. In addition, his performance appraisals had been excellent. However, after five years he was still a junior accountant. He had applied for two senior accountant positions that had opened, but they were both filled by people hired from outside the firm. When the accounting supervisor’s job came open two years ago, Bobby had not applied. He was surprised when his new boss turned out to be a hotshot graduate of State University whose only experience was three years with a large accounting firm. Bobby had hoped that

Ron Greene, a senior accountant he particularly respected, would get the job.

On the fifth anniversary of his employment at Crystal, Bobby decided it was time to do something. He made an appointment with the controller. At that meeting, Bobby explained to Mr. Friedman that he had worked hard to obtain a promotion and shared his frustration about having been in the same job for so long. “Well,” said Mr. Fried- man, “you don’t think that you were all that much better qualified than the people that we have hired, do you?” “No,” said Bobby, “but I think I could have handled the senior accountant job. Of course, the people you have hired are doing a great job too.” The controller responded, “We just look at the qualifications of all the applicants for each job, and considering everything, try to make a reasonable decision.”

Questions 5-24. Do you believe that Bobby has a legitimate complaint? Explain. 5-25. Explain the benefits of a promotion from within policy. Would

such a policy be appropriate for Crystal?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

5-26. Why might a firm want to use contingent workers as opposed to full-time employees? 5-27. Why is it important to match sources and methods of recruitment?

Good credit rating

Apply Today! Send your résumé,

in confidence, to: D. A. Bryant

International manufacturing Co., P.O. Box 1515

Salt Lake City, uT 84115

More than 300 applications arrived in the first week, and Dorothy was elated. When she reviewed the applicants, however, it appeared that few people possessed the desired qualifications for the job.

Questions 5-21. Dorothy overlooked some of the proper recruiting practices,

which resulted in an excessive number of unqualified people applying. What are they?

5-22. Are there any hiring standards that should be avoided? Identify them and explain why they should be avoided.

5-23. What recruitment sources and methods might have been used to have generated a better applicant pool for the two software design engineer positions for International Manufacturing? Defend your recommendations.

Endnotes 1 Matthew Beecher, “Only Assets Need

Apply,” HR Magazine 56 (November 2011): 84–85.

2 Anonymous, “For Incoming Executives: Defin- ing and Delivering Your Talent Agenda,” Risk & Compliance Journal (January 13, 2014). Accessed February 1, 2014, at http://deloitte. wsj.com/riskandcompliance/2014/01/13/for- incoming-executives-defining-and-delivering- your-talent-agenda.

3 Julie Kantor, “High Turnover Costs Way More Than You Think,” Huffington Post online (Feb- ruary 11, 2016). Accessed February 13, 2017, at www.huffingtonpost.com.

4 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Wind Turbine Technicians,” Occupational Outlook Handbook 2016-17. Accessed February 13, 2017, at www. bls.gov.

5 Dylan Matthews, “The Tuition is too Damn High Part II: Why College is Still Worth It,”

Washington Post (August 27, 2013). Accessed February 5, 2014, at www.washingtonpost.com.

6 Elka Torpey and Audrey Watson, “Education Level and Jobs: Opportunities by State,” Career Outlook online (September 2014), U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.bls.gov; Hope Yen, “New Study Shows the Value of a College Education,” Boston Globe (February 11, 2014). Accessed February 12, 2014, at www.bostonglobe.com.

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144 PART 2 • STAFFING

7 Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz, “Construction Contractors Warn of a Labor Shortage as Building Booms,” Chicago Tribune online (May 31, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.chicagotri- bune.com.

8 James E. Leemann, “The Jobs Are Out There,” Industrial Safety & Hygiene News 46 (January 2012): 18–20.

9 Stephen Whitaker and Mary Zenker, “Are Underemployed Graduates Displacing Non- graduates?” Economic Trends (July 2011): 21–23.

10 Constantine Von Hoffman, “Many Jobs Go Unfilled for over 3 Months,” CBS News Money- Watch (July 18, 2013). Accessed February 18, 2014, at www.cbsnews.com.

11 Anthony P. Carnevale, “Old Jobs, New Jobs: Here’s the Difference,” HR Magazine 57 (Janu- ary 2012): 25.

12 Rachel Emma Silverman, “Companies Are Chasing the Wrong Hires,” The Wall Street Jour- nal online (June 10, 2015). Accessed February 5, 2017, at http://blogs.wsj.com.

13 Rachel Emma Silverman, “Companies Are Chasing the Wrong Hires,” The Wall Street Jour- nal online (June 10, 2015). Accessed February 5, 2017, at http://blogs.wsj.com.

14 U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs “Internet Appli- cant Recordkeeping Rule.” Accessed February 13, 2017, at www.dol.gov/ofccp/regs/compli- ance/faqs/iappfaqs.htm\#Q1GI.

15 WorldatWork, Bonus Programs and Practices (July 2016). Accessed May 22, 2017, at www. worldatwork.org/adimLink?id=80398.

16 “Study Finds Bonus Pay Geared to Attract, Not Retain, Talent,” Report on Salary Surveys 9 (March 2009): 1–7.

17 Cat Zakrzewski, “Intel Doubles Up on Hiring Women and Minorities,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 3, 2015). Accessed February 3, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

18 “Bonus Programs and Practices,” Worldat- Work report, July 2016. Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.worldatwork.org/waw/ adimLink?id=80398.

19 Vickie Elmer, “Hiring without a Net: Groupon’s Recruiter Speaks,” Fortune 164 (July 25, 2011): 34.

20 Nelson D. Schwartz, “In Hiring a Friend in Need is a Prospect, Indeed. New York Times (January 27, 2013). Accessed February 3, 2014, at www.nytimes.com.

21 Auren Hoffman, “Seeking Great Candidates Online,” BusinessWeek Online (December 10, 2009): 1.

22 Elka Torpey and Audrey Watson, “Education Level and Jobs: Opportunities by State,” Career Outlook online (September 2014), U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed January 10, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

23 Alice Andore, “The Value of Poaching,” HR Magazine 57 (April 2012): 36–37.

24 John Helyar and Douglas MacMillan, “In Tech, Poaching Is the Sincerest Form of Flattery,” Bloomberg Businessweek (March 7, 2011): 17–18.

25 Rebecca Knight, “When the Competition Is Trying to Poach Your Top Employee,” Harvard Business Review online (September 29, 2015). Accessed February 3, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

26 Ibid. 27 “Technology Talent Poaching to Get More

Aggressive in 2011,” Channel Insider (March 3, 2011): 1.

28 Michael A. Tucker, “Don’t Say Goodbye,” HR Magazine 56 (August 2011): 71–73.

29 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Job Openings and Labor Turnover–December 2016” (USDL 17-0179, February 7, 2017). Accessed February 14, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

30 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “The Employ- ment Situation–January 2017” (USDL 17-0141, February 3, 2017). Accessed February 14, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

31 Ibid. 32 “Careers for Veterans,” General Electric

Careers Web site. Accessed February 14, 2017, at www.ge.com/careers/culture/us-veterans.

33 “Starbucks Hiring Efforts for Military, Youth and Refugees,” Starbucks’ New Room online (January 31, 2017). Accessed February 14, 2017, at https://news.starbucks.com/news/ starbucks-hiring-initiatives.

34 “Careers for Veterans,” AT&T Careers Web site. Accessed February 14, 2017, at http://att.jobs/ doing-great-things/military.

35 “Veterans in the Workplace,” U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation (November 2016). Accessed May 25, 2017, at www.uschamber- foundation.org.

36 Vanessa Fuhrmans, “Hiring Veterans Is Easy, Keeping Them Is Hard,” The Wall Street Journal online (March 29, 2017). Accessed May 25, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

37 Agency Group 09, “America Supports You: Group Helps Troops, Families Find Jobs,” FDCH Regulatory Intelligence Database (January 30, 2008): Department of Defense, 703-695-0192.

38 Eric Krell, “Criminal Background,” HR Maga- zine 57 (February 2012): 45–54.

39 National Institute of Justice, Research on Re- Entry and Employment, April 3, 2013. Accessed January 15, 2014, at www.nij.gov.

40 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commis- sion, “Arrest and Conviction Records as a Bar- rier to Employment,” (July 26, 2011). Written Statement for Amy Solomon. Accessed Febru- ary 18, 2014, at www.eeoc.gov.

41 Michelle Natividad Rodriguez and Beth Avery, “Ban the Box: U.S. Cities, Counties, and States Adopt Fair Hiring Policies,” National Employ- ment Law Project (February 1, 2017). Accessed February 14, 2017, at www.nelp.org/publica- tion/ban-the-box-fair-chance-hiring-state-and- local-guide/.

42 Roy Mauer, “Ban-the-Box Movement Goes Viral,” Society for Human Resource Manage- ment online. Accessed February 14, 2017, at www.shrm.org/resourcesandtools/hr-topics/ risk-management/pages/ban-the-box-movement- viral.aspx.

43 David Farkas, “Employee Search,” Chain Leader 13 (June 2008): 44–45.

44 Roseanne Harper, “CSA Offers Second Chance,” Supermarket News 57 (September 14, 2009): 30.

45 Michelle V. Rafter, “Goin’ Mobile In,” Work- force Management 90 (February 2011): 26–28.

46 Nicole Fallon Taylor, “Hiring in the Digital Age: What’s Next for Recruiting?” Business

News Daily online (January 11, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.businessnewsdaily. com/6975-future-of-recruiting.html.

47 Abha Bhattarai, “Facebook Wants to Help You Find a Job—Even If You’re Not Looking for One,” The Washington Post online (February 16, 2017). Accessed February 17, 2017, at www. washingtonpost.com.

48 CareerBuilder.com, “About Us.” Accessed February 17, 2017, at www.careerbuilder.com/ share/AboutUs/.

49 Jack Constine, “Facebook’s New Job Open- ing Posts Poach Business from LinkedIn,” TechCrunch Web site. Accessed February 17, 2017, at https://techcrunch.com/2017/02/15/ facebook-jobs/.

50 Glassdoor.com, “About Us.” Accessed Febru- ary 17, 2017, at www.glassdoor.com/about/ index_input.htm.

51 LinkedIn.com, “About LinkedIn.” Accessed February 17, 2017, at https://press.linkedin.com/ about-linkedin.

52 Marci Reynolds, “Twitter: The Newest Job Board?” Accessed February 15, 2017, at www. job-hunt.org/social-networking/twitter-job- board.shtml.

53 “How Disney and 5 Other Top Employers Use Twitter to Recruit,” The Under Cover Recruiter Web site. Accessed February 5, 2017, at http:// theundercoverrecruiter.com/how-disney-and- 5-other-top-employers-use-twitter-to-recruit/.

54 “AllianceQ Fortune 500 Company Recruiting: A Different Recruiting Model.” (July 13, 2011). Accessed May 20, 2014 at http://jobsearch. about.com/od/jobsdatabases/a/allianceq.htm.

55 “This Résumé Pool Is Deepening Fast,” Busi- nessWeek (July 13, 2009): 72.

56 Deborah Silver, “Niche Sites Gain Monster- Sized Following,” Workforce Management 90 (March 2011): 10–11.

57 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. (2005). Work- ers on Flexible and Shift Schedules, May 2004. USDL: 05-1198. Accessed January 19, 2014, at www.bls.gov.

58 U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Contingent Workforce: Size, Characteristics, Earnings, and Benefits,” Report: GAO-15-168R (April 20, 2015). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.gao.gov/assets/670/669766.pdf.

59 Robert J. Grossman, “Strategic Temptations,” HR Magazine 57 (March 2012): 24–31.

60 Daniel N. Janich, “Without Proper Planning, Contingent Workers Pose Serious Legal Risks to Employer Benefit Plans,” Employee Benefit Plan Review 66 (July 2011): 8–11.

61 Irwin Speizer, “An On-Demand Workforce,” Workforce Management 88 (October 19, 2009): 45–49.

62 “Temporary Workforce Stronger Than Ever,” T + D 65 (May 2011): 21.

63 U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Contingent Workforce: Size, Characteristics, Earnings, and Benefits,” Report: GAO-15-168R (April 20, 2015). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.gao.gov/assets/670/669766.pdf.

64 Joshua Jamerson, “Super Bowl Ad to Kick Off Hiring Spree,” The Wall Street Journal online (January 31, 2017). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

65 Chris McCarthy, “The Art of Headhunting,” Accountancy 147 (June 2011): 60.

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66 Lin Grensing-Pophal, “Executive Search,” Credit Union Management 35 (January 2012): 32–35.

67 Philip S. Moore, “Seniors Flood Older Worker Fair,” Inside Tucson Business 14 (March 3, 2005): 15–17.

68 “Vets Descend on Washington for Career Fair and Expo,” Agency Group 09, FDCH Regula- tory Intelligence Database (January 19, 2012).

69 Alison Damast, “Virtual Internships in Ris- ing Demand,” BusinessWeek.com (January 19, 2012): 2.

70 “Employers Are Being Creative with Perks & Pay for Internships,” HR Focus 87 (March 2010): 9.

71 National Associate for Colleges and Employ- ers, Paid Interns/Co-ops See Greater Offer

Rates and Salary Offers Than Their Unpaid Classmates (press release, March 23, 2016). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.naceweb. org/s03232016/paid-unpaid-interns-offer-rates- salary-offers.aspx.

72 Rita Pyrillis, “Companies, Again, Are Giving It the Old College Try,” Workforce Management 90 (February 2011): 16–17.

73 National Association of Colleges and Employ- ers, Percentage of Employers Planning to Offer Signing Bonuses Climbs for Class of 2016 (Feb- ruary 10, 2016). Accessed February 20, 2017, at www.naceweb.org/s02102016/signing-bonuses- for-class-of-2016.aspx.

74 Dennis Carey and Matt Smith, “How Compa- nies Are Using Simulations, Competitions, and Analytics to Hire,” Harvard Business Review

online (April 22, 2016). Accessed February 3, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

75 Lisa V. Gillespie, “Climbing the Corporate Lattice?” Employee Benefit News 26 (January 2012): 17–18.

76 George Anders, “HP Thinks Its Talent Strategy: Promote More, Go Outside Less,” Forbes (May 23, 2013). Accessed January 15, 2014, at www. forbes.com.

77 Suzanne Lucas, “I Keep Losing Out to Job Candidates,” CBS News MoneyWatch (August 16, 2013). Accessed February 2, 2014, at www. cbsnews.com.

78 Aditya Pande, “How to Make Onshoring Work,” Harvard Business Review 89 (March 2011): 30.

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146

6.1 Explain employee selection and environmental factors that affect the selection process.

6.2 Explain the importance of preliminary screening as well as reviewing applications and résumés.

6.3 Describe the use of tests in the selection process.

6

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Selection

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

6.4 Explain the use of the employment interview.

6.5 Describe the use of pre-employment screening and background checks.

6.6 Explain the selection decision and the metrics for evaluating recruitment/ selection effectiveness.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 6 Warm-Up.

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147

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: Selection and Environmental Factors Affecting the Selection Process Selection is the process of choosing from a group of applicants the individual best suited for a position and the organization (optimal types and levels of human capital). Properly matching people with jobs and the organization is the goal of the selection process. If individuals are over- qualified, underqualified, or for any reason do not fit either the job or the organization’s culture, they will be ineffective and probably leave the firm, voluntarily or otherwise. There are many ways to improve productivity, but none is more powerful than making the right hiring decision. A firm that selects high-quality employees reaps substantial benefits, which recur every year the employee is on the payroll. On the other hand, poor selection decisions can cause irreparable damage. A bad hire can negatively affect the morale of the entire staff, especially in a position where teamwork is critical.

Many companies would rather go short and work overtime than hire one bad apple. If a firm hires many bad apples, it cannot be successful for long even if it has perfect plans, a sound organizational structure, and finely tuned control systems. Competent people must be available to ensure the attainment of organizational goals. Today, with many firms having access to the same technology, people make the real difference.

The Selection Process Companies make selection decisions to determine whether individuals who were identified through the recruitment process will be offered employment. Figure 6-1 illustrates a generalized selection process, but it may vary from company to company and according to the type of job being filled. This process typically begins with preliminary screening. Next, applicants complete

6.1 Explain employee selection and environmental factors that affect the selection process.

selection Process of choosing from a group of applicants the individual best suited for a particular position and the organization.

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148 PART 2 • STAFFING

the firm’s application for employment or provide a résumé. Then they progress through a series of selection tests, one or more employment interviews, and pre-employment screening, includ- ing background and reference checks. The hiring manager then offers the successful applicant a job, subject to successful completion of a medical examination. Notice that an applicant may be rejected or opt out at any time during the selection process. To a point, the more screening tools used to assess an applicant, the greater the chance of making a good selection decision. A good selection decision results in either one of two outcomes. First, job candidates who fail to meet the standard for employment are not offered employment. Second, job candidates who do meet the standard for employment are offered employment.

The Environment of Selection A standardized selection process followed consistently would greatly simplify the selection pro- cess. However, circumstances may require making exceptions. The following sections describe environmental factors that affect the selection process.

OTHER HR FUNCTIONS The selection process affects, and is affected by, virtually every other HR function. For example, if the compensation package is inferior to those provided by competitors, hiring the best-qualified applicants will be difficult or impossible to achieve. The same situation applies if the firm’s safety and health record is substandard or if the firm has a reputation for providing minimal training. Certainly, if marginal workers are hired, additional training will be needed to get them qualified.

LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS Legal matters play a significant role in HR management because of EEOC legislation, executive orders, and court decisions. Although the basic purpose of selection is to determine candidates’ eligibility for employment, it is also essential for organizations to maintain non-discriminatory practices. The guiding principles in determining what information to get from an applicant are: Why am I asking this question and why do I want to know this information? If the information is job-related, usually asking for the information is appropriate. We will take up some of the particulars of legal matters later in the chapter after we examine selection testing.

FIGURE 6-1 Selection Process

EXTERNAl ENVIRoNMENT

INTERNAl ENVIRoNMENT

Preliminary Screening

Review of Applications and Résumés

Selection Tests

Employment Interviews

R e je

cte d

A p

p lica

n t

Selection Decision

Pre-Employment Screening:

Background and Reference

Checks

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CHAPTER 6 • SElECTIoN 149

SPEED OF DECISION MAKING The time available to make the selection decision can also have a major effect on the selection process. Conditions also can impact the needed speed of decision making. Suppose, for instance, that the only two quality-control inspectors on a production line just had a fight and both resigned, and the firm cannot operate until the positions are filled. In this situation, speed is crucial, and a few phone calls, two brief interviews, and a prayer may constitute the entire selection procedure. On the other hand, conducting a national search to select a CEO may take months or even a year. In bureaucracies, it is common for the selection process to take a considerable amount of time.

ORGANIZATIONAL HIERARCHY Organizations usually take different approaches to filling positions at varying levels. For instance, consider the differences in hiring a CEO versus filling a clerical position. Extensive background investigations and multiple interviews would most likely apply for the executive position. On the other hand, an applicant for a clerical position would probably take a word-processing test and perhaps have a short employment interview.

APPLICANT POOL The number of qualified applicants recruited for a particular job makes up the applicant pool. The process can be truly selective only if there are several qualified applicants. Yet, only one or two applicants with the required skills may be available, and companies report a shortage of skilled individuals available for employment, particularly in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields.1 The expansion and contraction of the labor market also affects the size of the applicant pool. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the total number of job openings in May 2017 was 5.7 million,2 with nearly 7 million unemployed workers.3

TYPE OF ORGANIZATION The type of organization employing individuals, such as private, governmental, or not-for-profit, can also affect the selection process. Most private-sector businesses are heavily profit oriented. Prospective employees who can help achieve profit goals are the preferred candidates. Consideration of the total individual, including job-related personality factors, is involved in the selection of employees for this sector.

Government civil service systems typically identify qualified applicants through competitive examinations. Often a manager may select only the top three applicants for a position. Rules such as this one may result in overlooking a strong candidate.

Individuals considered for positions in not-for-profit organizations (e.g., the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, YMCA, or YWCA) confront still a different situation. The salary level in these organizations may not be competitive with those of private and governmental organizations.4 Therefore, a person who fills one of these positions must be not only qualified but also dedicated to this type of work.

PROBATIONARY PERIOD Many firms use a probationary or introductory period that permits them to evaluate an employee’s ability based on established performance. The purpose of a probationary period is to establish the suitability of a new employee for the position and to resolve any issues there might be in the new employee’s performance over the first three months or so. This practice may be either a substitute for certain phases of the selection process or a check on the validity of the process. The rationale is that if an individual can successfully perform the job during the probationary period, the process does not require other selection tools. From a legal viewpoint, the use of a probationary period in the selection process is certainly job-related.

Even in unionized firms, the labor–management agreement typically does not protect a new employee until after a certain probationary period. This period is typically from 60 to 90 days. During that time, an employee can be terminated with little or no justification. On the other hand, firing a marginal employee in a union environment may prove to be quite difficult after the probationary period.

ORGANIZATIONAL FIT Organizational fit refers to management’s perception of the degree to which the prospective employee will fit in with the firm’s culture or value system. There are numerous reasons that a new hire does not work out but none is as important as cultural fit. Knowledge and skill are important but the most lasting component of the employment relationship is cultural match.5 The commonly heard statement, “the chemistry was just not right” may describe a poor fit. This was supported by Steven Rice, executive vice president of HR Juniper Networks Inc., who said, “If the customer sees you as team-oriented and such and the customer service guy

applicant pool Number of qualified applicants recruited for a particular job.

organizational fit Management’s perception of the degree to which the prospective employee will fit in with the firm’s culture or value system.

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is different, you have a problem. You have to hire against the brand.6 A poor fit harms organizational effectiveness, hurts morale, and drains creativity.” Nina Brody, head of talent for Take Care Health Systems in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, said, “If we have 10 qualified clinical people in front of us, we want to know who will fit best with our culture, because that’s where we tend to experience trouble, not necessarily with someone’s ability to do the job technically.”7

Using fit as a criterion may raise legal and diversity questions, and perhaps this explains the low profile of its use.8 Lauren Rivera, an associate professor of management and organizations at Northwestern University, warns, “In many organizations, it is this catchall for, ‘I don’t feel right about this person.”’9 In the process, a company possibly compromises diversity goals. Neverthe- less, there is considerable evidence that managers use fit in making selection decisions and that it is not a minor consideration. Complicating the situation further is the fact that the same employee may be a poor fit with one firm and a perfect fit with another. Applicants also should consider organizational fit when assessing whether to accept a job offer.

SELECTION TECHNOLOGY The application of technology to employee selection practices has increased dramatically in recent years.10 Two tools that are invaluable to the selection process in the technology boom that is sweeping HR today are applicant-tracking systems (ATSs) and candidate relationship management (CRM). “ATS and CRM are really your backbone,” says Jim McCoy, vice-president of solutions for ManpowerGroup Solutions, the RPO software division of Milwaukee-based ManpowerGroup.11

An ATS, also called a talent management system, is a software application designed to help an enterprise select employees more efficiently. Current ATSs permit human resource and line man- agers to oversee the entire selection process. They often involve screening résumés and spotting qualified candidates, conducting personality and skills tests, and handling background investiga- tions. They allow companies to compile job applications electronically, to gather candidates more quickly, set up interviews, and get new hires on board. An ATS can be used to post job openings on a corporate Web site or job board and generate interview requests to potential candidates by e-mail. Other features may include individual applicant tracking, requisition tracking, automated résumé ranking, customized input forms, prescreening questions and response tracking, and mul- tilingual capabilities. ATSs are used extensively to help ease the labor-intensive process of sorting résumés from online job boards. In most cases, the goal is not merely to reduce costs but also to speed up the hiring process and find people who fit an organization’s success profile. ATSs are not flawless. Some ATSs sort out résumés exclusively based on formatting, insufficient use of keywords, and other criteria that are unrelated to an applicant’s qualifications.12 Fortunately, ATSs continue to be enhanced to make recruiters more efficient and extend sourcing into the global market. Developers of ATSs are now focusing efforts on developing quality-of-hire metrics.

Helene Richter, director of talent operations for Liz Claiborne, New York City, said, “People choose an applicant-tracking tool to streamline process. But you have EEO and compliance issues that you need to streamline as well.” The applicant-tracking function does both.13 Hiring informa- tion is tracked to comply with Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs.

The purpose of candidate relationship management (CRM) is to help manage potential and actual applicants in an organized manner. It is useful in managing the relationship between the company and prospective applicants.14 CRM can be used to send job postings and job descriptions to job boards and other sites. It has the capability to search the Internet, including social media sites, for résumés, and then adds and catalogues them and other information to the database. CRM systems can link with other ATSs and any Web site. CRM systems permit candidates to get to know more about the company and allow the company to get to know more about the candidate.

CRM systems are used to communicate with those who have applied or appear qualified for jobs with the firm. Once the CRM system identifies an individual who might be appropriate for an open position, the system can e-mail that person asking them to respond. Gerry Crispin, a principal at the consulting firm CareerXroads in Kendall Park, New Jersey, said, “Candidate relationship management systems can provide information that helps a candidate recognize himself as an employee of the company, creating an ‘I’d fit there’ attitude.”15

The Internet has created a situation in which many résumés can be received. Often, candidates send an application and never get a reply. Whether because of arrogance, ignorance, or incompe- tence, companies sometime fail to inform applicants after they have been rejected. To overcome this situation, organizations use CRM software to help job seekers have good experiences with

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the companies’ Web sites and to bolster efforts to build talent pools. Companies truly dedicated to CRM do not stop after sending an auto reply; they also let them know when the position has been filled.

Preliminary Screening and Review of Applications and Résumés The selection process often begins with preliminary screening. The basic purpose of preliminary screening is to eliminate those who obviously do not meet the position’s requirements. Prelimi- nary screening may take the form of reviewing for obviously unqualified applicants with a brief interview, test, or only a review of the application or résumé for clear mismatches. In addition to eliminating clearly unqualified job applicants quickly, preliminary screening may produce other positive benefits for the firm. It is possible that the position for which the applicant applied is not the only one available. If the person doing the screening knows about other vacancies in the firm, he or she may be able to steer the prospective employee to another position. For instance, the assessor may decide that although an applicant is not a good fit for the applications-engineering job, she is an excellent candidate for an internal research-and-development position. This type of assessment not only builds goodwill for the firm but also can maximize recruitment and selection effectiveness.

At times, a short test may be administered to determine if a person should proceed in the selection process. For example, in the recruitment of sales representatives, a brief sales aptitude test may be given to determine if the applicant has a talent or interest in sales. Then, the company knows that the people they interview are already more likely to succeed in the role. By conducting a quick assessment before scheduling interviews, the company is more likely to hire people who will add value to the organization.

Having the candidate complete an application for employment is another early step in the selection process. This step may either precede or follow preliminary screening. The employer then evaluates it to see whether there is an apparent match between the individual and the position. A well-designed and properly used application form can be helpful because essential informa- tion is included and presented in a standardized format. Completion of an application may not be initially required for many management and professional positions. In these cases, a résumé may suffice. A complete application usually is obtained later—often for job candidates who have successfully passed the initial screening process and for whom the company intends to further consider for employment.

The specific information requested on an application form may vary from firm to firm, and even by job type within an organization. An application typically contains sections for name, address, telephone number, e-mail address, military service, education, and work history. Man- agers compare the information contained in a completed application to the job description to determine whether a potential match exists between the firm’s requirements and the applicant’s qualifications. As you might expect, this judgment is often difficult.

Several pre-printed statements are usually included on the application form. First, by signing the form, the applicant certifies that information provided on the form is accurate and true. Employers will likely reject candidates who make false claims for key issues. Candidates may be terminated after employment if they made any representation or statement that was not accu- rate or if they did not disclose matters that might significantly prejudice the employer’s hiring decision. Second, when not prohibited by state law, the form should also state that a condition of employment is employment-at-will. Employment-at-will is a policy that either the employer or the employee can terminate employment at any time for any reason. Finally, the form should contain a statement whereby the candidate gives permission to have his or her background and references checked.

An employment application form must reflect not only the firm’s informational needs but also legal requirements. Potentially discriminatory questions inquiring about such factors as gender, race, age, convictions, national origin, citizenship, birthplace, dependents, disabilities, religion, color, and marital status should be avoided.

Applicants sometimes deliberately leave out information on the application that may pres- ent them in a negative light. To combat this problem, many employers are requiring applicants

6.2 Explain the importance of preliminary screening as well as reviewing applications and résumés.

preliminary screening In employee selection, a review to eliminate those who obviously do not meet the position’s requirements.

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to use online applications that force a person to complete a required field before the application is successfully submitted. In fact, corporations have increasingly declined to accept a printed résumé, and applicants are directed to company Web sites for employment application and résumé submission.

A résumé is a goal-directed summary of a person’s experience, education, and training devel- oped for use in the selection process. Professional and managerial applicants often begin the selection process by submitting a résumé. Figure 6-2 illustrates a traditional résumé. Note that the résumé includes the career objective for the specific position the applicant is seeking. Some human resources (HR) professionals suggest that a professional summary at the beginning of the résumé is more useful to the recruiter. However, young job seekers with little work experience may be best served by using a career objective statement. The remainder of the résumé should be directed toward showing how a person has the skills and competencies necessary to accomplish the position identified in the career objective statement.16 Using keywords from the job description or employment ad will help an applicant get past the résumé-scanning programs many firms use.17 Only information necessary to show a relationship to the objective should be included. The all- important concept of relevancy is crucial in selling the applicant to the company. A new trend that has evolved over time is that the content of the résumé is more important than fitting an applicant’s entire career onto one page. Historically, a one-page résumé was the standard that applicants were told to use.

résumé Goal-directed summary of a person’s experience, education, and training developed for use in the selection process.

FIGURE 6-2 Example of a Traditional Résumé Marianne Sanders

Objective: To obtain an entry level position in accounting.

January 2017 – Present Accounting Internship with McElroy, Quirk, & Burch, APC (Accounting firm) Lake Charles, LA

January 2015 – December 2012 McNeese State University Student worker (Financial Aid) Lake Charles, LA

• Assist full-time worker with o�ce work • Help students complete financial aid question/forms

Beta Gamma Sigma Honor Fraternity Beta Alpha Psi Honor Fraternity Pi Beta Lambda – Business Professionals President Honor Role (Six times)

Hard working, goal-oriented, conscientious, positive thinker, work well in teams, excellent people skills

Accounting, physical fitness, traveling, tennis

Microsoft Office 2010, Excel, Word, PowerPoint, Windows 7, Drop O�ce 2010, Social Networking (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn)

Education: Southern State University Bachelor of Science, Accounting, Expected date of graduation, May 2019 GPA: 3.5/4.0

Honors:

Interests:

Software Proficiency:

Personal:

Experience:

Current Address 1234 Main Street Anytown, MA 02176 Phone: 555.555.5151 E-mail: [email protected]

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In developing a résumé, the sender should be careful not to misrepresent the truth. An appli- cant who has three credit hours to meet graduation requirements has not graduated, and there- fore, does not possess the degree for which she or he is studying. Certainly, the résumé should be designed to present the applicant in a positive light, but without exaggeration. Regarding job history, dates of employment should be accurate. It goes without saying that résumés should not contain grammar and spelling errors. The résumé should show that the applicant understands the job and how his or her work history can assist in accomplishing the job.

When sending a résumé via the Internet, applicants should realize that most large companies now use applicant-tracking systems. These systems assume a certain résumé style. Résumés that deviate from the assumed style are ignored or deleted. These systems scan résumés into databases, search the databases on command, and rank the résumés according to the number of resulting “hits” they receive. At times, such searches use multiple (10–20) criteria. Some systems f lag résumés that appear to misrepresent the truth, present misleading information, or are in other ways suspicious.

The use of applicant-tracking systems coupled with the downsizing of HR departments has resulted in a situation in which many résumés are never seen by human eyes once they enter the system. Therefore, a job applicant should make his or her résumé as computer/scanner friendly as possible so that its life in a database will be extended. Even if you are a perfect match for the job, your résumé may never get to someone who could decipher your potential value. To make the process work, a keyword résumé style should be used. Keywords refer to those words or phrases that are used to search databases for résumés that match. A keyword résumé contains an adequate description of the job seeker’s characteristics and industry-specific experience presented in keyword terms to accommodate the computer search process. The keywords are often job titles, skills, or areas of expertise related to the position. Keywords tend to be more of the noun or noun- phrase type (Office 2016, Windows 10, Biochemist) as opposed to power action verbs often found in traditional résumés (developed, coordinated, empowered, organized). Another way to look at keyword phrases is to think in terms of job duties. The terms employers search for most often are problem solving and decision making, oral and written communication, customer service or reten- tion, performance and productivity improvement, leadership, technology, team building, project management, and bilingual.

Applicants should study the job posting and industry ads to get an overview of the phrases that keep reappearing. Detailing an individual’s job duties may require a change in mind-set away from traditional résumé writing. Recruiters should be mindful that applicants have got- ten smarter in résumé preparation and at times include words that hardly resemble their past accomplishment.

Selection Tests Tests are essential components of employee selection. There are many considerations, including advantages and disadvantages, property of tests, validation approaches, and test type. We also conclude this section with a review of important legal matters that pertain to selection tests.

keywords Words or phrases that are used to search databases for résumés that match.

keyword résumé Résumé that contains an adequate description of the job seeker’s characteristics and industry- specific experience presented in keyword terms to accommodate the computer search process.

6.3 Describe the use of tests in the selection process.

☛ F Y I The use of selection tests is on the rise. In 2015, 57 percent of large U.S. employers used selection testing, up from 26 percent in 2013.18

Preliminary Considerations Recognizing the shortcomings of other selection tools, many firms have added selection tests to their hiring process. These tests rate factors such as aptitude, personality, abilities, and motivation of potential employees, allowing managers to choose candidates according to how they will fit into the open positions and corporate culture. However, tests alone are not enough to make a sufficient evaluation of a candidate because they are not fool proof. Firms need to use them in conjunction with other selection tools such as reference checks and interviews.

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Advantages and Disadvantages of Selection Tests Research indicates that customized tests can be a reliable and accurate means to predict on-the-job performance.19 Organizations use tests to identify attitudes and job-related skills that interviews cannot recognize. Also, the cost of employment testing is small in comparison to ultimate hiring costs. They are a more efficient way to get at information that results in better-qualified people being hired.

Job performance depends on an individual’s ability and motivation to do the work. Selection tests may accurately predict an applicant’s ability to perform the job, the can do, but they are less successful in indicating the extent to which the individual will be motivated to perform it, the will do. The most successful employees are likely to have two things in common: they identify with their firm’s goals, and they are highly motivated. For one reason or another, some employees with high potential never seem to reach it. The factors related to success on the job are so numer- ous and complex that selection may always be more of an art than a science.

Employers should be aware that tests might be unintentionally discriminatory. Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) former director Charles E. James Sr. said, “Testing is a ‘necessary business tool’ to help employers select qualified candidates. Hiring the wrong person puts your company at risk. The key is to make the test fit the job you’re using it for.”20 When a test excludes a protected class at a significant rate, the test should be avoided unless the employer can show that the test is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. Using selection tests carries with it legal liabilities of two types. One is a law- suit from rejected applicants who claim a test was not job related or that it unfairly discriminated against a protected group, violating federal employment laws. The second potential legal problem relates to negligent hiring lawsuits filed by victims of employee misbehavior or incompetence (a topic discussed later in this chapter).

Test anxiety can also be a problem. Applicants often become quite anxious when confronting yet another hurdle that might eliminate them from consideration. The test administrator’s reassur- ing manner and a well-organized testing operation should serve to reduce this threat. Although a great deal of anxiety is detrimental to test performance, a slight degree is helpful.

The problems of hiring unqualified or less-qualified candidates and rejecting qualified candi- dates will continue regardless of the procedures followed. Well-developed tests administered by competent professionals help organizations minimize such consequences.

Characteristics of Properly Designed Selection Tests Properly designed selection tests are standardized, objective, based on sound norms, reliable, and of utmost importance, valid. These concepts and the application of these concepts are discussed next.

STANDARDIZATION The uniformity of the procedures and conditions related to administering tests is standardization. To compare the performance of several applicants taking the same test, it is necessary for all to take the same test under conditions that are as identical as possible. For example, the content of instructions provided and the time allowed must be the same, and the physical environment must be similar. If one person takes a test in a room with jackhammers operating just outside and another takes it in a more tranquil environment, differences in test results are likely.

OBJECTIVITY In testing, objectivity occurs when everyone scoring a test obtains the same results. Multiple-choice and true/false tests are objective. The person taking the test either chooses the correct answer or does not.

NORMS A frame of reference for comparing an applicant’s performance with that of others is a norm. Specifically, a norm reflects the distribution of many scores obtained by people similar to the applicant being tested. A score by itself is insignificant. It becomes meaningful only when compared with other applicants’ scores. To better understand this important concept, think about one of the standardized tests required for college admission such as the ACT or SAT. For example, scores of 400 and 700 have limited usefulness. At best, they indicate that the applicant who scored 700 answered more questions correctly than the applicant who scored 400, and this conclusion might favor admission for the higher score. However, a comparison of raw test scores does not inform college admissions committees about how well these individuals performed relative to

standardization Uniformity of the procedures and conditions related to administering tests.

objectivity Condition that is achieved when everyone scoring a given test obtains the same results.

norm Frame of reference for comparing an applicant’s performance with that of others.

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everyone who took this test. A more useful metric is to convert the raw scores into percentile rankings. For example, a percentile ranking of 90 tells admissions committees that the raw scores earned by those in this percentile ranking exceed 90 percent of the scores of other test takers.

When enough employees are performing the same or similar work, employers can standardize their own tests. Typically, this is not the case, and a national norm for a test is used. A prospective employee takes the test, the score obtained is compared to the norm, and the significance of the test score is then determined.

RELIABILITY The extent to which a selection test provides consistent results is reliability. For example, if a person were to take the same test of personality several times and received highly similar scores (consistent results), this personality test would be judged to be reliable. Reliability data reveal the degree of confidence placed in a test. For example, if a person scores 130 on a certain test of conscientiousness this week and retakes the test next week and scores 80, the test reliability would likely be low. Tests with low reliability have implications for validity. For example, if a test has low reliability, its validity (accuracy) as a predictor (for example, of job performance) will also be low. If after scoring 130 the first week a person scores another 130 the second week, the test is reliable. However, the existence of reliability alone does not guarantee the test’s validity.

Reliability is expressed as a correlation coefficient. A correlation coefficient shows the strength and direction of the relationship between two variables, for example, personality mea- sured at time 1 (say, on February 1, 2018) and the same personality test measured later, time 2 (say, on December 1, 2018). Correlation coefficients can range between - 1.0 and + 1.0. In the cases of - 1.0 and + 1.0, there is evidence of perfect correlation. For example, when the correlation coef- ficient is + 1.0, for every 1-unit change in personality test score at time 1, we see a corresponding 1-unit increase in personality score at time 2. When the correlation coefficient is - 1.0, for every 1-unit change in personality score assessed at time 1, we see a corresponding 1-unit decrease in personality measured at time 2. When the correlation coefficient equals 0, then there is no cor- respondence between changes in scores on the personality test at times 1 and 2. In the selection context, we hope to obtain correlations equal to + 1.0. Realistically, correlation coefficients fall somewhere between these scores, which allows us to talk about the reliability of the test in terms of degrees of reliability. The goal is to obtain positive correlations that are as close to 1.0 as pos- sible. Correlations equal to zero or thereabouts have no utility as a selection tool. That is, such tests do not aid in the selection process.

VALIDITY The basic requirement for a selection test is that it be valid. Validity is the extent to which a test measures what it claims to measure. If a test cannot indicate ability to perform the job, it has no value. And if used, it will result in poor hiring decisions and a potential legal liability for the employer.

Title VII requires the test to work without having an adverse impact on minorities, females, and individuals with backgrounds or characteristics protected under the law. If using the test results in an adverse impact on certain members of protected groups, the firm must have a compel- ling reason why it is used; that is, it must validate the test. Employers are not required to validate their selection tests automatically.

Test Validation Approaches The Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures established three approaches to vali- dating selection tests: criterion-related validity, content validity, and construct validity.

CRITERION-RELATED VALIDITY A test validation method that compares the scores on selection tests to some aspect of job performance determined, for example, by performance appraisal is criterion-related validity. Performance measures might include quantity and quality of work, turnover, and absenteeism. A close relationship between the score on the test and job performance suggests that the test is valid. The two basic forms of criterion-related validity are concurrent and predictive validity.

Concurrent validity is determined when the firm obtains test scores and the criterion data at essentially the same time. For instance, it administers the test to all currently employed tele- marketers and compares the results with company records that contain current information about each employee’s job performance. If the test can identify productive and less productive workers,

reliability Extent to which a selection test provides consistent results.

validity Extent to which a test measures what it claims to measure.

criterion-related validity Test validation method that compares the scores on selection tests to some aspect of job performance determined, for example, by performance appraisal.

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one could say that it is valid. A potential problem in using this validation procedure results from changes that may have occurred within the work group. For example, firms may have fired the less productive workers, and promoted the more productive employees out of the group.

Predictive validity involves administering a test and later obtaining the criterion information. For instance, all applicants take the test but the firm uses other selection criteria, not the test results, to make the selection decision. After observing employee performance over time, the company analyzes test results to determine whether they differentiate the successful and less successful employees.

CONTENT VALIDITY A test validation method whereby a person performs certain tasks that are required by the job or completes a paper-and-pencil test that measures relevant job knowledge is content validity. Although statistical concepts are not involved, many practitioners believe that content validity provides a sensible approach to validating a selection test. This form of validation requires thorough job analysis and carefully prepared job descriptions. An example of the use of content validity is giving a word-processing test to an applicant whose primary job would be word processing. Court decisions have supported the concept of content validity.

CONSTRUCT VALIDITY A test validation method that determines whether a test measures certain constructs, or traits, that job analysis finds to be important in performing a job is construct validity. For instance, a sales representative position may require the applicant to be extroverted and assertive. The goal in construct validation studies is to observe correlations between the test under study and a grouping of related variables such as positive correlations between extroversion and sales performance as well as between assertiveness and sales performance. It is equally important to establish statistically insignificant correlations between the measures of constructs for which there is no reason to expect a relationship—for instance, birth month and job performance. Construct validity in and of itself is not a primary method for validating selection tests.

Employment Tests Individuals differ in characteristics related to job performance. Broadly, tests fall into one of two categories: aptitude tests and achievement tests. Aptitude tests measure how well a person can learn or acquire skills or abilities. Achievement tests assess a person’s current knowledge and skills. These differences, which are measurable, relate to cognitive abilities, psychomotor abilities, job knowledge, work samples, and personality.

COGNITIVE ABILITY TESTS Tests that determine general reasoning ability, memory, vocabulary, verbal fluency, and numerical ability are cognitive ability tests.

Cognitive ability tests are a form of IQ tests and these measure the capacity of an individual to learn at higher levels of difficulty (for example, learning to write at the fifth-grade level and learning to write at the college level). As the content of jobs becomes broader and more fluid, employees must be able to adapt quickly to job changes and rapid technological advances. It is likely that testing will be necessary to match the broader range of characteristics required for successful performance of these flexible jobs. The NFL uses the Wonderlic Personnel Test, which is designed to measure cognitive ability, the applicant’s natural aptitude for learning new information.

PSYCHOMOTOR ABILITIES TESTS Psychomotor abilities refer to the capacity to connect brain or cognitive functions and functions of the body such as physical strength. An example of a psychomotor ability is reaction time, which is defined as, “the ability to quickly respond (with the hand, finger, or foot) to a signal (sound, light, picture) when it appears.”21

PERSONALITY TESTS According to the American Psychological Association, “personality refers to individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving. The study of personality focuses on two broad areas: one is understanding individual differences in particular personality characteristics, such as sociability or irritability. The other is understanding how the various parts of a person come together as a whole.”22 Self-reported measures of temperaments, or dispositions, are personality tests. For example, health-care social workers, “Job requires being reliable, responsible, and dependable, and fulfilling obligations.”23 Personality tests, unlike ability tests, are not time constrained and do not measure specific problem-solving skills. These

content validity Test validation method whereby a person performs certain tasks that are required by the job or completes a paper-and-pencil test that measures relevant job knowledge.

construct validity Test validation method that determines whether a test measures certain constructs, or traits, that job analysis finds to be important in performing a job.

aptitude tests A test of how well a person can learn or acquire skills or abilities.

achievement tests A test of current knowledge and skills.

cognitive ability tests Tests that determine general reasoning ability, memory, vocabulary, verbal fluency, and numerical ability.

personality Individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving.

personality tests Self-reported measures of traits, temperaments, or dispositions.

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questionnaires tap into areas, such as leadership, teamwork, and personal assertiveness. Vacation planning company Delaware North found that they hired better fitting employees after including personality testing in their selection process. The company used personality testing to identify individuals who demonstrated traits such as friendliness, curiosity, and ability to multitask.24 With careful planning, a properly designed personality profile can measure and match the appropriate personality dimensions to the requirements of the job.

Most large companies now use psychometric testing to identify future managers. These indi- viduals are being assessed for their ability to bring about long-term change and their ability to handle day-to-day management tasks. Generally, fire departments and law enforcement agencies use the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) test, which consists of 567 state- ments that help to determine a subject’s degree of paranoia, depression, mania, or anxiety. In police departments, the MMPI is used to detect the inclination toward substance abuse. These types of tests are typically used in the early stage of the selection process.

Integrity tests represent a specific type of personality attribute. Integrity refers to, “being honest and ethical.”25 Employers have used them to measure candidates’ attitudes toward theft, dishonesty, absenteeism, violence, drug use, alcohol abuse, and other counterproductive behav- iors. Retail stores, nuclear plants, law enforcement agencies, and child-care facilities typically use integrity tests. Research has shown that integrity tests have high validity for predicting undesirable behaviors at work.26 Because the polygraph test (discussed later) has been effectively banned in the private sector as a hiring tool, integrity tests have often been used to detect dishonesty in candidates.

As the previous discussion indicates, many companies consider a variety of factors before offering employment. Rudi’s Organic Bakery discusses the elements and dimensions they look for in potential employees. In addition to looking at a candidate’s “ability” (mental horsepower to understand and process information and find solutions to problems), which comes from experi- ence, they are also looking at “personality” (how motivated a person is and how they will interact as part of a team). Besides “technical fit”—a background in food science—the company is looking for how an individual will fit into the company’s organizational culture and wants individuals who are reliable, positive, team players, and proactive. The following Watch It video describes Rudi Bakery’s employee selection considerations.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Rudi’s Bakery: Ability and Testing and respond to questions.

CH2M Hill is another example of a company that considers both ability and personality in their selection process. An employee from CH2M Hill, an industry-leading and global project delivery engineering firm, discusses key indicators that they look for in potential employees— from ability (technical fit) to personality (organizational fit) and why these indicators are essential to finding the right candidate for the job.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled CH2M Hill’s and respond to questions.

JOB-KNOWLEDGE TESTS Tests that measure a candidate’s knowledge of the duties of the job for which he or she is applying are job-knowledge tests. For example, lawyers must have knowledge of law and government, which is defined as, “Knowledge of laws, legal codes, court procedures, precedents, government regulations, executive orders, agency rules, and the democratic political process.”27 Such tests are commercially available but individual firms may also design them specifically for any job, based on data derived from job analysis.

job-knowledge tests Tests designed to measure a candidate’s knowledge of the duties of the job for which he or she is applying.

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JOB PERFORMANCE AND WORK-SAMPLES Tests that require an applicant to perform a task or set of tasks representative of the job are work-sample tests. For positions that require heavy use of spreadsheets, having the applicant construct a sample spreadsheet, with data the firm provides, will be useful in assessing a required ability. Electrical and electronic equipment assemblers, “position, align, or adjust work pieces or electrical parts to facilitate wiring or assembly.”28 Such tests, by their nature, are job related. A real test of validity, in the opinion of some experts, should be a performance assessment: take individuals to a job and give them the opportunity to perform it.

An assessment center is a selection approach that requires individuals to perform activities similar to those they might encounter in an actual job. The assessment center is one of the most powerful tools for assessing managerial talent because it is designed to determine if they will be effective in performing a specific job. Research has established the validity of the assessment center approach to predicting performance. Many of the top companies in the United States have set up assessment centers where they can first interview potential employees and then evaluate them in real work situations. It provides an excellent way to determine an individual’s capabilities to perform an entry-level management job.

In an assessment center, candidates perform several exercises that simulate the tasks they will carry out in the job they seek. Typical assessment center tests include having applicants complete in-basket exercises and perform in management games, leaderless discussion groups, mock interviews, and other simulations. The traditional in-basket exercise has received a techno- logical boost by replacing the paper memos with e-mail messages, faxes, tweets, or voice mail. Assessment centers measure candidates’ skills in prioritizing, delegating, and decision making. The professional assessors who evaluate the candidates’ performance usually observe them away from the workplace over a certain period, perhaps a single day. The assessors selected are typically experienced managers who may not only evaluate performance but also participate in the exercises.

An advantage of the assessment center approach is the increased reliability and validity of the information provided. Research has shown that the in-basket exercise, a typical component of assessment centers, is a good predictor of management performance. Its validity provides an alternative to paper-and-pencil tests.

Unique Forms of Testing GENETIC TESTING Tests performed to identify predisposition to inherited diseases, including cancer, heart disease, neurological disorders, and congenital diseases are genetic tests. DNA- testing companies can tell us our potential risk for breast cancer, cystic fibrosis, Alzheimer’s disease, and other common chronic conditions. Scientists have assembled the entire set of genetic instructions for building a human body, and world leaders likened this achievement to putting a human being on the moon. This brings both hope and concerns to the forefront in employment testing.

Genetic tests may predict a predisposition to having a disease. However, such tests cannot tell whether a person is certain to get the disease or when he or she would become ill. In addition, everyone has some disposition to genetic disease and a genetic predisposition is different from a preexisting condition.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has issued guidelines stating that healthy individuals with a genetic predisposition to a disease, and thus perceived as disabled, are protected by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The Genetic Information Nondiscrimina- tion Act (GINA) of 2008 is designed to prohibit the improper use of genetic information in health insurance and employment. Recently the EEOC issued a final regulation, which generally bars employers, unions, employment agencies, and joint apprenticeship programs from requesting, requiring, or purchasing an individual’s genetic information and making employment decisions based on such data.29

GRAPHOANALYSIS (HANDWRITING ANALYSIS) The use of handwriting analysis as a selection factor is graphoanalysis. Many in the United States view handwriting analysis in the same context as psychic readings or astrology. In Europe, however, many employers use graphoanalysis to help screen and place job applicants. It is not unusual for European companies to have full-time handwriting analysts on staff. With graphoanalysis, every stroke of handwriting has a meaning that can be understood only within the context of the other strokes present in the handwriting.

work-sample tests Tests that require an applicant to perform a task or set of tasks representative of the job.

assessment center Selection technique that requires individuals to perform activities similar to those they might encounter in an actual job.

HR Web Wisdom

Genetic Testing http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/

A guide to understanding genetic conditions.

genetic tests Tests given to identify predisposition to inherited diseases, including cancer, heart disease, neurological disorders, and congenital diseases.

graphoanalysis Use of handwriting analysis as a selection factor.

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Although no definitive study exists on the extent of its use in the United States, according to some handwriting experts, graphoanalysis is becoming more common. A basic reason for the reluctance of U.S. employers to use this approach appears to be a concern over the ability to validate such tests. And there is little research demonstrating the effectiveness of graphology in employee selection. This and the worry about possible legal action seem to make many U.S. employers wary of the process.

POLYGRAPH TESTS For many years, another means used to verify background information was the polygraph, or lie-detector test. One purpose of the polygraph was to confirm or refute the information contained in a candidate’s application. However, the Employee Polygraph Protection Act of 1988 prohibited the use of polygraph tests in the private sector. However, the act does not apply to governmental employers, and there are other limited exceptions. Even here, the technology has been found to be flawed. Effective techniques for beating lie detectors, which only measure stress and anxiety, have been developed and are available for use.

The act permits use of polygraph tests in the private sector in screening certain prospec- tive employees for security service firms and pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, and dispensers. The act also permits, with certain restrictions, polygraph testing of certain employees reasonably suspected of involvement in a workplace incident, such as theft or embezzlement. Persons who take polygraph tests have a few specific rights. For example, they have the right to a written notice before testing, the right to refuse or discontinue a test, and the right not to have test results disclosed to unauthorized persons.

Legal Considerations Earlier, we recognized the law an important environmental factor in the selection process. Now that we have studied selection testing, we will address some important examples of EEOC litiga- tion and settlements illustrating basic EEO principles that focus on testing:30

$ Title VII and Cognitive Ability Tests: Less Discriminatory Alternative for Cognitive Ability Test with Disparate Impact. EEOC v. Ford Motor Co. and United Automobile Work- ers of America, involved a court-approved settlement agreement on behalf of a nationwide class of African Americans who were rejected for an apprenticeship program after taking a cognitive ability test known as the Apprenticeship Training Selection System (ATSS). The ATSS was a written cognitive ability test that measured verbal, numerical, and spatial rea- soning to evaluate mechanical aptitude. Although it had been validated in 1991, the ATSS continued to have a statistically significant disparate impact by excluding African Ameri- can applicants. Less discriminatory selection procedures were subsequently developed that would have served Ford’s needs, but Ford did not modify its procedures. In the settlement agreement, Ford agreed to replace the ATSS with a selection procedure, to be designed by a jointly-selected industrial psychologist, that would predict job success and reduce adverse impact. Additionally, Ford paid $8.55 million in monetary relief.

$ Title VII and Physical Strength Tests: Strength test must be job-related and consistent with business necessity if it disproportionately excludes women. In EEOC v. Dial Corp., women were disproportionately rejected for entry-level production jobs because of a strength test. The test had a significant adverse impact on women; prior to the use of the test, 46 percent of hires were women, and after use of the test, only 15 percent of hires were women. Dial defended the test by noting that it looked like the job and use of the test had resulted in fewer injuries to hired workers. The EEOC established through expert testimony, however, that the test was considerably more difficult than the job and that the reduction in injuries occurred two years before the test was implemented, most likely because of improved training and better job rotation procedures. On appeal, the Eighth Circuit upheld the trial court’s finding that Dial’s use of the test violated Title VII under the disparate impact theory of discrimination. See www.eeoc.gov/press/11-20-06.html.

$ ADA and Test Accommodation: Employer must provide reasonable accommodation on pre-employment test for hourly, unskilled manufacturing jobs. The EEOC settled EEOC v. Daimler Chrysler Corp., a case brought on behalf of applicants with learning disabili- ties who needed reading accommodations during a pre-employment test given for hourly unskilled manufacturing jobs. The resulting settlement agreement provided monetary relief for 12 identified individuals and the opportunity to take the hiring test with the assistance

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of a reader. The settlement agreement also required that the employer provide a reasonable accommodation on this test to each applicant who requested a reader and provided docu- mentation establishing an ADA disability. The accommodation consisted of either a reader for all instructions and all written parts of the test, or an audiotape providing the same information.

Employment Interview The employment interview is a goal-oriented conversation in which the interviewer and appli- cant exchange information. Traditionally, interviews have not been valid predictors of success on the job.31 In fact, courts are often suspicious of hiring decisions based primarily on interview results because of their inherently subjective nature. For more than 500 years, Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa has confounded viewers who try to read her expression. Like the Mona Lisa, every job applicant presents a mysterious façade. Nevertheless, interviews continue to be the primary method companies use to evaluate applicants. The employment interview is especially important because the applicants who reach this stage are the survivors. They have endured preliminary screening, had their applications reviewed, and scored satisfactorily on selection tests. At this point, the candidates appear to be qualified, at least on paper. Every seasoned man- ager knows, however, that appearances can be quite misleading. Additional information is needed to indicate whether the individual is willing to work and can adapt to that organization (organizational fit).

Interview Planning Interview planning is essential to effective employment interviews. A primary consideration should be the speed in which the process occurs. Many studies have demonstrated that the top candidates for nearly any job are hired and off the job market within anywhere from 1 to 10 days.

The physical location of the interview should be both pleasant and private, providing for a minimum of interruptions. The interviewer should possess a pleasant personality, empathy, and the ability to listen and communicate effectively. He or she should become familiar with the applicant’s qualifications by reviewing the data collected from other selection tools. As prepara- tion for the interview, the interviewer should develop a job profile based on the job description/ specification. After listing job requirements, it is helpful to have an interview checklist that involves comparing an applicant’s application and résumé with the job description. Also, ques- tions should be prepared that relate to the qualities needed in a person being sought. In doing so, it is helpful to ask for examples of past job-related applicant behavior.

employment interview Goal-oriented conversation in which an interviewer and an applicant exchange information.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

The First Interview As Henry Davidson heads to the conference

room for his first interview, he starts to think about what he is going to ask the candidate. As a new Human Resources Assistant at Samson Corporation, Henry is conducting interviews of candidates being consid- ered for an administrative assistant position. Although he has a degree in HR and has worked in the field for more than a year now, this is his first opportunity to conduct an interview. His manager directed him to the company’s interview training program, but Henry believes that an interview is just a conversation so he didn’t bother with the training. He has great interpersonal skills and can’t wait to tell the candidate all

about the company. As Henry enters the room and shakes the can- didate’s hand, he realizes that he forgot to bring her résumé and the job description he had sitting on his desk. He’s not worried though, as he is good at engaging people in conversation and should do just fine without them. After greeting the candidate, Henry spends the first 20 minutes telling her about the job and the company. Once finished he asks her to, “tell me about yourself.” The first thing Henry learns is that she attended the same college as he did, so he knows she is a good can- didate. Although he is unsure on what to ask next, he doesn’t think it matters as he already knows he is going to recommend her for the job.

6.4 Explain the use of the employment interview.

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Content of the Interview Both the interviewer and the candidate have agendas for the interview. After establishing rapport with the applicant, the interviewer seeks additional job-related information to complement data provided by other selection tools. The interview permits clarification of certain points, the uncov- ering of additional information, and the elaboration of data needed to make a sound selection decision. The interviewer should provide information about the company, the job, and expectations of the candidate. Other areas typically included in the interview are discussed next.

OCCUPATIONAL EXPERIENCE The interviewer will explore the candidate’s knowledge, skills, abilities, and willingness to handle responsibility. Although successful performance in one job does not guarantee success in another, it does provide an indication of the person’s ability and willingness to work.

ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT In the absence of significant work experience, a person’s academic record takes on greater importance. Managers should, however, consider grade point average in the light of other factors. For example, involvement in work, extracurricular activities, or other responsibilities may have affected an applicant’s academic performance.

INTERPERSONAL SKILLS An individual may possess important technical skills significant to accomplishing a job. However, if the person cannot work well with others, chances for success are slim. This is especially true in today’s world, with the increasing use of teams. The biggest mistake an interviewee can make is thinking that firms hire people only for their technical skills. Indeed, more and more companies are competing for people who have both technical skills and “soft” skills such as the ability to get along with coworkers. For instance, a CEO of a financial investment company said, “You can’t just be the general of your own army.”32

PERSONAL QUALITIES Personal qualities normally observed during the interview include physical appearance, speaking ability, vocabulary, poise, adaptability, assertiveness, leadership ability, and cooperative spirit. As with all selection criteria, these attributes should be considered only if they are relevant to job performance.

Candidate’s Role and Expectations Although the interviewer will provide information about the company, it is still important for candidates to do their homework, including studying the job description and checking the Internet (including the firm’s Web site) before the interview. Employees are also conducting background checks on companies to check out potential employers on such things as financial stability, whether the company would be a good place to work, and career opportunities. Most company sites include information tailored to job seekers. They often provide a history of the company and a description of its products and customers. Applicants can often find out the culture of the firm by doing a thorough search of the Internet and the news media. WetFeet.com provides insightful profiles of companies, careers, and industries to guide job seekers toward finding the right career, the right industry, the right company, and the right job for them. A person applying for a manage- ment position, especially, should have a thorough understanding of the firm’s business priorities, its strengths and weaknesses, and its major competitors. Applicants should consider how they would address some of the issues facing the company. They need to be able to show how their experiences can help in addressing these issues.

Recruiters need to remember that interviewees also have objectives for the interview. One might be to determine what the firm is willing to pay as a starting salary. Job seekers have other goals that may include the following:

$ To be listened to and understood $ To have ample opportunity to present their qualifications $ To be treated fairly and with respect $ To gather information about the job and the company $ To make an informed decision concerning the desirability of the job

Candidates can learn what interviewing skills they need to improve by undergoing a mock interview or two. Having a colleague or friend interview them and afterward critically review- ing their own responses can be beneficial. This mock interview allows candidates to analyze the

HR Web Wisdom www.wetfeet.com/

Helps equip job seekers with the advice, research, and inspiration needed to plan and achieve a suc- cessful career

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strengths and interests that they would bring to a job. The process would also help them prioritize the points they want to make in the real interview.

General Types of Interviews Types of interviews are often broadly classified as unstructured, structured, behavioral, and situ- ational. A discussion of the differences follows.

UNSTRUCTURED INTERVIEW An unstructured interview is one in which the interviewer asks probing, open-ended questions. This type of interview is comprehensive, and the interviewer encourages the applicant to do much of the talking. Questions such as, “What professional accomplishments are you most proud of and why?”; “What is your greatest professional strength, and how have you used it to overcome a challenge in your career?”; and “What specifically attracted you to our organization?” might be asked. The unstructured interview is often more time consuming than the structured interview and results in obtaining different information from different candidates. This adds to the potential legal woes of organizations using this approach. Compounding the problem is the likelihood of discussing ill-advised, potentially discriminatory information. Applicants who are being encouraged to pour their heart out may volunteer facts that the interviewer does not need or want to know. Unsuccessful applicants subjected to this interviewing approach may later claim in court that the reason for their failure to get the job was the employer’s use of this information.

STRUCTURED INTERVIEW In the structured interview, the interviewer asks each applicant for a job the same series of job-related questions. Although interviews have historically been very poor predictors of job success, use of structured interviews increases reliability and accuracy by reducing the subjectivity and inconsistency of unstructured interviews. With the structured interview, questions are developed and asked in the same order of all applicants applying for the vacant position. This makes it easier to compare candidates fairly. There is a better chance that the best candidate will be selected using this technique. Often benchmark answers are determined beforehand.

Certainly, job-knowledge questions would be asked to probe the applicant’s job-related knowledge; these questions may relate to basic educational skills or complex scientific or mana- gerial skills. Worker requirements questions might also be asked of each applicant to determine the applicant’s willingness to conform to the requirements of the job. For example, the interviewer may ask whether the applicant is willing to perform repetitive work or move to another city. Deter- mining what questions to ask involves a thorough analysis of the position including a detailed analysis of the job description. Questions related to major job requirements in the job description make the process extremely job related.

BEHAVIORAL INTERVIEW Traditional interviewing has a reputation of being a poor predictor of job success. Because of the low success rate of traditional interviews, the behavioral interview is often used. The behavioral interview is a structured interview in which applicants are asked to relate actual incidents from their past relevant to the target job. Once used exclusively for senior executive positions, behavioral interviewing is now a popular technique for lower-level positions also. The assumption is that past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior.

Behavioral interviewers look for three main things: a description of a challenging situation, what the candidate did about it, and measurable results. In the behavioral interview, the questions are selected for their relevance to job success in a job. Questions are formed from the behaviors by asking applicants how they performed in the described situation. For example, when probing to determine how creative an applicant is, the candidate might be requested to, “Describe an experi- ence when you were faced with a new problem and how you handled it.”33 Or if seeking to deter- mine the applicant’s enthusiasm, the request might be, “Relate a scenario during which you were responsible for motivating others.” Behavioral interviewers ask each candidate the same open-ended questions, and then score responses on a scale. Interviewing is based on the principle that what you did previously in your life is a good predictor of what you will do in the future. Interviewees are asked to give an example of a situation when they faced a dilemma, a problem, or a situation.

In behavioral interviews, candidates may unwittingly reveal information about their attitudes, intelligence, and truthfulness. Arrogance, lack of cooperation with team members, and anger can all spill out during such an interview. Although some candidates may think the interview is all about technical skills, it is as much about them as a person as anything.

unstructured interview Interview in which the job applicant is asked probing, open- ended questions.

structured interview Interview in which the interviewer asks each applicant for a particular job the same series of job-related questions.

behavioral interview Structured interview in which applicants are asked to relate actual incidents from their past relevant to the target job.

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Questions asked during behavioral interviews are legally safe because they are job related. Equally important, because both questions and answers are related to successful job performance, they are more accurate in predicting whether applicants will be successful in the job they are hired to perform. It answers the one question both the hiring manager and the candidate want to know most: Is this a good fit?

SITUATIONAL INTERVIEW Whereas the behavioral interview focuses on how an individual handled circumstances in the past, the situational interview creates hypothetical situations candidates would likely encounter on the job and asks how they would handle them. For example, the question might be asked, “One of your employees has experienced a significant decline in productivity. How would you handle it?” As another example, “You completely disagree with the way that your boss has told you to handle a project. What would you do?” Basically, a situational interview provides a preview of the “how” a candidate might handle situations in a simulated work environment. Most often, interviewers are looking to hear the best course of action. However, some companies have expanded their expectations by seeking “practical intelligence,” which refers to knowing how to avoid pitfalls and potential predicaments.34

Methods of Interviewing Organizations conduct interviews in several ways. The level of the open position and the appro- priate labor market determine the most fitting approach. A discussion of these methods follows.

ONE-ON-ONE INTERVIEW In a typical employment interview, the applicant meets one-on-one with an interviewer. As the interview may be a highly emotional occasion for the applicant, meeting alone with the interviewer is often less threatening. This method provides a better opportunity for an effective exchange of information to take place.

GROUP INTERVIEW In a group interview, several applicants interact in the presence of one or more company representatives. This approach, although not mutually exclusive of other interview types, may provide useful insights into the candidates’ interpersonal competence as they engage in a group discussion. Another advantage of this technique is that it saves time for busy professionals and executives.

BOARD (OR PANEL) INTERVIEW In a board interview, several of the firm’s representatives interview a candidate at the same time. Companies use the board interview to gain multiple viewpoints because there are many cross-functional workplace relationships in business these days. Once the interview is complete, the board members pool their evaluation of the candidate. Most Ph.D. recipients are quite familiar with the board interview because they were required to defend their dissertation as their professors asked questions. At times, some candidates claimed that professors having opposing views were deliberately placed on the board and the candidate had to tiptoe through the session, hoping not to offend anyone.

MULTIPLE INTERVIEWS At times, applicants are interviewed by peers, subordinates, and potential superiors. This approach permits the firm to get a more encompassing view of the candidate. It also gives the candidate a chance to learn more about the company from a variety of perspectives. The result of this type of interview is a stronger, more cohesive team that shares the company’s culture and helps ensure organizational fit.

STRESS INTERVIEW What would you do if you were in an interview that was going quite well and all at once the interviewer said, “I think your answer is totally inadequate: it doesn’t deal with my concerns at all, can’t you do better than that?” You may not realize it, but you have just been exposed to a stress interview. In the stress interview, the interviewer intentionally creates anxiety.

Most interviewers strive to minimize stress for the candidate. However, in the stress inter- view, the interviewer deliberately makes the candidate uncomfortable by asking blunt and often discourteous questions. The purpose is to determine the applicant’s tolerance for stress that may accompany the job. Knowledge of this factor may be important if the job requires the ability to deal with a high level of stress.

Amazon.com interviewers have been known to ask job candidates to guess how many gas stations there are in the United States or to estimate the cost to wash all of Seattle’s windows. Google interviewers have also been known to ask, “You are shrunk to the height of a nickel and

situational interview Gives interviewers better insight into how candidates would perform in the work environment by creating hypothetical situations candidates would be likely to encounter on the job and asking them how they would handle them.

group interview Meeting in which several job applicants interact in the presence of one or more company representatives.

board interview An interview approach in which several of the firm’s representatives interview a candidate at the same time.

stress interview Form of interview in which the interviewer intentionally creates anxiety.

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your mass is proportionally reduced so as to maintain your original density. You are then thrown into an empty glass blender. The blades will start moving in 60 seconds. What do you do?”35 The answer is not as important as your logic in approaching an answer.

Stress interviews are not new. The late Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, father of the U.S. Navy’s nuclear submarine program, was known to offer interviewees a chair that had one or two legs shorter than the other. The candidates’ problems were compounded by the chair’s polished seat. The admiral once stated that, “they had to maintain their wits about them as they answered ques- tions while sliding off the chair.”36

REALISTIC JOB PREVIEW A realistic job preview (RJP) conveys both positive and negative job information to the applicant in an unbiased manner. Many applicants have unrealistic expectations about the prospective job they are seeking. They may have been told the exciting part of the job, but the less glamorous areas are not mentioned. RJPs have become increasingly common in certain fields because of the high turnover rates and the constant cost of replacing those individuals who do not work out.37 For instance, when conducting an interview in the fast-food restaurant industry, an applicant might be taken behind the counter to see what it is like to work in a hot, greasy environment, smell food cooking all day, and scramble around other bodies in close quarters. An inaccurate perception may occur when interviewers paint false, rosy pictures of the job and the company. This practice leads to mismatches of people and positions. What compounds the problem is when candidates exaggerate their own qualifications. The RJP should typically be done early in the selection process, and before a job offer is made.

An RJP conveys information about tasks the person would perform and the behavior required to fit into the culture of the organization. This approach helps applicants develop a more accurate perception of the job and the firm. Employers who give detailed RJPs get two results: fewer employees accept the job offer, and applicants who do accept the offer are less likely to leave the firm. Given an RJP, some candidates will take themselves out of the selection process, minimizing the number of unqualified candidates. Another reason to use RJPs is the benefit a firm receives from being an up-front, ethical employer.

As the previous discussion indicates, interviews play a crucial role in the employee selec- tion process. Zipcar is a car-sharing business. When interviewing, they recommend not speaking negatively about past employers, being genuine but respectful, showing interest in the organiza- tion with which you are interviewing, and being prepared. The interview process helps Zipcar to identify prospective employees who are passionate about the brand, professional, courteous, and presentable. The following Watch It video describes Zipcar’s perspectives on employee selection.

realistic job preview (RJP) Method of conveying both positive and negative job information to an applicant in an unbiased manner.

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Zipcar: Interviewing Candidates and respond to questions.

Potential Interviewing Problems Potential interviewing problems that can threaten the success of employment interviews are dis- cussed next.

INAPPROPRIATE QUESTIONS Many questions are clearly hiring standards to avoid. When they are asked, the responses generated create a legal liability for the employer. The most basic interviewing rule is this: Ask only job-related questions. The definition of a test in the Uniform Guidelines includes, “physical, education, and work experience requirements informal or casual interviews.” Because the interview is a test, if adverse impact is shown, it is subject to the same validity requirements as any other step in the selection process. For unstructured interviews, this constraint presents special difficulties. Historically, the interview has been more vulnerable to charges of discrimination than any other tool used in the selection process.

The ADA also provides a warning for interviewers. Interviewers should inquire about the need for reasonable accommodations in only a few situations. For example, the topic is appropriate if the applicant is in a wheelchair or has an obvious disability that will require accommodation. Also, the applicant may voluntarily disclose a disability or even ask for some reasonable accom- modation. Otherwise, employers should refrain from broaching the subject. Instead, interviewers

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should frame questions in terms of whether applicants can perform the essential functions of the jobs for which they are applying.

PERMITTING NON–JOB-RELATED INFORMATION If a candidate begins volunteering personal information that is not job-related, the interviewer should steer the conversation back on course. The interviewer might do well to begin the interview by tactfully stating something like, “This selection decision will be based strictly on qualifications. Let’s not discuss topics such as religion, social activities, national origin, gender, or family situations. We are definitely interested in you, personally. However, these factors are not job related and will not be considered in our decision.” This enables better decisions to be made while decreasing the likelihood of discrimination charges.38

To elicit needed information in any type of interview, the interviewer must create a climate that encourages the applicant to speak freely. However, the conversation should not become too casual. Whereas engaging in friendly chitchat with candidates might be pleasant, in our litigious society, it may be the most dangerous thing an interviewer can do. Asking a woman a question about her children that has nothing to do with the job would not be appropriate.

INTERVIEWER BIAS Often a problem that may arise in an interview is interviewer bias where the interviewer makes assumptions about the interviewee that may be incorrect and lets these biases influence the selection decision. Various forms of biases will next be discussed.

Stereotyping bias occurs when the interviewer assumes that the applicant has certain traits because they are members of a certain class. The classic case of stereotyping bias is when an interviewer assumes that a woman applicant cannot meet a certain physical requirement such as being able to lift 50 pounds.

A positive halo bias occurs when the interviewer generalizes one positive first impression feature of the candidate. Such might be the case with discovering that you have something in com- mon with the applicant. The opposite could occur with negative horn bias where the interviewer’s first negative impression of the candidate generalizes throughout the interview.

Contrast errors may occur when, for example, an interviewer meets with several poorly qualified applicants and then confronts a mediocre candidate. By comparison, the last applicant may appear to be better qualified than he or she is. The opposite can also occur. Suppose that a clearly outstanding candidate is followed by a very good candidate. The second candidate may not be considered even if the first candidate turns down the job offer.

Premature judgment bias suggests that interviewers often make a judgment about candidates in the first few minutes of the interview.39 Apparently, these interviewers believe that they can determine immediately whether a candidate will be successful or not. When this occurs, a great deal of potentially valuable information is not considered. Even if an interviewer spent a week with an applicant, the sample of behavior might be too small to judge the candidate’s qualifications properly. In addition, the candidate’s behavior during an interview is seldom typical or natural, thereby making a quick judgment difficult.

Interview illusion bias is closely related to premature judgment but not the same. Managers may say something to the effect, “Give me just five minutes with an applicant and I can tell if they will be successful with our company.” Their belief in their interview ability was likely exagger- ated. Recruiters are often overconfident about their ability to judge others in general. Interviewers should be careful about placing excessive weight on interviews and thinking, “I just feel good about this applicant” when making the hiring decision.40

INTERVIEWER DOMINATION In successful interviews, relevant information must flow both ways. Sometimes, interviewers begin the interview by telling candidates what they are looking for, and then are excited to hear candidates parrot back their own words. Other interviewers are delighted to talk through virtually the entire interview, either to take pride in their organization’s accomplishments or to express frustrations over their own difficulties. After dominating the meeting for an hour or so, these interviewers feel good about the candidate. Therefore, interviewers must learn to be good listeners as well as suppliers of information.

LACK OF TRAINING Anyone who has ever conducted an interview realizes that it is much more than carrying on a conversation with another person. The interviewer is attempting to gain insight into how the applicant answers job-related questions. There should be a reason for asking each question. For instance, suppose the applicant is told, “Tell me about yourself.” A trained

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interviewer asks this question to determine whether the applicant’s life experiences qualify the applicant for the job, not the fact that he or she had a little dog named Moe as a child. Interviewers should be trained to have a job-related purpose for asking each question. When the cost of making poor selection decisions is considered, the expense of training employees in interviewing skills can be easily justified.

NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION Body language is the nonverbal communication method in which physical actions such as motions, gestures, and facial expressions convey thoughts and emotions. The interviewer is attempting to view the nonverbal signals from the applicant. Applicants are also reading the nonverbal signals of the interviewer. Therefore, interviewers should make a conscious effort to view themselves as applicants do to avoid sending inappropriate or unintended nonverbal signals.

Concluding the Interview When the interviewer has obtained the necessary information and answered the applicant’s ques- tions, he or she should conclude the interview. Management must then determine whether the candidate is suitable for the open position and organization. If the conclusion is positive, the process continues; if there appears to be no match, the candidate is no longer considered. Also in concluding the interview, the interviewer should tell the applicant that he or she will be notified of the selection decision shortly. Keeping this promise helps maintain a positive relationship with the applicant. The Watch It video illustrates the process from the application and planning phases through concluding the interview.

Watch It 4 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Applying and Interviewing for Employment and respond to questions.

☛ F Y I A survey of companies revealed that pre-employment screening is conducted to ensure:

$ Higher quality of hires: 74% $ Government compliance: 56% $ Enhanced company reputation: 49% $ Greater safety and security: 43% $ Increased company reputation: 37%41

Pre-Employment Screening and Background Checks Pre-employment screening and background investigations are more important than ever before because of the rise in negligent hiring (to be discussed later in this chapter) lawsuits, recent cor- porate scandals, and national security concerns. At this stage of the selection process, an applicant has normally completed an application form or submitted a résumé, taken the necessary selection tests, and undergone an employment interview. On the surface the candidate looks qualified. It is now time to determine the accuracy of the information submitted or to determine whether vital information was not submitted.

Background investigations involve obtaining data from various sources, including previous employers, business associates, credit bureaus, government agencies, and academic institutions. Fin- gerprinting also is becoming a more common part of checks, especially for companies that employ workers in charge of securing a worksite—for example, airports, the financial services industry, hospitals, schools, the gaming industry, and hazardous materials services. Reasons for leaving jobs or gaps in employment may be cleverly disguised to present a work history that does not provide an accurate or complete picture. Letters of recommendation from companies that are no longer in existence and differences between their résumé and completed job application may raise a red flag.

6.5 Describe the use of pre-employment screening and background checks.

HR Web Wisdom

HR Advice for Small Businesses http://hradviceforsmallbusi- nesses.blogspot.com/

Offers advice for the small busi- ness owner to hire, manage, and retain employees.

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The intensity of background investigations depends on the nature of the open position’s tasks and its relationship to customers or clients. To be legally safe, employers should ask applicants to sign a liability waiver permitting a background investigation. The waiver is typically a statement on the application form that releases former employers, business references, and others from liabil- ity. It also authorizes checks of court records and the verification of the applicant’s educational history and other credentials.

Employment Eligibility Verification (Form I-9) The employment eligibility verification form I-9 must be filled out by U.S. job applicants, but it allows any number of documents to be used to demonstrate their legal right to work in the United States. Every employee hired since 1986 must have a completed Form I-9 on file. In an audit, federal immigration agents review the Form I-9 that employers are required to keep on file. The law provides for penalties from $100 to $1,000 for each incorrect or missing I-9. For example, Hartmann Studios, an event design and production company, was fined $605,250 for improper completion of I-9 forms. The total fine was based on a $700 rate for each violation.42

An additional level of verification involves the use of E-Verify to check out new hires, and its use is required for federal contractors and subcontractors with contracts of $100,000 or more. Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court granted states the right to require employers to use the federal E-Verify system to check on the eligibility of employees to work in the United States. E-Verify is a Web-based system that lets employers check Social Security and visa numbers submitted by workers against government databases. The system is not checking for citizenship, but for eligi- bility to be lawfully employed in the United States. The E-Verify system is not flawless because a recent report found that 6 percent passed the E-Verify checks because they had used fraudulent or stolen identities.43

☛ F Y I According to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, more than 600,000 employers of all sizes use E-Verify.44

Continuous Background Investigation Background investigations are not just for pre-employment any more. Some employers are screen- ing their employees on an ongoing basis. In certain industries, such as banking and health care, employers are required by regulation to routinely research the criminal records of employees. People and events are ever-changing. For example, financial devastation, marital collapse, or a medical crisis can send a person with the cleanest record over the edge. It has been estimated that every year one or two of every 1,000 existing employees acquire a new criminal record. Because only a small percent of convictions lead to jail time, the employer may never know of a conviction unless there is an ongoing background investigation.

Background Investigation with Social Media An increasing number of employers are using social media to conduct background investigations. Employers use an applicant’s Facebook page, LinkedIn profile, and postings made on an industry blog to find out about individuals they are considering hiring. One study revealed that 4 in 10 organizations use social media or online searches to screen candidates.45 According to another study, more than 8 out of 10 employers say that a positive online reputation influences their hiring decisions at least to some extent, and nearly half say a strong online reputation influences their decisions to a great extent.46 Still, many companies have expressed concerns about using social media profiles to screen job candidates. In 2015, a study by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) revealed that 76 percent of surveyed organizations were concerned about legal risks, and 60 percent maintained that information from social media sites do not provide job-related information.47

Employers reported that they have found content on social networking sites that caused them not to hire the candidate. Some examples include posting provocative or inappropriate photo- graphs or information, posting content about alcohol or drug use, and posting negative comments

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about their previous employer, coworkers, or clients. Other information found on these sites sup- ported their decision to hire the candidate. For example, the profile provided a good feel for the candidate’s personality and fit within the organization, the profile supported candidate’s profes- sional qualifications, and other people posted good references about the candidate.

As the cost of background checking has dropped and technology has improved, background checking has entered new dating relationships. Prior to accepting an invitation for a date with a new person, that individual can be “checked out” to determine if what was said was fact or fic- tion. Apps are now available to conduct a background check before entering into any relationship. Through these new apps, one can quickly determine if a person is telling the truth about factors such as age, relatives, addresses, criminal history, bankruptcies, judgments, liens, aliases, and current contact information.

Remembering Hiring Standards to Avoid Some of the standards used in the background investigation have the potential to violate a hiring standard to avoid. A word of caution is advised in situations when an applicant acknowledges that he or she has been convicted of a crime. A major implication of the Griggs v. Duke Power Company Supreme Court case was that when HR management practices eliminate substantial numbers of minority or female applicants (prima facie evidence), the burden of proof is on the employer to show that the practice is job related. If a criminal record automatically eliminates a candidate that means that approximately 65 million people who have been convicted of felonies and misdemeanors may struggle to find employment.48 Some states and cities have done away with asking about criminal convictions on applications, and there is a push to do it also on the national level. Therefore, caution should be taken using criminal conviction as a hiring criterion if it cannot be shown to be job related.

The same rationale can be said for conducting credit checks. If a disproportionate number of members of a protected group are rejected through the use of the credit check, the company would need to validate its use. Certainly, if a company does a credit check on all applicants, it is difficult to say that the credit check is job related. Presently 11 states have laws on their books banning credit check uses, and other states are considering credit check proposals.

Congress created somewhat of an obstacle for employers when it amended the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). Employers’ obligations are triggered under the act when they use consumer reports that contain information about an individual’s personal and credit characteris- tics, character, general reputation, and lifestyle. To avoid legal problems, employers need to allow sufficient time between notifying an applicant or employee of a less than favorable consumer report and taking adverse action. If an unfavorable credit check surfaces, the potential employee should be given time to dispute and correct the errors.49 Making mistakes can prove costly to com- panies. In 2015, several companies—BMW, Calvin Klein, Chuck E. Cheese, Food Lion, Home Depot, and Whole Foods—paid exorbitant settlements ranging from $716,400 to $3 million.50

The EEOC has recently conducted hearings claiming there are employers that hire only indi- viduals who are presently employed.51 Paul C. Evans, a partner with law firm Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP in Philadelphia, said, “I do think the EEOC will look to see whether or not employers are de facto, even without an explicit policy, precluding or eliminating from consideration those who have been out of work for long periods of time.”52

Much of the social media content contains information regarding possible hiring standards to avoid. The typical Facebook page will reveal race, sex, age, ethnic background, and more by just looking at the pictures and profile. Religion, especially if it is a strong part of the member’s belief system, is often easy to detect. None of these factors should be considered in the selection process. However, information is usually available that is legal to consider. In fact, according to a survey by Microsoft Corporation, 7 out of 10 U.S. hiring managers reject candidates based on information they have posted online even though 90 percent of these managers are concerned that the information they find can be inaccurate and unreliable.53

Reference checks are validations from those who know the applicant that provide additional insight into the information furnished by the applicant and allow verification of its accuracy. They are a valuable source of information to supplement the background investigation. Applicants are often required to submit the names of several references who can provide additional information about them. A possible flaw with reference checking is that virtually everyone can name three or four individuals willing to make favorable statements about him or her. Even so, there is anecdotal

reference checks Validations from individuals who know the applicant that provide additional insight into the information furnished by the applicant and verification of its accuracy.

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evidence that personal references do not always provide favorable information. They may not necessarily be committed to shading the truth for the applicant.

A related problem in obtaining information from previous employers is their general reluc- tance to reveal such data and this trend continues to grow. In 2010, a SHRM poll on background investigations, 98 percent of respondents said their organizations would verify dates of employ- ment for current or former employees, 68 percent said they would not discuss work performance, and 82 percent said they would not discuss character or personality.54

There are two schools of thought about supplying information about former employees. One is, “Don’t tell them anything.” The other is, “Honesty is the best policy.” In the more conservative approach, the employer typically provides only basic data such as name, job title, and dates of employment. The honesty approach is based on the reality that facts honestly given or opinions honestly held constitute a solid legal defense. It is helpful to know why the person left that job. If the response differs from that given by the applicant, it is a red flag. Although protective laws regarding reference checking do exist, apparently, there is a wait-and-see attitude among some employers. It will likely take litigation and court rulings before employers fully understand, and have confidence in, the statutes.

Traditional reference checking has been heavily labor-intense. Automated reference checking (ARC) has been a boon in this area. With ARC, references are anonymous and more efficient and a more comprehensive report can be provided. ARC automates one of the last elements of recruit- ing that used to be heavily manual. Because it is confidential, people are more forthcoming. And because it is online, the process goes faster. Reference checking requires an e-mail link to the job candidate. It is the candidate, not the recruiter, who contacts references to fill out the question- naire. The system collects the surveys and prepares a report for the recruiter. Referencing is much faster, going from an average of 4 days to an average of 1.2 days. ARC can help reduce the legal risks for the company seeking the reference because the request comes from the candidate, not the organization. The company does not run the risk of a recruiter asking an inappropriate question, because the applicant has preapproved the questions.

Negligent hiring is the liability an employer incurs when it fails to conduct a reasonable investigation of an applicant’s background, and then assigns a potentially dangerous person to a position in which he or she can inflict harm. The typical negligent hiring case involves a deliberate inflicting of harm committed by an employee including fraud, assault, or battery. Reasonable investigation varies according to the nature of the job. The risk of harm to third parties, for example, requires a higher standard of care when hiring a taxi driver as opposed to a machinist. The taxi cab driver is alone and has control of his or her customer during the time the customer is in the car. California law has strengthened background check requirements that directly influence riding shar- ing services, such as Uber and Lyft. These companies are banned from employing drivers who are confirmed sex offenders or had a violent felony conviction at any time in their past. In addition, hiring drivers with misdemeanors, including domestic violence or driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol during the previous seven years, is prohibited.55 This would not be the case for the machinist. Employers who operate home-service businesses, day-care centers, and home health- care operations are particularly at risk, as are those with employees who drive company vehicles, visit customer locations, handle money, or work with children, the elderly, or the impaired.56 The primary consideration in negligent hiring is whether the risk of harm from a dangerous employee was reasonably foreseeable. Accusers will argue that employers knew, or should have known, about a hire’s potential threat to others.57 In one negligent hiring case, a hospital nursing assistant was hired without a background investigation and the medical center did not ask former employers why the worker had left. If it had, the medical center would have discovered that the worker had previ- ously sexually harassed, assaulted, and inappropriately touched female patients. Once hired, the worker was left alone in rooms with vulnerable female patients and sexually abused them.58

Selection Decision and Evaluating the Effectiveness of Selection Decisions At this point, the focus is on the manager who must take the most critical step of all: the actual hiring decision. If a firm is going to invest thousands of dollars to recruit, select, and train an employee, it is important for the manager to hire the most qualified available candidate, according

negligent hiring Liability a company incurs when it fails to conduct a reasonable investigation of an applicant’s background, and then assigns a potentially dangerous person to a position in which he or she can inflict harm.

6.6 Explain the selection decision and the metrics for evaluating recruitment/selection effectiveness.

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to the firm’s criteria. The final choice is made from among those still in the running after selection tests, interviews, background investigations, and reference checks have been evaluated. Usually, the person selected has qualifications that most closely conform to the requirements of the open position and the organization.

Making the Selection Decision The person who normally makes the final selection is the manager who will be responsible for the new employee’s performance. In making this decision, the manager will review results of the selection methods used. Everything will not likely be weighted the same. The question then becomes, “Which data are most predictive of job success?” For each firm or group of jobs, the optimal selection method may be different.

MEDICAL EXAMINATION The ADA does not prohibit pre-employment medical examinations. However, it does determine the point at which they may be administered during the selection process. The ADA explicitly states that all exams must be directly relevant to the job requirements and that a firm cannot order a medical exam until the applicant is offered employment. Typically, a job offer is contingent on the applicant’s passing this examination. The basic purpose of the medical examination is to determine whether an applicant is physically capable of performing the work. The Uniform Guidelines state that these examinations can be used to reject applicants only when the results show that job performance would be adversely affected.

At this stage, some companies may also require drug testing to determine whether applicants are using chemical substances or alcohol. There are a variety of reasons for choosing to test applicants for drug use. Primarily, the use of illegal drugs, which impairs judgment and psychomotor coordina- tion, and may create workplace hazards. Pre-empting drug-related accidents through systematic drug testing may reduce the cost to provide employees with disability insurance. In addition, health-care claims may be higher for drug users than for those who do not use illegal substances. Ultimately, employers bear the cost of higher health insurance premiums. Finally, wherever called for by indus- try standards or government regulation, drug testing help companies to maintain compliance.

NOTIFICATION OF CANDIDATES Management should notify both successful and unsuccessful candidates of selection decisions as soon as possible. This action is a matter of courtesy and good public relations. Any delay may also result in the firm losing a prime candidate because top prospects often have other employment options.

Employers may reject applicants at any time during the selection process. Most people can accept losing if they lose fairly. Problems occur when the selection process appears to be less than objective. It is therefore important for firms to develop and use rational selection tools. Time constraints prevent firms from spending much time explaining a decision to an unsuccessful can- didate. If the person rejected was an internal candidate, managers may visit or make a personal phone call to the rejected applicant. A rejection letter is a more likely method if the candidate was not an internal candidate. However, a letter with a personal touch may reduce the stigma of rejection and avoid the applicant’s having a negative feeling about the company. An impersonal letter is likely to have the opposite effect. The best an organization can do is to make selection decisions objectively. Hopefully, most unsuccessful individuals can, with time, accept the fact that they were not chosen.

Evaluating Selection Decisions There is, however, no one-size-fits-all metric that employers can adopt to achieve greater hiring efficiency. The metrics that best suit each company depends on a variety of factors, including its business goals. The recent recession heightened the need to have metrics regarding the productiv- ity of employees. When employee cost-cutting decisions must be made, it is important that the most productive employees are retained. One survey revealed that companies with best-in-class talent acquisition programs were most successful at measuring the following four performance criteria: time to hire, quality of hire, new-hire retention, and hiring managers’ overall satisfaction with the program.59 Possible metrics for evaluating the effectiveness of recruitment/selection are described next. Metrics for evaluating other functions are discussed at the appropriate time.

QUALITY OF HIRE Many recruiters believe that quality of hire is the most important metric to use in the selection process. Some possible measures to determine the quality of hire might be

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communication effectiveness, ability to motivate others, leadership ability, and cultural fit.60 Even though the question of how to measure quality of hire and set standards for new-hire performance is difficult to determine, it is an important decision that HR professionals are constantly striving to determine. Realistically, the answer depends on the system and the company involved. For quality of hire to be usable, one needs to have performance assessment for two or three years before the real capabilities of a new hire will be understood.

TIME REQUIRED TO HIRE The shorter the time to hire, the more efficient the HR department is in finding the replacement for the job. The top candidates for nearly any job are hired and off the job market within anywhere from 1 to 10 days. It then becomes crucial that the time required to hire be as low as possible while still ensuring quality of hire. Otherwise your best prospect will have already signed on to work for a competitor.

NEW-HIRE RETENTION It is important to measure new-hire retention because costs go up dramatically if a position must be filled again in a short period. New-hire retention is calculated by determining the percentage of the new hires that remain with the company at selected intervals, typically one or two years. If this situation is happening excessively, HR should analyze the selection process to determine if there are flaws in the system that cause new hires to terminate prematurely. Perhaps, as was mentioned previously, an RJP needs to be instituted.

HIRING MANAGER OVERALL SATISFACTION The manager is largely responsible for the success of his or her department. It is the quality of the employees in the workgroup that have a major impact on success of the department. A manager’s belief that employees being hired through the recruitment and selection system do not perform as well as expected casts doubt on the entire selection process. Some measure manager satisfaction based on the survey of hiring managers, compared to previous period. Other firms provide a rating scale for the manager to evaluate how a new hire is performing after the employee’s first 90 or 120 days.

TURNOVER RATE Turnover rate is the number of times on average that employees must be replaced during a year. For example, if a company has 200 employees and 200 workers had been hired during the year, a 100 percent turnover rate would be experienced. As one might expect, a 100 percent rate is quite costly to the organization, and ways need to be found to reduce the rate. Employees who are hired and then quit within 120 days are called “False Starts” and are especially expensive because the company spends money on their hire but then quickly must spend even more to replace them. Across all industries, the average turnover rate based on quitting in 2016 was approximately 25 percent with the highest rates in services industries—for example, nearly 54 percent in the accommodation and food services industry.61

As the previous discussion indicates, there are a variety of measures to judge whether recruit- ment and selection decisions are effective. Among them is turnover. Patagonia, maker of outdoor gear, strives to select employees whose values are consistent with the philosophies and values of the company. They boast a high employee retention rate, which they attribute, in part, to their approach to employee selection. The following Watch It video describes Patagonia’s approach to employee selection.

Watch It 5 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Patagonia: Employee Testing and Selection and respond to questions.

COST PER HIRE In determining the recruiting cost per hire, the total recruiting expense must first be calculated. Then, the cost per hire may be determined by dividing the recruiting expenses (calculation of advertising, agency fees, employee referrals, relocation, recruiter pay, and benefits costs) by the number of recruits hired. Naturally, the difficulty associated with this measure is in determining the exact costs to include as recruiting expenses. It may be beneficial for a firm to use a benchmark cost per hire to compare to the specific cost for the company.

YIELD RATE A yield rate is the percentage of applicants from a particular source and method that make it to the next stage of the selection process. HR professionals calculate yield rates for

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172 PART 2 • STAFFING

each recruitment source, which they compare to judge relative effectiveness. For example, if 100 applicants submitted their résumés through the firm’s corporate career Web site and 25 were asked in for an interview, the yield rate for the corporate career Web site would be 25 percent (that is, 25 asked for an interview/100 who applied through the corporate career Web site). Each recruitment method would be analyzed in a similar manner. Continuing this example, assume that 10 of the 25 applicants who were interviewed received job offers. The yield rate at this stage would be 40 percent. Finally, assume that 5 of the 10 applicants who received job offers accepted them. The yield rate would be 50 percent. As previously noted, the yield rates would be calculated for each recruitment source and comparisons would be made at each stage. The goal is to compare the yield rates between each recruitment source at each stage. Larger yield rates generally signal higher effectiveness.

PREPARING FOR EXAM/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Explain employee selection and environmental factors

that affect the selection process. Selection is the process of choosing from a group of applicants the individual best suited for a particular position. There are many ways to improve productivity, but none is more powerful than making the right hiring decision.

The selection process typically begins with prelimi- nary screening. Next, applicants complete the firm’s appli- cation form, and this is followed by the administration of selection tests and a series of employment interviews with reference and background investigations. Once the selec- tion decision has been made, the prospective employee may be given a company medical examination.

The environmental factors that affect the selection process include other HR functions, legal considerations, speed of decision making, organizational hierarchy, appli- cant pool, type of organization, probationary period, orga- nizational fit, and selection technology.

2. Explain the importance of preliminary screening as well as reviewing applications and résumés. Preliminary screening is important because it identifies those who obviously do not meet the position’s requirements. Pre- liminary screening may take the form of reviewing for obviously unqualified applicants with a brief interview, test, or only a review of the application or résumé for clear mismatches.

Having the applicant complete an application for employment is another early step in the selection process. The employer evaluates this application to see whether there is an apparent match between the individual and the position.

When writing their résumés, applicants should realize that most companies now use automated résumé systems. These systems assume a certain résumé style. Résumés that deviate from the assumed style are ignored or deleted.

3. Describe the use of tests in the selection process. Recognizing the shortcomings of other selection tools, many firms have added pre-employment tests to their

hiring process. Selection tests may accurately predict an applicant’s ability to perform the job, the “can do,” but they are less successful in indicating the extent to which the individual will be motivated to perform it, the “will do.” Employers should also be aware that tests might be unintentionally discriminatory. Test anxiety can also be a problem.

4. Explain the use of the employment interview. The inter- view permits clarification of certain points, the uncover- ing of additional information, and the elaboration of data needed to make a sound selection decision. The interviewer should provide information about the company, the job, and expectations of the candidate.

The general types of interviews are the unstructured interview and the structured interview, including the behavioral interview and the situational interview.

5. Describe the use of pre-employment screening and background checks. Pre-employment screening has expe- rienced tremendous growth. It went from a possible step in the selection process to that of a necessary step. Back- ground investigation is more important than ever because of the rise in negligent hiring, lawsuits, recent corporate scan- dals, and national security concerns. Background investiga- tions involve obtaining data from various sources, including previous employers, business associates, credit bureaus, government agencies, and academic institutions.

6. Explain the selection decision and the metrics for evaluating recruitment/selection effectiveness. The selec- tion decision is when the final choice is made from among those still in the running after reference checks, selection tests, background investigations, and interview information are evaluated.

Metrics available to assess HR efficiency are numer- ous, and a comprehensive set of metrics can be produced to evaluate recruitment and selection. Possible metrics include quality of hire, time required to hire, new-hire retention, hiring manager overall satisfaction, turnover rate, costs per hire, and yield rate.

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Key Terms selection 147 applicant pool 149 organizational fit 149 preliminary screening 151 résumé 152 keywords 153 keyword résumé 153 standardization 154 objectivity 154 norm 154 reliability 155 validity 155

criterion-related validity 155 content validity 156 construct validity 156 aptitude tests 156 achievement tests 156 cognitive ability tests 156 personality 156 personality tests 156 job-knowledge tests 157 work-sample tests 158 assessment center 158 genetic tests 158

graphoanalysis 158 employment interview 160 unstructured interview 162 structured interview 162 behavioral interview 162 situational interview 163 group interview 163 board interview 163 stress interview 163 realistic job preview (RJP) 164 reference checks 168 negligent hiring 169

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

Questions for Review 6-1. What are the typical steps in the selection process? 6-2. What is the general purpose of preliminary screening? 6-3. What is the purpose of the application form? 6-4. What types of questions should be asked on an applica-

tion form? 6-5. What are the advantages and potential problems in the

use of selection tests? 6-6. What are the basic characteristics of a properly designed

selection test? 6-7. What are the test validation approaches? Define each. 6-8. Identify and describe the various types of employment

tests. 6-9. What is the purpose of an assessment center? 6-10. Describe genetic testing, graphoanalysis, and polygraph

tests. 6-11. What are the general types of interviews? Explain each. 6-12. What types of questions would make up a behavioral

interview?

6-13. What are the various methods of interviewing? Define each.

6-14. What are some potential interview problems? 6-15. What are some of the hiring standards to avoid? 6-16. Why should an employer be concerned about negligent

hiring? 6-17. Why should the selection decision be made before con-

ducting a medical examination? 6-18. What are some metrics for evaluating recruitment and

selection? 6-19. What environmental factors could affect the selection

process? Discuss each. 6-20. In terms of employee selection, what is the significance

of organizational fit? 6-21. Distinguish between an applicant-tracking system and

candidate relationship management.

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment Additional Personal Inventory Assessments can be found on MyLab Management.

Are You a Type A Personality? As you saw in this chapter, many companies consider applicants’ personality characteristics an important criterion in the selec- tion process. Type A personality is defined as a person who is seen by their coworkers as a hard worker and extremely focused on details. This PIA will assess the extent to which you exhibit the characteristics of a Type A personality.

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174 PART 2 • STAFFING

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Hiring with Incomplete Information Roberta Blythe recently opened a new business

named “Assisting You.” The company is a referral agency, matching service providers with customers who have home projects. Roberta’s strategy is to build a large clientele quickly by offering lower prices and shorter wait times than the competing agencies. Before long, cli- ents’ requests began coming in faster than she could meet them on a timely basis. Also, the recruiting and selection process from start to finish increased from 30 days to 50 days. Desperate to meet demand,

Roberta decided to streamline the process. Dropping background checks would reduce the wait time by 15 days. Feeling intense pressure to succeed, Roberta began hiring providers without first conducting background checks. Roberta feels confident in her decision because she has heard about many of the service providers, but certainly not all. 6-22. What would you do? 6-23. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business In Chapter 5, we explained the role of HR professionals and managers in the recruitment process. Together, identified the best approaches to building a pool of qualified candidates. Now, it’s time to make selection (hiring) decisions. Successful selection decisions are based on the collaboration between HR professionals and hiring managers who bring complementary expertise and perspectives to the task. HR professionals are experts on every aspect of the selection process (e.g., reliability and validity), and hiring managers are most well-acquainted with their staffing needs.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understanding and applying selection concepts and methods HR takes the lead

Review the appropriate guidelines for evaluating applications and résumés. Communicate what should and should not be considered. For example, some people list birthdate or marital status on their résumés and this information should never be considered when formulating interview questions or making the selection decision.

Discuss whether testing will add useful information for making more accurate selection decisions. Review the guidelines for conducting effective interviews and coordinate the types of interview questions that will be asked by HR and the questions that will be asked by managers.

HR professionals conduct background checks. HR professionals share their evaluations of the job candidates, and inform managers whether the results of the background check warrant further consideration.

Managers take the lead Review the top candidates with HR after prescreening applications and résumés. If testing is considered relevant, explain the minimum performance standards expected of successful employees. Share interview questions with HR to ensure job-relatedness. Consider all the job-related information and discuss whether a job offer should be made.

HRM by the Numbers Measuring Selection Outcomes

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

You were hired to develop a new recruitment and selection system to fill marketing assistant jobs. The Vice President of HR asked you to calculate various metrics to judge the effectiveness of the system using data from the previous calendar year. You have the following data to judge the effectiveness of the selection system:

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Number of Qualified Applicants Employee Referrals 10 Job Fairs 335 Job Web sites 4,000

Number of Applicants Interviewed Employee Referrals 5 Job Fairs 30 Job Web sites 210

Number of Job Offers Employee Referrals 3 Job Fairs 11 Job Web sites 45

Number of Job Offer Acceptances Employee Referrals 3 Job Fairs 4 Job Web sites 15

Questions 6-24. Calculate the yield rate for each recruitment source (based on the number interviewed relative to the number of qualified

applicants): (a) employee referrals, (b) job fairs, and (c) job Web sites. Which source is most effective? 6-25. Calculate the yield rate for each recruitment source (based on the number of job offers relative to the number of appli-

cants interviewed): (a) employee referrals, (b) job fairs, and (c) job Web sites. Which source is most effective? 6-26. Calculate the yield rate for each recruitment source (based on the number of job offer acceptances to the number of job

offers): (a) employee referrals, (b) job fairs, and (c) job Web sites. Which source is most effective?

I N C I D E N T 1 A Matter of Priorities As production manager for Thompson Manufacturing, Sheila Stephens has the final authority to approve the hiring of any new supervisors who work for her. The human resource manager performs the initial screening of all prospective supervisors and then sends the most likely candidates to Sheila for interviews.

One day recently, Sheila received a call from Pete Peterson, the human resource manager; “Sheila, I’ve just spoken to a young man who may be just who you’re looking for to fill the final line supervisor position. He has some good work experience and appears to have his head screwed on straight. He’s here right now and available if you could possibly see him.”

Sheila hesitated a moment before answering. “Gee, Pete,” she said, “I’m certainly busy today, but I’ll try to squeeze him in. Send him on down.”

A moment later Allen Guthrie, the applicant, arrived at Sheila’s office and she introduced herself. “Come on in, Allen,” said Sheila. “I’ll be right with you after I make a few phone calls.” Fifteen minutes later Sheila finished the calls and began talking with Allen. Sheila was quite

impressed. After a few minutes Sheila’s door opened and a supervisor yelled, “We have a small problem on line one and need your help.” Sheila stood up and said, “Excuse me a minute, Allen.” Ten minutes later Sheila returned, and the conversation continued for 10 more min- utes before a series of phone calls again interrupted the pair.

The same pattern of interruptions continued for the next hour. Finally, Allen looked at his watch and said, “I’m sorry, Mrs. Stephens, but I have to pick up my wife.”

“Sure thing, Allen,” Sheila said as the phone rang again. “Call me later today.”

Questions 6-29. What should Sheila have done to avoid interviews like this

one? 6-30. Explain why Sheila, not Pete, should make the selection

decision. 6-31. What steps in the selection process were missed, if any? What

problems might occur because of these omissions?

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, identify a job with which you are familiar. Perhaps it is a job that a group member currently holds or once held. Or, it could be a job currently or previously held by a family member or friend. Briefly describe some of the job duties.

6-27. Assuming the interviewer’s role, what are three questions that you would ask job candidates? Explain. 6-28. Assuming the interviewer’s role again, what are two questions that you would not ask job candidates? Explain.

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176 PART 2 • STAFFING

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

6-34. What is the significance of employee selection?

6-35. Why is background investigation important to the selection process?

Endnotes 1 Saranja Kapur, “Lack of Skilled Workers Hin-

ders Hiring by Private Firms,” CFO Journal (February 4, 2014). Accessed February 16, 2014, at www.wsj.com.

2 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Job Open- ings and Labor Turnover—May 2017” (USDL 17-0959, July 11, 2017). Accessed July 28, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

3 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “The Employ- ment Situation—June 2017” (USDL 17-0934, July 7, 2017). Accessed July 28, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

4 “Nonprofits in America: New Research Data on Employment, Wages, and Establishments,” Monthly Labor Review online (February 2016). Accessed February 17, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ opub/mlr/2016/article/nonprofits-in-america. htm.

5 Anita Weyland, “How to Recruit People Who Fit,” Training Journal (July 2011): 41–45.

6 Bill Roberts, “Values-Driven HR,” HR Maga- zine 57 (March 2012): 44–48.

7 Dave Zielinski, “Effective Assessments,” HR Magazine 56 (January 2011): 61–64.

8 Jonathan A. Segal, “Hiring Days Are Here Again,” HR Magazine 56 (July 2011): 58–60.

9 Rachel Feintzeig, “‘Culture Fit’ May Be the Key to Your Next Job,” The Wall Street Journal online (October 12, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

10 Ryan and Ployhart, “A Century of Selection.” 11 Susan G. Hauser, “Tech Turbo Boosters on

Hyperdrive,” Workforce Management 90 (August 2011): 24–26.

12 Lynda Spiegel, “How Job Seekers Can Get Around Flaws in the Hiring Software,” The Wall Street Journal online (May 24, 2016). Accessed February 17, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

13 “Automate Recruiting and Onboarding,” Chain Store Age 85 (April 2009): 19.

14 Sue Weeks, “Putting CRM at the Heart of Recruiting,” Recruiter (April 14, 2010): 32–34.

15 Bill Roberts, “Manage Candidates Right from the Start,” HR Magazine 53 (October 2008): 73–76.

16 Peter Vogt, “Avoid the Top 10 Résumé Mis- takes,” Monster.com (2014). Accessed February 15, 2014, at http://career-advice.monster.com/ résumés-cover-letters/resume-writing-tips/ avoid-the-top-10-resume-mistakes/article.aspx.

17 Jim Boulden, “Software Weeds Out Weak Résu- més,” CNN.Com, international edition (January 8, 2013). Accessed February 15, 2014, at: http:// edition.cnn.com/2013/01/08/business/resume- software-scanning/index.html.

18 Lauren Weber, “Today’s Personality Tests Raise the Bar for Job Seekers,” The Wall Street Jour- nal online (April 14, 2015). Accessed January 7, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

19 Ann Marie Ryan and Robert E. Ployhart, “A Century of Selection, Annual Review of Psy- chology, 65 (2014): 693–717

20 “Validate Hiring Tests to Withstand EEO Scru- tiny: DOL & EEOC Officials,” HR Focus 85 (May 2008): 8–9.

21 O*NET, “Psychomotor Abilities,” Occupational Information Network. Accessed February 16, 2014, at www.onetonline.org/find/descriptor/ browse/Abilities/1.A.2/.

22 American Psychological Association, “Person- ality”. Accessed February 16, 2014, at www. apa.org/topics/personality/.

23 O*NET, “Healthcare Social Workers,” Occu- pational Information Network. Accessed Feb- ruary 16, 2014, at www.onetonline.org/link/ summary/21-1022.00#WorkStyles.

24 Lauren Weber, “Today’s Personality Tests Raise the Bar for Job Seekers,” The Wall Street Jour- nal online (April 14, 2015). Accessed January 7, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

25 O*NET, “Integrity,” Occupational Information Network Content Model. Accessed February 16, 2014, at www.onetcenter.org/dl_files/Content- Model_DetailedDesc.pdf.

26 Bill Roberts, “Your Cheating Heart,” HR Maga- zine 56 (June 2011): 54–60.

27 O*NET, “Lawyers,” Occupational Infor- mation Network. Accessed February 16, 2014, at www.onetonline.org/link/ summary/23-1011.00#Knowledge.

28 O*NET, “Electrical and Electronic Equipment Assemblers,” Occupational Information Net- work. Accessed February 16, 2014, at www. onetonline.org/link/summary/51-2022.00.

29 “EEOC Issues Final Rule Interpreting Federal Law on Genetic Information,” HR Focus 88 (January 2011): 1–5.

30 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Com- mission, “Employment Tests and Selection Procedures,” Fact Sheet on Employment Tests and Selection Procedures (September 23, 2010). Accessed February 16, 2014, at www.eeoc.gov.

31 Ryan and Ployhart, “A Century of Selection.” 32 Kate Davidson, “Employers Find ‘Soft Skills’

Like Critical Thinking in Short Supply,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 30, 2016). Accessed January 13, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

33 “How to: Hire for Creativity,” Inc. 32 (October 2010): 53–56.

34 Lauren Weber, “Hiring Tip: Find the Person Who Knows What Not to Do,” The Wall Street Journal online (October 4, 2016). Accessed February 18, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

35 Michael Kaplan, “Job Interview Brainteasers,” Business 2.0 8 (September 2007): 35–37.

36 Martha Frase-Blunt, “Games Interviewers Play,” HR Magazine 46 (January 2001): 107–108.

37 Michael A. Tucker, “Show and Tell,” HR Maga- zine 57 (January 2012): 51–53.

38 “Job Interviews: How to Pose Risky Questions the Legal Way,” HR Specialist: New Jersey Employment Law 5 (April 2010): 6.

39 AR Mazzotta, “Just Like Me: Tips for Reducing Perception-Driven Biases in CT Hiring,” (July 16, 2013). Accessed January 10, 2014, at www.armazzotta.com/

I N C I D E N T 2 National Career Day Chipotle Mexican Grill launched an initiative in 2015—National Career Day—to hire 4,000 workers in just one day. The company deemed the initiative a success and repeated the event a year later in search of 5,000 additional workers. More than 60,000 individuals registered online and each store manager selected 100 candidates for interviews. Store man- agers set aside six to eight hours to conduct interviews.

Questions 6-32. Based on a highly compressed time frame, what are some of

the pre-employment activities Chipotle might have set aside? 6-33. What are some of the pros and cons of undertaking a massive

hiring spree in one day?

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tips-for-reducing-perception-driven-biases-in-ct- hiring/.

40 “The Hidden Risks of Hiring Based on ‘Chem- istry,”’ HR Specialist 8 (February 2010): 1–2.

41 “Background Screening Trends & Best Practices Report: 2015-2016,” Sterling Backcheck report. Accessed January 15, 2017, at www.sterling- backcheck.com.

42 Bruce Buchanan, “Company Fined $600,000 for I-9 Violations,” LawLogix. com blog (January 22, 2016). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.lawlogix.com/ company-fined-600000-9-violations/.

43 “Evaluation of the Accuracy of E-Verify Find- ings,”] Report submitted to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (July 2012). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.uscis.gov; Bill Leonard, “Researchers: Stolen Identities Often Slip Through E-Verify,” HR Magazine 55 (April 2010): 11.

44 “What is E-Verify?” U.S. Citizenship and Immi- gration Services, February 26, 2016. Accessed January 27, 2017, at www.uscis.gov/e-verify/ what-e-verify.

45 Roy Mauer, “Know Before You Hire: 2016 Employment Screening Trends,” Society for Human Resource Management online (January 20, 2016). Accessed February 18, 2017, at www. shrm.org/resourcesandtools/hr-topics/talent- acquisition/pages/2016-employment-screening- trends.aspx.

46 Sherrie A. Madia, “Why Shifting Efforts to Social Media Is Smart Strategy for 2011,” Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership 5 (December 2010): 12–13.

47 “SHRM Survey Findings: Using Social Media for Talent Acquisition—Recruitment and Screening,” Society for Human Resource Man- agement (January 7, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, (available for download) at www. shrm.org/hr-today/trends-and-forecasting/ research-and-surveys/pages/social-media- recruiting-screening-2015.aspx.

48 “Vast Majority of Large Employers Screen Applicants for Criminal Records, Survey Says,” HR Focus 88 (May 2011): 11–12.

49 Juliette Fairley, “Employers Face Challenges in Screening Candidates,” Work force Management 89 (November 2010): 7–9.

50 Roy Mauer, “Know Before You Hire: 2016 Employment Screening Trends,” Society for Human Resource Management online (January 20, 2016). Accessed February 18, 2017, at www.shrm. org/resourcesandtools/hr-topics/talent-acquisition/ pages/2016-employment-screening-trends.aspx.

51 Kathryn M. Nash, “Get Ready for a New Feder- ally Protected Class: The Unemployed,” HR Specialist: Minnesota Employment Law 5 (Janu- ary 2012): 6.

52 Judy Greenwald, “New Type of Hiring Discrim- ination Claim in Works,” Business Insurance 45 (February 28, 2011): 1–20.

53 Andrea Siedsma, “Are Background Checks on Web Posts Too Much Information?” Workforce Management 91 (January 2012): 10.

54 Dori Meiert, “Seeing Behind the Mask,” HR Magazine 56 (February 2011): 30–37.

55 Greg Bensinger, “California Law Strengthens Background Checks for Uber and Lyft,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 28, 2016). Accessed January 28, 2017, at www.wsj. com.

56 Michael L. Forte, “Sexual Assaults at Work: When Can the Employer Be Held Liable?” Florida Underwriter 28 (2011): 10.

57 Bill Roberts, “Backgrounds to the Foreground,” HR Magazine 55 (December 2010): 46–51.

58 “Stakes Rise for Preventing Sexual Harassment and Age Discrimination,” Security Director’s Report 9 (March 2009): 8.

59 Theresa Minton-Eversole, “Quality Measure- ment: Key to Best-in-Class Talent Acquisition,” HR Magazine 53 (December 2008): 64–66.

60 “Quality of Hires Is Vital,” Recruiter (June 9, 2010): 6.

61 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Job Open- ings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) Data Query System.” United States Department of Labor. Accessed February 18, 2017, at www. bls.gov/jlt/data.htm.

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Part Three Performance Management and Training Chapter 7

Performance Management and Appraisal

Chapter 8

Training and Development

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7.1 Describe performance management, performance appraisal, and the performance appraisal process.

7.2 Explain the uses of performance appraisal and performance criteria.

7.3 Describe the choice of various performance appraisal methods.

7

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Performance Management and Appraisal

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

7.4 Assess the effectiveness and limitations of performance appraisal practices.

7.5 Explain how to conduct the appraisal interview.

7.6 Summarize key trends in performance appraisal practice.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 7 Warm-Up.

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181

The tools we describe in this chapter and in Chapter 8 provide human resources (HR) profession- als with a foundation to evaluate and improve employees (human capital) to promote competi- tive advantage. Let’s consider a metaphor to bring the opening sentence to life. Think about, for example, a delivery vehicle. Many factors contribute to fuel efficiency, one of which is tire pres- sure. Insufficient tire pressure creates greater drag on the vehicle, which raises fuel consumption.

Companies prefer fuel-efficient vehicles to maintain lower operating costs because they want to maximize profitability. Mechanics can use an air gauge to determine whether tire pressure falls within standard limits specified by the automobile manufacturer.

Delivery vehicles represent physical capital, and we have learned that employees are human capital. Both help add value to companies. In this example, fuel efficiency is a measure of perfor- mance. Lower-than-standard or expected fuel efficiency equates with (lower) job performance. Air gauges can be thought of as a performance appraisal technique that helps mechanics (managers or supervisors) judge a vehicle’s fuel efficiency (an employee’s job performance). We take up the topics of performance management and performance appraisal in this chapter.

Performance Management, Performance Appraisal, and the Performance Appraisal Process Performance management and performance appraisal are tools that organizations use to judge whether employees are meeting expectations. Beyond this common purpose, performance man- agement addresses organizational processes and performance appraisal focuses on individual or group performance. Following a review of these practices, we will examine the performance appraisal process.

HR Web Wisdom

Performance Management www.opm.gov/perform/over- view.asp

Office of Personnel Manage- ment Web site on performance management.

7.1 Describe performance man- agement, performance appraisal, and the performance appraisal process.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

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182 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

Performance Management Performance management (PM) is a goal-oriented process directed toward ensuring that orga- nizational processes are in place to maximize the productivity of employees, teams, and ultimately, the organization. It is a major player in accomplishing organizational strategy in that it involves measuring and improving the value of the workforce. PM includes incentive goals and the cor- responding incentive values so that the relationship can be clearly understood and communicated. There is a close relationship between incentives and performance.

PM systems are one of the major focuses in business today. Although every HR function contributes to PM, training, performance appraisal, and compensation play a more significant role. Whereas performance appraisal occurs at a specific time, PM is a dynamic, continuous process. Every individual in the organization is a part of the PM system. Every component of the system is integrated to ensure continuous organizational effectiveness. With PM, every worker’s efforts should focus on achieving strategic goals. A well-developed job description is needed to deter- mine whether performance expectations have been achieved. If workers’ skills need improvement, additional training should be provided. In PM systems, training has a direct tie-in to achieving organizational effectiveness, as does pay and performance. A good PM system ensures that people make good, effective use of their time.

PM may be the single largest contributor to organizational effectiveness in recent years. An effective PM system should be the responsibility of everyone in the organization starting with the CEO and moving throughout the entire organization because companies that disregard PM do not prosper.1

Performance Appraisal Performance appraisal (PA) is a formal system of review and evaluation of individual or team task performance. A critical point in the definition is the word formal because managers should be reviewing an individual’s performance on a continuing basis.

PA is especially critical to the success of PM. Although PA is but one component of PM, it is a vital one, in that it directly reflects the organization’s strategic plan. Although evaluation of team performance is critical when teams exist in an organization, the focus of PA in most firms remains on the individual employee. Regardless of the emphasis, an effective appraisal system evaluates accomplishments and initiates plans for development, goals, and objectives.

Most managers rely on PA techniques as a basis to provide feedback, encourage performance improvement, make valid decisions, justify terminations, identify training and development needs, and defend personnel decisions such as why one employee received a higher pay increase than another employee. PA serves many purposes, and improved results and efficiency are increasingly critical in today’s globally competitive marketplace. Therefore, abandoning the only program with performance in its name and employees as its focus would seem to be an ill-advised overreac- tion. Additionally, managers must be concerned about legal issues, which we consider later in this chapter. Developing an effective PA system has been and will continue to be a high priority for management.

Performance Appraisal Process As shown in Figure 7-1, the starting point for the PA process is identifying specific performance goals. An appraisal system probably cannot effectively serve every desired purpose, so manage- ment should select the specific goals it believes to be most important and realistically achievable. For example, some firms may want to stress employee development, whereas other organizations may want to focus on pay adjustments. Many firms rely on PA results to help inform decisions to terminate employment, particularly after a regular pattern of inadequate job performance. In any case, PA serves a developmental purpose, evaluative purpose, or both.

The next step in this ongoing cycle continues with establishing performance criteria (standards) and communicating these performance expectations to those concerned. Then the work is performed and the supervisor appraises the performance. At the end of the appraisal period, the appraiser reviews work performance and evaluates it against established performance standards. This review helps determine how well employees have met these standards, determines reasons for deficiencies, and develops a plan to correct the problems. At this meeting, goals are set for the next evaluation period, and the cycle repeats.

performance management (PM) Goal-oriented process directed toward ensuring that organizational processes are in place to maximize the productivity of employees, teams, and ultimately, the organization.

performance appraisal (PA) Formal system of review and evaluation of individual or team task performance.

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The Uses of Performance Appraisal and Performance Criteria Management must carefully plan for how it will use the results of performance appraisal and select performance criteria as it pertains to achieving corporate goals.2 For instance, performance appraisal can help inform managers whether a low performing employee would benefit from remedial training. The most common appraisal criteria are traits, behaviors, competencies, goal achievement, and improvement potential. Once these considerations are well understood, HR professionals should educate managers about who should be involved in the appraisal process.

Uses of Performance Appraisal For many organizations, the primary goal of an appraisal system is to improve individual and organizational performance. There may be other goals, however. A potential problem with PA, and a possible cause of much dissatisfaction, is expecting too much from one appraisal plan. For example, a plan that is effective for developing employees may not be the best for determining pay increases. Yet a properly designed system can help achieve organizational objectives and enhance employee performance. In fact, PA data are potentially valuable for virtually every human resource functional area.

HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING In assessing a firm’s HR, data must be available to identify those who have the potential to be promoted or for any area of internal employee relations. Through PA it may be discovered that there is an insufficient number of workers who are prepared to enter management. Plans can then be made for greater emphasis on management development, which we will discuss in Chapter 8. Succession planning is a key concern for all firms. A well-designed appraisal system provides a profile of the organization’s human resource strengths and weaknesses to support this effort.

TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT Performance appraisal should point out an employee’s specific needs for training and development. For instance, if Pat Compton’s job requires skill in technical writing and her evaluation reveals a deficiency in this factor, she may need additional training to overcome this shortcoming. If a firm finds that many first-line supervisors are having difficulty in administering disciplinary action, training sessions addressing this problem may be appropriate. By identifying deficiencies that adversely affect performance, training and development (T&D) programs can be developed that permit individuals to build on their strengths and minimize their deficiencies. An appraisal system does not guarantee properly trained and developed employees. However, determining T&D needs is more precise when appraisal data are available.

7.2 Explain the uses of performance appraisal and performance criteria.

FIGURE 7-1 Performance Appraisal Process

Identify Specific Performance

Appraisal Goals

Establish Performance Criteria and

Communicate Them to

Employees

Examine Work Performed

Appraise Performance

Discuss Appraisal with Employee

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184 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

CAREER PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT Career planning is an ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them. On the other hand, career development is a formal approach used by the organization to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed. PA data is essential in assessing an employee’s strengths and weaknesses and in determining the person’s potential. Managers may use such information to counsel employees and assist them in developing and implementing their career plans.3

COMPENSATION PROGRAMS PA results provide a basis for rational decisions regarding pay adjustments. Most managers believe that you should reward outstanding job performance tangibly with pay increases. They believe that the behaviors you reward are the behaviors you get. Rewarding behaviors necessary for accomplishing organizational objectives is at the heart of a PM system. To encourage good performance, a firm should design and implement a reliable PA system and then reward the most productive workers and teams accordingly. Substantial evidence substantiates the expectation that better performance ratings lead to higher pay increases and bonuses.4 Creators of total rewards systems want to ensure that individual performance supports organizational objectives.

INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS PA data are also used for decisions in several areas of internal employee relations, including promotion, demotion, termination, layoff, and transfer. For example, an employee’s performance in one job may be useful in determining his or her ability to perform another job on the same level, as is required in the consideration of transfers. Certainly, PA data is vital when promotions are considered or layoffs must be made. However, when the performance level is unacceptable, demotion, or even termination, may be appropriate.

ASSESSMENT OF EMPLOYEE POTENTIAL Some organizations attempt to assess an employee’s potential as they appraise his or her job performance. Although past behaviors may be a good predictor of future behaviors in some jobs, an employee’s past performance may not accurately indicate future performance in other jobs. The best salesperson in the company may not have what it takes to become a successful district sales manager, where the tasks are distinctly different. Similarly, the best systems analyst may, if promoted, be a disaster as an information technology manager. Overemphasizing technical skills and ignoring other equally important skills is a common error in promoting employees into management jobs. Recognition of this problem has led some firms to separate the appraisal of performance, which focuses on past behavior, from the assessment of potential, which is future oriented.

Performance Criteria Traits, behaviors, and competencies are often used as PA standards. Other standards include goal attainment and improvement potential.

TRAITS, BEHAVIORS, AND COMPETENCIES Traits represent an individual’s predisposition to think, feel, and behave, and many traits are usually thought of as being biologically created. A personality trait is more ingrained with an individual as with a person being introverted or extroverted, or less conscientious or more conscientious.

Behaviors are typically viewed as resulting from a variety of sources including traits and situ- ational context. For example, a highly conscientious person is more likely to engage in behaviors that lead to timely task completion than someone who is less conscientious because conscien- tiousness is associated with dutifulness. Employees who tend to be less conscientious may step up their game in situations where they could earn substantial performance-based bonuses than in situations where pay is the same regardless of performance differences.

A behavior may have been learned from parents, from significant friends, or from a certain work environment. A behavior can be changed, but traits are usually more established. Often a young person who joins the military will have many behavioral changes take place prior to return- ing to civilian life. An appropriate behavior to evaluate for a manager might be leadership style. For individuals working in teams, developing others, teamwork and cooperation, or customer ser- vice orientation might be appropriate. Desired behaviors may be appropriate as evaluation criteria because if they are recognized and rewarded, employees tend to repeat them. If certain behaviors result in desired outcomes, there is merit in using them in the evaluation process.

Competencies, as we discussed in Chapter 4, refer to an individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently over time to perform work

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successfully in the required work situations. Competencies may be technical in nature, relate to interpersonal skills, or are business oriented. For example, analytical thinking and achievement orientation might be essential in professional jobs. In leadership jobs, relevant competencies might include developing talent, delegating authority, and people management skills. The competencies selected for evaluation purposes should be those that are closely associated with job success.

Many of these commonly used traits, behaviors, and competencies are subjective and may be either unrelated to job performance or difficult to define. In such cases, inaccurate evaluations may occur and create legal problems for the organization as well. This was the case in Wade v. Mississippi Cooperative Extension Service where the circuit court ruled:

In a performance appraisal system, general characteristics such as leadership, public accep- tance, attitude toward people, appearance and grooming, personal conduct, outlook on life, ethical habits, resourcefulness, capacity for growth, mental alertness, and loyalty to organiza- tion are susceptible to partiality and to the personal taste, whim, or fancy of the evaluator as well as patently subjective in form and obviously susceptible to completely subjective treat- ment by those conducting the appraisals.

At the same time, certain traits, behaviors, and competencies may relate to job performance and, if this connection is established, using them may be appropriate.

GOAL ACHIEVEMENT If organizations consider ends more important than means, goal achievement outcomes become an appropriate factor to evaluate. The outcomes established should be within the control of the individual or team and should be results that lead to the firm’s success. At upper levels, the goals might deal with financial aspects of the firm such as profit or cash flow, and market considerations such as market share or position in the market. At lower organizational levels, the outcomes might be meeting the customer’s quality requirements and delivering according to the promised schedule.

To assist the process, the manager needs to provide specific examples of how the employee can further his or her development and achieve specific goals. Both parties should reach an agreement as to the employee’s goals for the next evaluation period and the assistance and resources the manager needs to provide. This aspect of employee appraisal should be the most positive element in the entire process and help the employee focus on behavior that will produce positive results for all concerned.

IMPROVEMENT POTENTIAL When organizations evaluate employees’ performance, many of the criteria used focus on the past. From a PM viewpoint, the problem is that you cannot change the past. Unless a firm takes further steps, the evaluation data become merely historical documents. Therefore, firms should emphasize the future, including the behaviors and outcomes needed to develop the employee, and in the process, achieve the firm’s goals. This involves an assessment of the employee’s potential. Including potential in the evaluation process helps to ensure more effective career planning and development.

The HR Director of the California Health Foundation explains the nature of the company’s PM system. The system is open-ended and includes just a few general categories, covering the employee’s past performance with respect to their objectives set at the previous year’s appraisal, and their future goals in the company. The following Watch It video describes the California Health Foundation’s PA system, including a review of the criteria for an employee receiving a good PA, and HR’s methods of dealing with both positive and negative PAs and efforts to maintain a positive work culture that emphasizes a culture of personal responsibility, flexibility, and development.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled The California Health Foundation: Performance Management and respond to questions.

Responsibility for Performance Appraisal Often, the human resource department is responsible for coordinating the design and implementa- tion of PA programs. However, it is essential that line managers play a key role from beginning to end. These individuals usually conduct the appraisals, and they must directly participate in

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186 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

developing the program if it is to succeed. In a recent survey of 1,143 U.S. employees, 53 percent get feedback about their performance from their managers. But many would like to get an expanded view of their performance and receive input from others such as from peers, project leaders, and even clients.5 Several possibilities exist regarding the person(s) who will rate the employee.

IMMEDIATE SUPERVISOR An employee’s immediate supervisor has traditionally been the most logical choice for evaluating performance, and this continues to be the case. The supervisor is usually in an excellent position to observe the employee’s job performance, and the supervisor has the responsibility for managing a unit. When someone else has the task of evaluating employees, the supervisor’s authority may be undermined. Also, employee T&D is an important element in every manager’s job, and as previously mentioned, appraisal programs and employee development are usually closely related.

On the negative side, the immediate supervisor may emphasize certain aspects of employee performance and neglect others. Also, managers have been known to manipulate evaluations to justify pay increases and promotions and vice versa.

In most instances, the immediate supervisor will probably continue to be involved in evaluat- ing performance. Organizations will seek alternatives, however, because of technological advances and a desire to broaden the perspective of the appraisal.

EMPLOYEES Historically, our culture has viewed evaluation by employees negatively. However, this thinking has changed somewhat. Some firms conclude that evaluations of managers by employees are both feasible and needed. They reason that employees are in an excellent position to view managers’ effectiveness. Advocates believe that this approach leads supervisors to become especially conscious of the work group’s needs and to do a better job of managing. In the higher education environment, it is a common practice for instructors to be evaluated by students. Critics are concerned that managers (and instructors) will be caught up in a popularity contest or that employees will be fearful of reprisal. If this approach has a chance for success, one thing is clear: the evaluators must be guaranteed anonymity. Ensuring anonymity might be particularly difficult in a small department and especially if demographic data on the appraisal form could identify raters.

PEERS AND TEAM MEMBERS A major strength of using peers to appraise performance is that they work closely with the evaluated employee and probably have an undistorted perspective on typical performance, especially in team assignments. Problems with peer evaluations include the reluctance of some people who work closely together, especially on teams, to criticize each other. On the other hand, if an employee has been at odds with another worker, he or she might really “unload on the enemy,” which results in an unfair evaluation. Another problem concerns peers who interact infrequently and lack the information needed to make an accurate assessment.

Organizations are increasingly using teams, including those that are self-directed. Team mem- bers know each other’s performance better than anyone and can, therefore, evaluate performance more accurately. Also, peer pressure is a powerful motivator for team members, and members who recognize that peers within the team will be evaluating their work show increased commitment and productivity. When employees work in teams and their appraisal system focuses entirely on individual results, it is not surprising that they show little interest in their teams. But this problem can be corrected. If teamwork is essential, make it a criterion for evaluating employees; rewarding collaboration will encourage teamwork.

SELF-APPRAISAL If employees understand their objectives and the criteria used for evaluation, they are in a good position to appraise their own performance. Many people know what they do well on the job and what they need to improve. If they have the opportunity, they will criticize their own performance objectively and act to improve it. Many times, employees are tougher on themselves than the supervisor will be. Also, because employee development is self-development, employees who appraise their own performance may become more highly motivated. Self- appraisal provides employees with a means of keeping the supervisor informed about everything they have done during the appraisal period.6

Even if a self-appraisal is not a part of the system, the employee should at least provide the manager a list of his or her most important accomplishments and contributions over the appraisal period. This will prevent the manager from being blindsided when the employee complains, per- haps justifiably, “You didn’t even mention the Bandy contract I landed last December!”

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CHAPTER 7 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND APPRAIsAl 187

As a complement to other approaches, self-appraisal has great appeal to managers who are primarily concerned with employee participation and development. For compensation purposes, however, its value is considerably less. Some individuals are masters at attributing good perfor- mance to their own efforts and poor performance to someone else’s.

CUSTOMER APPRAISAL Customer behavior determines a firm’s degree of success. Therefore, some organizations believe it is important to obtain performance input from this critical source. Organizations use this approach because it demonstrates a commitment to the customer, holds employees accountable, and fosters change. Customer-related goals for executives generally are of a broad, strategic nature, whereas targets for lower-level employees tend to be more specific. For example, an objective might be to improve the rating for accurate delivery or reduce the number of dissatisfied customers by half. It is important to have employees participate in setting their goals and to include only factors that are within the employees’ control.

360-DEGREE FEEDBACK People all around the employee whose performance is being judged may provide input. Those sources, as we have already discussed, include senior managers, the employee himself or herself, a supervisor, employees, peers, team members, and internal or external customers. By shifting the responsibility for evaluation to more than one person, many of the common appraisal errors can be reduced or eliminated. Software is available to permit managers to give the ratings quickly and conveniently. Furthermore, including the perspective of multiple sources results in a more comprehensive and fair view of the employee’s performance and minimizes biases resulting from limited views of performance.

Having multiple raters also makes the process more legally defensible. However, it is impor- tant for all parties to know the evaluation criteria, the methods for gathering and summarizing the feedback, and the use to which the feedback will be put. An appraisal system involving numerous evaluators will naturally take more time and, therefore, be costlier. Nevertheless, the way firms are being organized and managed may require innovative alternatives to traditional top-down appraisals.

In a survey of training participants, 84 percent said their 360-degree experience was useful.7 However, some managers believe that the 360-degree feedback method has problems. General Electric’s (GE’s) former CEO Jack Welch maintains that the 360-degree system in his firm had been “gamed” and that people were saying nice things about one another, resulting in all good ratings.8 Another critical view with an opposite twist is that input from peers, who may be com- petitors for raises and promotions, might intentionally distort the data and sabotage the colleague. Yet because so many firms use 360-degree feedback evaluation, it seems that many firms have found ways to avoid the pitfalls.

Significant risks with 360-degree feedback are confidentiality and possible legal ramifica- tions. Many firms outsource the process to make participants feel comfortable that the information they share and receive is completely anonymous. Information is very sensitive, and in the wrong hands, could impact careers. In addition, Nesheba Kittling, an attorney at labor law firm Fisher & Phillips, states that, “Employees’ performance reviews are an employers’ first line of defense against discrimination claims.”9 Detailed documentation of job performance, “provides support for an employer’s contention that it had legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons,” for adverse action against an employee such as a demotion or termination.10

As an important aside, the 360-degree feedback evaluation method is based on the reliance of multiple sources to provide information about an employee’s performance.

The 360-degree method is unlike traditional performance reviews, which provide employees with feedback only from supervisors. The 360-degree feedback approach provides an all-inclusive view of each employee. As many as 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies use some form of 360-degree feedback for either employee evaluation or development. Many companies use results from 360-degree programs not only for conventional applications but also for succession planning, training, and professional development.11

Performance Appraisal Period Formal performance evaluations are usually prepared at specific intervals. Although there is noth- ing magical about the period for formal appraisal reviews, in most organizations they occur either annually or semiannually. Even more significant, however, is the continuous interaction (primarily

HR Web Wisdom

360-Degree Evaluation www.custominsight.com/360- degree-feedback/what-is- 360-degree-feedback.asp

3 6 0 - D eg r e e E va l u a t i o n — Delivering Feedback

360-degree feedback evaluation method Popular performance appraisal method that involves evaluation input from multiple levels within the firm as well as external sources.

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188 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

informal), including coaching and other developmental activities, that continues throughout the appraisal period. Managers should be conditioned to understand that managing performance is a continuous process that is built into their job every day.

In the current business climate, firms may want to consider monitoring performance more often. Changes occur so fast that employees need to look at objectives and their own roles throughout the year to see whether changes are in order. Southwest Airlines has asked its manag- ers to have monthly check-ins with staff rather than semiannual ones.12 Employees with Royal Caribbean Cruises are evaluated approximately three weeks prior to the completion of their contract, which is typically six months. Some even consider these relatively shorter intervals to be too long; “Think of a sports team: A coach doesn’t wait until the end of a season to give his players feedback.”13

Some organizations use the employee’s date of hire to determine the rating period. At times an employee’s first appraisal may occur at the end of a probationary period, anywhere from 30 to 90 days after his or her start date. However, in the interest of consistency, it may be advisable to perform evaluations on a calendar basis rather than on anniversaries. If firms do not con- duct all appraisals at the same time, it may be impossible to make needed comparisons between employees.

The frequency of providing employees with performance feedback is important. The follow- ing Watch It video describes The Weather Channel PA process in which appraisals are recom- mended to be done on an ongoing, continual basis so that an employee always knows where he or she stands as far as what is expected and how well he or she is doing. This way, the employee can look forward to performance reviews instead of dreading them; performance reviews will be an official confirmation of all the progress that the employee has been making under the ongoing relationship of appraisal and feedback with the employee’s manager.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Weather Channel: Performance Appraisal and respond to questions.

Choosing a Performance Appraisal Method The various methods are next presented as if they are separate and distinct when each may be used in conjunction with another method. For instance, the 360-degree feedback method may incorporate portions of the ranking scale. There are multiple approaches to appraising employee performance. It is instructive to group them into categories according to what they are designed to measure. PA methods fall into four broad categories:

$$ Trait systems $$ Comparison systems $$ Behavioral systems $$ Results-based systems

Trait Systems Trait systems ask raters to evaluate each employee’s traits or characteristics (e.g., quality of work, quantity of work, appearance, dependability, cooperation, initiative, judgment, leadership respon- sibility, decision-making ability, or creativity). Appraisals are typically scored using descriptors ranging from unsatisfactory to outstanding. Figure 7-2 contains an illustration of a trait method of performance appraisal.

The trait approach does have limitations. First, trait systems are highly subjective14 because they assume that every supervisor’s perception of a given trait is the same. For example, the trait “quality of work” may be defined by one supervisor as, “The extent to which an employee’s performance is free of errors.” To another supervisor, quality of work might mean, “The extent to which an employee’s performance is timely.” Human resource profes- sionals and supervisors can avoid this problem by working together in advance to specify the definition of traits clearly.

7.3 Describe the choice of various performance appraisal methods.

trait systems Type of performance-appraisal method, requiring raters (e.g., supervisors or customers) to evaluate each employee’s traits or characteristics (e.g., quality of work and leadership).

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CHAPTER 7 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND APPRAIsAl 189

Another drawback is that systems rate individuals on subjective personality factors rather than on objective job performance data. Essentially, trait assessment focuses attention on employees rather than on job performance. Employees may simply become defensive rather than trying to understand the role that the trait plays in shaping their job performance and then taking corrective actions. Moreover, traits represent a predisposition to behave, think, or feel. Although traits do influence behavior, these do not fully account for behavior.15 For example, highly conscientious individuals tend to be dutiful and complete assignments on a regular basis. However, other fac- tors, including illness or ongoing distractions, could interfere with the productivity that one might expect to be associated with a trait.

Comparison Systems Comparison systems evaluate one employee’s performance against that of other employees. Employees are ranked from the best performer to the poorest performer. In simplest form, supervi- sors rank each employee and establish a performance hierarchy such that the employee with the best performance receives the highest ranking. Employees may be ranked on overall performance or on various traits.

An alternative approach, called a forced distribution method PA and sometimes referred to as a stacked ranking system, assigns employees to groups that represent the entire range of per- formance. For example, three categories that might be used are best performers, moderate per- formers, and poor performers. A forced distribution approach, in which the rater must place a specific number of employees into each of the performance groups, can be used with this method. Figure 7-3 displays a forced distribution rating form for an animal keeper job with five perfor- mance categories.

Many companies use forced distribution approaches to minimize the tendency for supervisors to rate most employees as excellent performers. This tendency usually arises out of supervisors’ self-promotion motives. Also, supervisors often provide positive performance ratings to most employees because they do not want to alienate them. After all, supervisory performance depends largely on how well employees perform their jobs.

Although used by some prestigious firms, the forced distribution system appears to be unpop- ular with many managers.16 Some believe it fosters cutthroat competition, paranoia, and gen- eral ill will, and destroys employee loyalty.17 For example, David Auerback, a former Microsoft employee, stated that this type of appraisal system had employees feeling helpless and, “encour- aged people to backstab their co-workers.”18 Many believe that a “rank-and-yank” system such as forced distribution is not compatible when a company encourages teamwork. In addition, critics of forced distribution contend that they compel managers to penalize a good, although not a great, employee who is part of a superstar team. Another reason employees are opposed to forced ranking is that they suspect that the rankings are a way for companies to rationalize firings

comparison systems A type of performance-appraisal method, require that raters (e.g., supervisors) evaluate a given employee’s performance against other employees’ performance attainments. Employees are ranked from the best performer to the poorest performer.

forced distribution method Performance appraisal method in which the rater is required to assign individuals in a work group to a limited number of categories, like a normal frequency distribution.

Employee’s Name: Employee’s Position:

Supervisor’s Name: Review Period:

Instructions: For each trait, circle the phrase that best represents the employee.

1. Diligence a. Outstanding b. Above average c. Average d. Below average e. Poor

2. Cooperation with others a. Outstanding b. Above average c. Average d. Below average e. Poor

3. Communication skills a. Outstanding b. Above average c. Average d. Below average e. Poor

4. leadership a. Outstanding b. Above average c. Average d. Below average e. Poor

5. Decisiveness a. Outstanding b. Above average c. Average d. Below average e. Poor

FIGURE 7-2 Trait-Oriented Performance Appraisal Rating Form

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190 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

more easily. Yahoo’s employee-ranking system was challenged in court for this very reason. Allegedly, Yahoo executives required managers to give poor rankings to a designated percentage of employees regardless of actual performance, and high-level executives subjectively changed managers’ ratings.19

Forced distribution approaches have drawbacks. The forced distribution approach can dis- tort ratings because employee performance may not fall into these predetermined distributions. Let’s assume that a supervisor must use the following forced distribution to rate her employees’ performance:

$$ 15 percent well below average $$ 25 percent below average $$ 40 percent average $$ 15 percent above average $$ 5 percent well above average

This distribution is problematic to the extent that the actual distribution of employee performance is substantially different from this forced distribution. If 35 percent of the employees’ perfor- mance were either above average or well above average, then the supervisor would be required to underrate the performance of 15 percent of the employees. Based on this forced distribution, the supervisor can rate only 20 percent of the employees as having demonstrated above-average or well-above-average job performance. Management–employee relationships ultimately suffer because workers feel that ratings are dictated by unreal models rather than by individual perfor- mance. Perhaps extensive training and development interventions enabled many more employees than anticipated to perform well above average (12 percent versus 5 percent). The “forced” nature of this system results in 7 percent of employees being placed in an undeservedly lower rating category. Also, under a pay-for-performance plan, those 7 percent would receive a lower than earned pay increase award.

Another comparative technique for ranking employees is the paired comparisons method. Supervisors compare each employee to every other employee, identifying the better performer in each pair. Figure 7-4 displays a paired comparison form. Following the comparison, the employees are ranked according to the number of times they were identified as being the better performer. In this example, Allen Jones is the best performer because he was identified most often as the better performer, followed by Bob Brown (identified twice as the better performer) and Mary Green (identified once as the better performer).

paired comparisons Supervisors compare each employee to every other employee, identifying the better performer in each pair.

Instructions: You are required to rate the performance for the previous 3 months of the 15 workers employed as animal keepers to conform with the following performance distribution:

$$ 15 percent of the animal keepers will be rated as having exhibited poor performance.

$$ 20 percent of the animal keepers will be rated as having exhibited below-average performance.

$$ 35 percent of the animal keepers will be rated as having exhibited average performance.

$$ 20 percent of the animal keepers will be rated as having exhibited above-average performance.

$$ 10 percent of the animal keepers will be rated as having exhibited superior performance.

Use the following guidelines for rating performance. Based on the five duties listed in the job description for animal keeper, the employee’s performance is characterized as:

$$ Poor if the incumbent performs only one of the duties well. $$ Below average if the incumbent performs only two of the duties well. $$ Average if the incumbent performs only three of the duties well. $$ Above average if the incumbent performs only four of the duties well. $$ Superior if the incumbent performs all five of the duties well.

FIGURE 7-3 A Forced Distribution Performance Appraisal Rating Form

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Comparative methods are best suited for small groups of employees who perform the same or similar jobs. They are cumbersome for large groups of employees or for employees who per- form different jobs. For example, it would be difficult to judge whether a production worker’s performance is better than a secretary’s performance because the jobs are substantively different. The assessment of a production worker’s performance is based on the number of units he or she produces during each work shift; a secretary’s performance is based on the accuracy with which he or she types memos and letters.

As do trait systems, comparison approaches have limitations. They tend to encourage subjec- tive judgments, which increase the chance for rater errors and biases. In addition, small differences in performance between employees may become exaggerated by using such a method if supervi- sors feel compelled to distinguish among levels of employee performance.

Behavioral Systems Behavioral systems rate employees on the extent to which they display successful job perfor- mance behaviors. In contrast to trait and comparison methods, behavioral methods rate objective job behaviors. When correctly developed and applied, behavioral models provide results that are relatively free of rater errors and biases. The three main types of behavioral systems are the critical incident technique (CIT), behaviorally anchored rating scales (BARS), and behavioral observation scales (BOS).

The critical incident technique (CIT)20 requires job incumbents and their supervisors to identify performance incidents (e.g., on-the-job behaviors and behavioral outcomes) that distin- guish successful performances from unsuccessful ones. The supervisor then observes the employees and records their performance on these critical job aspects. Supervisors usually rate employees on how often they display the behaviors described in each critical incident. Figure 7-5 illustrates a CIT form for an animal keeper job. Two statements represent examples of ineffective

behavioral systems Performance appraisal methods that focus on distinguishing between successful and unsuccessful behaviors.

critical incident technique (CIT) Performance appraisal method that requires keeping written records of highly favorable and unfavorable employee work actions.

Instructions: Please indicate by placing an X which employee of each pair has performed most effectively during the past year.

X Bob Brown X Mary Green Mary Green Jim smith

X Bob Brown Mary Green Jim smith X Allen Jones Bob Brown Jim smith

X Allen Jones X Allen Jones

FIGURE 7-4 A Paired Comparison Performance Appraisal Rating Form

Instructions: For each description of work behavior, circle the number that best describes how frequently the employee engages in that behavior.

1. The incumbent removes manure and unconsumed food from the animal enclosures. 1 2 3 4 5 Never Almost never sometimes Fairly often Very often

2. The incumbent haphazardly measures the feed items when placing them in the animal enclosures. 1 2 3 4 5 Never Almost never sometimes Fairly often Very often

3. The incumbent leaves refuse dropped by visitors on and around the public walkways. 1 2 3 4 5 Never Almost never sometimes Fairly often Very often

4. The incumbent skillfully identifies instances of abnormal behavior among the animals, which represent signs of illness. 1 2 3 4 5 Never Almost never sometimes Fairly often Very often

FIGURE 7-5 A Critical Incidents Performance Appraisal Rating Form

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192 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

job performance (numbers 2 and 3), and two statements represent examples of effective job per- formance (numbers 1 and 4).

The CIT tends to be useful because this procedure requires extensive documentation that identifies successful and unsuccessful job performance behaviors by both the employee and the supervisor. The CIT’s strength, however, is also its weakness: implementation of the CIT demands continuous and close observation of the employee. Supervisors may find the record keeping to be overly burdensome.

Behaviorally anchored rating scales (BARS)21 are based on the CIT, and these scales are developed in the same fashion with one exception. For the CIT, a critical incident would be written as “the incumbent completed the task in a timely fashion.” For the BARS format, this incident would be written as “the incumbent is expected to complete the task in a timely fashion.” The designers of BARS write the incidents as expectations to emphasize the fact that the employee does not have to demonstrate the exact behavior that is used as an anchor to be rated at that level. Because a complete array of behaviors that characterize a job would take many pages of descrip- tion, it is not feasible to place examples of all job behaviors on the scale. Experts therefore list only those behaviors that they believe are most representative of the job the employee must per- form. A typical job might have 8–10 dimensions under BARS, each with a separate rating scale.

Table 7-1 illustrates a portion of a BARS system that was developed to evaluate college recruiters. Suppose the factor chosen for evaluation is Ability to Present Positive Company Image. On the very positive end of this factor would be, “Makes excellent impression on college recruits. Carefully explains positive aspects of the company. Listens to applicant and answers questions in a very positive manner.” On the very negative end of this factor would be, “Even with repeated instructions continues to make a poor impression. This interviewer could be expected to turn off college applicant from wanting to join the firm.” As may be noted, there are several levels in between the very negative and the very positive. The rater can determine more objectively how frequently the employee performs in each defined level.

As with all PA techniques, BARS has its advantages and disadvantages.22 Among the various PA techniques, BARS is the most defensible in court because it is based on actual observable job behaviors. In addition, BARS encourages all raters to make evaluations in the same way. Perhaps the main disadvantage of BARS is the difficulty of developing and maintaining the volume of

behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS) Performance appraisal method that combines elements of the traditional rating scale and critical incident methods; various performance levels are shown along a scale with each described in terms of an employee’s specific job behavior.

Clearly Outstanding Performance Makes excellent impression on college recruits. Carefully explains positive aspects of the company. Listens to applicant and answers questions in a very positive manner.

Excellent Performance Makes good impression on college recruits. Answers all questions and explains positive aspects of the company. Answers questions in a positive manner.

Good Performance Makes a reasonable impression on college recruits. Listens to applicant and answers questions in knowl- edgeable manner.

Average Performance Makes a fair impression on college recruits. Listens to applicant and answers most questions in a knowledge- able manner.

Slightly Below Average Performance Attempts to make a good impression on college recruits. Listens to applicants but at times could be expected to have to go to other sources to get answers to questions.

Poor Performance At times makes poor impression on college recruits. Sometimes provides incorrect information to applicant or goes down blind avenues before realizing mistake.

Very Poor Performance Even with repeated instructions continues to make a poor impression. This interviewer could be expected to turn off college applicant from wanting to join the firm.

TABLE 7-1

BARS for Factor: Ability to Present Positive Company Image

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data necessary to make it effective. The BARS method requires companies to maintain distinct appraisal documents for each job. As jobs change over time, the documentation must be updated for each job.

Another kind of behavior system, a behavioral observation scale (BOS),23 displays illustra- tions of positive incidents (or behaviors) of job performance for various job dimensions. The evaluator rates the employee on each behavior according to the extent to which the employee performs in a manner consistent with each behavioral description. Scores from each job dimension are averaged to provide an overall rating of performance. BOS is developed in the same way as a BARS instrument, except that it incorporates only positive performance behaviors. The BOS method tends to be difficult and time-consuming to develop and maintain. Moreover, to ensure accurate appraisal, raters must be able to observe employees closely and regularly. However, observing employees on a regular basis may not be feasible where supervisors are responsible for several people.

Results-Based Systems Results-based performance appraisal methods focus on measurable outcomes such as an indi- vidual’s or team’s sales, customer service ratings, productivity, reduced incidence of workplace injuries, and so forth. The selection of results largely depends on three factors. The first factor is the relevance of the results that may be used to judge a company’s progress toward meeting its strategic goals. The second factor is the reliability with which results can be measured. The third factor is the extent to which the results measure is truly a measure of performance over which an employee has the resources and latitude to achieve the designated results.

Management by objectives (MBO) could possibly be the most effective PA technique because supervisors and employees determine objectives for employees to meet during the rating period and employees appraise how well they have achieved their objectives. MBO is used mainly for managerial and professional employees and typically evaluates employees’ progress toward strategic planning objectives.

Employees and supervisors together determine objectives tied to corporate strategies. Employees are expected to attain these objectives during the rating period. The crucial phase of the MBO process requires that challenging but attainable objectives and standards be established through interaction between managers and employees. Individuals jointly established objectives with their managers, who then give them some latitude in how to achieve the objectives. Action plans require clear delineation of what specifically is to be accomplished and when it is to be completed. For example, if a sales manager has a performance objective of increasing sales in his

behavioral observation scale (BOS) A specific kind of behavioral system for evaluating job performance by illustrating positive incidents (or behaviors) of job performance for various job dimensions.

results-based performance appraisal Performance appraisal method in which the manager and employee jointly agree on objectives for the next appraisal period; in the past a form of management by objectives.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Appraising Performance at Global Insurance As Devin Franklin hung up from a call with yet

another unhappy employee, he realized there was a problem with the new PA system. Devin, the HR Manager at Global Insurance, rolled out a new performance rating form about a month ago and has since heard from several frustrated employees. Devin met his goal to get the new system in place before the end of the year, but may have rushed the process too much. He created a basic form using rating scales that asked supervisors to rate all employees on the same common factors such as quality and quantity of work, customer service skills, and gen- eral attitude. The easy to use form allowed supervisors to just check the right boxes and give it to the employees. But, there have been a variety

of complaints suggesting the appraisals aren’t effectively evaluating the employees’ performance. Many complaints have argued different definitions of the factors being evaluated such as attitude. Some of the field insurance agents who work outside of the office on their own have even suggested that their direct supervisors shouldn’t evalu- ate their customer service skills because the supervisors never actually observe their customer interactions. The supervisors have asked him a lot of questions about the form as well. Devin considered organizing a training program for the supervisors, but he decided there just wasn’t enough time. Now, he’s not sure if a training program would even fix the problems.

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194 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

or her area by 38 percent next year, the action plan might include the employment of three expe- rienced salespersons, six calls a week by the sales manager on major customers, and assignment of appropriate sales quotas to all the salespeople.

At the end of the rating period, the employee writes a report explaining his or her progress toward accomplishing the objectives, and the employee’s supervisor appraises the employee’s performance based on accomplishment of the objectives. Despite the importance of managerial employees to company success, it is often difficult to establish appropriate performance goals because many companies simply do not fully describe the scope of these positions. MBO can promote effective communication between employees and their supervisors.

With MBO, performance is evaluated based on progress toward objective attainment. Hav- ing specific performance objectives provides management with a basis for comparison. When objectives are agreed on by the manager and the employee, self-evaluation and controls become possible. In fact, with MBO, PA can be a joint effort, based on agreement.

With MBO, it is left up to the managers to take corrective action when results are not as planned. Such action may take the form of changes in personnel, changes in the organization, or even changes in the objectives. Other forms of corrective action may include providing additional training and development of individual managers or employees to enable them to better achieve the desired results. Corrective action should not necessarily have negative connotations. Under MBO, objectives can be renegotiated downward without penalty or fear of job loss. Various seg- ments of the MBO process can easily be integrated into an effective goal-oriented system. Goal- oriented systems are often a component of broader development programs that help employees achieve career goals.

On the downside, MBO is time-consuming and requires a constant f low of information between employees and employers. Moreover, its focus is only on the attainment of goals, often to the exclusion of other important outcomes. This drawback is known as a “results at any cost” mentality.24 The role of automobile sales professionals historically was literally limited to making sales. Once these professionals and customers agreed on the price of a car, the sales profession- als’ work with customers was completed. Automobile salespeople today remain in contact with clients for several months following the completion of the sale. The purpose is to ensure customer satisfaction and build loyalty to the product and dealership by addressing questions about the vehicle’s features and reminding clients about scheduled service checks.

Another results-oriented practice is the work standards method. The work standards method is a PA method that compares each employee’s performance to a predetermined standard or expected level of output. Standards reflect the normal output of an average worker operating at a normal pace. Firms may apply work standards to virtually all types of jobs, but production jobs generally receive the most attention. An obvious advantage of using work standards as appraisal criteria is objectivity. However, for employees to perceive that the standards are objective, they should understand clearly how the standards were set. Management must also explain the rationale for any changes to the standards.

The work standards method is often coupled with an incentive pay plan known as the piece- work plan. Piecework plans typically found in manufacturing settings, rewards employees based on their individual hourly production against an objective output standard and is determined by the pace at which manufacturing equipment operates. For each hour, workers receive piecework incentives for every item produced over the designated production standard. Workers also receive a guaranteed hourly pay rate regardless of whether they meet the designated production standard. Companies use piecework plans when the time to produce a unit is relatively short, usually less than 15 minutes, and the cycle repeats continuously.

Figure 7-6 illustrates the calculation of a piecework incentive.

work standards method Performance appraisal method that compares each employee’s performance to a predetermined standard or expected level of output.

☛ $F Y I In a survey commissioned by the Society for Human Resource Management:

$$ Nine out of ten companies reported using annual or semi-annual performance reviews. $$ Only three out of ten expressed that they conducted them well.25

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Assessing the Effectiveness and Limitations of Performance Appraisal Practices It is important to understand how to distinguish between effective and ineffective performance appraisal practices. Also, as noted earlier, there are potentially legal consequences for the firm when ineffective practices are not remedied. We review these issues next.

Characteristics of an Effective Appraisal System The basic purpose of a PA system is to improve the performance of individuals, teams, and the entire organization. The system may also serve to assist in making administrative decisions con- cerning pay increases, promotions, transfers, or terminations. In addition, the appraisal system must be legally defensible. Although a perfect system does not exist, every system should possess certain characteristics. The following factors assist in accomplishing these purposes.

RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY We discussed the reliability and validity of selection practices in Chapter 6. These issues equally apply to performance appraisal methods. Applied to performance appraisal, reliability refers to the extent to which a method provides consistent results. For example, let’s assume that two managers are similarly familiar with an employee’s job performance, and they independently rate performance using the same method at the same time. If the supervisors’ judgements were in alignment, we could say that the performance appraisal method is reliable (normally, we talk about degrees of reliability).

Validity is the extent to which a test measures what it claims to measure. If a performance appraisal method measures something other than job performance, it has no value. For instance, if a sales professional is judged on monthly sales revenue, then, measuring anything else leads to the conclusion that the method is not valid. An illustration would be measuring motivation to perform well rather than sales revenue.

JOB-RELATED CRITERIA Job-relatedness is perhaps the most basic criterion needed in employee performance appraisals. The evaluation instrument should tie in closely to the accomplishment of organizational goals.26 The Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures and court decisions are quite clear on this point. More specifically, evaluation criteria should be determined through job analysis. Subjective factors, such as initiative, enthusiasm, loyalty, and cooperation may be important; however, unless clearly shown to be job related, they should not be used.

PERFORMANCE EXPECTATIONS Employees must understand in advance what is expected of them. How can employees function effectively if they do not know what they are being measured against? On the other hand, if employees clearly understand the expectations, they can evaluate their own performance and make timely adjustments as they perform their jobs, without having to wait for the formal evaluation review. The establishment of highly objective work standards is relatively simple in many areas, such as manufacturing, assembly, and sales. For numerous other types of jobs, however, this task is more difficult. Still, evaluation must take place based on clearly understood performance expectations.

7.4 Assess the effectiveness and limitations of performance appraisal practices.

Piecework standard: 15 stitched garments per hour

Hourly base pay rate awarded to employees when the standard is not met: $4.50 per hour That is, workers receive $4.50 per hour worked regardless of whether they meet the piece- work standard of 15 stitched garments per hour. Piecework incentive award: $0.75 per garment stitched per hour above the piecework standard

Guaranteed Hourly Base Pay ($)

Piecework Award (No. of Garments Stitched above the Piecework Standard : Piecework Incentive Award)

Total Hourly Earnings ($)

First hour 4.50 10 garments * $0.75/garment = $7.50 12.00 second hour 4.50 Fewer than 15 stitched garments, thus

piecework award equals $0 4.50

FIGURE 7-6 Calculation of a Piecework Award for a Garment Worker

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196 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

STANDARDIZATION Firms should use the same evaluation instrument for all employees in the same job category who work for the same supervisor. Supervisors should also conduct appraisals covering similar periods for these employees. Regularly scheduled feedback sessions and appraisal interviews for all employees are essential. Most large companies require groups of supervisors to come together to standardize employee performance reviews. They hash out the rationale behind each employee’s performance rating and adjust them to ensure that they reflect similar standards and expectations.28

Formal documentation of appraisal data serves several purposes, including protection against possible legal action. Employees should sign their evaluations. If the employee refuses to sign, the manager should document this behavior. Records should also include a description of employee responsibilities, expected performance results, and the role these data play in making appraisal decisions. Although PA is important for small firms, they are not expected to maintain PA systems that are as formal as those used by large organizations. Courts have reasoned that objective criteria are not as important in firms with only a few employees because in smaller firms, top managers are more intimately acquainted with employees’ work.

TRAINED APPRAISERS A common deficiency in appraisal systems is that the evaluators seldom receive training on how to conduct effective evaluations. Unless everyone evaluating performance receives training in the art of giving and receiving feedback, the process can lead to uncertainty and conf lict. The training should be an ongoing process to ensure accuracy and consistency. It should cover how to rate employees and how to conduct appraisal interviews. Instructions should be rather detailed and the importance of making objective and unbiased ratings should be emphasized.

CONTINUOUS OPEN COMMUNICATION Most employees have a strong need to know how well they are performing. A good appraisal system provides highly desired feedback on a continuing basis. There should be few surprises in the performance review. However, in one survey, only 45 percent of individuals felt their managers consistently communicated their performance concerns throughout the year.29 Managers should handle daily performance problems as they occur and not allow them to pile up for six months or a year and then address them during the PA interview. When something new surfaces during the appraisal interview, the manager probably did not do a good enough job communicating with the employee throughout the appraisal process. Even though the interview presents an excellent opportunity for both parties to exchange ideas, it should never serve as a substitute for the day-to-day communication and coaching required by performance management.

CONDUCT PERFORMANCE REVIEWS In addition to the need for continuous communication between managers and employees, a special time should be set for a formal discussion of an employee’s performance. Because improved performance is a common goal of appraisal systems, withholding appraisal results is absurd. Employees are severely handicapped in their developmental efforts if denied access to this information. A performance review allows them to detect any errors or omissions in the appraisal, or an employee may disagree with the evaluation and want to challenge it.

Constant employee performance documentation is vitally important for accurate PAs. Although the task can be tedious and boring for managers, maintaining a continuous record of observed and reported incidents is essential in building a useful appraisal. The appraisal interview will be discussed in a later section.

DUE PROCESS Ensuring due process is vital. If the company does not have a formal grievance procedure, it should develop one to provide employees an opportunity to appeal appraisal results that they consider inaccurate or unfair. They must have a procedure for pursuing their grievances and having them addressed objectively.

☛ $F Y I $$ Only about half of employees strongly agree that they know what is expected of them at work.27

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Limitations of Performance Appraisal PA is constantly under a barrage of criticism. The rating scales method seems to be the most vul- nerable target. Yet in all fairness, many of the problems commonly mentioned are not exclusive to this method but rather, reflect improper implementation. The following section highlights some of the more common problem areas.

APPRAISER DISCOMFORT Conducting PAs is often a frustrating task for managers. If a PA system has a faulty design, or improper administration, employees will dread receiving appraisals and the managers will despise giving them. In fact, some managers have always loathed the time, paperwork, difficult choices, and discomfort that often accompanies the appraisal process. Going through the procedure cuts into a manager’s high-priority workload and the experience can be especially unpleasant when the employee in question has not performed well.

SUBJECTIVITY OF PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS A potential weakness of many PA methods is that they lack objectivity. For example, commonly used factors such as traits, behaviors, and competencies are virtually impossible to measure with objective measures. In addition, these factors may have little to do with an employee’s job performance. Although subjectivity will always exist in appraisal methods, employee appraisal based primarily on personal characteristics may place the evaluator and the company in untenable positions with the employee and equal employment opportunity guidelines. The firm may be hard-pressed to show that some of these factors are job related.

Almost all people make rating errors. Rating errors reflect differences between human judgment processes versus objective, accurate assessments uncolored by bias, prejudice, or other subjective, extraneous influences.30 Human resource departments can help raters to minimize errors by carefully choosing rating systems and to recognize and avoid common errors. Major types of rater errors include:

$$ Bias errors $$ Contrast errors $$ Errors of central tendency $$ Errors of leniency or strictness

BIAS ERRORS Bias errors happen when the rater evaluates the employee based on a personal negative or positive opinion of the employee, rather than on the employee’s actual performance. Four ways supervisors may bias evaluation results are first-impression effects, positive and negative halo effects, similar-to-me effects, and illegal discriminatory biases.

A manager biased by a first-impression effect might make an initial favorable or unfavorable judgment about an employee and then ignore or distort the employee’s actual performance to fit this impression. For instance, a manager expects that a newly hired graduate of a prestigious university will be an exemplary performer. After one year on the job, this employee fails to meet many of the work objectives, nevertheless, the manager rates the job performance more highly because of the initial impression.

A positive halo effect (oftentimes, referred to simply as a halo effect) or negative halo effect (also known as a horn error) occurs when a rater generalizes an employee’s good or bad behavior on one aspect of the job to all aspects of the job. For example, Rodney Pirkle, accounting supervisor, placed a high value on neatness, a factor used in the company’s PA system. As Rodney was evaluating the performance of his senior accounting clerk, Jack Hicks, he noted that Jack was a very neat individual and gave him a high ranking on this factor. Also, consciously or uncon- sciously, Rodney permitted the high ranking on neatness to carry over to other factors, giving Jack undeserved high ratings on some other performance criteria even though his actual performance was low. This phenomenon is known as the positive halo effect, an evaluation error that occurs when a manager generalizes one positive performance feature or incident to all aspects of employee performance, resulting in a higher rating. Of course, if Jack had not been neat, yet, performed well on every other dimension, the opposite, the horn error would have occurred.

rating errors In performance appraisals, differences between human judgment processes versus objective, accurate assessments uncolored by bias, prejudice, or other subjective, extraneous influences.

bias errors Evaluation errors that occur when the rater evaluates the employee based on a personal negative or positive opinion of the employee rather than on the employee’s actual performance.

first-impression effect An initial favorable or unfavorable judgment about an employee’s which is ignored or distorted.

positive halo effect (or halo effect) Evaluation error that occurs when a manager generalizes one positive performance feature or incident to all aspects of employee performance, resulting in a higher rating.

negative halo effect (or horn error) Evaluation error that occurs when a manager generalizes one negative performance feature or incident to all aspects of employee performance, resulting in a lower rating.

☛ $F Y I $$ Researchers maintain that 61 percent of an employee’s rating is based on the manager’s judgment

of him/herself rather than on the employee.31

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A similar-to-me effect refers to the tendency on the part of raters to judge favorably employees whom they perceive as like themselves. Supervisors biased by this effect rate more favorably employees who have attitudes, values, backgrounds, or interests like theirs. For example, employees whose children attend the same elementary school as their manager’s children receive higher PA ratings than do employees who do not have children. Similar-to-me errors or biases easily can lead to charges of illegal discriminatory bias, wherein a supervisor rates members of his or her race, gender, nationality, or religion more favorably than members of other classes.

This pitfall occurs when managers allow individual differences to affect the ratings they give. If there are factors to avoid such as gender, race, or age, not only is this problem detrimental to employee morale, but it is obviously illegal and can result in costly lawsuits. The effects of cultural bias, or stereotyping, can influence appraisals.32 Managers establish mental pictures of what are considered ideal typical workers, and employees who do not match this picture may be unfairly judged. Although all people have biases of some type that can affect the appraisal process, a suc- cessful evaluator will manage these biases.33

CONTRAST ERRORS Supervisors make contrast errors when they compare an employee with other employees rather than to specific, explicit performance standards. Such comparisons qualify as errors because other employees are required to perform only at minimum acceptable standards. Employees performing at minimally acceptable levels should receive satisfactory ratings, even if every other employee doing the job is performing at outstanding or above-average levels.

ERRORS OF CENTRAL TENDENCY When supervisors rate all employees as average or close to average, they commit errors of central tendency. Such errors are most often committed when raters are forced to justify only extreme behavior (i.e., high or low ratings) with written explanations, therefore, HR professionals should require justification for ratings at every level of the scale and not just at the extremes. With such a system, the rater may avoid possible controversy or criticism by giving only average ratings.34 However, because these ratings tend to cluster in the fully satisfactory range, employees do not often complain. Nevertheless, this error does exist and it influences the accuracy of evaluations. Typically, when pay raises are given, they will be based on an employee’s rated performance. When a manager gives an underachiever or overachiever an average rating, it undermines the compensation system.35

ERRORS OF LENIENCY OR STRICTNESS Raters sometimes place every employee at the high or low end of the scale, regardless of actual performance. With a leniency error, managers tend to appraise employees’ performance more highly than they rate compared with objective criteria. This behavior is often motivated by a desire to avoid controversy over the appraisal. However, leniency provides a false sense of confidence to the employee and diminishes exceptional performance by other workers. It is most prevalent when highly subjective (and difficult to defend) performance criteria are used, and the rater is required to discuss evaluation results with employees. When managers know they are evaluating employees for administrative purposes, such as pay increases, they are likely to be more lenient than when evaluating performance to achieve employee development. Leniency, however, may result in failure to recognize correctable deficiencies. The practice may also deplete the merit budget and reduce the rewards available for superior employees. Rather than confronting employees whose performance is not acceptable, managers may avoid the situation by giving false-positive performance evaluations. An organization may find itself in a difficult situation when after firing a problem employee, the recent excellent performance evaluation shows up as part of a lawsuit.36 Rating an employee as outstanding and then firing him or her because of poor performance will make a supervisor look foolish if taken to court. On the other hand, strictness errors occur when a supervisor rates an employee’s performance lower than it would be if compared against objective criteria.

EMPLOYEE ANXIETY The evaluation process may also create anxiety for the appraised employee.37 This may take the form of discontent, apathy, and turnover. In a worst-case scenario, a lawsuit is filed based on real or perceived unfairness. Opportunities for promotion, better work assignments, and increased compensation may hinge on the results. This could cause not only apprehension but also outright resistance. One opinion is that if you surveyed typical employees, they would tell you PA is management’s way of highlighting all the bad things they did all year.

illegal discriminatory bias A bias error for which a supervisor rates members of his or her race, gender, nationality, or religion more favorably than members of other classes.

contrast errors A rating error in which a rater (e.g., a supervisor) compares an employee to other employees rather than to specific explicit performance standards.

central tendency error Evaluation appraisal error that occurs when employees are incorrectly rated near the average or middle of a scale.

leniency error Giving an undeserved high performance appraisal rating to an employee.

strictness errors Being unduly critical of an employee’s work performance.

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Legal Considerations Employee lawsuits may result from negative evaluations. Employees often win these cases, thanks in part to the firm’s own PA procedures. A review of court cases makes it clear that legally defensible PA systems should be in place. Perfect systems are not expected, and the law does not preclude supervisory discretion in the process. However, the courts normally require an absence of adverse impact on members of protected classes or validation of the process. It also expects a system that keeps one manager from directing or controlling an employee’s career. There should also be a system whereby the appraisal is reviewed and approved by someone or some group in the organization. Another requirement is that the evaluator must have personal knowledge of the employee’s job performance. In addition, the system uses predetermined norms that limit the manager’s discretion.

Mistakes in appraising performance and decisions based on invalid results can have seri- ous repercussions. For example, discriminatory merit pay increases have resulted in costly legal action. In settling cases, courts have held employers liable for back pay, court costs, and other costs related to training and promoting certain employees in protected classes. Further, giving higher- than-earned evaluations and then firing an employee may set the stage for a suit, especially if the individual is a member of a protected group. The apparent inconsistency may give the employee a basis for claiming discrimination.38

Legislation that prohibits illegal discrimination in employment practices (e.g., the Age Dis- crimination in Employment Act) certainly applies to PA practices. In the case of Mistretta v. San- dia Corporation (a subsidiary of Western Electric Company, Inc.), a federal district court judge ruled against the company, stating, “There is sufficient circumstantial evidence to indicate that age bias and age based policies appear throughout the performance rating process to the detri- ment of the protected age group.” The Albemarle Paper v. Moody case also supported validation requirements for PAs, as well as for selection tests. Organizations should avoid using any appraisal method that results in a disproportionately negative impact on a protected group.

An employer may also be vulnerable to a negligent retention claim if an employee who con- tinually receives unsatisfactory ratings in safety practices, for example, is kept on the payroll and he or she causes injury to a third party. In these instances, firms might reduce their liability if they provide substandard performers with training designed to overcome the deficiencies.

It is unlikely that any appraisal system will be immune to legal challenge. However, systems that possess the characteristics discussed are more legally defensible. At the same time, they can provide a more effective means for achieving PM goals.

Performance Appraisal Interview The appraisal interview is the Achilles’ heel of the entire evaluation process. In fact, appraisal review sessions often create hostility and can do more harm than good to the employee-manager relationship. To minimize the possibility of hard feelings, the face-to-face meeting and the written review must have performance improvement, not criticism, as their goal. The reviewing manager must use all the tact he or she can muster in discussing areas needing improvement. Managers should help employees understand that they are not the only ones under the gun. Rating manag- ers should emphasize their own responsibility for the employee’s development and commitment for support.

The appraisal interview has the potential for confrontation and undermining the goal of motivating employees. Still, some employees who receive negative feedback respond by yelling or getting defensive; others may cry. As disarming as these reactions may be, managers must avoid responding to reactive employees in the same manner.39 The situation improves consider- ably when several sources provide input, including perhaps the employee’s own self-appraisal. Regardless of the system used, employees will not trust a system they do not understand.

Scheduling the Interview Supervisors usually conduct a formal appraisal interview at the end of an employee’s appraisal period. It should be made clear to the employee as to what the meeting is about.40 Employees typically know when their interview should take place, and their anxiety tends to increase if their supervisor delays the meeting. Interviews with top performers are often pleasant experiences for

7.5 Explain how to conduct the appraisal interview.

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all concerned. However, supervisors may be reluctant to meet face-to-face with poor performers. They tend to postpone these anxiety-provoking interviews.

Interview Structure A successful appraisal interview should be structured in a way that allows both the supervi- sor and the employee to view it as a problem-solving rather than a fault-finding session. The manager has several purposes when planning an appraisal interview. Certainly, the employee’s performance should be discussed, focusing on specific accomplishments.41 Also, the employee should be assisted in setting goals and personal development plans for the next appraisal period. The manager should suggest means for achieving established goals, including support from the manager and firm. For instance, a worker may receive an average rating on a factor such as quality of production. In the interview, both parties should agree to the specific improvement needed dur- ing the next appraisal period and specific actions that each should take.42

During performance reviews, managers might ask employees whether their current duties and roles are effective in achieving their goals. In addition to reviewing job-related performance, they might also discuss subjective topics, such as career ambitions. For example, in working on a project, perhaps an employee discovered an unrealized aptitude. This awareness could result in a new goal or serve as a springboard to an expanded role in the organization.

The amount of time devoted to an appraisal interview varies considerably with company policy and the position of the evaluated employee. Although costs are a consideration, there is merit in conducting separate interviews for discussing: (1) employee performance and develop- ment; and (2) pay. Many managers have learned that as soon as the topic of pay emerges in an interview, it tends to dominate the conversation, with performance improvement taking a back seat. For this reason, if pay increases or bonuses are involved in the appraisal, it might be advisable to defer those discussions for one to several weeks after the appraisal interview.

Use of Praise and Criticism Some managers believe that they should focus only on negative items. However, focusing only on weaknesses has the potential to damage relationships with employees.43 No one wants a lengthy interview where they are constantly bombarded with criticism. A person might reason that, “If I am this bad, I had better find another job.”

As suggested previously, conducting an appraisal interview requires tact and patience on the part of the evaluator. Praise is appropriate when warranted, but it can have limited value if not clearly deserved. If an employee must eventually be terminated because of poor performance, a manager’s false praise could bring into question the “real” reason for being fired. In addition, giving praise should be a positive experience for both the manager and employee. However, the message sometimes is lost when the manager displays inconsistent body language. Other factors may also undermine the intended message. Tone of voice, facial expressions, nonverbal, and emo- tion may be as important as the spoken word.44 For instance, frequently looking at the clock on the wall rather than making direct eye contact sends mixed signals.

Criticism, even if warranted, is especially difficult to give. The employee may not perceive it as being constructive. It is important that discussions of these sensitive issues focus on the deficiency, not the person. Effective managers minimize threats to the employee’s self-esteem whenever possible. When giving criticism, managers should emphasize the positive aspects of performance; criticize actions, not the person; and ask the employee how he or she would change things to improve the situation. Also, the manager should avoid supplying all the answers and try to turn the interview into a win-win situation so that all concerned gain.

Employees’ Role From the employees’ side, two weeks or so before the review, they should go through their diaries or files and make a note of all projects worked on, regardless whether they were successful.45 The best recourse for employees in preparing for an appraisal review is to prepare a list of creative ways they have solved problems with limited resources. They will look especially good if they can show how their work contributes to the value of the company. This information should be on the appraising manager’s desk well before the review. Reminding managers of information, they may have missed should help in developing a more objective and accurate appraisal.

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Concluding the Interview Ideally, employees will leave the interview with positive feelings about management, the company, the job, and themselves. If the meeting results in a deflated ego, the prospects for improved per- formance will be bleak. Although you cannot change past behavior, future performance is another matter. The interview should end with specific and mutually agreed-on plans for the employee’s development. Managers should assure employees who require additional training that it will be forthcoming and that they will have the full support of their supervisor. When management does its part in employee development, it is up to the individual to perform in an acceptable manner.

Trends in Performance Appraisal Practice In recent years, many HR professionals, business executives, and employees have questioned the value of traditional annual performance appraisal methods. A survey by Deloitte University revealed that 78 percent of HR professionals said that performance management is important or very important.46 However, only eight percent of the respondents stated that that their performance management process drove business results.47 Some firms have transitioned to ongoing reviews that entail more frequent, developmental feedback, often making pay raise and promotion deci- sions separately. For instance, Kris Duggan, CEO of information technology company Better- Works, maintains, “When evaluating who gets promotions, raises and bonuses, it has to be done in a more subjective manner, taking into account the competitive rate for the market, the amount of time since the last raise, what sorts of customer or internal relationships have been developed, and how well the employee is executing on his or her objectives.”48

By September 2015, 51 large firms were changing to a system without ratings.49 Many more are contemplating the same. Several other firms have modified their performance appraisal meth- ods. General Electric (GE), once known for using forced ranking systems, stopped using them. At GE, employees who were rated in the bottom 10 percent of the performance distribution were either encouraged to leave or fired. Instead, the company now expects 200,000 salaried employees and managers to share frequent feedback via a mobile app called [email protected] Janice Semper, a GE human resource executive, maintained that eliminating ratings, “led to more meaningful, richer conversations that were not getting distracted by . . . a label.”51

Adobe Systems had used a forced ranking system for many years until 2012. The company estimated that managers spent a total of 80,000 hours to conduct annual reviews.52 Nowadays, the company provides extensive training to educate employees and managers about how to conduct more frequent “check-in” meetings. Donna Morris, senior vice president of human resources, described check-ins as, “ . . . a 180 [-degree turn] in terms of giving people the material they need to improve their performance and change course.”53 Morris added, “It completely changes how employees feel about their jobs and opportunities. Feedback is now viewed as a gift.” Adobe also deemed the new approach as successful based on an analysis of involuntary and voluntary turn- over. The voluntary turnover rate has decreased by 30 percent and involuntary turnover increased by 50 percent.54

Some companies recognize the value of frequent feedback and elements of a rating system. For instance, IBM uses technology to facilitate more frequent performance reviews. IBM uses the Checkpoint app to set short-term goals and managers provide quarterly feedback on their prog- ress. For the ratings portion, managers evaluate every employee on five criteria—business results, impact on client success, innovation, personal responsibility to others, and skills. Diane Gherson, chief human resource officer at IBM, said, “In the old system, there was one score. People [got] sort of obsessed by that.”55 In addition, she spoke highly of the five-factor rating, “It leads to a much richer, more balanced discussion.” The following Watch It video describes online retailer Hautelook’s PA system. The system blends the use of traditional ratings and frequent discussions between managers and employees.

7.6 Summarize key trends in performance appraisal practice.

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Hautelook: Appraising and respond to questions.

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Despite some companies’ shifts away from traditional performance appraisal methods, these practices are far from extinction. One survey revealed that roughly 90 percent of firms worldwide use performance ratings. In addition, these firms rely on ratings as a factor in pay raise decisions.56

There are many reasons that companies maintain the status quo. Perhaps most noteworthy is the lack of executive-level support for change. For example, Intel Corporation executives were worried that sacrificing ratings would draw healthy tension out of a workplace.57 In addition, others were concerned that managers may not possess sufficient skills to use performance dis- cussions effectively. There is some merit to this concern. In some cases, managers displayed dif- ficulties explaining job performance to employees as well as clearly describing specific steps for improvement.58 Perhaps managers have become accustomed to using traditional ratings. Without them, they may be having difficulty framing the discussion.59

In summary, traditional performance appraisal methods have come under greater scrutiny in recent years. Some firms have changed their approach and others remain somewhat skeptical about moving away from traditional methods. HR professionals have had decades to analyze the effectiveness of traditional methods. The alternatives discussed in this section may well prove to be superior; however, sufficient time has not passed to complete rigorous evaluations in much the same way that HR professionals and researchers have done for traditional methods.

Try It! If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the Individual Behavior simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Describe performance management, performance

appraisal, and the performance appraisal process. Per- formance management (PM) is a goal-oriented process that is directed toward ensuring that organizational pro- cesses are in place to maximize productivity of employ- ees, teams, and ultimately, the organization. PM systems are one of the major focuses in business today. With PM, the effort of each worker should be directed toward achieving strategic goals. Performance appraisal (PA) is a system of review and evaluation of individual or team task performance.

The identification of specific goals is the starting point for the PA process and the beginning of a continu- ous cycle. Then job expectations are established with the help of job analysis. The next step involves examining the actual work performed. Performance is then appraised. The final step involves discussing the appraisal with the employee.

2. Explain the uses of performance appraisal and perfor- mance criteria. The most common appraisal criteria are traits, behaviors, competencies, goal achievement, and improvement potential.

PA data are potentially valuable for use in numer- ous human resource functional areas, including human resource planning, recruitment and selection, training and

development, career planning and development, compen- sation programs, internal employee relations, and assess- ment of employee potential.

People who are usually responsible for PA include immediate supervisors, employees, peers and team mem- bers, self-appraisal, and customer appraisal.

Formal performance evaluations are usually prepared at specific intervals. Although there is nothing magical about the period for formal appraisal reviews, in most organizations they occur either annually or semi-annually.

3. Describe the choice of various performance appraisal methods. PA methods include 360-degree feedback evalu- ation, rating scales, critical incidents, work standards, ranking, forced distribution, behaviorally anchored rating scales, and results-based approaches.

4. Assess the effectiveness and limitations of performance appraisal practices. Characteristics of effective performance appraisal practices include reliable and valid methods, job- related criteria, setting performance expectations, standard- ization, trained appraisers, continuous open communication, conducting performance reviews, and ensuring due process.

The problems associated with PAs include appraiser discomfort, lack of objectivity, halo/horn errors, leniency/ strictness, central tendency, recent behavior bias, personal bias (stereotyping), and employee anxiety.

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A review of court cases makes it clear that legally defen- sible PA systems should be in place. Perfect systems are not expected, and the law does not preclude supervisory discretion in the process. However, systems that possess certain characteristics are more legally defensible.

5. Explain how to conduct the appraisal interview. A suc- cessful appraisal interview should be structured in a way that allows both the supervisor and the employee to view it as a problem-solving rather than a fault-finding session. Activities include scheduling the interview, structuring the interview, appropriate use of praise and criticism, clarifying employees’ role and concluding the interview by setting plans for effective performance.

6. Summarize key trends in performance appraisal practice. Traditional performance appraisal methods have come under scrutiny for a variety of reasons. Five rea- sons include limiting performance appraisal to one-year

intervals, ratings do not fully capture the scope and depth of performance, supervisors and managers may find it dif- ficult to accurately recall employees’ performance over an extended period, companies coordinate performance appraisals with pay increase decisions, and traditional methods most often focus on past rather than future performance.

Many companies have set aside traditional perfor- mance appraisal approaches for continuous performance discussions; others have introduced hybrid methods that combine features of ratings and continuous discussions.

Criticisms of traditional methods do not signal the extinction of this approach. While new approaches show promise, they are not without limitations, including craft- ing clear discussions about performance. Over time, evaluation studies will shed light on the effectiveness of newer approaches.

Key Terms performance management (PM) 182 performance appraisal (PA) 182 360-degree feedback evaluation

method 187 trait systems 188 comparison systems 189 forced distribution method 189 paired comparisons method 190 behavioral systems 191 critical incident technique 191

behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS) 192

behavioral observation scales (BOS) 193

results-based performance appraisal 193

management-by-objectives (MBO) 193

work standards method 194 rating errors 197

bias errors 197 first-impression effect 197 positive halo effect 197 negative halo effect (horn error) 197 similar-to-me effect 197 illegal discriminatory bias 198 contrast errors 198 errors of central tendency 198 leniency error 198 strictness errors 198

Questions for Review 7-1. Define performance management and performance

appraisal. 7-2. What are the uses of performance appraisal? 7-3. What are some reasons that people give for getting rid

of performance appraisal? 7-4. What are the steps in the performance appraisal

process? 7-5. What aspects of a person’s performance might an orga-

nization evaluate? 7-6. Many different people can conduct performance

appraisals. What are the various alternatives? 7-7. What appraisal intervals are often used in appraisal

reviews? 7-8. Briefly describe each of the following methods of per-

formance appraisal: (a) 360-degree feedback evaluation (b) rating scales

(c) critical incidents (d) work standards (e) ranking (f) forced distribution (g) behaviorally anchored rating scales (h) results-based systems

7-9. What are the various problems associated with perfor- mance appraisal? Briefly describe each.

7-10. What are the legal considerations associated with per- formance appraisal?

7-11. Explain why the following statement is often true: “The Achilles’ heel of the entire evaluation process is the appraisal interview itself.”

7-12. What are some of the considerations associated with changing from the use of employee ratings to continu- ous discussions?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

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204 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Work Performance Assessment This self-assessment helps you identify obstacles you are experiencing (or have experienced) that prevent you from achieving a high level of performance in a work setting. Provide responses regarding work performance based on a current (or a recent) work situation.

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Abdication of Responsibility You are the new vice president for HR of a

company that has not been performing well, and everyone, including yourself, has a mandate to deliver results. The pressure has never been greater. Shareholders are angry after 3 years of a tough market that has left their company stock losing value every day. Many sharehold- ers desperately need stock performance to pay for their retirement. Working for you is a 52-year-old manager with two kids in college. In previous evaluations, executives told him he was doing fine, when he clearly was not, and his performance is still far below par.

If you are to show others in the company that you are willing to make tough decisions, you feel you must fire this individual. The question is who’s going to suffer: the firm and ultimately shareholders whose retirements are in jeopardy, or a nice guy who’s been lied to for 20 years? 7-13. What would you do? 7-14. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less than ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Employee performance appraisals will ultimately be a managerial decision. As a manager, your focus will be on the broader issues of production, revenue, customer service, and competition. Managing and appraising employees’ performance will be an important factor in sustaining high levels of production, revenue, and competitive advantage. Making effective decisions requires managers and HR to work together to determine the most appropriate method for appraising performance and effectively com- municating the result to employees.

Action checklist for managers and HR—planning and conducting effective performance appraisals HR takes the lead

Work with line managers to design the performance appraisal plan that best fits the specific duties and responsibilities of roles. Consider implementing a training program wherein managers are trained in two areas: (1) accurately assessing performance; and (2) recording the assessment in a way that is lawful and easily understood by both the employer and employee.

Set in motion the discussions between managers and employees where performance will be discussed and action plans based on the particular circumstances (e.g., discussing training opportunities to remedy performance deficiencies, or career planning for advancing high performing employees).

Managers take the lead

Determine performance criteria and accurate measurements to ensure that a specific output is the expectation of both the employee and employer.

Work with HR to become educated on the limitations of different performance appraisal methods, particularly methods that require subjective evaluations of employee performance. Certain roles have objective standards (e.g., sales numbers), but most require a subjective evaluation, introducing the possibility of rating errors.

Following company policy, use appraisals to accurately compensate employees, set training plans to help turnaround poor performance, or develop a plan for career advancement based on past excellent performance. Review these plans with HR professionals.

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HRM by the Numbers Performance Appraisal: Forced Distribution

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Despite the limitations of forced distribution performance appraisal methods, many companies continue to use them. The forced distribution method follows the principles of forced distribution grading systems found in some colleges and universities where professors award grades that fit a prescribed distribution. It is the HR professional’s responsibility to review the performance evaluations submitted by each department and determine whether the ratings conform to the company’s prescribed performance distribution.

Prescribed Performance Distribution

1. Outstanding 2. Above average 3. Average 4. Below average 5. Poor 10% 20% 40% 20% 10%

You just received the following sets of performance ratings from the customer service department and warehouse:

Customer Service Department (300 employees)

1. Outstanding 2. Above average 3. Average 4. Below average 5. Poor 30 employees 60 employees 120 employees 60 employees 30 employees

Warehouse (500 employees)

1. Outstanding 2. Above average 3. Average 4. Below average 5. Poor 75 employees 75 employees 200 employees 50 employees 100 employees

Questions 7-15. State the distribution (in percentage terms) for the (a) customer service department and (b) warehouse. Starting with

the customer service department, list the percentages in order from outstanding through poor. Then, do the same for the warehouse.

7-16. One or both of the performance distributions calculated in question 17-15 does not match the prescribed performance distribution. Compare each distribution to the prescribed performance distribution. Does the customer service department meet the prescribed distribution? Does the warehouse distribution meet the prescribed distribution?

7-17. Focus on the mismatched distribution(s) identified in question 7-16. Correct the mismatched distribution(s) to match the prescribed standard distribution by indicating the number of employees expected to fall in each performance category.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, use O*NET (which we reviewed in Chapter 4) to select a job for further study. Start by browsing jobs in dif- ferent occupations (www.onetonline.org/find/). Next, from the find occupations drop down list, select job family. There, you will see 23 unique job families (occupations). Then, select a job family (click on the link for the chosen job family). Finally, select a job from the chosen job family (click on the link for the chosen job) and review the information contained in the detailed report. 7-18. Among the broad performance appraisal methods categories reviewed in this chapter, which one would you choose for

the selected job? Explain. 7-19. What are some of the limitations of the selected approach for appraising job performance? Be sure to answer this ques-

tion using your selected job as a frame of reference.

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I N C I D E N T 2 Good Job! Chandra LaMar just celebrated her 20th-year anniversary at Westfield Farm Implement Company, a large retailer of farm equipment ranging from small riding lawn mowers to gigantic combines. She started her career as an office clerk and received excellent performance reviews, which led to many promotions through the years. Chandra worked the longest in the customer service department as a product specialist.

Chandra was well liked by her peers. She was an easygoing indi- vidual who tried to help in any way possible. For instance, when a coworker did not understand details about new products, Chandra always took the time to answer their questions. When a coworker needed to leave early or come in late, Chandra answered his or her calls as well as her own. All the while, she never took credit for help- ing others.

Chandra was thrilled when the company promoted her to manager of the customer service department. First unsure about whether to accept the promotion, she asked her peers for their opinions. Every- body expressed excitement and support for Chandra’s promotion.

Everything had been going easily for Chandra, at least until she completed performance appraisals of her staff members. One employee, Janine Melton, has been distracted during most of the past

year while she was caring for an ill parent. Her performance was suffer- ing. For instance, Janine routinely failed to return customer phone calls and e-mails, and she missed important product introduction meetings.

When it was time for Janine’s annual PA, Chandra felt conflicted about what to do. Chandra and Janine were peers and they are close friends. Chandra did not want to add more stress to Janine’s life. After much thought, she decided to overlook Janine’s performance defi- cits, focusing instead on a couple of examples of good performance. Although Janine could not be considered more than an average worker, Chandra rated her outstanding overall. Janine was relieved when she got her review from Chandra. She had been concerned about perform- ing poorly given all of the distractions in her life, but concluded that she simply must have been too hard on herself.

Questions 7-23. From Westfield Farm Implement’s standpoint, what difficulties

might Chandra’s evaluation of Janine create? 7-24. What are the possible long-term consequences for Janine’s

employment status? 7-25. What can Chandra do to correct her mistake?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

7-26. Why are performance management and performance appraisal practices so impor- tant to a firm?

7-27. What are the characteristics of an effective appraisal system?

I N C I D E N T 1 These Things Are a Pain “There, at last it’s finished,” thought Rajiv Chaudhry, as he laid aside the last of 12 PA forms. It had been a busy week for Rajiv, who supervises a road maintenance crew for the Georgia Department of Highways.

In passing through Rajiv’s district a few days previously, the gov- ernor had complained to the area superintendent that repairs were needed on several of the highways. Because of this, the superintendent assigned Rajiv’s crew an unusually heavy workload. In addition, Rajiv received a call from the HR office that week reminding him that the PAs were late. Rajiv explained his predicament, but the HR specialist insisted that the forms be completed right away.

Looking over the appraisals again, Rajiv thought about several of the workers. The PA form had places for marking quantity of work, quality of work, and cooperativeness. For each characteristic, the worker could be graded outstanding, good, average, below average, or unsatisfactory. As Rajiv’s crew had completed all the extra work assigned for that week, he marked every worker outstanding in quan- tity of work. He marked Joe Blum average in cooperativeness because Joe had questioned one of his decisions that week. Rajiv had decided to patch a pothole in one of the roads, and Joe thought the small sec- tion of road surface ought to be broken out and replaced. Rajiv didn’t include this in the remarks section of the form, though. As a matter of fact, he wrote no remarks on any of the forms.

Rajiv felt a twinge of guilt as he thought about Roger Short. He knew that Roger had been goofing off, and the other workers had been carrying him for quite some time. He also knew that Roger would be upset if he found that he had been marked lower than the other workers. Consequently, he marked Roger the same to avoid a confron- tation. “Anyway,” Rajiv thought, “these things are a pain, and I really shouldn’t have to bother with them.”

As Rajiv folded up the PAs and put them in the envelope for mail- ing, he smiled. He was glad he would not have to think about PAs for another six months.

Questions 7-20. What weaknesses do you see in Rajiv’s performance

appraisals? 7-21. Should HR have the ability to “insist that the forms be com-

pleted right away?” Discuss. 7-22. Many managers would agree with Rajiv in saying that, “these

things are a pain, and I really shouldn’t have to bother with them.” What are the disadvantages in doing away with per- formance appraisal?

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CHAPTER 7 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND APPRAIsAl 207

Endnotes 1 Ann Pace, “The Performance Management

Dilemma,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 22. 2 Hugh J. Watson and Jim Hill, “What Gets

Watched Gets Done: How Metrics Can Motivate,” Business Intelligence Journal 14 (2009): 4–7.

3 Chris Cancialosi, “The Future of Performance Management Is Not One-Size-Fits-All,” Forbes online (February 22, 2016). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

4 Peter Cappelli and Martin Conyon, “What Do Performance Appraisals Do?” National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series (Working Paper 22400). Accessed February 5, 2017, at www.nber.org/papers/w22400.

5 “U.S. Employees Desire More Sources of Feed- back for Performance Reviews,” Piecework Award (No. of Garments Stitched above the Piecework T + D Incentive Award) 66 (February 2012): 18.

6 Joan Lloyd, “Performance Reviews Never Easy,” Receivables Report for America’s Health Care Financial Managers 24 (March 2009): 8–10.

7 “Full-Circle Assessments,” Training 47 (November/December 2010): 7.

8 John F. Welch Jr., Jack: Straight from the Gut (New York: Warner Business Books, 2001): 157–158.

9 Anne Fisher, “Should performance reviews be crowdsourced?” CNNMoney (October 8, 2013). Accessed February 10, 2014, at www.manage- ment.fortune.cnn.com.

10 Ibid. 11 G. N. Salunke, “Colleagues, Managers, Custom-

ers and Competitors Keys to Development: 360 Degree Approach to Development,” Advances in Management 3 (August 2010): 32–35.

12 Jena McGregor, “The Midyear Review’s Sudden Impact,” BusinessWeek (July 6, 2009): 50–52.

13 Claire Suddath, “Performance Reviews: Why Bother?” Bloomberg Businessweek (November 7, 2013). Accessed March 10, 2014, at www. businessweek.com.

14 Bernardin, H. J., and Beatty, R. W. (1984). Per- formance Appraisal: Assessing Human Behav- ior at Work. Boston, MA: Kent.

15 M.R. Barrick and M.K. Mount, “The Big Five Personality Dimensions and Job Performance: A Meta-Analysis,” Personnel Psychology 44 (1991): 1–26.

16 Joshua Brustein, “Microsoft Kills Its Hated Stack Rankings. Does Anyone Do Employee Reviews Right?” Bloomberg Businessweek (November 13, 2013). Accessed January 25, 2014, at www.businessweek.com.

17 Liz Ryan, “Ten Management Practices to Throw Overboard in 2012,” BusinessWeek.com (Janu- ary 23, 2012): 1.

18 Joshua Brustein, “Microsoft Kills Its Hated Stack Rankings. Does Anyone Do Employee Reviews Right?” Bloomberg Businessweek (November 13, 2013). Accessed January 25, 2014, at www.businessweek.com.

19 Vindu Goel, “A Yahoo Employee-Ranking Sys- tem Favored by Marissa Mayer Is Challenged in Court,” The New York Times online (February 1, 2016). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www. nytimes.com.

20 Fivars, G. (1975). The critical incident tech- nique: A bibliography. JSAS Catalog of Selected Documents in Psychology, 5, p. 210.

21 Smith, P., and Kendall, L. M. (1963). Retransla- tion of expectation: An approach to the construc- tion of unambiguous anchors for rating scales. Journal of Applied Psychology, 47, 149–155.

22 Latham and Wexley (1981), Increasing Produc- tivity Through Performance Appraisal, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company.

23 Latham, G. P., and Wexley, K. N. (1977). Behav- ioral observation scales for performance appraisal purposes. Personnel Psychology, 30, pp. 255–268.

24 Ibid. 25 Stephanie Taylor Christensen, “3 Ways Com-

panies Are Changing the Dreaded Performance Review,” Fast Company online (October 2, 2015). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www. fastcompany.com.

26 Nishchae Suri, “Career Journal: Making Perfor- mance Appraisals More Effective,” Wall Street Journal Online (April 29, 2011).

27 Marco Nink, “Many Employees Don’t Know What’s Expected of Them at Work,” Gallup Business Journal (October 13, 2015). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.gallup.com.

28 Rebecca R. Hastings, “Most Large Companies Calibrate Performance, Poll Finds,” HR Maga- zine 57 (February 2012): 87.

29 Alexandra Bradley, “Taking the Formality Out of Performance Reviews,” T + D 64 (June 2010): 18.

30 Blum, M. L., and Naylor, J. C. (1968). Indus- trial Psychology: Its Theoretical and Social Foundations. New York: Harper & Row.

31 Steffen Maier, “4 Unconscious Biases that Distort Performance Reviews,” Entrepneur. com (September 22, 2016). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.entrepreneur.com/article/281919.

32 Jeffrey Pfeffer, “Low Grades for Performance Reviews,” BusinessWeek (August 8, 2009): 68.

33 Eric Krell, “An Impartial Review,” HR Maga- zine 56 (October 2011): 97–99.

34 Peter C. Fisk, “Appraising the Performance of Performance Appraisals,” Monthly Labor Review online (December 2016). Accessed Feb- ruary 3, 2017, at www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2016/ beyond-bls/pdf/appraising-the-performance-of- performance-appraisals.pdf.

35 Tom Krattenmaker, “Appraising Employee Per- formance in a Downsized Organization,” Har- vard Management Update 14 (May 2009): 3–5.

36 “10 HR Mistakes Your Employee’s Lawyer Will Try to Exploit,” HR Specialist: Texas Employ- ment Law 7 (January 2012): 4.

37 Sarah Raj, “How to Impress at Apprais- als,” Enterprise Innovation 6 (December 2010/ January 2011): 40–41.

38 Jonathan A. Segal, “The Dirty Dozen Perfor- mance Appraisal Errors,” BusinessWeek.com (January 17, 2011): 2.

39 Amy Jen Su, “How to Give Feedback to People Who Cry, Yell, or Get Defensive,” Harvard Business Review online (September 21, 2016). Accessed February 3, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

40 “Addressing Performance Problems: 7 Steps to Success,” HR Specialist 7 (October 2009): 6.

41 “Cite Specifics,” Communication Briefings 29 (April 2010): 6.

42 “Performance Prep,” Communication Briefings 29 (March 2010): 9.

43 Rick Wartzman, “Yes, You Can Make Perfor- mance Reviews Worthwhile,” BusinessWeek. com (April 11, 2011): 4.

44 Ben Dattner, “The Key to Performance Reviews is Preparation,” Harvard Business Review online (June 21, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

45 Charlene Kesee, “Toot Your Horn . . . Loudly,” OfficePro 70 (March/April 2010): 14–17.

46 Jeff Schwartz, Laurence Collins, Heather Stockton, Darryl Wagner, and Brett Walsh, “Rewriting the Rules for the Digital Age: 2017 Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends,” Deloitte University Press (2017). Accessed March 3, 2017, at www2.deloitte.com/us/en/ pages/human- capital/articles/introduction- human-capital-trends.html.

47 David Schatsky and Jeff Schwartz, “Leading in the New World of Work: Global Human Capi- tal Trends,” Deloitte University Press (2015). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www2.deloitte. com/au/en/pages/human-capital/articles/global- human-capital-trends-2015-leading-new-world- work.html.

48 Dana Wilke, “If the Annual Performance Review Is on the Way Out, What Can Replace It?” Society for Human Resource Management online (December 7, 2015). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.shrm.org/resourcesandtools/ hr-topics/employee-relations/pages/perfor- mance-reviews-dead.aspx.

49 David Rock and Beth Jones, “Why More and More Companies Are Ditching Performance Ratings,” Harvard Business Review online (September 8, 2015). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

50 Rachel Emma Silverman, “GE Does Away with Employee Ratings,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 26, 2016). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

51 Ibid. 52 Graham Kenny, “Fixing Performance Appraisal

Is About More Than Ditching Annual Review,” Harvard Business Review online (February 2, 2016). Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.hbr. org.

53 David Burkus, “How Adobe Scrapped Its Per- formance Review System and Why It Worked,” Forbes online (June 1, 2016). Accessed March 13, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

54 Ibid. 55 Claire Zillman, “IBM Is Blowing Up Its Annual

Performance Review,” Fortune online (February 1, 2016). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www. fortune.com.

56 “The Measure of a Man,” The Economist online (February 20, 2016). Accessed March 13, 2017, at www.economist.com.

57 Rachel Feintzeig, “The Trouble With Grading Employees,” The Wall Street Journal online (April 21, 2015). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

58 Rachel Emma Silverman, “GE Does Away with Employee Ratings,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 26, 2016). Accessed March 13, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

59 Jenna McGregor, “This Big Change Was Sup- posed to Make Performance Reviews Better. Could It Be Making Them Worse?” The Wash- ington Post online (June 7, 2016). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www.washingtonpost.com.

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208

8 Training and Development LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

8.1 Define training and development (T&D) and summarize related practices.

8.2 Describe the training and development process.

8.3 Summarize some human resource management training initiatives.

8.4 Explain the concept of careers and career planning approaches and methods.

8.5 Describe management development.

8.6 Define organization development (OD) and the learning organization.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 8 Warm-Up.

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209

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: No other human resources (HR) practice set is most squarely designed to develop a company’s employees than training and development. Training and development (T&D) is the heart of a continuous effort designed to improve employee competency and organizational performance. There are many elements that fit within a T&D umbrella. The most common elements include training, career development, organizational development, and organizational learning. For the sake of organization, we can distinguish between these four elements based on two dimensions— focus on the individual employee or groups of employees and time frame, short and long term. Time frames do not come with a set number of years. Short time frames are based on the specific learning objectives and expected period for employees to learn and apply those skills. Long time frames are based on the period a company sets to achieve its strategic objectives. Figure 8-1 shows the organization of T&D elements.

Training and Development and Related Practices Our focus in this chapter is on related practices aimed at building human capital and overall orga- nizational capabilities. These practices are training and development, organizational development, and the learning organization.

Training provides learners with the knowledge and skills needed for their present jobs. Show- ing a worker how to operate a lathe or a supervisor how to schedule daily production are examples of training. On the other hand, development involves learning that goes beyond today’s job and has a more long-term focus. It prepares employees to keep pace with the organization as it changes and grows. We often associate development with the concept of careers and career development, management development, and mentoring and coaching practices, which we discuss later in this chapter.

T&D activities have the potential to align a firm’s employees with its corporate strategies. Some possible strategic benefits of T&D include employee satisfaction, improved morale, higher retention, lower turnover, improved hiring, a better bottom line, and the fact that satisfied employees produce satisfied customers. Individuals and groups receive the bulk of T&D efforts. However,

training and development (T&D) Heart of a continuous effort designed to improve employee competency and organizational performance.

8.1 Define training and devel- opment (T&D) and summarize related practices.

training Activities designed to provide learners with the knowledge and skills needed for their present jobs.

development Learning that goes beyond today’s job and has a more long-term focus.

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210 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

some firms believe that to achieve needed change, they must move the entire organization in a different direction. Efforts to achieve this goal are the focus of organization development (OD).

Improved performance, the bottom-line purpose of T&D, is a strategic goal for organizations. Toward this end, many firms have become or are striving to become learning organizations. A learning organization is a firm that recognizes the critical importance of continuous performance- related T&D and takes appropriate action.

As previously noted, many companies embrace these philosophies and rely on a variety of training and development approaches to align workforce capabilities with their strategic mission. The following Watch It video describes how the use of various methods helps PTC, a product development company, maintain its competitive edge.

organization development (OD) Planned and systematic attempts to change the organization, typically to a more behavioral environment.

learning organization Firm that recognizes the critical importance of continuous performance-related T&D and takes appropriate action.

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled PTC Employee Engagement and to respond to questions.

FIGURE 8-2 Training and Development Process

Determine Specific T&D Needs

Establish Specific T&D Objectives

Select T&D Method(s) and Delivery System(s)

Implement T&D Programs

Evaluate T&D Programs

EXTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

INTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

Short Term Long Term

Groups/Organization Organizational Organizational Development Learning

Individuals Training Career Management

FIGURE 8-1 Organization of Training and Development Elements

Training and Development Process Major adjustments in the external and internal environments necessitate corporate change. The general T&D process that anticipates or responds to change may be seen in Figure 8-2. First, an organization must determine its specific needs for training. As we will see, needs are considered at the levels of the organization, task, and persons. From that information, HR professionals judge whether training is essential, and if so, what the training should be, why training should be conducted, who should be trained, and where training should occur. Then specific objectives need to be established. The objectives might be quite narrow if limited to the supervisory ability of a manager, or they might be broad enough to include improving the management skills of all

8.2 Describe the training and development process.

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CHAPTER 8 • TRAINING AND DEvELOPMENT 211

first-line supervisors. In exemplary organizations, there is a close link between the firm’s strategic mission and the objectives of the T&D program. Review and periodic updating of these objec- tives is necessary to ensure that they support the firm’s changing strategic needs. After setting the T&D objectives, management can determine the appropriate methods and the delivery system to be used. Naturally, management must continuously evaluate T&D to ensure its value in achiev- ing organizational objectives and the HR department should lead the charge. Unfortunately, more companies need to do a better job of this. One survey found that, “only one in four HR orga- nizations have effectively integrated their talent management practices . . . with the company’s strategic objectives.”1

☛ F Y I Companies spent an average $814 per employee for training in 2016. The amount varied by company size:

$ Small (100 to 999 employees): $1,052 $ Midsize (1,000 to 9,999 employees): $870 $ Large (10,000 or more employees): $3792

Determine Specific Training and Development Needs The first step in the T&D process is to determine specific T&D needs. In today’s highly competi- tive business environment, undertaking a program because other firms are doing it is asking for trouble. A systematic approach to addressing bona fide needs must be undertaken and must be done taking into consideration the mission of the organization.

A training and development needs assessment helps companies determine whether training is necessary. It may be determined by conducting analyses on three levels, which include organi- zation, task, and person.

ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS Organizational analysis focuses on the firm’s strategic mission, goals and corporate plans are studied, along with the results of strategic human resource planning. Let’s consider a brief example of AT&T Corp. to illustrate an organizational analysis. AT&T Corp. is a subsidiary of AT&T (formerly American Telephone & Telegraph) and its headquarters are in Dallas, Texas. The company offers voice, video, data, and Internet telecommunications and professional services to businesses, consumers, and government agencies. The company operates the second-largest wireless network in the United States behind Verizon Wireless with 134.8 million subscribers compared to Verizon Wireless’ base of 145.7 million.3

AT&T led the revolution in landline telephone service in the nineteenth century and had long been the leader for decades in technology based on cables and hardware (telephone handsets). Although AT&T Corp. successfully made the transition to wireless service, the technology contin- ues to change at breakneck speeds. Like other companies in the industry, AT&T needs to adapt to the internet and the cloud. This change entails transitioning from cable networks to fiber network technology. That’s easier said than done. AT&T’s average employee job tenure is 22 years with most of its 280,000 employees trained decades ago in “old” technology that no longer provides the company with a competitive advantage.4 AT&T Corp. recognized investments in employee development are essential to competitive advantage. Marty Richter, corporate communications manager, stated, “We’re focused on aligning company leaders to strategic business innovation and results, skilling and reskilling our 280,000 employees and inspiring a culture of continuous learning.”5 Since 2013, the company invested more than $250 million in employee development and approximately $30 million in tuition reimbursement.6

TASK ANALYSIS Task analysis focuses on the tasks required to achieve the firm’s purposes. In this case, working with fiber-optic technology is one of AT&T’s goals. Job descriptions are important data sources for this analysis level, and it is logical that customer service employees who serve in the role of sales and those who serve in post-sales service are most relevant to the CEO’s objective because they not only specify the tasks of these jobs, but also indicate the knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) required to perform these jobs adequately. The following are some of the Customer Service Representative job tasks that are specified in the Occupational Information Network (O*NET).7

training and development needs assessment Heart of a continuous effort designed to improve employee competency and organizational performance.

organizational analysis Training needs assessment activity, which focuses on the firm’s strategic mission, goals, and corporate plans are studied, along with the results of strategic HR planning.

task analysis A training needs assessment activity, which focuses on the tasks required to achieve the firm’s purposes.

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212 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

$ Confer with customers by telephone or in person to provide information about products or services, take or enter orders, cancel accounts, or obtain details of complaints.

$ Check to ensure that appropriate changes were made to resolve customers’ problems. $ Keep records of customer interactions or transactions, recording details of inquiries,

complaints, or comments, as well as actions taken. $ Resolve customers’ service or billing complaints by performing activities such as exchang-

ing merchandise, refunding money, or adjusting bills. $ Complete contract forms, prepare change of address records, or issue service discontinu-

ance orders, using computers.

These tasks can help HR professionals determine training content and how best to design training to impart knowledge and skills. In addition, specifying the tasks better enable HR profes- sionals to select evaluation measures of training effectiveness, including learning of knowledge and skills to perform these jobs more effectively as well as indicators of job performance changes (hopefully improvements) following the completion of training over time.

PERSON ANALYSIS Person analysis focuses on obtaining answers to the questions: Who needs to be trained? What do employees need to do differently from what they’re doing today? And what kind of KSAs do employees need?

Specifying the KSAs necessary for task performance is essential information that will help in the selection of training methods. For example, a simple classroom lecture could be an effective vehicle for imparting basic knowledge about customer service principles and product knowl- edge. Role plays could be an effective approach to having trainees demonstrate whether they have learned basic knowledge and can effectively combine knowledge with skills to effectively complete customer service representative tasks. Among many, O*NET lists the following most important KSAs, respectively, to the customer service representative job:8

$ Customer and Personal Service—Knowledge of principles and processes for providing customer and personal services. This includes customer needs assessment, meeting quality standards for services, and evaluation of customer satisfaction.

$ Active Listening—Giving full attention to what other people are saying, taking time to understand the points being made, asking questions as appropriate, and not interrupting at inappropriate times.

$ Oral Comprehension—The ability to listen to and understand information and ideas pre- sented through spoken words and sentences.

Establish Training and Development Program Objectives T&D must have clear and concise objectives and be developed to achieve organizational goals. Without them, designing meaningful T&D programs would not be possible. Worthwhile evalua- tion of a program’s effectiveness would also be difficult, at best. As we discussed in the previous section, AT&T might pursue training in various aspects of fiber-optics technology to support its goal of continual reinvention and competitiveness among its major competitors.9 Consider these purposes and objectives for a training program involving employment compliance:

TRAINING AREA: EMPLOYMENT COMPLIANCE

Purpose: To provide the supervisor with

1. Knowledge and value of consistent human resource practices 2. The intent of Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) legal requirements 3. The skills to apply them

Objectives: To be able to

1. Cite the supervisory areas affected by employment laws on discrimination 2. Identify acceptable and unacceptable actions 3. State how to get help on EEOC matters 4. Describe why we have disciplinary action and grievance procedures 5. Describe our disciplinary action and grievance procedures, including who is covered

person analysis A training needs assessment activity that focuses on finding answers to questions such as Who needs to be trained? What do they need to do differently from what they’re doing today? What kind of knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) do employees need?

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CHAPTER 8 • TRAINING AND DEvELOPMENT 213

As you see, the purpose is established first. The specific learning objectives that follow leave little doubt about what the training should accomplish. With these objectives, managers can determine whether training has been effective. For instance, in the example, a trainee either can or cannot state how to get help on equal employment opportunity matters.

Training Methods When a person is working in a garden, some tools are more helpful in performing certain tasks than others. The same logic applies when considering T&D methods, and these methods are changing continuously and improving. Regardless of whether programs are in-house or outsourced, firms use many methods for imparting knowledge and skills to the workforce and usually more than one method, called blended training, is used to deliver T&D. As part of the blended training process, e-learning is enhancing or replacing some traditional training methods. T&D methods are dis- cussed next. Each of these training methods should be evaluated and selected for what it does best.

CLASSROOM METHOD The classroom method, in which the instructor physically stands in front of students, continues to be effective for many types of training. One advantage of instructor- led training is that the instructor may convey a great deal of information in a relatively brief time. The effectiveness of instructor-led programs improves when groups are small enough to permit discussion, and when the instructor can capture the imagination of the class and use new technology to provide a better classroom learning experience. Also, the charisma or personality that the instructor brings to class may excite the students to want to learn. The classroom setting allows for real-time discussion that is not easily replicated, even with the most advanced technology.

E-LEARNING The tradition of instructors physically lecturing in front of live corporate students has diminished somewhat in recent years. E-learning is the T&D method for online instruction using technology based methods such as DVDs, company intranets, and the Internet. The Internet offers many opportunities for learning. For example, companies such as Coursera and Udacity partner with universities to offer massive open online courses (MOOCs) that enable thousands of students who are located anywhere in the world at any time of the day to take university-level courses. Initially, the audience for MOOCs was mainly college-level students. Increasingly, companies are adopting MOOCs as an e-learning tool. Altogether, more than 35 million people have enrolled in MOOCs since 2011.10 Partnering with highly recognized universities that offer MOOCs could increase the value of training in a variety of ways, including through learning leading-edge information and techniques from world-famous professors and assessments by current and prospective clients that training is state-of-the art. “There’s a lot of potential for how MOOCs can be used for corporate training and development,” said Julia Stiglitz, head of business development and strategic partnerships for Coursera, which also partners with universities such as Stanford and UC Berkeley to offer online college courses.11 “The companies are looking for new ways to train their employees and get them up to speed on skills that may not have been relevant five years ago.”

e-learning The T&D method for online instruction using technology- based methods such as the DVDs, company intranets, and the Internet.

☛ F Y I $ In a survey of individuals who completed at least one MOOC, 52 percent stated a primary goal of

improving their current job or finding a new job.12

The benefits of e-learning are numerous and include decreased costs, greater convenience and flexibility, improved retention rates, and a positive environmental impact.13 It can be self-paced, can often be individualized, and can be done while at work or off-shift. A concept can be viewed as often as needed. Individuals using e-learning can be working on different parts of a program, at varying speeds, and in different languages.

Luxottica is an Italian eyewear and optical company whose chain stores include LensCrafters, Pearle Vision, and Sunglass Hut, with 38,000 employees worldwide. Angi Willis, Luxottica’s learning technology project manager said, “We just didn’t have the manpower, technology or budget to efficiently and effectively manage and execute our various training programs.” Luxottica

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214 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

put training online so employees could have instant access to information they needed to do their jobs, including details on new products and regulations as well as continuing education.14

The advantages of using e-learning are numerous, however, the biggest advantage is cost savings. According to Gordon Johnson, vice president of marketing for infrastructure provider Expertus, “Online meetings are one-third the cost of face-to-face meetings, so the question becomes not which is best, but whether face-to-face training is three times better. Usually not.”15

For Union Pacific, the largest railroad company in North America, both distance and time have been hurdles to learning. About 19,000 of its 48,000 widely disbursed employees work on the railroad’s locomotives and freight cars, many on different schedules. So, the company uses a blend of traditional learning and e-learning that provides the kind of training far-flung employees require, at a time when they can use it.

Firms that consistently have a high turnover rate have turned to e-learning because classroom learning is not cost-effective. Nike faced a challenge that many retailers today are confronting. Nike designed an online training program that the company could offer to employees in its own stores as well as at other retailers that sell Nike products. The program conveys a lot of informa- tion quickly, but it is also easy to learn. This is important because the training is directed at 16- to 22-year-olds.16

A takeoff on e-learning is the live virtual classroom, often referred to as virtual instructor led, that uses a Web-based platform to deliver live, instructor-led training to geographically dispersed learners. Organizations can bring together entire teams for just an hour or two per week. They can also bring content specialists into the classroom for only the necessary time required from two minutes to two hours. Virtual instructor led training is ideal for organizations that have many technicians needing frequent training while they continue to do their job in the field.17 The need to have large blocks of time that takes workers away from their jobs is thus eliminated. Training can now be provided in blocks of time as opposed to several days. For example, a two-day live training session might be provided in five 75-minute modules delivered over time. These provide both cost savings and convenience.18

CASE STUDY The case study is a T&D method in which trainees study the information provided in the case and make decisions based on it. The goal of the case study method is to provide trainees with the opportunity to sharpen critical thinking skills. Often, the case study method occurs with an instructor who serves as a facilitator. It is also quite common for trainees to analyze the case in teams because problem solving typically involves consultation with others.

If an actual company is involved, the student would be expected to research the firm to gain a better appreciation of its financial condition and environment. Research on companies has been significantly enhanced through the availability of case studies of a variety of business functions. There are many sources of business case studies, including Harvard Business School Publishing.

BEHAVIOR MODELING AND TWEETING Behavior modeling is a T&D method that permits a person to learn by copying or replicating behaviors of others. Behavior modeling has been used to train supervisors in such tasks as conducting performance reviews, correcting unacceptable performance, delegating work, improving safety habits, handling discrimination complaints, overcoming resistance to change, orienting new employees, and mediating individuals or groups in conflict.

Social networking, such as Twitter, has been used as a learning tool involving behavior modeling. “In a corporation, micro-blogging can be a way to augment behavior modeling,” says Sarah Millstein, author of the O’Reilly Radar Report. This works by having a person who excels at a task send out frequent updates about what he or she is doing. The company might even formalize the process to the extent that it would select exemplary performers to post on a regular basis and determine those employees who should follow their posts.19

ROLE-PLAYING Role-playing is a T&D method in which participants are required to respond to specific problems they may encounter in their jobs by acting out real-world situations. Rather than hearing an instructor talk about how to handle a problem or by discussing it, they learn by doing. Role-playing is often used to teach such skills as administering disciplinary action, interviewing, grievance handling, conducting performance appraisal reviews, team problem solving, effective communication, and leadership-style analysis. A successful role-playing activity occurs if the activity mirrors real-life situations. It has also been used successfully to teach workers how to deal

case study T&D method in which trainees are expected to study the information provided in the case and make decisions based on it.

behavior modeling T&D method that permits a person to learn by copying or replicating behaviors of others to show managers how to handle various situations.

role-playing T&D method in which participants are required to respond to specific problems they may encounter in their jobs by acting out real-world situations.

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with individuals who are angry, irate, or out of control. Some restaurant chains use role-playing to train servers how to deal with difficult situations such as a couple having an argument at the dinner table. The classic case of using role-playing is when a manager must take disciplinary action against a worker for something they did improperly. Managers never know how an employee will react when being reprimanded. When acting out the role of the worker, he or she may randomly choose from a variety of roles such as being stoic, starting to cry, promising never to do it again, or take this job and shove it.

TRAINING GAMES Games can be quite useful learning tools to aid in the group dynamic process. Games are a cost-effective means to encourage learner involvement and stimulate interest in the topic, thereby enhancing employees’ knowledge and performance.20 According to Elizabeth Treher, founder, president, and CEO of The Learning Key Inc., “Team-based business games result in better knowledge retention, provide focused, memorable learning and a more enjoyable learning atmosphere than traditional methods.”21 A major benefit of games is that learners retain 75 percent of the knowledge they acquire when playing games, according to research by the National Training Laboratories. McDonald’s in Japan estimates new employee training time to prepare burgers has been cut in half because of a video game created in conjunction with Nintendo.22 Microsoft Xbox support agents use the Xbox Customer Care Framework (CCF) Assessment simulator training game. The game simulates real-life circumstances caused by generating the stress and anxiety of receiving difficult customer relations calls.23 Even the U.S. Marine Corps uses a game-based training program called Mission Impact, which places learners in a simulated battalion to improve their environmental performance.

Business games are a T&D method that permits participants to assume roles such as presi- dent, controller, or marketing vice president of two or more similar hypothetical organizations and compete against each other by manipulating selected factors in a business situation. Partici- pants make decisions affecting such factors as price levels, production volumes, and inventory levels. Typically, a computer program manipulates their decisions, with the results simulating those of an actual business situation. Participants can see how their decisions affect other groups and vice versa. The best thing about this type of learning is that if a poor decision costs the com- pany $1 million, no one gets fired, yet the business lesson is learned.

IN-BASKET TRAINING In-basket training is a T&D method in which the participant is asked to establish priorities for and then handle many business papers, e-mails, texts, memoranda, reports, and telephone messages that would typically cross a manager’s desk. The messages, presented in no order, call for anything from urgent action to routine handling. The participant is required to act on the information contained in these messages. In this method, the trainee assigns a priority to each situation before making any decisions. This form of training has been quite beneficial to help predict performance success in management jobs. Assessment centers commonly make use of this method in the selection process.

ON-THE-JOB TRAINING On-the-job-training (OJT) is an informal T&D method that permits an employee to learn job tasks by performing them. Often OJT will also have a significant impact on personal development. The key to this training is to transfer knowledge from a highly skilled and experienced worker to a new employee, while maintaining the productivity of both workers. OJT is used to pass on critical “how to” information to the trainee. Individuals may also be more highly motivated to learn because it is clear to them that they are acquiring the knowledge needed to perform the job. At times, however, the trainee may feel so much pressure to produce that learning is negatively affected. Firms should be selective about who provides OJT. Regardless of who does the training, that person must have a good work ethic and correctly model the desired behavior.

APPRENTICESHIP TRAINING Apprenticeship training is a training method that combines classroom instruction with OJT. While in training, the employee earns less than the master craftsperson, who is the instructor. The National Association of Manufacturers projects that by 2020 some 10 million skilled workers will be needed and apprenticeships remain one of the most vital sources for securing skilled labor. The Manufacturing Institute projects that there will be approximately 3.5 million manufacturing job vacancies through 2025 and more than half are expected to go unfilled because of a significant shortage of skilled workers.24 Apprenticeship

business games T&D method that permits participants to assume roles such as president, controller, or marketing vice president of two or more similar hypothetical organizations and compete against each other by manipulating selected factors in a business situation.

in-basket training T&D method in which the participant is asked to establish priorities for and then handle several business papers, e-mail messages, memoranda, reports, and telephone messages that would typically cross a manager’s desk.

on-the-job training (OJT) An informal T&D method that permits an employee to learn job tasks by performing them.

apprenticeship training Training method that combines classroom instruction with on-the- job training.

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training is common with craft jobs, such as those of plumber, carpenter, machinist, welder, fabricator, laser operator, electrician, and press brake operator. As baby boomers continue to leave the workforce, they must be replaced by competent operators, and apprenticeship programs provide an effective way of accomplishing this. Many organizations are partnering with high schools, vocational schools, and universities as they search for new skilled workers. Organizations often donate look-alike equipment to the schools so students can be trained on the system.

The U.S. Department of Labor has implemented regulations governing apprenticeships. His- torically apprenticeships were defined by the amount of instruction time—typically 10,000 hours over four years. The new regulations offer provisions for competency-based apprenticeships, electronic and distance training, and the issuance of interim credentials. These credentials can be used toward college credits. “It’s nice because a person isn’t waiting until the end of the program to get some kind of reward,” says Steve Mandes, executive director at National Institute for Met- alworking Skills (NIMS).25 For instance, Scot Forge, a metals manufacturer, pays apprentices’ tuition and wages while they complete a three-year apprenticeship program. Upon completion, apprentices earn an associate degree and a guaranteed job at the company for two years.26

The concept of apprenticeships has been expanding beyond the skilled trades. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that the demand for software jobs is on the rise relative to the supply of qualified individuals. Some private companies have anticipated this need for software professionals by creating “code” schools. Code schools offer short-term education on software development basics.27 The goal is to prepare individuals to take entry-level jobs in the informa- tion technology field.

☛ F Y I $ Individuals who complete an apprenticeship have substantially higher annual earnings—$50,000

compared to those who do not complete an apprenticeship ($44,720).28

TEAM TRAINING Team training focuses on imparting knowledge and skills on individuals who are expected to work collectively toward meeting a common objective. For example, many automobile manufacturers organize teams to focus on the completion of car assembly. One such team installs the interior components, including dashboard, seats, carpeting, headliner, and trim. Many individuals work together to complete these tasks in an ordered sequence within a designated period to ensure that the factory meets its daily production quota. Other examples include teams of sales representatives and post-sales representatives to ensure that the customer receives a product configuration that meets its business needs and has subsequent support to ensure that employees of the client firm can properly use the product, such as inventory software.

The nature of the work and business needs determines whether coordination training or cross- training is necessary. Team coordination training educates team members how to orchestrate the work that they do to complete the task such as in the previous examples. All team training initiatives involve information sharing and procedures for ensuring that the work is conducted in proper order. For example, in the automobile assembly example, team members must ensure that all the electrical wires that run across the floor are properly connected to their appropriate com- ponents (such as power window motors) before door trim is installed.

The success of team coordination training can mean the difference between life and death. The U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) regularly conducts a program for its rescue and recovery mission teams, which it calls Team Coordination Training (TCT).

Team Coordination Training (TCT) is a program that focuses on reducing the probability for human error by increasing individual and team effectiveness. Safety has long been the Com- manding Officer’s responsibility and, until recently, was assumed to be the logical result of finely tuned technical skills. USCG mishap data suggests that while technical skills are an essential component of any job, they alone will not ensure safety.29

Cross-training educates team members about the other members’ jobs so that they may perform them when a team member is absent, is assigned to another job in the company, or has left the company altogether. Ideally, effective cross-training initiatives will raise flexibility, com- munication, morale, and interdepartmental relations. Cross-training is also prevalent in a variety

team training Training focused on teaching knowledge and skills to individuals who are expected to work collectively toward meeting a common objective.

team coordination training Team training focused on educating team members how to orchestrate the individual work that they do to complete the task.

cross-training Type of training for educating team members about the other members’ jobs so that they may perform them when a team member is absent, is assigned to another job in the company, or has left the company altogether.

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of employment settings because pressures to manage labor costs have often led to fewer employees who are hired to perform the same job. Restaurants are a common setting where cross-training is important. For example, it may be necessary for servers to step in to assist the kitchen staff prepare meals when one or more kitchen staff members are absent.

Training and Development Delivery Systems The previous section focused on the various T&D methods available to organizations, and the list is constantly changing. In this section, our attention is devoted to how training may be delivered to participants.

CORPORATE UNIVERSITIES A T&D delivery system provided under the umbrella of the organization is referred to as a corporate university. The corporate T&D institution’s focus is on creating organizational change that involves areas such as company training, employee development, and adult learning. It aims to achieve its goals by conducting activities that foster individual and organizational learning and knowledge. It is proactive and strategic rather than reactive and tactical and can be closely aligned to corporate goals. Even though they are called universities, they are not so in the straightest sense because degrees in specific subjects are not granted. General Electric (GE) has its Crotonville campus and McDonald’s has its Hamburger University.

Recent years have seen the decline of corporate universities as companies such as Xerox, Ford, Pfizer, Aetna, and Merrill Lynch moved away from them largely because of the significant overhead costs associated with maintaining learning facilities and dedicated staff. However, in New York City, North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System’s corporate university serves 42,000 employees across 15 hospitals.30 Deloitte LLP has recently built a $300 million corporate university in Westlake, Texas. Its 750,000 square feet will house state-of-the-art learning tech- nology, 800 sleeping rooms, and even a ballroom. Marc Rosenberg, a learning consultant, says, “There’s only so much you can do with social networking on the Internet, especially in services firms where you rely so much on your colleagues for help.”31 Also, firms are better able to control the quality of training and to ensure that all employees receive the same messages.

COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES For decades, colleges and universities have been the primary delivery system for training professional, technical, and management employees. Many public and private colleges and universities are taking similar approaches to training and education as have the corporate universities. Corporate T&D programs often partner with colleges and universities or other organizations, such as the American Management Association, to deliver both training and development. As we discussed, the advent of MOOCs has created greater opportunities for partnerships between educational institutions and companies.

COMMUNITY COLLEGES Community colleges are publicly funded higher education establishments that deliver vocational training and associate degree programs. Also, labor unions partner with some community colleges to sponsor formal courses as part of apprenticeship programs in the skilled trades such as carpentry and plumbing. For example, a course on electrical wiring principles and practices would be found in the curriculum for apprentices preparing to become master electricians. Some employers have discovered that community colleges can provide certain types of training better and more cost effectively than the company can. Rapid technological changes and corporate restructuring have created a new demand by industry for community college training resources.

ONLINE HIGHER EDUCATION A form of online e-learning that has increased substantially in recent years is the use of online higher education. Online higher education is defined as formal educational opportunities including degree and training programs that are delivered, either entirely or partially, via the Internet. One reason for the growth of online higher education is that it allows employees to attend class at lunchtime, during the day, or in the evening. It also saves employees time because it reduces their need to commute to school. It increases the range of learning opportunities for employees and increases employee satisfaction. Another point that needs to be made is that skepticism regarding the quality of online degrees appears to be fading. John Challenger, chief executive of outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, agrees. “We did once have a clear line between online and brick-and-mortar degrees, but that’s changing,” he says. “Hiring managers are catching up.”32

corporate university T&D delivery system provided under the umbrella of the organization.

online higher education Educational opportunities including degree and training programs that are delivered, either entirely or partially, via the Internet.

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Enrollment in online universities continues to grow.33 The University of Phoenix has the largest student body in North America. The university has more than 200 campuses worldwide and confers degrees in more than 100 degree programs at the bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral levels. Clemson University’s Master of Human Resource Development is a fully online course designed for in-career practitioners. The 36-credit program follows a cohort structure, with approximately 40 students in each unit. Class sessions are offered several times a week, to allow for an average of 10 students in each class. Students are assigned a “home group” within the cohort, but can choose another class to attend when work/life demands such as schedule conflicts or travel arise.34

In recent years, programs have been introduced that provide students with more and more autonomy and control of their programs of study. There are basically three categories of online higher education programs available: hybrid, synchronous, and asynchronous. Hybrid programs permit students to take some classes online and some in a traditional university setting. Online synchronized study offers students the choice of studying through an online portal system, how- ever, the student is expected to appear for most classes on a real-time schedule. With this approach, students interact with a real professor and obtain real-time support for the learning material. With asynchronous learning, students have a series of assignments that need to be completed in a certain time frame. A system is available that allows students to communicate with the professor and classmates. For instance, the University of Phoenix gives the option of completing an MBA entirely online or completing a portion on campus. All courses were six weeks in length and each assignment had to be completed in a fixed time frame. Online higher education is not for every- one and the key to success is discipline. Jeff Seaman of Babson Survey Research Group, which studies online education, said, “You need discipline. Otherwise, the ‘anytime, anywhere’ aspect frees you to put off the work.”35

VESTIBULE SYSTEM Vestibule system is a T&D delivery system that takes place away from the production area on equipment that closely resembles equipment used on the job. For example, a group of lathes may be in a training center where the trainees receive instruction in their use. A primary advantage of the vestibule system is that it removes the employee from the pressure of having to produce while learning. The emphasis is focused on learning the skills required by the job.

VIDEO MEDIA The use of video media such as DVDs continues to be a popular T&D delivery system. These media are especially appealing to small businesses that cannot afford more expensive training methods and are often incorporated in e-learning and instructor-led instruction. In addition, they provide the f lexibility desired by any firm. Behavior modeling, previously mentioned, has long been a successful training method that uses video media.

SIMULATORS Simulators are a T&D delivery system comprised of devices or programs that replicate actual job demands. The devices range from simple paper mock-ups of mechanical devices to computerized simulations of total environments. T&D specialists may use simulated sales counters, automobiles, and airplanes. A prime example is the use of simulators to train pilots. Simulated crashes do not cost lives or deplete the firm’s fleet of jets. John Deere uses an Excavator Training Simulator to train new operators in a risk-free environment. The simulator provides specific realistic lessons on proper operator techniques, machine controls, and safe operation at a virtual job site.36 Crane operator trainees use a software simulator based on actual crane functions. Trainees sit in an authentic crane cab, with real control options while the simulation offers a realistic experience.37

SOCIAL NETWORKING Today’s employees interact, learn, and work in much different ways and styles than in the not-so-distant past. Increasingly mobile and geographically dispersed workforces are becoming the norm. At the same time, dwindling or stagnant travel budgets are creating a need for different training methods. Thus, some organizations are using social networking and collaborative tools to enable informal learning. In a recent study, 55 percent of respondents also expect an increase in informal learning usage, which includes social media, blogs, wikis, and discussion groups.38 Informal learning often takes place outside the corporate training departments. It does not necessarily follow a specified curriculum. The absence of formal curricula requires employers to embrace informal learning. By embracing informal learning, learners may be more motivated to gain knowledge. Thus, informal learning has surfaced as an important part of employee development.

vestibule system T&D delivery system that takes place away from the production area on equipment that closely resembles equipment used on the job.

simulators T&D delivery system comprised of devices or programs that replicate actual job demands.

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The premise behind the educational success of social networking is the learning approach referred to as constructivism. A constructivist learning environment differs from the traditional model. In this setting, the teacher guides the learner toward multiple learning sources, rather than acting as the sole source of knowledge.39 With more workers around the world using social media, they are getting and trusting information from their peer group more than in the past.40 Commu- nities of practice are usually a good source of informal learning. Before joining one, the learner should conduct due diligence by gaining an understanding the kinds of knowledge and skills that are important to them. Smaller, invitation-only communities are usually beneficial, particularly when the learner knows at least one member.41 Often organizations are using communication meetings called huddles, which are usually called daily for a short period such as seven minutes, as informal learning opportunities.42 Many believe that using shared, social learning solutions will grow.

Implementing Training and Development Programs A perfectly conceived training program will fail if management cannot convince the participants of its merits. Participants must believe that the program has value and will help them achieve their personal and professional goals. A long string of successful programs certainly enhances the credibility of T&D.

Implementing T&D programs is often difficult. One reason is that managers are typically action-oriented and feel that they are too busy for T&D. According to one management develop- ment executive, “Most busy executives are too involved chopping down the proverbial tree to stop for the purpose of sharpening their axes.” Another difficulty in program implementation is that qualified trainers must be available. In addition to possessing communication skills, the trainers must know the company’s philosophy, its objectives, its formal and informal organization, and the goals of the training program. T&D requires more creativity than perhaps any other human resource function.

Implementing training programs presents unique problems. Training implies change, which employees may vigorously resist. It may also be difficult to schedule the training around present work requirements. Unless the employee is new to the firm, he or she undoubtedly has specific full-time duties to perform. Another difficulty in implementing T&D programs is record keep- ing. It is important to maintain training records, including how well employees perform during training and later on the job. This information helps measure program effectiveness and charts the employees’ progress in the company.

Metrics for Evaluating Training and Development Managers should strive to develop and use T&D metrics because such information can smooth the way to budget approval and executive buy-in. Most managers agree that training does not cost, it pays, and that training is an investment, not an expense. However, the actual value of the training must be determined if top management will be ready to invest in it.

The traditional framework for evaluation of training is based on four criteria.43 Although this framework was developed decades ago, HR professionals call on it to organize evaluation efforts.

REACTIONS The first criterion, trainee reactions, refers to the extent to which trainees liked the training program related to its usefulness, and quality of conduct. Trainee reactions, when assessed, are measured upon completion of the training session by survey. The survey questions can be specific or general (“how satisfied were you with the presentation of sales skill strategies?” versus “how satisfied were you with the overall training program?”). This information may help training designers pinpoint potential problem aspects of the training as well as possible reasons for the shortcomings.

Evaluating a T&D program by asking the participants’ opinions of it is an approach that provides a response and suggestions for improvements, essentially a level of customer satisfac- tion. You cannot always rely on such responses, however. The training may have taken place in an exotic location with time for golfing and other fun activities, and the overall experience may bias some reports. Nevertheless, this approach is a good way to obtain feedback and to get it quickly and inexpensively.

LEARNING The second criterion, learning, refers to the extent to which principles, facts, and techniques were understood and retained in memory by the employee. As with trainee reactions, learning is often assessed on completion of the training program (and sometimes, throughout the

reactions Training evaluation criterion focused on the extent to which trainees liked the training program related to its usefulness, and quality of conduct.

learning The extent to which an employee understands and retains principles, facts, and techniques.

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training course) by the appropriate tests (typing speed or recall of concepts from memory). Both evaluation criteria are important because positive trainee reactions and learning are expected to lead to more job-related and concrete ways of assessing training.

Some organizations administer tests to determine what the participants in a T&D program have learned. The pre-test/post-test control group design is one evaluation procedure that may be used. In this procedure, both groups receive the same test before and after training. The experi- mental group receives the training but the control group does not. Each group receives randomly assigned trainees. Differences in pretest and posttest results between the groups are attributed to the training provided. A potential problem with this approach is controlling for variables other than training that might affect the outcome. Personality differences should be considered. In many cases, highly conscientious individuals tend to perform better in training than less conscientious individuals. The training environment also matters. For instance, loud noises such as jackhammer- ing just outside the classroom window will inevitably interfere with trainees’ ability to concentrate.

BEHAVIOR The third criterion, behavior change, refers to the changes in job-related behaviors or performance that can be attributed to training. Specifically, this criterion assesses transfer of training. Transfer of training refers to the extent to which an employee generalizes knowledge and skill learned in training to the work place, as well as maintains the level of skill proficiency or knowledge learned in training. The necessity of generalization may be more evident in highly complex, changing environments; maintenance is typically sought after in more straightforward settings. At AT&T, an example of generalization may be taking the principles of cybersecurity and applying them in a highly virtualized environment.44 An example of skill maintenance is whether a typing speed of 90 words per minute demonstrated during training is sustained over time when the employee is back on the job.

Tests may accurately indicate what trainees learn, but they give little insight into whether the training leads participants to change their behavior. For example, it is one thing for a manager to learn about motivational techniques but quite another matter for this person to apply the new knowledge. A manager may sit in the front row of a training session dealing with empowerment of subordinates, absorb every bit of the message, understand it totally, make a grade of 100 on a test on the material, and then return the next week to the workplace and continue behaving in the same old autocratic way. The best demonstration of value occurs when learning translates into lasting behavioral change. Michael Allen, winner of the Distinguished Contribution to Workplace Learning and Performance Award, said, “We don’t care about what people know. We care about what they can do . . . with what they know. Our challenge, as effective instructional designers, is to get people to make the leap from knowing to doing and that’s where we often fail.”45

ORGANIZATIONAL RESULTS The fourth criterion, results, refers to the extent to which tangible outcomes that can be attributed to training are realized by the organization. Organizational results refer to such outcomes as enhanced productivity, lower costs, and higher product or service quality. Results in the context of training indicate whether (and how well or poorly) an organization has attained competitive advantage. Likewise, assessment of results over time can inform whether (and how well or poorly) competitive advantage has been sustained over time. Whereas much research on trainee reactions, learning, and behavior has amassed over the last several decades, relatively few gains have been made for results.

Here metrics address the business’s bottom line, such as productivity data, rather than num- bers of training sessions completed or the satisfaction employees gained from a training session. For instance, if the objective of an accident-prevention program is to reduce the number and severity of accidents by 15 percent, comparing accident rates before and after training provides a useful metric of success. Leslie Joyce, vice president of global talent management at Novelis and former CLO at Home Depot, said, “If there is change in behavior or improvement in performance, most CEOs I’ve worked with will agree that training has had an impact.”46

Return on investment (ROI) is an important results criterion. CEOs want to see training in terms that they can appreciate such as business impact, business alignment, and ROI, that is, the extent to which benefits of training outweigh the costs to provide it. However, a recent study from the ROI Institute showed that although 96 percent of executives want to see the business effects of learning, only 8 percent receive it.47 Nevertheless, in today’s global competitive environment, training will not be rewarded with continued investment unless training results in improved per- formance that impacts the bottom line. Today, organizations can only justify investing in training

behavior change Change in job-related behaviors or performance that can be attributed to training.

transfer of training Training evaluation method focusing on the extent to which an employee generalizes knowledge and skill learned in training to the work place, as well as maintains the level of skill proficiency or knowledge learned in training.

organizational results Typically, training outcomes such as enhanced productivity, lower costs, and higher product or service quality.

HR Web Wisdom

Benchmarking www.benchnet.com

The Benchmarking Exchange and Best Practices homepage is provided

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that is clearly essential to business success and that delivers results that enable the company to compete effectively.

Benchmarking is the process of monitoring and measuring a firm’s internal processes, such as operations, and then comparing the data with information from companies that excel in those areas. Because training programs for different firms are unique, the training measures are neces- sarily broad. Common benchmarking questions focus on metrics such as training costs, the ratio of training staff to employees, and whether new or more traditional delivery systems are used. Information derived from these questions probably lacks the detail to permit specific improve- ments of the training curricula. However, a firm may recognize, for example, that another orga- nization can deliver a lot of training for relatively little cost. This information could then trigger the firm to follow up with interviews or site visits to determine whether that phenomenon repre- sents a “best practice.”

Quality standards are another important results measure. A well-recognized standard is the ISO 9001 quality assurance standard, which states, “Employees should receive the training and have the knowledge necessary to do their jobs.” To comply with the standard, companies must maintain written records of their employee training to show that employees have been properly trained. Think of possible questions that a compliance auditor might ask when auditing a firm. Some might be, “How does your firm assess the need for the types and amounts of training and education received by all categories of employees? What percentage of employees receives train- ing annually? What is the average number of hours of training and education per employee?” Under ISO 9001, monitoring the quality of training is important.

We have considered a variety of training methods, delivery systems, and training evaluation criteria. Careful planning and orchestration of these methods and systems is essential to achiev- ing effective training. The Watch It video describes Wilson Learning’s approach and philosophy.

benchmarking Process of monitoring and measuring a firm’s internal processes, such as operations, and then comparing the data with information from companies that excel in those areas.

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Wilson Learning: Training and to respond to questions.

Factors Influencing Training and Development There are numerous factors that both impact and are impacted by T&D.

TOP MANAGEMENT SUPPORT For T&D programs to be successful, top management support is required; without it, a T&D program will not succeed. The most effective way to achieve success is for executives to provide the needed resources to support the T&D effort. The comments by Carol Freeland, principal/owner of ACTS + in Hot Springs Village, Arizona, best described the importance of support from the CEO when she said, “If the CEO does not believe in the inherent value of training, any training effort on the part of the company will be fruitless and languish.”48

SHORTAGE OF SKILLED WORKERS Shortage of future skilled workers was first projected in the 1980s but has recently received additional attention. Mark Tomlinson, executive director and general manager of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers, compares the shortage of skilled workers to viewing an iceberg in stormy seas. “We’re just approaching it; we haven’t hit it yet but we know it’s there. People are starting to see it. They just don’t know how to deal with it.”49 It took Cianbro Corporation, a heavy construction company in the Northeast, 18 months to hire 80 experienced welders.50 JetBlue Airways, like most commercial airlines, are feeling the pinch of a pilot shortage. The substantial expense to meet the lengthy period over which they qualify to fly passenger jets has contributed to this shortage. JetBlue has developed an innovative trial training program to prepare pilots for flight duties over a much shorter period. JetBlue spokesman Doug McGraw said that the trial program is designed to build, “the complex skills required of airline pilots from the first day.”51 Though shorter, McGraw emphasized that the quality of preparation will not be compromised, by emphasizing the goal, “to ensure the quality of our current cadre of pilots is maintained.”52 These examples point to the problems of finding qualified employees and providing them with essential training.

HR Web Wisdom

Association for Talent Development www.td.org

The homepage for the Asso- ciation for Talent Development is presented.

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Unemployment figures are misleading because they do not show employers who are begging for skilled workers. Worldwide many companies are struggling to find skilled workers. Baby boomers—the best-educated and most-skilled workforce in U.S. history—are preparing to retire. Labor experts are concerned that workers in the United States lack the critical skills needed to replace baby boomers. Silicon Valley companies are having difficulty finding software engineers; Union Health Service and the Harvard hospital system find it hard to find nurses and technicians; and manufacturers such as Caterpillar and Westinghouse cannot hire enough welders and machin- ists to operate their state-of-the-art lathes.53

Part of the problem in finding qualified people for manufacturing jobs is that there is a genera- tion of young people for which manufacturing has not been an attractive job prospect because they have seen many jobs outsourced and they question the long-term future in these jobs. In addition, training needs are changing and the old skill requirements of reading, writing, and arithmetic have been expanded. Executives are increasingly demanding additional skills of their new hires such as critical thinking and problem solving, communication, collaboration, and creativity.54

TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES Change is occurring at an amazing speed, with knowledge doubling every year. Perhaps no factor has influenced T&D more than technology. As technology becomes capable of handling more and more tasks, employers combine jobs and confer broader responsibilities on remaining workers. For example, the technology of advanced automated manufacturing, such as that in the automobile industry, is today doing the jobs of other employees, including the laborer, the materials handler, the operator-assembler, and the maintenance person. In fact, it is now commonplace for a single employee to perform all those tasks in a position called “manufacturing technician.” The expanding range of tasks and responsibilities in almost all jobs demand higher levels of reading, writing, and problem-solving skills. Employees must possess higher levels of reading skills than before because they must now be able to read the operating and troubleshooting manuals (when problems arise) of automated manufacturing equipment that is based on computer technology. Previously, the design of manufacturing equipment was relatively simple and easy to operate, based on simple mechanical principles such as pulleys.

Technological innovation also has fostered increased autonomy and team-oriented work places, which also demand different job-related skills than employees once needed. For example, the manufacturing technician’s job mentioned previously, is generally more autonomous than its predecessor. Thus, technicians must be able to manage themselves and their time. Employers now rely on working teams’ technical and interpersonal skills to drive efficiency and to improve quality. Today’s consumers often expect customized products and applications, which require that employees possess sufficient technical skill to tailor products and services to customers’ needs, as well as the interpersonal skills necessary to determine client needs and customer service.

GLOBAL COMPLEXITY The world is simply getting more complex, and this has had an impact on how an organization operates. No longer does a firm just compete against other firms in the United States. Now more than ever, to sustain competitive advantage companies must provide their employees with leading-edge skills, and encourage employees to apply their skills proficiently. Increasing customer expectations also mean the standards for success are constantly rising. To compete in the more complex global environment, companies must be able to simultaneously integrate global operations, respond to diverse local/national needs within subsidiary operations, and implement innovation rapidly around the world.

There is reason to suspect that many U.S. firms are already behind in this regard. Employers in both the European Common Market and some Pacific Rim economies have long emphasized learning as a proactive tool for responding to strategic change. For example, in Ireland, the pri- vate sector offers graduate employment programs in skill areas such as science, marketing, and technology. In short, global competition necessitates that companies in the United States become more productive and there is growing consensus that training must be at the forefront of their attempts to do so.

LEARNING STYLES Although much remains unknown about the learning process, what is known affects the way firms conduct training. It is known that adults retain approximately 20 percent of what they read and hear, 40 percent of what they see, 50 percent of what they say, 60 percent of what they do, and 90 percent of what they see, hear, say, and do.55 Because of these differences, it is important to use a wide range of T&D methods. Learning style supports the concept that

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people have a natural preference, based on their dominant sense, in how they choose to learn and process information. It may be visual, hearing, or touching.56 Some learn best from working in a group whereas others prefer studying on an individual basis. Still others absorb best by seeing how the material provides a practical application, and others want to know the theoretical basis. Some learners can readily absorb information by reading written words whereas others learn best through hearing the words spoken.

In studying the information in this text, the different learning styles will become apparent. There are exercises at the end of each chapter to provide hands-on application of the material. Being able to read the words in the text will appeal to some whereas others will learn best through hearing the instructor’s lecture. Each chapter’s PowerPoint slides provide a visual representation of the material. The incidents at the end of each chapter require extending your newfound knowl- edge in a practical manner.

To cope with the different learning styles, firms use multiple methods, called blended training (also referred to as blended learning), to deliver T&D. This involves using a combination of train- ing methods that are strategically combined to best achieve a training program’s objectives.57 John Leutner, head of global learning services for Xerox corporate HR, said, “The new blended learning is about creating a richer, more meaningful development experience that relates to a person’s work and performance.”58 Starbucks Coffee uses a blended learning approach to certify its baristas. Trainees receive 70 percent of their training through on-the-job experiences and hands-on training, 20 percent from peer feedback and peer mentorship, and 10 percent from online training modules.59

Another learning principle is that learners progress in an area of learning only as far as they need to achieve their purposes. Professors have long known that telling students which concepts are important motivates them to study the material, especially if the information is prime test material. Research indicates that unless there is relevance, meaning, and emotion attached to the material taught, trainees will not learn.

Another learning principle is that the best time to learn is when the learning can be useful. One way this impacts T&D is the need for training on a timely basis. Just-in-time training (on-demand training) is training provided anytime, anywhere in the world when it is needed. For example, transport and logistics company AP Moller Maersk, capitalizes on team-based learning that begins with finding solutions to significant market threats and opportunities. The company assembles global teams to tackle business problems. Team members benefit from each other’s unique expertise and perspectives. In just a few years, AP Moller Maersk deemed this program a success based on financial outcomes and growth of new business opportunities.60 In addition to working alongside team members, computer technology, the Internet, intranets, smartphones, and similar devices have made these approaches economically feasible to a degree never possible before. The ability to deliver knowledge to employees on an as-needed basis, anywhere on the globe, and at a pace consistent with their learning styles greatly enhances the value of T&D.

OTHER HUMAN RESOURCE FUNCTIONS Successful accomplishment of other human resource functions can also have a crucial impact on T&D. For instance, if recruitment-and-selection efforts or its compensation package attract only marginally qualified workers, a firm will need extensive T&D programs. Hiring marginally qualified workers will likely have a significant impact on the firm’s safety and health programs. Therefore, additional training will be required.

Human Resource Management Training Initiatives HR is responsible for many company-wide training initiatives on HR-related matters. Among these initiatives are orientation (onboarding), ethics, compliance (equal employment opportu- nity, Occupational Safety and Health), and diversity. We will limit our discussion to orientation (onboarding) here and safety training is discussed in Chapter 13. Resources for other types of compliance training are available online on the government agency responsible for the compli- ance issue. For example, the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs Web site addresses affirmative action requirements, and the U.S. Department of Labor provides learning resources for determining whether jobs are exempt from the overtime pay provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

blended training The use of multiple training methods to deliver T&D.

just-in-time training (on-demand training) Training provided anytime, anywhere in the world when it is needed.

8.3 Summarize some human resource management training initiatives.

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Orientation is the initial T&D effort to inform new employees about the company, the job, and the work group. It becomes a way to engage new employees and reinforce the fact that they made the proper career choice. It also familiarizes them with the corporate culture and helps them to quickly become productive. A good orientation program is quite important because first impres- sions are often the most lasting and need to start the minute an applicant accepts an offer of employment. One of the orientation goals at Booz Allen is to make a positive first impression and create excitement before the new hire’s first day on the job, using their online new-hire portal.61

New employees usually decide whether to stay at a company within their first six months of employment, and orientation programs give organizations an opportunity to get the relationship off to a good start. Therefore, new-hire orientation programs are particularly crucial for the rapid transition from new hires to contributing members of the organization. Orientation formats are unique to each firm. However, some basic purposes are listed here.

$ The Employment Situation. At an early point in time, it is helpful for the new employee to know how his or her job fits into the firm’s organizational structure and goals.

$ Company Policies and Rules. Every job within an organization must be performed within the guidelines and constraints provided by policies and rules. Employees must understand these to ensure a smooth transition into the workplace.

$ Compensation. Employees have a special interest in obtaining information about the reward system. Management normally provides this information during the recruitment- and-selection process and often reviews it during orientation.

$ Corporate Culture. The firm’s culture reflects, in effect, “How we do things around here.” This relates to everything from the way employees dress to the way they talk.

$ Team Membership. A new employee’s ability and willingness to work in teams was likely determined before he or she was hired. In orientation, the program may again emphasize the importance of becoming a valued member of the company team.

$ Employee Development. An individual’s employment security is increasingly becoming dependent on his or her ability to acquire needed knowledge and skills that are constantly changing. Thus, firms should keep employees aware not only of company-sponsored devel- opmental programs, but also of those available externally.

$ Socialization. To reduce the anxiety that new employees may experience, the firm should take steps to integrate them into the informal organization. Some organizations have found that employees subjected to socialization programs, including the topics of politics and career management, perform better than those who have not undergone such training.

To this list, add the fact that there are numerous forms and documents a new employee must complete or read and acknowledge.

Supervisors represent the front line of orientation. Roger Chevalier, California-based man- agement consultant and author of A Manager’s Guide to Improving Workplace Performance, said, “If employees are selected properly, 85 percent of whether they will succeed is based on the environment created by a supervisor.”62 Peers also often serve as excellent information agents. There are several reasons for using peers in performing this function. For one thing, they are accessible to newcomers, often more so than the boss. Peers also tend to have a high degree of empathy for new people. In addition, they have the organizational experience and technical expertise to which new employees need access. Some organizations assign a mentor or “buddy” to new hires to work with them until they are settled in.

Although orientation can occupy a new employee’s first few days on the job, some firms believe that learning is more effective if spread out over time. A company may deliver a program in a system of 20 one-hour sessions over a period of several weeks, or extend the program over a much longer period. For example, IBM developed Succeeding@IBM, which is a two-year pro- gram that delivers new information covering corporate values, strategy, tools, and the resources needed to be successful. IBM distinguishes its orientation program from others, in part, by incor- porating personalized learning plans.

Some firms are sensitive to information overload and make information available to employees on an as-needed basis. For example, a new supervisor may eventually have the responsibility for evaluating his or her subordinates. But knowledge of how to do this may not be needed for six months. A training segment on performance evaluation may be placed on the Internet or a firm’s intranet and be available when the need arises. This approach is consistent with just-in-time train- ing, mentioned previously.

orientation Initial T&D effort for new employees that informs them about the company, the job, and the

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Careers and Career Planning Approaches and Methods In the sections that follow, we will address a series of interrelated topics—careers, career paths, and career planning. A career is a general course that a person chooses to pursue throughout his or her working life. Historically, a career was a sequence of work-related positions an individual occupied during a lifetime, although not always with the same company. However, today there are few relatively static jobs. A career path is a flexible line of movement through which a person may travel during his or her work life. Following an established career path, the employee can undertake career development with the firm’s assistance. From a worker’s perspective, following a career path may involve weaving from company to company and from position to position as he or she obtains greater knowledge and experience. Career paths have historically focused on upward mobility within an occupation, which was a choice not nearly as available as in the past. The days of the cradle to the grave job have largely disappeared. Other career paths include the network, lateral skill, dual-career paths, adding value to your career, demotion, and being your own boss as a free agent. Most careers are no longer a straight ascent up the corporate ladder. By selecting an alternative career path, a person may transfer current skills into a new career, one that was only dreamed about in the past. Typically, these career paths are used in combination and may be more popular at various stages of a person’s career.

In the following Watch It video, you will learn that Verizon provides employees with the opportunity to develop a career path that fits their interests and the company’s needs. Verizon also provides a variety of training programs to help facilitate the attainment of career goals.

8.4 Explain the concept of careers and career planning approaches and methods.

career General course that a person chooses to pursue throughout his or her working life.

career path A flexible line of movement through which a person may travel during his or her work life.

Watch It 3 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Verizon: Career Planning and to respond to questions.

Traditional Career Path Although the traditional career path is not as viable a career path option as it previously was, understanding it furthers one’s comprehension of the other career path alternatives. The traditional career path is one in which an employee progresses vertically upward in the organization from one specific job to the next. The assumption is that each preceding job is essential preparation for the next-higher-level job. Therefore, an employee must move, step-by-step, from one job to the next to gain needed experience and preparation. One of the biggest advantages of the tradi- tional career path is that it was straightforward and very predictable.63 The path was clearly laid out, and the employee knew the specific sequence of jobs through which he or she must progress.

Today, the old model of a career in which an employee worked his or her way up the ladder in a single company is becoming somewhat rare. The up-or-out approach, in which employees must keep getting promoted quickly or get lost, is becoming outmoded. The certainties of yesterday’s business methods and growth have disappeared in most industries. However, the one certainty that remains is that there will always be top-level managers and individuals who strive to achieve these positions. The way these positions are obtained may be different.

Network Career Path The network career path contains both a vertical sequence of jobs and a series of horizontal opportunities. The network career path recognizes the interchangeability of experience at certain levels and the need to broaden experience at one level before promotion to a higher level. Often, this approach provides more realistic opportunities for employee development in an organization than does the traditional career path. For instance, a person may work as an inventory manager for a few years and then move to a lateral position of shift manager before being considered for a promotion. The vertical and horizontal options lessen the probability of blockage in one job. Royal Caribbean crew members are often given several different work assignments prior to a promotion. One major disadvantage of this type of career path is that it is more difficult to explain to employ- ees the specific route their careers may take for a given line of work.

traditional career path Employee progresses vertically upward in the organization from one specific job to the next.

network career path Method of career progression that contains both a vertical sequence of jobs and a series of horizontal opportunities.

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The benefits of a network career path are not limited to lower-level positions in the organi- zational job structure. An interesting research study provides evidence that following a network career path may be the best route to becoming a high-ranking executive, including CEO. Data from LinkedIn revealed that experience in one additional functional area improved the odds of becom- ing an executive as much as gaining three years of additional experience.64 Also, taking assign- ments in four functions was nearly as helpful as earning an MBA from a highly-ranked program.

Lateral Skill Path The lateral skill path allows for lateral moves within the firm, taken to permit an employee to become revitalized and find new challenges. Neither pay nor promotion may be involved, but by learning a different job, an employee can increase his or her value to the organization and become rejuvenated and reenergized. Firms that want to encourage lateral movement may choose to use a skill-based pay system that rewards individuals for the type and number of skills they possess. Another approach is job enrichment. This approach rewards (without promotion) an employee by increasing the challenge of the job, giving the job more meaning, and giving the employee a greater sense of accomplishment.

Dual-Career Path The dual-career path was originally developed to deal with the problem of technically trained employees who had no desire to move into management through the normal upward mobility procedure. The dual-career path recognizes that technical specialists can and should be allowed to contribute their expertise to a company without having to become managers. A dual-career approach is often established to encourage and motivate professionals in fields such as engineering, sales, marketing, finance, and HR. Individuals in these fields can increase their specialized knowl- edge, make contributions to their firms, and be rewarded without entering management. Whether on the management or technical path, compensation would be comparable at each level. The dual system has been a trademark in higher education, where individuals can move through the ranks of instructor, assistant professor, associate professor, and professor without having to go into administration.

Adding Value to Your Career Adding value to your career may appear to be totally self-serving, but nevertheless, it is a logical and realistic career path. In the rapidly changing world today, professional obsolescence can creep up on a person. What makes a person valuable in today’s work environment is the knowledge and experience he or she brings to a job. An individual’s knowledge must be ever expanding, and continual personal development is a necessity. The better an employee’s qualifications, the greater the opportunities he or she has with the present firm and in the job market. A person must discover what companies need, then develop the skills necessary to meet these needs as defined by the marketplace. Individuals should always be doing something that contributes significant, positive change to the organization. If any vestige of job security exists, this is it. Basically, the primary tie that binds a worker to the company, and vice versa, is mutual success resulting in performance that adds value to the organization.

Demotion Demotion is the process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduction in pay. Demotions have long been associated with failure, but lim- ited promotional opportunities in the future and the fast pace of technological change may make demotion a legitimate career option. If the stigma of demotion can be removed, more employees, especially older workers, might choose to make such a move. Some people get into a position only to find their skills were better suited to their old job. Sometimes they decide they do not want to have as much responsibility because of things going on in their personal lives. Working long hours for limited promotional opportunity loses its appeal to some after a while, especially if the worker can financially afford the demotion. In certain instances, this approach might open a clogged promotional path and at the same time permit a senior employee to escape unwanted stress without being viewed as a failure.

lateral skill path Career path that allows for lateral moves within the firm, taken to permit an employee to become revitalized and find new challenges.

dual-career path Career path that recognizes that technical specialists can and should be allowed to contribute their expertise to a company without having to become managers.

demotion Process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduction in pay.

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Free Agents (Being Your Own Boss) Free agents are people who take charge of all or part of their careers by being their own bosses or by working for others in ways that fit their needs or wants. Many became free agents because of company downsizing and have no desire or would have difficulty reentering the corporate world.65 Free agents are said to work in the gig economy, which simply refers to working as an independent contractor to complete projects for one or more clients. Free agents most often get projects (or gigs) using a Web site or mobile app that helps to match them with customers.66

Some free agents work full-time, others work part-time. Still, others work full-time and run a small business in the hope of converting it into their primary work. Free agents come in many shapes and sizes, but what distinguishes them is a commitment to controlling part or all their careers. They have a variety of talents and are used to dealing with a wide range of audi- ences and changing their approach on the spot in response to new information or reactions. Free agents most commonly work in one or more of the following industries (and a common job title): arts and design (graphic designers), computer and information technology (Web develop- ers), construction and extraction (painters), media and communications (photographers), and transportation and material moving (delivery drivers).67 They also tend to love challenges and spontaneity.68

Career Planning Approaches Career planning is an ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them. Individuals in today’s job market must truly manage their careers. Career planning should not concentrate only on advancement opportunities because the present work environment has reduced many of these opportunities. At some point, career planning should focus on achieving successes that do not necessarily entail promotions, even if it means taking a lower- paying job in an industry, such as health care, where growth opportunities are plentiful.69 Or, it may mean staying put under the right circumstances. A Glassdoor survey revealed that a positive workplace culture, often established by good working relationships, is associated with higher retention.70 The survey also found that a negative workplace culture is associated with signifi- cantly higher turnover. Altogether, these findings may suggest that employees are satisfied with their current career status.

“If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there,” is certainly true in career planning. Career planning must now accommodate several objectives and enable us to prepare for each on a contingency basis. It will need updating to accommodate changes in our own interests as well as in the work environment. Historically, it was thought that career planning was logical, linear, and indeed, planned. Today, a new job assignment often is thought of as being paid to learn a new task and increase your experience level in case you must leave your job. Because of the many changes that are occurring, career planning is essential for survival for individuals and organizations. Individuals should have a strategy or plan for unexpected career events that begins while they are still employed.

SELF-ASSESSMENT Self-assessment is the process of learning about oneself. Anything that could affect one’s performance in a future job should be considered. It is one of the first things that a person should do in planning a career. A self-assessment can help a person target career choices and goals. Conducting a realistic self-assessment may help a person avoid mistakes that could affect his or her entire career progression. A person should take time to analyze his or her past successes and failures. A thorough self-assessment will go a long way toward helping match an individual’s specific qualities and goals with the right job or profession. Remember, you cannot get what you want until you know what you want. The self-assessment is not something that is done once and forgotten. It is something that spans a career and into retirement. The self- assessment may show that you do not want to retire at 65. Some enjoy working well past what traditionally has been thought of as the retirement age. As a 95-year-old former mentor said, “work is what keeps me alive and going. Everyone I know who retired died young, and certainly much younger than me.”71

A self-evaluation procedure, developed originally by Benjamin Franklin that assists people in becoming aware of their strengths and weaknesses is the strength/weakness balance sheet. Employees who understand their strengths can use them to maximum advantage. By recognizing

free agents People who take charge of all or part of their careers by being their own bosses or by working for others in ways that fit their needs or wants.

career planning Ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them.

self-assessment Process of learning about oneself.

strength/weakness balance sheet A self-evaluation procedure, developed originally by Benjamin Franklin, that assists people in becoming aware of their strengths and weaknesses.

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their weaknesses, they are in a better position to overcome them. This statement sums up that attitude; “If you have a weakness, understand it and make it work for you as a strength; if you have a strength, do not abuse it to the point at which it becomes a weakness.”

To use a strength/weakness balance sheet, the individual lists strengths and weaknesses as he or she perceives them. This is quite important, because believing, for example, that a weakness exists even when it does not can equate to a real weakness. Thus, if you believe that you make a poor first impression when meeting someone, you will probably make a poor impression. The perception of a weakness often becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Table 8-1 shows an example of a strength/weakness balance sheet. Typically, a person’s weak- nesses will outnumber strengths after the first few attempts. However, as the individual repeats the process, some items that first appeared to be weaknesses may eventually be strengths and should then be moved from one column to the other. A person should devote sufficient time to the proj- ect to obtain a clear understanding of his or her strengths and weaknesses. Typically, the process should take at least several days during which the list is drafted and subsequently modified. People change, and every few years the process should again be undertaken again.

A likes and dislikes survey assists individuals in recognizing restrictions they place on themselves. Connecticut-based career counselor Julie Jansen said, “It’s important in identifying what you want to do, what your skills are, and what you don’t—and do—like about your current occupation.”72 You are looking for qualities you want in a job and attributes of a job you do not want. For instance, some people are not willing to live in certain parts of the country, and such feelings should be noted as a constraint. Some positions require a person to spend considerable amount of time traveling. Thus, an estimate of the amount of time a person is willing to travel would also be helpful. Recognition of such self-imposed restrictions may reduce future career problems.

The size of the firm might also be important. Some like a major organization whose products or services are well known; others prefer a smaller organization, believing that the opportunities for advancement may be greater or that the environment is better suited to their tastes. All factors that could affect an individual’s work performance should be listed in the likes and dislikes survey. An example of this type of survey is shown in Table 8-2.

FORMAL ASSESSMENT Combining self-assessment with formal assessment tools designed to inform career planning considerations provides a more comprehensive approach. Formal assessment refers to the use of established external approaches to facilitate evaluation of an issue at hand. There are many tools, including the use of performance appraisal, which we already addressed in Chapter 7. An example is the 360-degree feedback method. In this chapter, we will focus on another approach. In the career planning domain, testing tools to identify career interests

likes and dislikes survey Procedure that helps individuals in recognizing restrictions they place on themselves.

formal assessment The use of established external approaches to facilitate evaluation of an issue at hand.

Strengths Weaknesses

Work well with people.

Good manager of people.

Hard worker.

Lead by example.

People respect me as being fair and impartial.

Tremendous amount of energy.

Get the job done when it is defined.

Excellent at organizing other people’s time.

Can get the most out of people who are working for me.

Have a great amount of empathy.

Do not like constant supervision.

Often say things without realizing consequences.

Cannot sit at a desk all the time.

A rebel at heart but have portrayed myself as just the opposite. My conservatism has gotten me jobs that I emotionally did not want.

Am sometimes nervous in an unfamiliar environment.

Interest level hits peaks and valleys.

Many people look on me as being unstable.

Not a tremendous planner for short range.

Exclusively better at long-range planning.

Impatient—want to have things happen fast.

TABLE 8-1

Strength/Weakness Balance Sheet

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based on values and personality represent one approach. Although individuals may complete these tests on their own and read the report that is generated based on their responses, it often makes sense to work with a career counselor who can answer questions and make further recommendations.

Perhaps the most well-known example is the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI). This assessment tool contains dozens of questions that elicit an individual’s preferences for how they would behave in different situations. The MBTI describes the following four preferences: Energy measures an individuals’ degree of extraversion or introversion to determine whether a person gains energy through interpersonal relationships (extraversion) or through self-reflection (intro- version). Information-Gathering measures a preference for gathering information about facts to consider before deciding (Sensing) or a preference for gathering information about possibilities before deciding. Decision making measures a preference for consideration a person gives to their own or others’ feelings and values relative to facts and details. Preferences to consider the effect of a decision on personal feelings as well as on others (Feeling) stand in contrast to a preference to make objective decisions (Thinking). Lifestyle refers to an individual’s inclination to be either flexible or structured. A preference to establish goals, strategies for goal attainment, and dead- lines for meeting them (Judging) stands in contrast to a preference for embracing the unexpected, modifying decisions, and working without definitive timelines and deadlines (Perceiving).

An example of a formal test is the Career Key, which is based on Holland’s Theory of Career Choice. This theory is premised on the idea that people are more likely to thrive in situations that match their personalities. It specifies six personality and corresponding situational types. For example, according to Holland’s theory:73

Persons having an Investigative personality type “dominate” this environment. There are more of them than there are people of other personality types. For example, in a scientific laboratory there will be more persons having an “Investigative” personality than there will be people who have an “Enterprising” type. “Investigative” people create an “Investigative” environment. For example, they particularly value people who are precise, scientific, and intellectual—who are good at understanding and solving science and math problems.

Examples of jobs that fit this description include architects and physicians. As you can see, both informal and formal career assessments provide you with useful infor-

mation. The sheer volume of information can be overwhelming. Still, it is important to sort through this information and think strategically about the next steps. Marketing strategist Dorie Clark suggests preparing a résumé of how you envision yourself five years into the future.74 Spe- cifically, state your desired job title and responsibilities. This exercise not only provides a vision for the foreseeable future, but also should serve as a prompt to figure out the next steps toward getting there.

Likes Dislikes

Enjoy traveling

Would like to live in the Southeast United States

Enjoy being my own boss

Would like to live in a medium-sized city

Enjoy watching football and baseball

Enjoy playing racquetball

Do not want to work for a large firm

Would not want to work in a large city

Would not like to work behind a desk all day

Would not like to wear suits all the time

TABLE 8-2

Likes and Dislikes Survey

Try It! If your professor has assigned this, sign onto www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the Managing Your Career simulation and test your applica- tion of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

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Career Development Methods Career development is a formal approach used by the organization to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed. Beverly Kaye, coauthor of Love ‘Em or Lose ‘Em: Getting Good People to Stay, studied the top 20 reasons employees remain with their company and discovered that career development opportunities were number one on the list. It was even more important than receiving greater pay.75 With career development, the organization identifies paths and activities for individual employees as they develop.

Career planning rests with the employee. However, career development must closely parallel individual career planning if a firm is to retain its best and brightest workers. Employees must see that the firm’s career development effort is directed toward furthering their specific career objectives. Companies must therefore help their employees obtain their career objectives and most notably, career security. They must provide them with opportunities to learn and do different things. Performing the same or a similar task over and over provides little development. Through effective career development, a pool of men and women can be developed who can thrive in any number of organizational structures in the future.

Properly designed and implemented career development programs can aid in recruiting and hiring and ensure that the best employees are in the pipeline for future leadership positions. Formal career development is important to maintain a motivated and committed workforce. In fact, Gen Y workers tend to favor personalized career guidance as opposed to big salaries and retirement packages. Further, high-potential employees are more likely to remain with organizations that are willing to invest in their development.

Career development should begin with a person’s job placement and initial orientation. Man- agement then observes the employee’s job performance and compares it to job standards. At this stage, strengths and weaknesses will be noted, enabling management to assist the employee in making a tentative career decision. Naturally, this decision can be altered later as the process continues. This tentative career decision is based on several factors, including personal needs, abilities, and aspirations, and the organization’s needs. Management can then schedule develop- ment programs that relate to the employee’s specific needs.

Career development programs are expected to achieve one or more of the following objectives:

$ Effective development of available talent. Individuals are more likely to be committed to career development that is part of a specific career plan. This way, they can better under- stand the purpose of development. Career development consistently ranks high on employ- ees’ want lists, and they can often be a less expensive option than pay raises and bonuses.

$ Self-appraisal opportunities for employees considering new or nontraditional career paths. Some excellent workers do not view traditional upward mobility as a career option because firms today have fewer promotion options available. Other workers see themselves in dead- end jobs and seek relief. Rather than lose these workers, a firm can offer career planning to help them identify new and different career paths.

$ Development of career paths that cut across divisions and geographic locations. The devel- opment should not be limited to a narrow spectrum of one part of a company.

$ A demonstration of a tangible commitment to developing a diverse work environment. Individuals who recognize a company as desiring a diverse environment often have greater recruiting and retention opportunities.

$ Satisfaction of employees’ specific development needs. Individuals who see their personal development needs being met tend to be more satisfied with their jobs and the organization. They tend to remain with the organization.

$ Improvement of performance. The job itself is the most important influence on career development. Each job can provide different challenges and experiences.

$ Increased employee loyalty and motivation, leading to decreased turnover. Individuals who believe that the firm is interested in their career planning are more likely to remain with the organization.

$ A method of determining training and development needs. If a person desires a certain career path and does not currently have the proper qualifications, this identifies a training and development need.

There are numerous methods for career development. Some currently used methods, most of which are used in various combinations, are discussed next.

career development Formal approach used by the organization to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed.

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MANAGER/EMPLOYEE SELF-SERVICE Manager and employee self-service have proven to be useful in career development. Many companies are providing managers with the online ability to assist employees in planning their career paths and developing required competencies. Through employee self-service, employees are provided with the ability to update performance goals online and to enroll in training courses.

DISCUSSIONS WITH KNOWLEDGEABLE INDIVIDUALS In a formal discussion, the superior and subordinate employees may jointly agree on what career development activities are best. The resources made available to achieve these objectives may also include developmental programs. In some organizations, human resource professionals are the focal point for helping on the topic. In other instances, psychologists and guidance counselors provide this service. In an academic setting, colleges and universities often provide career planning and development information to students. Students often go to their professors for career advice.

COMPANY MATERIAL Some firms provide material specifically developed to assist in career development. Such material is tailored to the firm’s special needs. In addition, job descriptions provide valuable insight for individuals to personally determine whether a match exists between their strengths and weaknesses and specific positions.

PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL SYSTEM The firm’s performance appraisal system can also be a valuable tool in career development. Discussing an employee’s strengths and weaknesses with his or her supervisor can uncover developmental needs. If overcoming a weakness seems difficult or even impossible, an alternative career path may be the solution.

WORKSHOPS Some organizations conduct workshops lasting two or three days for helping workers develop careers within the company. Employees define and match their specific career objectives with the needs of the company. At other times, the company may send workers to workshops available in the community or workers may initiate the visit themselves. Consider just two of the developmental activities available for HR professionals:

$ Society for Human Resource Management Seminar Series. Many HR seminars are available to SHRM members.

$ American Management Association, Human Resource Seminars. There are numerous human resource seminars offered through the AMA.

Management Development Management development consists of all learning experiences provided by an organization result- ing in upgrading skills and knowledge required in current and future managers. Although leader- ship is often depicted as an exciting and glamorous endeavor, there is another side; failure can quickly result in losing one’s position. The risks are especially high because of today’s rapid changes. This situation magnifies the importance of providing development opportunities for a firm’s management group. A recent study found that almost 70 percent of companies believe that senior executives also need to improve their leadership skills. More than half of companies reported that their top leaders also needed to improve their strategic planning skills. Several other skills teamwork, motivating people, and creativity.76 Increasingly, organizations recognize the impor- tance of leader empathy. Empathy refers to the ability to understand and share the feelings of other people. Companies such as Cisco Systems and Ford Motor Company provide empathy training to improve management effectiveness, employee retention, and product design. For instance, the Ford design team shows empathy toward pregnant women who need more room and other accommoda- tions in vehicles. Designers wear the weighty “empathy belly,” which is a garment that simulates some of the feelings of a pregnant woman. Empathy training is paying off for many companies.77 The 2015 Global Empathy Index revealed that the top 10 organizations (of 160 in total) generated 50 percent more net income per employee than the bottom 10 organizations.78 In addition, overall, the DDI’s Global Leadership Forecast 2014–2015 found that organizations with the highest-quality leaders were nine times more likely to outperform their competition in metrics such as financial accomplishment, product quality and services, employee engagement, and customer approval.79

A firm’s future lies largely in the hands of its managers. This group performs certain func- tions essential to the organization’s survival and prosperity. Managers must make the right choices

8.5 Describe management development.

management development Consists of all learning experiences provided by an organization resulting in upgrading skills and knowledge required in current and future managerial positions.

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in most of their decisions; otherwise, the firm will not grow and may even fail. Therefore, it is imperative that managers keep up with the latest developments in their respective fields and, at the same time, manage an ever-changing workforce operating in a dynamic environment. Also, note that as managers reach higher levels in the organization, it is not so much their technical skills that they need, but their interpersonal skills and their business knowledge. In the extreme, unethi- cal senior leaders whose behavior is counterproductive comes with consequences. For instance, turnover is likely to increase. And, by one estimate, a poor leader can cost a company up to $2.7 million dollars.80

First-line supervisors, middle managers, and executives may all participate in management development programs. These programs are available in-house, by professional organizations, and at colleges and universities. T&D specialists often plan and present in-house programs, at times using line managers. Organizations such as the SHRM and AMA conduct conferences and seminars in many specialties. Numerous colleges and universities also provide management devel- opment programs. Colleges and universities may possess expertise not available within business organizations. In these cases, academicians and management practitioners can advantageously present T&D programs jointly.

Mentoring and Coaching Mentoring and coaching have become important means of management development. Because the purposes of mentoring and coaching are similar in concept and the terms are often used interchangeably in the literature, they are discussed together. Coaching and mentoring activities, which may occur either formally or informally, are primarily development approaches emphasiz- ing one-on-one learning.

Mentoring is an approach to advising, coaching, and nurturing for creating a practical rela- tionship to enhance individual career, personal, and professional growth and development. The concept of a mentor is believed to have its origins in Greek mythology when Odysseus set out for the Trojan War and placed the running of his palace in the hands of his trusted friend, Mentor.81 Mentors may be anywhere in the organization or even in another firm. For years, mentoring has repeatedly been shown to be the most important factor influencing careers. In a study done by Gartner Research, having a mentor helps a person get promoted five times more often than his or her peers who do not have mentors. They are also promoted six times more than the competition.82

mentoring Approach to advising, coaching, and nurturing for creating a practical relationship to enhance individual career, personal, and professional growth and development.

☛ F Y I $ Having a mentor matters to the millennial generation. Those who intend to stay with their firm for

more than five years are twice as likely to have a mentor (68 percent) than those who do not intend to stay as long (32 percent).83

Most Fortune 500 companies have a mentoring program. Mentors equip protégés to learn for themselves by sharing experiences, asking demanding questions, challenging decision mak- ing, and expanding problem-solving skills. It focuses on skills to develop protégés to perform to their highest potential, leading to career advancement. Mentors have the potential to help mentees discover their strengths and weaknesses, formulate a career path, set goals, manage stress, and balance work and personal obligations. Mentors can also help protégés learn to stand up to their superiors when circumstances dictate. For example, United Airlines encourages experienced cap- tains to mentor co-pilots, and to help them be more insistent with veteran captains if they detect problems or hazards.84 Technology can be used to match up mentors and mentees; however, the best algorithms are destined to fail if mentors and protégés do not find common ground as people.85 Successful mentoring relationships do not necessarily last forever. These relationships may be quite fluid and form and dissolve around specific issues, such as helping younger people to build their professional networks.

E-mentoring, or open mentoring, is being used more and more today as opposed to face-to- face interaction with positive results. Many keep in touch with their mentors via e-mail, Facebook, and Twitter, but they may get together for lunch if they happen to be in the same location.

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Most believe that women can truly benefit from a female mentor who has knowledge and experience and can show them “the ropes.” For various reasons, mentors tend to seek out their mirror images. Because women and minorities are not equally represented at the firm’s top levels, they sometimes are left without a female mentor. For instance, only 20 women were CEOs of Fortune 500 companies in 2016.86 Women who are mentored, particularly by other women, are more likely to enhance and expand career skills, advance in their careers, receive higher salaries, and enjoy their work more. Women want and need to have advice provided by mentors to use their talents and realize their potential, not only for their personal benefit but also to assist their firms.87

Discussions about the importance of mentoring and structuring mentoring practices has almost exclusively focused on developing younger or less experienced individuals. Very little has been said about mentoring high ranking executives, including the CEO. Most of us probably assume that executives have successfully climbed the corporate ladder and do not need mentor- ing. Still, many CEOs could benefit from the wise counsel of their peers—other CEOs or retired CEOs. Companies do not establish mentoring programs for CEOs. Rather, it is up to the CEO to reach out to trusted members of their networks. There is evidence to support payoffs of such mentoring relationships for the company. In a survey of CEOs who have mentoring relationships, 71 percent expressed confidence that company performance improved, 69 percent stated that they were making better decisions, and 76 percent said that they were more ably meeting stakeholder expectations.88 In addition, employees within the organization also stand to benefit indirectly from their CEO’s mentoring experiences. For instance, David Nish, now former CEO of Scottish insurance company Standard Life, stated, “The storytelling my mentor gave me was way beyond expectations. It’s about believing I’m unlimited . . . and I try to give my people the same—belief that they can do anything.”89

Coaching is often considered a responsibility of the immediate boss, who helps, much like a mentor, but the primary focus is about performance. Coaching involves helping workers see why they have been selected to perform the task or why they have been selected for the team. The coach has greater experience or expertise than the protégé and is in the position to offer wise advice. It is employee development that is customized to each individual and is therefore immediately applicable and does not require stepping away from work for extended periods of time.

Reverse Mentoring Reverse mentoring is a process in which older employees learn from younger ones. There are people in organizations who are approaching retirement who do not want to retire and who have tremendous knowledge that should not go to waste. There are young people who know things

coaching Often considered a responsibility of the immediate boss, who provides assistance, much like a mentor.

reverse mentoring A process in which older employees learn from younger ones.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Management Development at Trends Apparel As the HR Director at Trends Apparel, Laura

Kent finds it challenging to support management development for the retail chain’s local store managers. Turnover of the managers is high and exit interviews indicate lack of training as a concern. After reading an article about other organizations using a new e-learning training program on management skills, she thinks she has found a solution to the dilemma. She contacted the company that developed the training program and learned that the training helps managers develop skills in inventory management and marketing products. Laura thought it sounded perfect for Trends Apparel managers and imme- diately purchased the training. However, after a month, only 2 of the

40 managers have enrolled in the training, and those two did not finish the training. In frustration, Laura organized a conference call with a group of managers to discuss the problem. She is surprised to learn that the managers don’t see the training as relevant. They said what they need is training in managing employees. For example, they need to learn how to better deal with employee problems and how to motivate employees. In addition, the managers told Laura that the e-learning program was just hard to work into their schedules. They felt coaching from other managers would be more helpful to them. Laura now realizes that even though the e-learning training program is already paid for, it is likely not going to be used.

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234 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

others do not know and who are anxious to expand their horizons. The existence of these two diverse, but potentially mutually helpful, populations has led to reverse mentoring. At Procter & Gamble, the reverse mentoring program allows senior management to be mentored in areas such as biotechnology. It pairs scientists and top managers to explore the potential impact of biotech- nology on P&G’s customers, suppliers, and overall business. Time Warner has a Digital Reverse Mentoring Program between their executives and technology savvy college students.90 Phil McKinney, a vice president at Hewlett-Packard, uses reverse mentoring by spending time with his company’s college interns to understand what motivates them and how they work.91

Organization Development and the Learning Organization Individuals and groups receive the bulk of T&D effort. However, some firms believe that to achieve needed change, they must move the entire organization in a different direction. As noted earlier in the chapter, efforts to achieve this goal are the focus of OD—planned and systematic attempts to change the organization, typically to a more behavioral environment. OD education and training strategies are designed to develop a more open, productive, and compatible workplace despite differences in personalities, culture, or technologies. The OD movement has been strongly advocated by researchers such as Chris Argyris and Warren Bennis.92 OD applies to an entire system, such as a company or a plant, and is a major means of achieving change in the corporate culture. Various factors in the firm’s corporate culture affect employees’ behavior on the job. To bring about desired changes in these factors and behavior, organizations must be transformed into market-driven, innovative, and adaptive systems if they are to survive and prosper in today’s highly competitive global environment. This type of development is increasingly important as both work and the workforce diversify and change.

OD Interventions Numerous OD interventions are available to the practitioner. Interventions covered in the follow- ing sections include survey feedback, a technique often combined with other interventions such as quality circles and team building.

SURVEY FEEDBACK The organization development method of basing change efforts on the systematic collection and measurement of subordinate’s attitudes through anonymous questionnaires is survey feedback. It enables management teams to help organizations create working environments that lead to better working relationships, greater productivity, and increased profitability. Survey feedback generally involves the following steps:

1. Members of the organization, including top management, are involved in planning the survey.

2. All members of the organizational unit participate in the survey. 3. The OD consultant usually analyzes the data, tabulates results, suggests approaches to

diagnosis, and trains participants in the feedback process. 4. Data feedback usually begins at the top level of the organization and flows downward to

groups reporting at successively lower levels. 5. Feedback meetings provide an opportunity to discuss and interpret data, diagnose problem

areas, and develop action plans.

QUALITY CIRCLES The United States received the concept of quality circles from Japan several decades ago. This version of employee involvement is still in use today, improving quality, increasing motivation, boosting productivity, and adding to the bottom line. Quality circles are groups of employees who voluntarily meet regularly with their supervisors to discuss their problems, investigate causes, recommend solutions, and take corrective action when authorized to do so. The team’s recommendations are presented to higher-level management for review, and the approved actions are implemented with employee participation.

Toyota North America Inc. uses quality circles to develop a competitive workforce spirit. Approximately 37 percent of the automaker’s assemblers participate in Toyota’s global “Quality Circles” competition that pits worker against worker in a friendly competition to develop more

HR Web Wisdom

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Career One Stop Pathways to Career Success.

8.6 Define organization development (OD) and the learn- ing organization.

survey feedback Organization development method of basing change efforts on the systematic collection and measurement of subordinate’s attitudes through anonymous questionnaires.

quality circles Groups of employees who voluntarily meet regularly with their supervisors to discuss problems, investigate causes, recommend solutions, and take corrective action when authorized to do so.

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efficient manufacturing methods. The ultimate target is 100 percent. Quality circles are one way that Toyota sees as providing an edge over the competition. Toyota holds competitions twice a year to identify the best ideas.93

TEAM BUILDING Team building is a conscious effort to develop effective work groups and cooperative skills throughout the organization. It helps members diagnose group processes and devise solutions to problems. Effective team building can be the most efficient way to boost morale, employee retention, and company profitability. Whether it’s a lieutenant leading troops into battle or executives working with their managers, the same principles apply. An important by-product of team building is that it is one of the most effective interventions for improving employee satisfaction and work-related attitudes. Individualism has deep roots in U.S. culture. This trait has been a virtue and will continue to be an asset in our society. However, there are work situations that make it imperative to subordinate individual autonomy in favor of cooperation with a group. It seems apparent that teams are clearly superior in performing many of the tasks required by organizations. The building of effective teams, therefore, has become a business necessity.

Team building uses self-directed teams, each composed of a small group of employees responsible for an entire work process or segment. Team members work together to improve their operation or product, to plan and control their work, and to handle day-to-day problems. They may even become involved in broader, company-wide issues, such as vendor quality, safety, and business planning. There are basically two types of team-building exercises. In the first, there is an attempt to break down barriers to understanding that workers have built. In the second, partici- pants “place their lives” in the hand of others such as falling backward, believing that the team will catch you.94 Team-building exercises run the spectrum from a paint-ball battle95 to the raw egg exercise that Southwest Airlines creates. At Southwest Airlines, the firm divides new employees into teams and gives them a raw egg in the shell, a handful of straws, and some masking tape. Their task is, in a limited amount of time, to protect that delicate cargo from an eight-foot drop. The exercise prepares teams of employees for creative problem solving in a fast-paced environment.96

In one team-building exercise, participants were instructed to untangle a 60-foot yellow rope. At first participants tried to untangle the rope on an individual basis, which resulted in failure. Ultimately, they began to share their ideas on how to untangle the rope, and within minutes it was untangled.97 A classic team-building exercise is called “blind man’s bluff” where a blindfolded person who is “it” must chase others with only the verbal assistance of team members to guide him or her.98

Pump It Up sells inf latable playgrounds throughout the United States and uses the play- grounds and childlike activities to create team-building exercises. The head office worked with team-building experts to devise a handbook of business-related team-building activities, includ- ing “Leading the Crowd Playfully” (to break the ice) and “Tag Team Climbing” (to improve cooperation). However, just bouncing around—in socks, in full view of the boss—may improve team morale.99

A classic team-building exercise is called “Team Banquets,” where workers with different knowledge, skills, and experience are brought together to accomplish a single goal: create a banquet. The Team Banquet brings together 25 to 30 employees and challenges them to prepare a gourmet banquet within two hours. Only the raw ingredients and equipment are provided.100 Through team building, management and participants discover that the exercises provide an excel- lent analogy to the workplace and provide an outstanding means for developing teamwork.

Learning Organization A learning organization needs to provide a supportive learning environment and it provides spe- cific learning processes and practices. Also, it is vital that management supports and reinforces learning. A learning organization moves beyond delivering tactical training projects to initiating learning programs aligned with strategic corporate goals. Once undervalued in the corporate world, training programs are now credited with strengthening customer satisfaction, contributing to partnership development, enhancing research and development activities, and finally, reinforc- ing the bottom line. Being recognized as a company that encourages its employees to continue to grow and learn can be a major asset in recruiting. Learning organizations view learning and development opportunities in all facets of their business and try to constantly look ahead and ensure that all employees are taking full advantage of their learning opportunities.101 In a learning

team building Conscious effort to develop effective work groups and cooperative skills throughout the organization.

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organization employees are rewarded for learning and are provided enriched jobs, promotions, and compensation. Organizations with a reputation for having a culture of being a learning leader tend to attract more and better-qualified employees.

In the competition to become listed in the “100 Best Companies to Work for in America,” learning and growth opportunities were a high priority. On nearly every survey, T&D ranks in the top three benefits that employees want from their employers, and they search for firms that will give them the tools to advance in their profession. T&D is not merely a nice thing to provide, it is a strategic resource—one that firms must tap to energize their organizations in the twenty-first century.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Define training and development (T&D) and summarize

related practices. Training is designed to permit learners to acquire knowledge and skills needed for their present jobs. Development involves l earning that goes beyond today’s job. Related to training and development practices is organization development, is planned and systematic attempts to change the organization, typically to a more behavioral environment. Also, a learning organiza- tion is a firm that recognizes the critical importance of continuous performance-related T&D and takes appropri- ate action.

2. Describe the training and development process. The pro- cess begins with the organization’s determination of its specific training needs. Then specific objectives need to be established. After setting the T&D objectives, management can determine the appropriate methods and the delivery system to be used. Management must continuously evalu- ate T&D to ensure its value in achieving organizational objectives.

Training professionals rely on three analytic approaches to determine training needs—organizational analysis, task analysis, and person analysis. Training methods include instructor-led training, e-learning, case study, behavior modeling, role-playing, training games, in-basket training, on-the-job training, and apprentice- ship training. Delivery systems include corporate uni- versities, colleges and universities, community colleges, online higher education, vestibule system, video media, and simulators. Some possible metrics for evaluating training and development include participants’ opinion, extent of learning, behavioral change, accomplishment of T&D objectives, return on investment from training, and benchmarking. There are numerous factors that both impact and are impacted by T&D, including top manage- ment support, shortage of skilled workers, technologi- cal advances, learning styles, and other human resource functions.

3. Summarize some human resource management training initiatives. Orientation is the guided adjustment of new employees to the company, the job, and the work group. HR typically takes the lead on a variety of other training

programs including ethics, compliance (for example, safety and health), and diversity training.

4. Explain the concept of a careers and career planning approaches and methods. A career is the general course that a person chooses to pursue throughout his or her working life. A career path is a flexible line of movement through which a person may travel during his or her work life. Career paths include traditional career path, network career path, lateral skill path, dual-career path, adding value to your career, demotion, and free agents.

Career planning is an ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them. Self-assessment (for example, a likes and dislikes survey) and formal assessment approaches (for example, surveys that measure how an individual would behave situations) help organizations and employees with career planning.

Career development is a formal approach used by the organization to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed. Career development methods include manager/employee self-service, discussions with knowledgeable individuals, company material, performance appraisal system, and workshops.

5. Describe management development. Management devel- opment consists of all learning experiences provided by an organization for providing and upgrading skills and knowl- edge required in current and future managers.

6. Define organization development (OD) and the learning organization. As noted earlier, organization development is planned and systematic attempts to change the organi- zation, typically to a more behavioral environment. OD techniques include survey feedback, a technique often combined with other interventions such as quality circles and team building. Also, as noted earlier, a learning orga- nization is a firm that recognizes the critical importance of continuous performance-related T&D and takes appropriate action. Learning organizations view learning and develop- ment opportunities in all facets of their business and try to constantly look ahead and ensure that all employees are taking full advantage of their learning opportunities.

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Key Terms training and development (T&D) 209 training 209 development 209 organization development (OD) 210 learning organization 210 training and development needs

assessment 211 organizational analysis 211 task analysis 211 person analysis 212 e-learning 213 case study 214 behavior modeling 214 role-playing 214 business games 215 in-basket training 215 on-the-job training (OJT) 215 apprenticeship training 215 team training 216

team coordination training 216 cross-training 216 corporate university 217 online higher education 217 vestibule system 218 simulators 218 reactions 219 learning 219 behavior change 220 transfer of training 220 organizational results 220 benchmarking 221 blended training 223 just-in-time training (on-demand

training) 223 orientation 224 career 225 career path 225 traditional career path 225

network career path 225 lateral skill path 226 dual-career path 226 demotion 226 free agents 227 career planning 227 self-assessment 227 strength/weakness balance sheet 227 likes and dislikes survey 228 formal assessment 228 career development 230 management development 231 mentoring 232 coaching 233 reverse mentoring 233 survey feedback 234 quality circles 234 team building 235

Questions for Review 8-1. Define training and development. 8-2. What is a learning organization? 8-3. What are the steps in the T&D process? 8-4. What are the various training and development meth-

ods? Briefly describe each. 8-5. What are the various training and development delivery

systems? Briefly describe each. 8-6. How is social networking used in informal training? 8-7. Define orientation, and explain the purposes of

orientation. 8-8. What are some metrics for evaluating training and

development? 8-9. Define career. Why is it important for individuals to

conduct career planning? 8-10. What is the process of developing a strength/weakness

balance sheet?

8-11. Why is it important for a firm to conduct career development?

8-12. What are some career development methods? 8-13. What are the various career paths that individuals may

use? 8-14. Define management development. Why is it important? 8-15. Distinguish between mentoring and coaching. What is

reverse mentoring? 8-16. Define each of the following:

(a) organization development (b) survey feedback (c) quality circles (d) team building

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Core Evaluation Scale This instrument assesses one’s core self-evaluation. Core evaluation describes how a respondent views his or her current life and abilities. In this PIA, you’ll see how you view yourself and your confidence in specific situations.

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238 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Consequences of Inadequate Training Design You are the HR manager for a hospital that is

updating its online system for patient registration, billing, and medical records management. The current system has been in place for the past several years and most employees are proficient users. In anticipation of transitioning to the new system, you contacted area hospitals that adopted the same new system. Your goal is to understand the training protocol and how well employees are applying what they learned to performing their jobs. Some hospitals surveyed used a blended learning approach that included a three-hour traditional classroom lecture, one- hour video instruction, and three hours of hands-on experience follow- ing the lecture segments. Those hospitals reported successful learning and transfer. Other hospitals limited training exclusively to either the three-hour lecture or one-hour online learning module. Administrators in these hospitals admitted that employees were generally not well prepared to use the system, and ill preparation led to service delays and countless customer complaints. Based on the result of your inquiry, you decided to adopt the blended approach.

Excited about your decision, you met with your HR director to review the training plan. The HR Director asked you about the cost differences between each approach. Naturally, the blended learning approach is the costliest option because it requires the most time away from work (employees are paid while taking training) and the hands-on module requires the purchase of expensive software to run simulations. Without hesitation, the HR Director instructed you to adopt the less expensive method.

Worried about this decision, you emphasized the superiority of the blended learning approach as well as the shortcomings of the least costly approach, including ill preparation, lower job performance, sub- stantially more customer complaints, excessive work stress, and pos- sible dissemination of confidential medical information to unauthorized individuals. Nevertheless, she responded by shrugging her shoulders and motioned you out of her office.

8-17. What would you do? 8-18. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less than ethical decision?

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Skills requirements are changing rapidly, creating gaps between what it takes to perform a job at a high level of proficiency and employees’ readiness to do the work. Companies have two broad options for addressing these situations. One option is to select better qualified individuals in anticipation of these changes. Another is to invest in training current employees. Both options have pros and cons. Realistically most organizations will address these gaps by using a combination of both. The decision often comes down to cost effectiveness and whether there are qualified individuals in the labor market who are available for work. Where train- ing current employees best suits an organization’s objectives, both HR professionals and managers play a role in documenting a need for training (e.g., task and person analyses).

Action checklist for managers and HR—anticipating training needs HR takes the lead

HR professionals are responsible for pinpointing how training and development, management development, career develop- ment, and organizational development will propel organizational success.

Ensure managers see the connection between organizational success and talent development, and hold managers accountable for making it happen.

Guide managers through the process of recognizing current and anticipating possible future skill gaps. Work with managers to select, implement, and evaluate training to ensure positive learning and training transfer.

Managers take the lead

Discuss with HR professionals changing skill requirements by educating them about how current or anticipated new technol- ogy changes the way work gets done.

Provide examples where current employees’ performance is declining by pointing out skills gaps, and offer how they may be brought up to speed. This kind of information will help HR professionals identify the appropriate training design.

Describe examples of desired performance attainments that you anticipate from successful training initiatives. In doing so, you are helping HR professionals identify relevant metrics of training success.

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HRM by the Numbers Estimating Training Expenses

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Training and development programs can create value for companies. In the short-term, at least, training programs represent a monetary cost. Consider the following example of training costs:

$ Program development (e.g., salaries and benefits [health insurance] of personnel, equipment): $30,000 $ Direct training program implementation (e.g., training materials, technology costs, facilities, travel, instructor’s salary and

benefits): $12,500 $ Indirect (e.g., overhead [cost of utilities], general and administrative [e.g., staff time to schedule training facilities, registering

employees for training sessions]): $95,000 $ Hourly pay for all employees who are participating in training activities: $240,000 $ Lost productivity while employees are participating in the training activities: $200,000

Questions 8-19. What is the total cost of training based on the current expenses? 8-20. Let’s assume that 100 employees will participate in this training program. What is the average training cost per

employee? (For simplicity, assume that each employee makes the same hourly pay rate.) 8-21. Employees’ hourly rate is $20, and 100 employees receive training. Based on total hourly pay for employees who are

participating in training activities, how many hours does each employee spend in training?

I N C I D E N T 1 Career Development at Meyers and Brown Regina Passalaqua joined Meyers and Brown, a management consulting firm, three years ago after she earned an MBA from Prestige University. During her short tenure, Regina received excellent performance reviews. Pleased with her accomplishments, Regina eventually became bored because her assignments were always similar—developing employee attitude surveys, analyzing the data, and preparing recommendations for clients. Regina was yearning for new challenges and professional growth, but was unsure about how to go about getting them. Over time, she became frustrated with the situation and began interviewing for jobs in other management consulting firms.

Bill Meyers, senior partner in the firm, heard from a colleague out- side the firm that Regina was interviewing for jobs. Bill also noticed that Regina demonstrated less enthusiasm in meetings. Concerned about Regina, Bill called her in for a meeting. He said, “Regina, thank you for taking the time to meet with me. I asked for this meeting to tell you that you are a highly-valued member of this firm.”

“Thank you, Mr. Meyers. Your opinion means a lot to me,” Regina replied. Then, she shrugged her shoulders and seemed a bit uneasy. Bill was not assured by Regina’s body language.

“Are you happy here, Regina?” he asked. Regina replied, “Yes, but . . . well, I’m not feeling very challenged these days and I am hav- ing a difficult time figuring out how I can advance to more challenging

assignments. Frankly, I am looking for another job where I hope to find greater challenges.”

Bill replied, “Regina, I had no idea that you felt this way.” Then, he reflected on his 30-year career in management consulting, and how he advanced to a partnership role in the firm. Bill recalled that his man- agers and successful management consultants from other firms were instrumental in shaping a career plan and figuring out the logical steps to fulfill the milestones in the plan.

“Regina, now, I understand how you are feeling. I felt the same way when I was at your career stage,” Bill said.

Regina replied, “Mr. Meyers, I had no idea that someone of your professional stature ever felt this way.” He reacted, “Of course, most everyone does. I attribute much of my success to the people who took an interest in my career . . . people in whom I felt comfortable confiding.”

Enthusiastically, Regina exclaimed, “Yes, that’s it! That’s it!” In a concerned tone, “Underutilizing your talents or losing you

altogether would be a disservice to all concerned. I want to work with you to find your path at Meyers and Brown. Please, let me help guide you,” Bill said. Regina smiled in response to Bill’s offer.

Bill stated, “I want to meet with you monthly to discuss your career. And, I am also going to ask Margaret and Samuel to meet with you

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, identify an activity that you understand and perform well. Perhaps the task could come from a hobby, chores at home, or a previous or current job. Write a summary of how you (would) perform this activity and specify the knowledge, skills, and abilities that (would) enable you to do well.

8-22. How would you train others to perform the task? Explain. 8-23. In which ways would you measure training success? Explain.

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240 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

as well. You see . . . they are successful management consultants who followed very different paths to achieving success in this firm. And, they are very supportive of others who are trying to find their way.”

“Thank you so much, Mr. Meyers! Yes, thank you. I will look for- ward to our meetings,” Regina stated in a gleeful manner.

Questions 8-24. Evaluate Meyers and Brown’s approach to career development. 8-25. How might the firm change its approach to mentoring high

potential employees?

I N C I D E N T 2 There’s No Future Here! “Could you come to my office for a minute, Bob?” asked Terry Geech, the plant manager.

“Sure, be right there,” said Bob Glemson. Bob was the plant’s quality control director. He had been with the company for four years. After completing his degree in mechanical engineering, he worked as a production supervisor and then as a maintenance supervisor prior to moving to his present job. Bob thought he knew what the call was about.

“Your letter of resignation catches me by surprise,” began Terry. “I know that Wilson Products will be getting a good person, but

we sure need you here, too.” “I thought about it a lot,” said Bob, “but there just doesn’t seem

to be a future for me here.” “Why do you say that?” asked Terry. “Well,” replied Bob, “the next position above mine is yours. Since

you’re only 39, I don’t think it’s likely that you’ll be leaving soon.” “The fact is that I am leaving soon,” said Terry. “That’s why it’s

even more of a shock to learn that you’re resigning. I think I’ll be

moving to the corporate office in June of next year. Besides, the com- pany has several plants that are larger than this one, and we need good people in those plants from time to time, both in quality control and in general management.”

“Well, I heard about an opening in the Cincinnati plant last year,” said Bob, “but by the time I checked, the job had already been filled. We never know about opportunities in the other plants until we read about the incumbent in the company paper.”

“All this is beside the point now. What would it take to get you to change your mind?” asked Terry.

“I don’t think I will change my mind now,” replied Bob, “because I’ve given Wilson Products my word that I’m going to join them.”

Questions 8-26. Evaluate the career planning and development program at this

company. 8-27. What actions might have prevented Bob’s resignation?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

8-28. Why is executive onboarding for external hires so difficult?

8-29. What are some factors that influence T&D?

Endnotes 1 Ron Ashkenas, “You Can’t Delegate Tal-

ent Management to the HR Department,” Harvard Business Review online ( September 23, 2016). Accessed March 7, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

2 “2016 Training Industry Report,” Training (November/December 2016): 28–41.

3 Mike Dano, “How Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint and More Stacked Up in Q4 2016: The Top 7 Carriers,” Fiercewireless online (March 8, 2017). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www. fiercewireless.com/wireless/how-verizon- at-t-t-mobile-sprint-and-more-stacked-up- q4-2016-top-7-carriers.

4 Quentin Hardy, “Gearing Up for the Cloud, AT T Tells Its Workers: Adapt, or Else,” The New York Times online (February 13, 2016). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www.nytimes. com.

5 Isabel Thottam, “10 Companies with Awesome Training and Development Programs,” Monster. com. Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.monster. com/career-advice/article/companies-with- awesome-training-development-programs.

6 John Donovan and Cathy Benko, “AT T’s Tal- ent Overhaul,” Harvard Business Review online (October 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

7 Summary Report For: 43-4051.00 - Customer Service Representatives. Occupational Informa- tion Network. Accessed March 3, 2017, at www. onetonline.org/link/summary/43-4051.00.

8 Ibid. 9 Eben Harrell, “The Solution to the Skills Gap

Could Already Be Inside Your Company,” Har- vard Business Review online (September 27, 2016). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www. hbr.org.

10 Josh Bersin, “Use of MOOCs and Online Edu- cation Is Exploding: Here’s Why,” Forbes online (January 5, 2016). Accessed March 3, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

11 Ellen Lee, “Online Courses Trim Billions in Personnel Training,” CNBC (February 14, 2014). Accessed April 5, 2014, at www.cnbc.com.

12 Chen Zhenghao, Brandon Alcorn, Gayle Chris- tensen, Nicholas Eriksson, Daphne Koller, and Ezekiel J. Emanuel, “Who’s Benefiting from MOOCs and Why,” Harvard Business Review online (September 22, 2015). Accessed Febru- ary 28, 2017, www.hbr.org.

13 “A Closer Look at E-learning: Expert Advice on Why Technology-based Training Works,” Indus- trial Safety & Hygiene News 46 (January 2012): 56.

14 Greg Wright, “Retailers Buy Into E-Learning,” HR Magazine 55 (December 2010): 87–90.

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CHAPTER 8 • TRAINING AND DEvELOPMENT 241

15 Gail Dutton, “Tech Check,” Training 46 (Janu- ary 2009): 24–26.

16 Michael A. Tucker, “E-Learning Evolves,” HR Magazine 50 (October 2005): 74–78.

17 Margery Weinstein, “Is Technology Fulfilling Its Promise?” Training 48 (September/October 2011): 32–34.

18 Martyn Lewis, “Moving into the Live Virtual Classroom,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 76–77.

19 Pat Galagan, “Twitter as a Learning Tool, Really,” T + D 63 (March 2009): 28–31.

20 Dave Zielinski, “Gaming for Engagement,” HR Magazine 57 (January 2012): 16.

21 “Companies Are Using Team-Based Business Games to Increase Productivity, Expert Says,” CPA Practice Management Forum 6 (2010): 22.

22 “Training Budgets Bounce Back: Where to Spend,” HR Specialist 9 (March 2011): 1–5.

23 Brandon Hall, “Learning at Play,” Chief Learn- ing Officer 10 (May 2011): 18.

24 Jeremy Diebel, “Remedy the Skills Gap with Apprenticeship Programs,” Industry Week online (October 26, 2016). Accessed March 3, 2017, at www.industryweek.com/manufacturing-day/ remedy-skills-gap-apprenticeship-programs.

25 Peter B. Alpern, “Need Skilled Workers? Try Growing Your Own,” American Machinist 153 (May 2009): 40–43.

26 Elizabeth Schulze, “U.S. Companies Turn to German Training Model to Fill Jobs Gap,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 26, 2016). Accessed February 19, 2017, at www. wsj.com.

27 Christopher Mims, “A New Kind of Jobs Pro- gram for Middle America,” The Wall Street Journal online (February 26, 2017). Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

28 Elizabeth Schulze, “U.S. Companies Turn to German Training Model to Fill Jobs Gap,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 26, 2016). Accessed January 18, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

29 United States Coast Guard, “Introduction,” (Chapter 1), Team Coordination Training (TCT). Accessed March 3, 2017, at https://www.uscg. mil/auxiliary/training/tct/.

30 Kathryn Tyler, “A New U,” HR Magazine 57 (April 1, 2012): 27–34.

31 Pat Galagan, “Back to Bricks and Mortar,” T + D 65 (March 2011): 30–31.

32 Laura Cohn, “Grad Degrees from a Distance,” Kiplinger’s Personal Finance 64 (August 2010): 49.

33 “Distance Education Enrollment Continues to Grow,” Babson Survey Research Group (Febru- ary 9, 2016). Accessed March 7, 2017, at https:// onlinelearningconsortium.org//news_item/ babson-study-distance-education-enrollment- growth-continues-2

34 Ann Pace, “Higher Education: Paves the Way for New Career Opportunities,” T + D 65 (Sep- tember 2011): 74–77.

35 Elaine Pofeldt, “Make a Digital Degree Pay Off,” Money 40 (June 2011): 32.

36 Jeff Griffin, “Simulator Provides Effective— And Fun—Training,” Underground Construc- tion 64 (August 2009): 16–18.

37 Euan Youdale, “Open View,” International Cranes & Specialized Transport 19 (May 2011): 23–24.

38 Ladan Nikravan, “Back to Class,” Chief Learn- ing Officer 11 (January 2012): 18–21.

39 Daniel W. Bixby, “To Be Continued: Using Social Media for Training Conversations,” T + D 64 (July 2010): 30–33.

40 Dave Zielinski, “Group Learning,” HR Maga- zine 57 (May 2012): 49–52.

41 Alexandra Samuel, “Using Social Media to Build Professional Skills,” Harvard Business Review online (August 4, 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

42 “Four Ways to Facilitate Informal Learning,” T + D 66 (February 2012): 18.

43 Donald L. Kirkpatrick, “Evaluation of Train- ing,” In R. L. Craig (Ed.). Training and Devel- opment Handbook (pp. 18-1–18-27). New York: McGraw-Hill.

44 Rachel King, “AT T’s Ambitious Effort to Retrain More Than 100,000 Workers,” The Wall Street Journal online (March 17, 2016). Accessed March 11, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

45 Paula Ketter, “Creative Instructional Design Equals Successful Learning Transfer,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 10.

46 Pat Galagan, “Measure for Measure,” T + D 65 (May 2011): 28–30.

47 Edward Trolley, “Lies About Learning,” Chief Learning Officer 10 (June 2011): 82.

48 Emily Johnson, “Maximize Your Training Investment,” Collector 77 (February 2012): 42–43.

49 Dennis Seeds, “Scouting for Talent: What the Shortage in Skilled Manufacturing Workers Means to a Hungry Industry,” Smart Business Indianapolis 8 (July 2011): 9–13.

50 Joanne L. Stewart, “Train for the Future,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 54–57.

51 Andy Pasztor, “JetBlue Eyes Flying Time Rules with New Pilot-Training Program,” The Wall Street Journal online (November 26, 2015). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

52 Ibid. 53 Drake Bennett, “Do the Unemployed Get a Sec-

ond Act?” Bloomberg Businessweek (September 9, 2011): 64–70.

54 “The 21st Century Requires More Skilled Work- ers,” MWorld 10 (Summer 2011): 17–19.

55 Fred E. Fanning, “Engaging Learners: Tech- niques to Make Training Stick,” Professional Safety 56 (August 2011): 42–48.

56 “Using Your Clients’ Learning Style to Close Sales,” Kitchen & Bath Design News 30 (Febru- ary 2012): 20.

57 Armin Hopp, “Soft Steps Towards Digital Learning,” Training Journal (January 2012): 51–54.

58 Lance Dublin, “Finding the Right Learning Mix,” Chief Learning Officer 10 (August 2011): 36–39.

59 Joseph Michelli, “Starbucks’ Partnership Approach,” Training online (March 4, 2014). Accessed March 1, 2017, at https://trainingmag. com/starbucks%E2%80%99-partnership-approach.

60 Jon Younger, “How Are Learning and Develop- ment Are Becoming More Agile,” Harvard Business Review online (October 11, 2016). Accessed February 5, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

61 David Milliken, “Poised for Discovery,” T + D 65 (August 2011): 70–71.

62 Angelia Chapin, “How to Get Your New Hires from Zero to 100 in Weeks,” Canadian Business 83 (November 23, 2010): 72.

63 Beverly Kaye and C. Patrick Smith, “Career Development: Shifting from Nicety to Neces- sity,” T + D 66 (January 2012): 52–55.

64 Neil Irwin, “How to Become a C.E.O.? The Quickest Path Is a Winding One,” The New York Times online (September 9, 2016). Accessed March 7, 2017, at www.nytimes.com.

65 Diane Mulcahy, “Why I Tell My MBA Students to Stop Looking for a Job and Join the Gig Economy,” Harvard Business Review online (October 20, 2016). Accessed March 7, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

66 Elka Torpey and Andrew Hogan, “Working in a Gig Economy,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Career Outlook online (May 2016). Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.bls.gov/careerout- look/2016/article/what-is-the-gig-economy. htm.

67 Ibid. 68 Thomas Lawrence, “Integrating Contingent

Workers,” Baseline 114 (January/February 2012): 3.

69 Kate Davidson, “To Switch or Not to Switch? How Workers’ Career Choices Could Help the Economy,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 11, 2016). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

70 Andrew Chamberlain, “Why Do Employees Stay? A Clear Career Path and Good Pay, for Starters,” Harvard Business Review online (March 6, 2017). Accessed March 7, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

71 Rebecca Weingarten, “Thinking of Retiring? Not So Fast,” BusinessWeek Online (March 26, 2009): 20.

72 John Mullins, “Career Planning the Second Time Around,” Occupational Outlook Quarterly 53 (Summer 2009): 12–15.

73 The Career Key, “Investigative Type Work Environment,” Accessed April 5, 2014, at www. careerkey.org/choose-a-career/investigative- work-environment.html.

74 Dorie Clark, “Think Strategically About Your Career Development,” Harvard Business Review online (December 6, 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

75 Ann Field, “Do Your Stars See a Reason to Stay?” Harvard Management Update 13 (June 2008): 3–5.

76 Aparna Nancherla, “C-Level Boot Camp,” T + D 64 (January 2010): 24.

77 Joann S. Lublin, “Companies Try a New Strat- egy: Empathy,” The Wall Street Journal online (June 21, 2016). Accessed February 21, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

78 Belinda Parmar, “The Most Empathetic Com- panies, 2016,” Harvard Business Review online (December 1, 2016). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

79 The Conference Board and DDI, “Ready-Now Leaders: 25 Findings to Meet Tomorrow’s Busi- ness Challenges,” Global Leadership Forecast 2014|2015. Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.ddiworld.com/DDI/media/trend-research/ global-leadership-forecast-2014-2015_tr_ddi. pdf.

80 Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, “What Science Tells Us about Leadership Potential,” Harvard Business Review online (September 21, 2016). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

81 Kristy Allen, “Mentoring Builds a Stronger Pro- fession,” Charter 81 (February 2010): 54.

82 Amy Alexander, “Mentoring Give-and-Take,” Investor’s Business Daily (January 24, 2012): 3.

83 “The 2016 Deloitte Millennial Survey,” Deloitte (2016). Accessed December 29, 2016, at www2.

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242 PART 3 • PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING

deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/global/ Documents/About-Deloitte/gx-millenial-survey- 2016-exec-summary.pdf.

84 Andy Pasztor and Susan Carey, “United Calls in Pilots for Extra Training,” The Wall Street Journal online (January 29, 2016). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

85 Anthony K. Tjan, “What the Best Mentors Do,” Harvard Business Review online (February 27, 2017). Accessed March 3, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

86 Wendy Murphy, “How Women (and Men) Can Find Role Models When None Are Obvious,” Harvard Business Review online (June 1, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

87 Michael Laff, “The Guiding Hand: Mentoring Women,” T + D 63 (September 2009): 32–35.

88 Suzanne de Janasz and Maury Peiperl, “CEOs Need Mentors Too,” Harvard Business Review online (April 2015). Accessed March 7, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

89 Ibid. 90 Christian Hamaker, “An Example in Their Youth,”

Rural Telecom 28 (September/October 2009): 9. 91 Richard R. Reilly and Karen Sobel Lojeski,

“Leading the Dispersed Workforce,” Mechani- cal Engineering 131 (November 2009): 30–34.

92 R. Wayne Mondy and Shane R. Premeaux, Man- agement: Concepts, Practices, and Skills, 7th ed. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice Hall, 1995): 497.

93 Byron Pope, “Toyota Says Quality Circles Still Paying Dividends,” Ward’s Auto World 44 (June 2008): 20.

94 Mike Donlin, “Take One for the Team,” Corpo- rate Meetings & Incentives 28 (August 2009): 26.

95 “Team Building Treachery,” Accountancy 143 (March 2009): 20.

96 Kathryn Tyler, “Take New Employee Orienta- tion off the Back Burner,” HR Magazine 43 (May 1998): 49.

97 René Street, “We Move Forward as a Team,” Women in Business 61 (December 2009/January 2010): 6.

98 Swati Karve, “Facilitation Skills: Using Training Games,” T + D 65 (July 2011): 30–31.

99 Belinda Luscombe, “Getting Jumpy at Work,” Time International (South Pacific Edition) 173 (May 25, 2009): 30.

100 Howard Prager, “Cooking Up Effective Team Building,” Training & Development 53 (Decem- ber 1999): 14–15.

101 Rich Cordivari, “From Training Company to Learning Organization,” T + D 64 (January 2010): 60–63.

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Part Four Compensation Chapter 9

Direct Financial Compensation (Monetary

Compensation)

Chapter 10

Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee

Benefits)

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244

9 Direct Financial Compensation ( Monetary Compensation) LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, you should be able to:

9.1 Summarize the usual components of a total compensation plan and the environment of compensation practice.

9.2 Explain the direct financial compensation practices.

9.3 Discuss job structures and how they are established.

9.4 Summarize competitive pay policies: pay level and pay mix.

9.5 Explain what pay structures are and how they are created.

9.6 Review exceptions to the rules: compensation for sales representatives, contingent workers, and executives.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 9 Warm-Up.

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245

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, you should be able to: A Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) survey of human resource (HR) executives identified recruiting and retaining top talent in a competitive labor market as their number one challenge.1 Compensation is an important HR practice that helps firms address this and other challenges. There are two mechanisms by which compensation contributes to recruitment and retention. First, pay helps define a person’s standard of living and sense of security. All else equal, higher pay enables people to meet their most basic needs such as food and shelter as well as save money for retirement more easily than those who earn less. Also, higher pay enables people to enjoy the finer things in life such as frequenting gourmet restaurants, driving a luxury car, and taking exotic vacations. Second, in most cases, employees and firms alike strive to maximize their earnings. The use of incentive compensation practices serves this common interest by aligning the interests of employees with a company’s mission. For instance, sales employees have the potential to earn greater amounts of incentive pay for the attainment of progressively higher sales goals. From the company’s perspective, higher sales contribute to increased earnings. In addi- tion, highly successful companies, such as management consulting company Boston Consulting Group, provide highly competitive compensation packages that consist of lucrative pay amounts and employee benefits (e.g., paid family leave). In fact, Boston Consulting Group is among the top 25 companies known for offering extremely generous compensation amounts.2

Total Compensation and the Environment of Compensation Practice At the broadest level, total compensation represents both the intrinsic and extrinsic rewards employees receive for performing their jobs. The components of a total compensation program are shown in Figure 9-1. These building blocks are embedded within a system of three structural elements: job structures, competitive compensation policies, and pay structures.

9.1 Summarize the usual com- ponents of a total compensation plan and the environment of compensation practice.

total compensation Both the intrinsic and extrinsic rewards employees receive for performing their jobs.

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246 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

Direct and Indirect Financial Compensation Extrinsic compensation refers to rewards that come from outside the person. There are two kinds. The first, direct financial compensation (monetary compensation) consists of the pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salaries, commissions, and bonuses. The second, indirect financial compensation (employee benefits), refers to extrinsic compensation other than hourly wages or annual salary. This form of compensation includes a wide variety of rewards of monetary value such as paid vacation and medical care. For instance, companies spend money to purchase medical care coverage for employees. HR professionals often refer to intrinsic rewards as nonfi- nancial compensation. Nonfinancial compensation derives from within an employee’s self. For example, nonfinancial compensation can come from the satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological or physical environment in which the person works. For instance, it is easy to imagine that a teacher derives great satisfaction from seeing his students excel. Although our focus will be on financial compensation, it is worth briefly considering non- financial compensation. Employers may choose to award nonfinancial compensation to comple- ment an employee’s paycheck, especially when financial compensation budgets make it difficult to award higher pay. Some examples of simple nonfinancial compensation practices include rec- ognition awards, team leadership opportunities, prizes, and gift cards. Other examples include training for employees who value professional development and flexible work scheduling for those who give high priority to work/life balance. As you will learn in the following Watch It video, the effectiveness of nonfinancial compensation practices significantly depends on knowing each employee as an individual to provide options of interest and value to them.

direct financial compensation (monetary compensation) Pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salary, commissions, and bonuses.

indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) All financial rewards that are not included in direct financial compensation.

nonfinancial compensation Satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological and/or physical environment in which the person works.

FIGURE 9-1 Components of a Total Compensation Program

Compensation

Financial Nonfinancial Direct Wages Salary Commissions Bonuses

Indirect (Benefits) Legally Required Benefits Health Care Social Security Unemployment Compensation Workers‘ Compensation Family & Medical leave

Discretionary Benefits Paid Time Off life Insurance Retirement Plans Employee Stock Option Plans Employee Services Premium Pay

Meaningful Appreciated Satisfying learning Enjoyable Challenging

The Job Job Environment Sound Policies Capable Managers Competent Employees Congenial Coworkers Appropriate Status Symbols Working Conditions

Workplace Flexibility Flextime Compressed Workweek Job Sharing Telecommuting Part-Time Work

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Motivation (TWZ Role Play) and to respond to questions.

Managers tend to view financial compensation as both an expense and an asset. It is an expense in the sense that it reflects the cost of labor. For example, on average, companies spent $35.28 per hour worked per employee in March 2017. Of this total, companies spent $24.10 on wages and $11.18 on all employee benefits.3 The costs of labor continually rise. For example, the cost of wages rose, on average, 9.7 percent between March 2014 and March 2017. The increase in the cost of employee benefits was greater, equaling 12.1 percent.4

Financial compensation is instrumental in recruiting and hiring good people and in encour- aging them to put forth their best efforts and remain in their jobs. A firm that pays well attracts many applicants, enabling management to pick and choose the skills and traits it values. It holds on to these quality hires by equitably sharing the fruits of its financial success, not only among the management team but also with the rank and file. Compensation programs have top management’s attention because they have the potential to influence employee work attitudes and behavior that lead to improved organizational performance and achieving the firm’s strategic plan. We can find evidence for top management’s interest in identifying the right type of employees by reviewing

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CHAPTER 9 • DIRECT FINANCIAl COMPENSATION ( MONETARy COMPENSATION) 247

the “About Careers” sections of company Web sites. For example, software developer and manu- facturer Adobe describes the role of their engineering professionals:

You could work at a unicorn, a startup with a $1 billion valuation. Or you could work at Adobe, a 30-year-old company that’s home to a number of unicorns. Our size and trajec- tory mean exciting opportunities for you to feed your curiosity, stretch your creativity, and work with a diverse group of whip-smart people on the vanguard of technology engineering, research, and development. Define a rewarding career path while creating beautiful, usable products that touch millions of people.5

Structure of Direct Financial Compensation Plans Now that we have defined the components of direct financial compensation, it is important to con- sider how companies structure monetary compensation plans. There are many factors to consider, which are shown in Figure 9-2, starting with the environment of compensation practice. But, first, we briefly summarize the three structural elements of compensation plans here to round out the introduction of total compensation. These elements include job structures, competitive compen- sation policies, and pay structures, which are also shown in Figure 9-2 and will be examined in detail later in this chapter.

JOB STRUCTURES Management techniques used for determining a job’s relative worth include job analysis, job descriptions, and job evaluation, and together, these lead to the creation of job structures. As we discussed in Chapter 4, an organization must first define and describe job content. HR professionals use job analysis for this purpose. The primary by-product of job analysis is the job description. Job descriptions serve many different purposes, including data for evaluating jobs. With job descriptions, HR professionals can use job evaluation to judge the relative worth of all jobs within the company. The primary basis for making value judgments is consideration of skill, knowledge, ability, and working conditions.

COMPETITIVE COMPENSATION POLICIES After companies have clearly written job descriptions and they have specified job structures that show the relative worth of jobs, they move on to the next step, which is to decide on competitive compensation policies. HR professionals must consider the compensation policies that it will pursue, and these focus on pay level (for example, paying higher salaries, on average, than the competition for similar jobs) and pay mix (percentage of money that goes toward salary, employee benefits [Chapter 10], and adjustments such as incentive pay).

PAY STRUCTURES Coupled closely with these choices is job pricing, which leads to the construction of pay structures. HR professionals conduct compensation surveys to identify what and how the competition is paying its employees. Once armed with information about market pay rates, HR professionals develop pay structures features that facilitate administration of pay policies. These include pay range and pay grades.

FIGURE 9-2 Determinants of Direct Financial Compensation

Job Structures Job Analysis

Job Evaluation

Pay Structures Pay Grades Pay Ranges

Contextual Influences on Direct Financial Compensation

Labor Market Cost-of-Living Labor Unions Economy Interindustry Wage

Differentials Legislation

Competitive Pay Policies Compensation Surveys

Pay-level Policies Pay Mix Policies

Direct Financial Compensation Base Pay (hourly wage and salary)

Cost-of-living Adjustment Pay-for-Performance Person-focused Pay

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248 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

Contextual Influences HR professionals build the compensation system in a dynamic environment. There are many contextual influences that must be considered. Among the most prominent considerations are labor market, cost-of-living differences between geographic locations, labor unions, the economy, interindustry wage differentials, and legislation.

LABOR MARKET Potential employees located within the geographic area from which employees are recruited constitute the labor market. Labor markets for some jobs extend far beyond the location of a firm’s operations. An aerospace firm in St. Louis, for example, may be concerned about the labor market for engineers in Fort Worth or Orlando, where competitive firms are located. Managerial and professional employees are often recruited from a wide geographic area. As global economics increasingly sets the cost of labor, the global labor market grows in importance as a determinant of financial compensation for individuals.

Companies’ demand for qualified individuals relative to supply often influences compensation decisions. There are upward pressures to raise starting pay when the demand for qualified workers is greater than supply. These market dynamics require that companies compete for limited qualified workers for skilled jobs. Oftentimes, base pay exceeds the national annual median pay—and pay levels are fastest growing.6 Many of these jobs are found in the healthcare and computer fields. This appears to be the case for information security analysts. According to the Occupational Outlook Handbook,7 demand for information security analysts is expected to be very high through at least the next 10 years. Annual median pay for information security analysts is approximately 2.5 times higher than the national median for all jobs. Cyberattacks have grown in frequency and sophisti- cation over the last few years, and many organizations are behind in their ability to detect these attacks. For example, Eddie Bauer and Target experienced breaches of their databases that contained customers’ credit card numbers. Analysts will be needed to come up with innovative solutions to prevent hackers from stealing critical information or creating havoc on computer networks. Also, the federal government is expected to greatly increase its use of information security analysts to protect the nation’s critical information technology (IT) systems, particularly as it has recently experienced breaches that could compromise national security. Finally, as the healthcare industry expands its use of electronic medical records, ensuring patients’ privacy and protecting personal data are becoming more important. More information security analysts will be employed to create essential safeguards.

The previous example focused on one of many highly skilled jobs in the computer profes- sion. A common assumption is that high demand for workers applies only to highly skilled jobs. That assumption is incorrect. Recently, Starbucks raised base pay as much as 15 percent and awards company stock for most employees with at least two years of continuous employment.8 (We will review stock awards later in this chapter.) Starbucks made this decision, in part, because it has been more difficult to hire well-qualified workers at lower pay rates, particularly since the unemployment rate has declined in recent years. Other retailers have made similar moves. The following Watch It video describes Walmart’s rationale behind the decision to raise its starting hourly wage to $9.

labor market Potential employees located within the geographic area from which employees are recruited.

HR Web Wisdom

Calculate Salary Differences from City to City www.salary.com

Web site to determine numerous costs of a move to another city.

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Walmart Boosts Entry-Level Pay and to respond to questions.

Higher base pay has become increasingly more common in industries where business activity peaks around the holiday season. Online retailers such as Amazon.com Inc. and package delivery companies, including the United Parcel Service Inc. vigorously compete for seasonal workers. For instance, Amazon hired 120,000 temporary warehouse workers for whom they provide extensive training.9 Amazon also found ways to shorten the training time without sacrificing quality, thus, reducing costs. In turn, the company offered higher pay in hopes of attracting the best qualified candidates.

COST-OF-LIVING DIFFERENCES Cost-of-living differences between geographic locations may account for variations in compensation for similar jobs, and HR professionals sometimes consider cost-of-living when competing for talent in a competitive labor market. For example, let’s assume that a firm offers equal starting pay to two equally qualified individuals who have been hired

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CHAPTER 9 • DIRECT FINANCIAl COMPENSATION ( MONETARy COMPENSATION) 249

to perform the same job. The only difference is their placement—Jackson, Mississippi, and Washington, D.C. The cost-of-living difference between these cities is staggering. An individual earning $100,000 annually in Jackson would need to earn approximately $175,000 in D.C. to maintain a similar standard of living. If a differential was to be considered, it might be based on housing costs. Housing costs—rent or mortgage—are among the largest financial obligations most individuals assume. In D.C., average housing prices are about 230 percent higher than in Jackson.10 The company may consider offering the D.C.-based employee a higher salary to help offset cost-of-living differences.

LABOR UNIONS The National Labor Relations Act declared legislative support, on a broad scale, for the right of employees to organize and engage in collective bargaining. Unions normally prefer to determine compensation through the process of collective bargaining, which describes the negotiations between the labor union that represents employee interests and company management. An excerpt from the National Labor Relations Act prescribes the areas of mandatory collective bargaining between management and unions as, “wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.” These broad bargaining areas obviously have great potential to impact compensation decisions. When a union uses comparable pay as a standard in making compensation demands, the employer needs accurate labor market data. For example, unions often rely on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) as the criterion for awarding cost-of-living adjustments. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the CPI monthly.11

Unions’ gains also influenced compensation practices in non-union companies. Many non- union companies offered similar compensation to their employees. This phenomenon is known as a spillover effect. Non-union companies’ motivation is to minimize employees’ interests in seeking union representation.12

ECONOMY The economy affects compensation decisions. For example, a depressed economy generally increases the labor supply, and this condition serves to lower the market rate. In addition, companies often choose not to award pay raises to contribute to cost containment objectives in a slow economic environment where business activity is likely to suffer. A booming economy, on the other hand, results in greater competition for workers and the price of labor is driven upward.

spillover effect Non-union companies’ offer of similar compensation unionized companies with the goal of reducing the likelihood that nonunion workforces will seek union representation.

☛ F Y I Average weekly compensation varies by industry:

$ Mining: $1,434 $ Construction: $1,109 $ Manufacturing: $1,075 $ Retail: $557 $ Leisure and Hospitality: $39513

INTERINDUSTRY WAGE DIFFERENTIALS In competitive labor markets, companies attempt to attract and retain the best individuals for employment partly by offering lucrative wage and benefits packages. Some companies, unfortunately, find it difficult to compete based on wage and benefits. Indeed, there are noteworthy wage differences among industries. These differences are known as interindustry wage differentials or compensation differentials.

Interindustry differentials can be attributed to many factors, including the industry’s product market, degree of capital intensity, profitability of the industry, unionization, and gender mix of the workforce.14 Companies that operate in product markets in which there is relatively little competition from other companies tend to pay higher wages because these companies exhibit substantial profits. This phenomenon can be attributed to such factors as higher barriers to entry into the product market and an insignificant influence of foreign competition. Government regu- lation and extremely expensive equipment represent entry barriers in such industries as mining. The U.S. defense industry and the public utilities industry have high entry barriers and no threats from foreign competitors.

Capital intensity also explains pay differentials between industries. The average pay amount varies with the degree of capital intensity. On average, capital-intensive industries such as con- struction pay more than industries that are less capital intensive such as retail. Capital-intensive

interindustry wage or compensation differentials Pattern of pay and benefits associated with characteristics of industries.

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businesses require highly capable employees who have the aptitude to learn how to use complex technology. Service such as retail industries are not capital intensive, and most have the reputation of paying low wages. The operation of service industries depends almost exclusively on employ- ees with relatively common skills rather than on employees with specialized skills to operate such physical equipment as casting machines or robotics.

The discussion of environmental factors, thus far, concisely conveys various dynamics in the pay setting process. However, the picture has become somewhat more complicated. Increas- ingly, technologies and market demand have led to the formation of (very small) niche industries. Many of these industries rely on newly created jobs that did not exist in the recent past.15 Take, for instance, remote control vehicle and drone operators. In addition, cost-of-living differentials extend beyond the comparison of two geographic locations as described earlier because members of work teams are distributed across the globe.

LEGISLATION Federal and state laws can also affect the amount of compensation a person receives and how that amount is determined. For example, prevailing wage laws specify how pay rates should be calculated. The Equal Pay Act prohibits an employer from paying a female employee less money than a male employee if both employees do work that is substantially the same. As we discussed in Chapter 3, equal employment legislation, including the Civil Rights Act, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act, prohibits discrimination against specified groups in employment matters, including compensation. The same is true for federal government contractors or subcontractors covered by Executive Order 11246 and the Rehabilitation Act. States and municipal governments also have laws that affect compensation practices. Our focus in the next section, however, is on the federal legislation that provides broad coverage and specifically deals with compensation issues. These laws appear in chronological order of their passage.

DAVIS-BACON ACT OF 1931 The Davis-Bacon Act of 1931 was the first national law to deal with minimum wages. It mandates a prevailing wage for all federally financed or assisted construction projects exceeding $2,000. Contractors must pay wages at least equal to the prevailing wage in the local area. The U.S. Secretary of Labor determines prevailing wage rates based on compensation surveys of different areas. In this context, “local” area refers to the general location where work is performed. Cities and counties represent local areas. The prevailing wage is the typical hourly wage paid to more than 50 percent of all laborers and mechanics employed in the local area. The act also requires that contractors offer employee benefits that are equal in scope and value to employee benefits that prevail in the local area.

WALSH-HEALY ACT OF 1936 The Walsh-Healy Act covers contractors and manufacturers who sell supplies, materials, and equipment to the federal government. Its coverage is more extensive than the Davis-Bacon Act. This act applies to both construction and non-construction activities. In addition, this act covers all the contractors’ employees except office, supervisory, custodial, and maintenance workers who do any work in preparation for the performance of the contract. The minimum contract amount that qualifies for coverage is $10,000 rather than the $2,000 amount under the Davis-Bacon Act of 1931. This legislation also requires paying one-and-a-half times the regular pay rate for hours more than 8 per day or 40 per week.

FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT OF 1938, AS AMENDED The most significant law affecting compensation is the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938. The purpose of the FLSA is to establish minimum labor standards on a national basis and to eliminate low wages and excessive working hours. The FLSA attempts to eliminate low wages by setting a minimum wage and to make long hours expensive by requiring a higher overtime pay rate for excessive hours. It also requires record keeping and provides standards for child labor. The Wage and Hour Division of the U.S. Department of Labor administers this act. The amount of the federal minimum wage has changed several times since it was first introduced in 1938 and continues to do so; however, the increases are relatively small and implemented infrequently. For instance, the federal minimum wage rose from $6.55 to $7.25 per hour in 2009.

Many of the federal laws have counterparts in state and local legislation, and minimum wage is a good example. In general, state and local legislation may be concurrent with federal law or may exist in the absence of similar federal legislation. Wherever inconsistencies in federal, state, or local laws exist, the law that provides individuals the greatest benefit generally prevails.

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According to the U.S. Department of Labor, in January 2017, 45 states had minimum wage requirements.16 Two states with minimum wage rates set lower than the federal minimum wage. There were 29 states plus the District of Columbia with minimum wage rates set higher than the federal minimum wage. Fourteen states that have a minimum wage requirement equal the federal minimum wage amount. The remaining five states do not have an established minimum wage requirement. In January 2017, the District of Columbia had the highest minimum wage at $11.50 per hour while Georgia and Wyoming had the lowest minimum wage ($5.15 per hour) of the 45 states that have a minimum wage requirement. Some state laws include provisions for increasing the minimum wage rate over time. The increases are often tied to rises in the cost of living or legislated amounts. For instance, California’s minimum wage rate is rising incrementally until it reaches $15 in 2022. Altogether, 4.4 million low-wage workers will receive pay raises because pay would otherwise fall below higher rates.17

Even though the federal and some state and local governments raise the minimum wage from time to time, most workers who earn the minimum wage argue that it is insufficient to afford the necessities. In the summer of 2013, fast food workers across the United States walked off their jobs to protest what they believe is insufficient pay. The following Watch It video captures work- ers’ concerns about the minimum wage level and the collective response of restaurant owners to their concerns.

Watch It 3 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Fast Food Workers Walk Out, Demanding Higher Pay and to re- spond to questions.

The FLSA distinguishes between exempt and nonexempt jobs for the purposes of determining which employees are required to be paid an overtime rate of one-and-one-half times the employ- ee’s regular rate after 40 hours of work in a consecutive 7-day period. Companies are not required to pay overtime to exempt employees, but they are required to do so for nonexempt employees. Exempt employees are categorized as executive, administrative, professional, or outside sales- persons. All others are nonexempt employees. Aggressive action is being taken against compa- nies that fail to pay the overtime requirement.18 Although the act covers most organizations and employees, certain classes of employees are specifically exempt from overtime provisions.

An executive employee is essentially a manager (such as a production manager) with broad authority over subordinates. An administrative employee, although not a manager, occupies an important staff position in an organization and might have a title such as account executive or market researcher. A professional employee performs work requiring advanced knowledge in a field of learning, normally acquired through a prolonged course of specialized instruction.19 This type of employee might have a title such as company physician, legal counsel, or senior statisti- cian. Outside salespeople who sell tangible or intangible items away from the employer’s place of business are exempted from the overtime pay requirement.

EQUAL PAY ACT OF 1963 Congress enacted the Equal Pay Act of 1963 to remedy a serious problem of employment discrimination in private industry; “Many segments of American industry [have] been based on an ancient but outmoded belief that a man, because of his role in society, should be paid more than a woman even though his duties are the same.”20 The Equal Pay Act of 1963 is based on a simple principle: Men and women should receive equal pay for performing equal work.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 pertains explicitly to jobs of equal worth. Companies assign pay rates to jobs according to the skill, effort, responsibility, and working conditions required to perform them.

Pay differentials for equal work are not always illegal. Pay differentials between men and women who are performing equal work are acceptable only when made on a seniority system, merit system, incentive system, or on any factor other than sex. Valid performance appraisal prac- tices are essential to determine whether pay differentials between men and women performing equal work are illegal.

Despite the goal of equal pay for equal work, various recent studies indicate that women make approximately 79 percent as much as men. Still, many researchers have cautioned that this

exempt employees Employees categorized as executive, administrative, professional, or outside salespersons, and not required to be paid at an overtime rate for work beyond the completion of standard work hours.

nonexempt employees Employees not categorized as executive, administrative, professional, or outside salespersons, and required to receive overtime pay for work beyond the completion of standard work hours.

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statistic is possibly misleading because it does not focus explicitly on equal work or account for differences in the length of work history for men and women. Certainly, more research is neces- sary that measures these factors when estimating the gender wage gap.21

WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT (DODD-FRANK ACT) The Dodd- Frank Act was signed into law in 2010 and has provisions relating to executive compensation and corporate governance that impact the executives, directors, and shareholders of publicly traded companies. We will cover specific provisions of the act in the discussion about executive compensation, which follows later in this chapter.

Direct Financial Compensation Components There are five types of direct financial compensation. These include employee base pay, cost-of- living adjustments, seniority pay, pay-for-performance, and person-focused pay. An employee’s direct financial compensation rarely consists of all five components. Most employees receive base pay, and companies choose which of the remaining four types of financial compensation to include. Companies choose one additional or combination of direct financial compensation components for employee groups based on how best to direct employee job performance (for example, sales employees versus clerical employees). Also, factors such as labor unions influence how direct employee compensation is structured.

Base Pay Employees receive base pay, or money, for performing their jobs. Base pay is recurring; that is, employees continue to receive base pay as long as they remain in their jobs. Companies disburse base pay to employees in one of two forms: hourly pay or wage or as salary. Employees earn hourly pay for each hour worked. They earn salaries for performing their jobs, regardless of the actual number of hours worked. Companies measure salary on an annual basis. As noted earlier, the Fair Labor Standards Act established criteria for determining whether employees should be paid hourly or by salary. In January 2017, the average weekly rate for workers was approximately $894.22 On an annual basis, this figure translates to $46,488 (based on a 40-hour work week over 52 calendar weeks).

Over time, HR professionals work with managers and supervisors to adjust base pay. There are various methods for making these adjustments, which we review next. These include cost-of- living adjustments, seniority pay, pay-for-performance, and person-focused pay.

Cost-of-Living Adjustments Cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) represent periodic base pay increases that are founded on changes in prices as recorded by the CPI. In recent years, the typical COLA equaled approxi- mately 2-3 percent annually. COLAs enable workers to maintain their purchasing power and standard of living by adjusting base pay for inflation. Real hourly compensation measures the purchasing power of a dollar, whereas nominal hourly compensation is the face value of a dollar. Increases in the costs of goods and services cause nominal pay to be less than real pay. Let’s say that a $5 bill buys 50 pieces of candy (10 cents each). Next year, the price of candy doubles; a $5 bill buys just 25 pieces of candy.

COLAs are most common among workers represented by unions because one of the main goals of unionization is to protect the standard of living of its membership. When a union empha- sizes cost of living, it may try to pressure management into including a COLA, which rarely is found outside unionized employment settings. Provisions for COLAs are contained in an escala- tor clause in the labor agreement that automatically increases wages as the CPI registers general price increases.

Seniority Pay Seniority is the length of time an employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job. Seniority pay systems reward employees with periodic additions to base pay according to employees’ length of service in performing their jobs. These pay plans assume that employees become more valuable to companies with time and that valued employees will leave if they do not have a clear idea that their salaries will progress over time.23 This rationale comes

9.2 Explain the direct financial compensation practices.

base pay The monetary compensation employees earn on a regular basis for performing their jobs. Hourly pay and salary are the main forms of base pay.

hourly pay One type of base pay. Employees earn hourly pay for each hour worked.

salary One type of base pay. Employees earn salaries for performing their jobs, regardless of the actual number of hours worked. Companies generally measure salary on an annual basis.

cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) Escalator clause in a labor agreement that automatically increases wages as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ cost-of- living index rises.

real hourly compensation Measure of the purchasing power of a dollar.

nominal hourly compensation The face value of a dollar.

seniority Length of time an employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job.

seniority pay Pay program in which pay increases are based on length of service.

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from human capital theory,24 which, as we discussed in earlier chapters, states that employees’ knowledge and skills generate productive capital known as human capital. Employees can develop such knowledge and skills from formal education and training, including on-the-job experience. Over time, employees presumably refine existing skills or acquire new ones that enable them to work more productively. Thus, seniority pay rewards employees for acquiring and refining their skills as indexed by seniority.

Historically, seniority pay programs were common methods for rewarding employee per- formance. However, most companies set aside the use of seniority plans in favor of pay-for- performance methods that explicitly measure performance such as merit pay and incentive pay methods. Increased competitive and economic pressures make it important that companies reward employees commensurately with their measurable contributions.

Still, we do find seniority pay programs commonly in use within government agencies and in a variety of other employment settings in which labor unions represent the interests of workers. We can look to the U.S. federal government for an example of a comprehensive seniority pay program that is known as the General Schedule. Figure 9-3 displays this arrangement. The General Schedule clas- sifies federal government jobs into 15 classifications (GS-1 through GS-15) based on such factors as skill, education, and experience levels. Employees are eligible for 10 within-grade step pay increases. At present, it takes employees 18 years to progress from Step 1 to Step 10. Employees spend one year each in Steps 1 through 3, two years each in Steps 4-6, and three years each in Steps 7-9.

human capital As defined by economists, refers to sets of collective skills, knowledge, and ability that employees can apply to create economic value for their employers.

human capital theory A theory premised on the idea that employees’ knowledge and skills generate productive capital known as human capital. Employees can develop knowledge and skills from formal education or on-the-job experiences.

General Schedule (GS) Classification of federal government jobs into 15 classifications (GS-1 through GS-15), based on such factors as skill, education, and experience levels. In addition, jobs that require high levels of specialized education (e.g., a physicist), significantly influence public policy (e.g., law judges), or require executive decision making are classified in three additional categories: Senior Level (SL), Scientific & Professional (SP) positions, and the Senior Executive Service (SES).

FIGURE 9-3 Salary Table: 2017 General Schedule

Annual Rates by Grade and Step ($)

Grade Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 Step 7 Step 8 Step 9 Step 10

WITHIN GRADE AMOUNTS

1 18,526 19,146 19,762 20,375 20,991 21,351 21,960 22,575 22,599 23,171 Varies 2 20,829 21,325 22,015 22,599 22,853 23,525 24,197 24,869 25,541 26,213 Varies 3 22,727 23,485 24,243 25,001 25,759 26,517 27,275 28,033 28,791 29,549 758 4 25,514 26,364 27,214 28,064 28,914 29,764 30,614 31,464 32,314 33,164 850 5 28,545 29,497 30,449 31,401 32,353 33,305 34,257 35,209 36,161 37,113 952 6 31,819 32,880 33,941 35,002 36,063 37,124 38,185 39,246 40,307 41,368 1,061 7 35,359 36,538 37,717 38,896 40,075 41,254 42,433 43,612 44,791 45,970 1,179 8 39,159 40,464 41,769 43,074 44,379 45,684 46,989 48,294 49,599 50,904 1,305 9 43,251 44,693 46,135 47,577 49,019 50,461 51,903 53,345 54,787 56,229 1,442 10 47,630 49,218 50,806 52,394 53,982 55,570 57,158 58,746 60,334 61,922 1,588 11 52,329 54,073 55,817 57,561 59,305 61,049 62,793 64,537 66,281 68,025 1,744 12 62,722 64,813 66,904 68,995 71,086 73,177 75,268 77,359 79,450 81,541 2,091 13 74,584 77,070 79,556 82,042 84,528 87,014 89,500 91,986 94,472 96,958 2,486 14 88,136 91,074 94,012 96,950 99,888 102,826 105,764 108,702 111,640 114,578 2,938 15 103,672 107,128 110,584 114,040 117,496 120,952 124,408 127,864 131,320 134,776 3,456

Source: U.S. Office of Personnel Management. http://www.opm.gov. Accessed March 9, 2017.

☛ F Y I In a survey of companies, 70 percent revealed that base pay increases are mainly determined by perfor- mance relative to job performance standards rather than comparisons between employees.25

Performance-Based Pay Performance-based pay is governed by how well one performs the job. To maximize company objectives of the firm, it is important to link employee compensation to performance. This basic rule applies to all within the organization, ranging from the company president to hourly employee. It recognizes that some workers are just better than other workers in performing the same job.

The objective of performance-based pay is to improve productivity by rewarding those who best assist in achieving this goal. It assumes that given the proper incentives, most employees will work

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harder and smarter. In a survey, companies that reported the best results from their pay-for-perfor- mance programs used multiple rewards to recognize and reward performance, including base pay increases (91 percent), short-term incentives (71 percent), spot bonuses (49 percent), equity awards (33 percent), other long-term incentives (18 percent), and profit sharing (7 percent).26 An effective perfor- mance appraisal program is a prerequisite for any pay system tied to performance. Using this approach, workers would need to first have a clear understanding of what goals the organization wanted them to achieve. Then, based on the result of performance appraisal, rewards would be forthcoming.

When Sprint’s CEO Dan Hesse took over the wireless provider, he wanted employees to clearly understand what he thought was important and what they should focus on to achieve maximum rewards. He wanted compensation to be based on improving the customer experience, strengthening the brand, and generating cash to increase profits. The amount paid for performance extended from 5 percent for entry-level employees to 50 percent and higher at the vice-president level.27 As another example, if it is important to improve safety in the workplace, this goal must be communicated to employees and included in their performance review. If worker behavior leads to fewer accidents, workers should be rewarded.28 Rewards might be as simple as a pat on the back or additional money in their paychecks. Appraisal data provide input for such approaches as merit pay and incentive pay bonuses. Each of these approaches to compensation management will be discussed in the following sections. These include merit pay, merit bonuses; and, incentive pay, of which there are three categories: individual incentive pay, group incentive pay, and company-wide incentive pay.

MERIT PAY Merit pay is a pay increase added to employees’ base pay based on their level of performance. It assumes that employees’ compensation over time should be determined, at least in part, by differences in job performance.29 Employees earn permanent merit increases based on their performance. The pay increases reward excellent effort or results, motivate future performance, and help employers retain valued employees. Merit increases are usually expressed as a percentage of hourly wages for nonexempt employees and as a percentage of annual salaries for exempt employees. In 2016, employees earned average merit increases of 3.1 percent. The rate varied according to the level of employee performance. The highest performers earned 3.9 percent of base pay and average performers earned 2.7 percent.30

In practice, however, merit pay increases historically have been merely a cost-of-living increase in disguise.31 This is the case because most companies do not offer cost-of-living increases as well as merit pay increases. For example, a 4 percent merit pay increase is mislead- ing from the standpoint of recognizing employee performance when cost-of-living has increased by 3 percent. The pay increase amount attributed to performance is a mere 1 percent.

At times, companies provide automatic pay increases under the guise of merit pay, which defeats the purpose. As John Rubino, president of Rubino Consulting Services, an international HR consulting firm, said, “Companies with base-salary programs and automatic annual pay increases offer little to motivate employees.”32 Past studies by compensation professionals have determined that merit pay is marginally successful in influencing pay satisfaction and perfor- mance. From the employer’s viewpoint, a distinct disadvantage to the typical merit pay increase is that it increases the employee’s base pay. Therefore, employees receive the added amount each year they are on the payroll regardless of later performance levels.

It has become increasingly more difficult to justify merit pay increases based on a previous employment period but added perpetually to base pay. There are many long-term employees who are poor performers who have high salaries because of past automatic cost-of-living increases. Although numerous companies continue with traditional merit pay plans, some companies are starting to quietly freeze or cut pay for some to be able to reward others. According to Myrna Hellerman, senior vice-president at Sibson Consulting, “much can be learned from best-practices companies where base pay increases must be earned, based on demonstrated individual achieve- ment. Pay raises are not an entitlement; the entitlement era is over.”33

MERIT BONUSES Companies are increasingly placing a higher percentage of their compensation budget in merit bonuses, which is a one-time annual financial award, based on productivity that is not added to base pay. This approach better enables companies to control the cost of direct compensation by not adding pay increases to base pay on a permanent basis, which is the case for seniority and merit pay. Figure 9-4 shows the differences in cost between the use of merit pay and merit bonuses.

More and more companies embrace the concept of pay for performance. When the economy was slowing down and employers were holding down across-the-board pay raises, companies still put a large percentage of salary budgets toward bonuses.34 A recent survey found that 87

merit pay Pay increase added to employees’ base pay based on their level of performance.

merit bonus One-time annual financial award, based on productivity that is not added to base pay.

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percent of employers offer at least two or more types bonuses as a reward to employees.35 The use of bonuses helps managers control their cash outlay in a tough business environment while laying the foundation to share success with top producers.36 Managers commonly contend that the use of bonuses is a win-win situation because it boosts production and efficiency and gives employees some control over their earning power. A positive side effect of using bonuses to reward high performance is that it may positively affect employee engagement, motivation, and satisfaction.37

Approximately 60 percent of organizations today are providing spot bonuses for critical areas and talents.38 Spot bonuses are relatively small monetary gifts provided to employees for out- standing work or effort during a reasonably short period. If an employee’s performance has been exceptional, the employer may reward the worker with a one-time bonus of as low as $50 and $100 or $500. For certain professional jobs, it is not unheard of for a highly productive worker to receive $5,000 or more shortly after a noteworthy achievement.

INCENTIVE PAY Incentive pay rewards employees for partially or completely attaining a predetermined work objective. Incentive or variable pay is defined as compensation—other than base wages or salaries—that fluctuates according to employees’ attainment of some standard, such as a pre-established formula, individual or group goals, or company earnings. Much like seniority and merit pay approaches, incentive pay augments employees’ base pay, but incentive pay appears as one-time payments. Employees usually receive a combination of recurring base pay and incentive pay, with base pay representing the greater portion of direct financial compensation. More employees are presently eligible for incentive pay than ever before, as companies seek to control costs and motivate personnel continually to strive for exemplary performance. Companies increasingly recognize the importance of applying incentive pay programs to various kinds of employees as well, including production workers, technical employees, and service workers.

Companies generally institute incentive pay programs to control payroll costs or to moti- vate employee productivity. Companies can control costs by replacing annual merit or seniority increases or fixed salaries with incentive plans that award pay raises only when the company enjoys an offsetting rise in productivity, profits, or some other measure of business success. Well-developed incentive programs base pay on performance, so employees control their own compensation levels. Companies can choose incentives to further business objectives.

There are many kinds of incentive pay plan options. Companies use incentive pay to reward individual employees, groups of employees, or whole companies based on their performance. Management typically relies on business objectives to determine incentive pay levels.

spot bonus Relatively small monetary gifts provided to employees for outstanding work or effort during a reasonably short period.

incentive pay Compensation, other than base wages or salaries, that fluctuates according to employees’ attainment of some standard (e.g., a pre-established formula, individual or group goals, or company earnings).

FIGURE 9-4 Permanent Annual Merit Increases versus Bonus Awards: A Comparison

(At the end of 2017, John Smith earned an annual salary of $35,000.)

Cost of Increase (Total Current Salary—2017 Annual Salary) Total Salary under

Year

Increase Amount

(%)

Permanent Merit Increase

($) Bonus

Award ($)

Permanent Merit Increase (Merit

Increase + Previous Annual Salary) ($)

Bonus Award Annual (Bonus Award + 2017

Salary) ($)

2018 3 1,050 1,050 36,050 36,050 2019 5 2,853 1,750 37,853 36,750 2020 4 4,367 1,400 39,367 36,400 2021 7 7,122 2,450 42,122 37,450 2022 6 9,649 2,100 44,649 37,100 2023 5 11,881 1,750 46,881 36,750 2024 3 13,287 1,050 48,287 36,050 2025 6 16,185 2,100 51,185 37,100 2026 8 20,279 2,800 55,279 37,800 2027 7 24,148 2,450 59,148 37,450

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INDIVIDUAL INCENTIVE PLANS In a recent survey, 52 percent of companies indicated that they use individual incentive pay plans.39 We will review the four commonly used individual incentive pay plans: piecework, management incentives, behavioral encouragement plans, and referral plans. Then, we will briefly address the pros and cons of individual incentive plans.

Piecework is an incentive pay plan in which employees are paid for each unit they produce. For example, if a worker is paid $8 a unit and produces 10 units a day, the worker earns $80. Sometimes a guaranteed base is included in a piece-rate plan, meaning that a worker would receive this base amount no matter what the output. Historically, piecework is especially prevalent in the production/operations area. Requirements for the plan include developing output standards for the job and being able to measure the output of a single employee. Piecework pay plans have declined in use somewhat because the plan requires constant monitoring. For instance, if on day one the worker produced 8 units and on day two the worker produced 12 units, each day must be counted separately. Also, professionals such as industrial engineers are needed to maintain the system. Obviously, a piecework plan would not be feasible for many jobs.

Management incentive plans award bonuses to managers when they meet or exceed objec- tives based on sales, profit, production, or other measures for their division, department, or unit. Management incentive plans differ from piecework plans in that piecework plans base rewards on the attainment of one specific objective, and management incentive plans often require multiple complex objectives. For example, management incentive plans reward managers for increasing market share or reducing their budgets without compromising the quality and quantity of output. The best-known management incentive plan is management by objectives (MBO).40 When used as part of incentive programs, superiors (that is, managers’ managers) communicate the amount of incentive pay managers will receive based on the attainment of specific goals. As an aside, when MBO is used as part of merit pay systems, superiors make subjective assessments of managers’ performance, and they use these assessments to determine permanent merit pay increases.

Under behavioral encouragement plans, employees receive payments for specific behavioral accomplishments (e.g., good attendance or safety records). For example, companies usually award monetary bonuses to employees who have exemplary attendance records for a specified period. When behavioral encouragement plans are applied to safety records, workers earn awards for lower personal injury or accident rates associated with the improper use of heavy equipment or hazardous chemicals. Behavioral encouragement plans have the potential to save companies sub- stantially more money than the cost of these awards. For example, frequent absenteeism in a company’s workforce could disrupt production goals and quality. Customers may respond by choosing to make purchases for better quality products from other companies. Loss of customer bases will have a negative impact on profitability and reputation that prompts prospective custom- ers to choose alternate sources to purchase products.

As discussed in Chapter 5, approximately 74 percent of companies rely on referral plans to enhance recruitment of highly qualified employees.41 Employees may receive monetary bonuses for referring new customers or recruiting successful job applicants. In the case of recruitment, employees can earn bonuses for making successful referrals for job openings. For example, there has been a tremendous shortage of nurses for the past several years and the shortage is expected to grow as the population ages. Because of the shortage, hospitals commonly offer sign-on bonuses and referral bonuses. In Florida, for instance, many signing bonuses top out at $20,000 and referral bonuses are as high as $2,500.42 A successful referral usually means that companies award bonuses only if hired referrals remain employed with the company in good standing beyond a designated period, often at least 45 days. Referral plans rely on the idea that current employees’ familiarity with company culture should enable them to identify viable candidates for job openings more efficiently than employment agencies could because agents are probably less familiar with client companies’ cultures. Employees are likely to make only those referrals they truly believe are worthwhile because their personal reputations are at stake.

Individual incentive plans have advantages and disadvantages. On the positive side, indi- vidual incentive plans promote an equitable distribution of compensation within companies (i.e., the amount employees earn depends on their job performance). The better employees perform, the more they earn. Equitable pay ultimately enables companies to retain the best performers. Paying better performers more money sends a signal that the company appropriately values posi- tive job performance. Another advantage of individual incentive plans is their compatibility with individualistic cultures, such as the United States. Because U.S. employees are socialized to make

piecework Incentive pay plan in which employees are paid for each unit they produce.

management incentive plans Bonuses to managers who meet or exceed objectives based on sales, profit, production, or other measures for their division, department, or unit.

behavioral encouragement plans Individual incentive pay plans that reward employees for specific such behavioral accomplishments as good attendance.

referral plans Individual incentive pay plans for rewarding the referral of new customers or recruiting successful job applicants.

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individual contributions and be recognized for them, the national culture of the United States probably enhances the motivational value of individual incentive programs.

A downside of individual incentive plans is that they may encourage undesirable workplace behavior when these plans reward only one or a subset of dimensions that constitute employees’ total job performance. Let’s assume that an incentive plan rewards employees for quantity of output. If employees’ jobs address such various dimensions as quantity of output, quality, and customer satisfaction, employees may focus on the one dimension—in this case, quantity of output—that leads to incentive pay and thereby neglect the other dimensions.

GROUP INCENTIVE PLANS In baseball, as with other team sports, you do not judge the team based on its ace pitcher or great outfielder. The criterion for success is overall team performance, its win–loss record. In business, companywide plans offer a possible alternative to the incentive plans previously discussed. Team-based incentives are determined by how well the team performs in the accomplishment of the job. Because team performance consists of individual efforts, individual employees should be recognized and rewarded for their contributions. However, if a team is to function effectively, firms should also provide a reward based on the overall team performance as well. Changing a firm’s compensation structure from an individual-based system to one that involves team-based pay can have powerful results. By so doing, a firm can improve efficiency, productivity, and profitability.

There are many kinds of team incentive programs. Most companies define these programs based on the type of team.43 Work (process) teams refer to organizational units that perform the work of the organization on an ongoing basis. Membership is relatively permanent, and members work full time on the team. Customer service teams and assembly teams on production lines represent excellent examples of work teams. Work teams are effective when individuals are cross- trained to perform team members’ work when they are absent. The goal is to maintain consistency in performance quality (e.g., addressing customer concerns promptly even when one or more team members are absent) and output (e.g., in the case of assembly teams). Team members ultimately engage in performance sharing rather than focusing exclusively on one set of tasks.

Project teams consist of a group of people assigned to complete a one-time project. Members usually have well-defined roles and may work on specific phases of the project, either full time or in addition to other work responsibilities of the team. Project teams usually work across such functions as engineering, product development, and marketing to ensure that the final product meets company specifications in terms of cost, quality, and responsiveness to market demands (e.g., Toyota’s hybrid vehicles). Many individuals collaborated to ensure the production of cars that rely less on fossil fuels, demonstrate excellent gas mileage, and offer the same driving experi- ence that people have come to expect of gasoline-powered automobiles.

Parallel teams, or task forces, include employees assigned to work on a specific task in addi- tion to normal work duties. The modifier parallel indicates that an employee works on the team task while continuing to work on normal duties. Also, parallel teams or task forces operate on a temporary basis until their work culminates in a recommendation to top management. Task forces are used to evaluate existing systems and processes, to select new technology, and to improve existing products. People often serve on a voluntary basis or are appointed; in many cases, they are not compensated specifically for extra work or outcome of extra work.

Teams or groups may ultimately receive incentive pay based on such criteria as customer sat- isfaction (i.e., customer service quality), safety records, quality, and production records. Although these criteria apply to other categories of incentive programs as well (individual, company-wide, and group plans), companies allocate awards to each worker based on the group’s attainment of predetermined performance standards.

Team incentives have both advantages and disadvantages. On the positive side, firms find it easier to develop performance standards for groups than for individuals. For one thing, there are fewer standards to determine. Also, the output of a team is more likely to reflect a complete prod- uct or service. Another advantage is that employees may be more inclined to assist others and work collaboratively if the organization bases rewards on the team’s output. When teams perform highly, it is the interaction among team members, not the members themselves, that creates the high per- formance. If a team member is asked who was responsible for the high performance of the team, he or she would likely say, “We were,” and mean it. A potential disadvantage for team incentives relates to exemplary performers. If individuals in this category perceive that they contribute more

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258 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

than other employees in the group, they may become disgruntled and leave. Christopher Avery, a Texas-based speaker and consultant who specializes in issues concerning individual and shared responsibility in the workplace and the author of Teamwork Is an Individual Skill: Getting Your Work Done When Sharing Responsibility, said, “If management wants to reward a high-performing team member, give that person a raise.”44

Gain sharing describes group incentive systems that reward employees with an incentive payment based on improved company performance for increased productivity, increased customer satisfaction, lower costs, or better safety records.45 Gain sharing was developed so that all employ- ees could benefit financially from productivity improvements resulting from a formal employee suggestion system. In addition to serving as a compensation tool, most gain sharing reflects a management philosophy that emphasizes employee involvement. The use of gain sharing is most appropriate where workplace technology does not constrain productivity improvements. For example, assembly line workers’ abilities to improve productivity may be limited. Increasing the speed of the conveyor belts may compromise workers’ safety. Gain sharing programs, such as the Scanlon, Rucker, and Improshare plans, are the most popular gain sharing plans that have been adopted by U.S. corporations. Gain sharing helps align an organization’s people strategy with its business strategy. Gain sharing plans (also known as productivity incentives, team incentives, and performance sharing incentives) generally refer to incentive plans that involve many or all employees in a common effort to achieve a firm’s performance objectives.

Joseph Scanlon, after whom the Scanlon plan was named, developed the first gain sharing plan during the Great Depression, and it continues to be a successful approach to awarding group incentives. The Scanlon plan provides a financial reward to employees for savings in labor costs resulting from their suggestions. Employee-management committees evaluate these suggestions. Participants in these plans calculate savings as a ratio of payroll costs to the sales value of what that payroll produces. If the company can reduce payroll costs through increased operating effi- ciency, it shares the savings with its employees. Scanlon plans are not only financial incentive systems, but also systems for participative management. The Scanlon plan embodies management- labor cooperation, collaborative problem solving, teamwork, trust, gain sharing, open-book man- agement, and servant leadership.

COMPANYWIDE INCENTIVE PLANS The use of companywide incentive plans can be traced to the nineteenth century. Companies instituted profit sharing programs to ease workers’ dissatisfaction with low pay and to change their beliefs that company management paid workers substandard wages while earning substantial profits. Quite simply, management believed that workers would be less likely to challenge managerial practices if they received a share of company profits. Organizations normally base companywide plans on the firm’s profitability or market value. Companywide plans include profit sharing and employee stock option plans.

gain sharing Group incentive systems that provide participating employees with an incentive payment based on improved company performance for increased productivity, increased customer satisfaction, lower costs, or better safety records.

Scanlon plan Gain sharing plan that provides a financial reward to employees for savings in labor costs resulting from their suggestions.

HR Web Wisdom

Scanlon Leadership Network www.scanlon.org/

A promoter of the Scanlon prin- ciples to advance their applications among organizations.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Motivating Software Development Teams As she gets ready to start her presentation,

Jennifer Senders is excited about her new plan to improve performance of the software development teams at Creators Software. As a senior compensation analyst, she was charged with creating a new team- based pay plan to replace the company’s current individual bonus sys- tem. All the software developers at Creators work in teams to design and deliver software solutions for a wide variety of clients. The work- force at Creators is very talented, but many of the developers would prefer to work alone. Thus, many of the teams were having problems meeting deadlines and other expected team outcomes. Jennifer knows

that for the team to work well together, the incentives should focus on team goals instead of individual goals. However, a glance at her audi- ence as she explains the new bonus structure suggests they may not share her enthusiasm. She gets a hint about their concerns as soon as she asks for questions. Several hands go up and the employees begin to ask about individual rewards. One developer states that he knows he works harder than others on his team and he doesn’t want them affecting his pay. As Jennifer starts to respond, she is thinking fast about what she might need to change.

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Profit sharing pays a portion of company profits to employees, separate from base pay, cost- of-living adjustments, or permanent merit pay increases. These plans award cash to employees, typically on a quarterly or annual basis. Many firms use this type of plan to integrate the employ- ees’ interests with those of the company. Profit-sharing plans can aid in recruiting, motivating, and retaining employees, which usually enhances productivity. For instance, General Motors’ hourly workers received profit sharing awards based on the company’s substantial $12 billion profit in 2016. UAW Vice President Cindy Estrada stated, “Today’s performance bonus announce- ment of a maximum of $12,000 each rewards our members’ dedication and commitment to build- ing some of the most popular and high-quality vehicles in the world.”46

The results of profit sharing include increased efficiency and lower costs. However, variations in profits may present a special problem. When employees have become accustomed to receiving added compensation from profit sharing, and then there is no profit to share, they may become disgruntled.

Another problem with a profit-sharing plan stems from the recipients’ seldom knowing precisely how they helped generate the profits, beyond just doing their jobs. HR professionals refer to this as a line-of-sight problem. And, if employees continue to receive a payment, they will come to expect it and depend on it. If they do not know what they have done to deserve it, they may view it as an entitlement program and the intended ownership attitude may not materialize.

Under employee stock plans, companies grant employees the right to purchase shares of company stock. Company stock represents total equity of a company. Company stock shares represent equity segments of equal value. Equity interest increases positively with the number of stock shares. Stock options describe an employee’s right to purchase company stock. Employ- ees do not actually own stock until they exercise the stock option rights. This is done by purchas- ing stock at a designated price after a company-chosen period lapses, usually no more than 5 years. Employee stock options provide an incentive to work productively, with the expectation that collective employee productivity will increase the value of company stock over time. Employees earn monetary compensation when they sell the stock at a higher price than they originally paid for it.

Person-Focused Pay Thus far, we have studied job-based pay practices. Job-based pay compensates employees for jobs they currently perform. HR professionals establish a minimum and maximum acceptable amount of pay for each job. In the case of merit pay, managers evaluate employees based on how well they fulfilled their designated roles as specified by their job descriptions and periodic objectives. Managers then award a permanent merit addition to base pay, based on employee performance. With incentive pay, managers award one-time additions to base pay. Pay raise amounts are based on the attainment of work goals, which managers communicate to employees in advance.

In contrast, person-focused pay compensates employees for developing the f lexibility, knowledge, and skills to perform many jobs effectively. Moreover, these programs reward employ- ees on their potential to make positive contributions to the workplace based on their successful acquisition of work-related skills or knowledge. Job-based pay plans reward employees for the work they have done as specified in their job descriptions or periodic goals (i.e., how well they have fulfilled their potential to make positive contributions in the workplace).

Skill-based pay is a system that compensates employees for their job-related skills and knowledge, rather than how well he or she performs on the present job. Skill-based pay is a method of recruiting and retaining highly skilled employees that enables employers to offer compensation based on the knowledge, skills, and abilities that employees bring to the company and that they develop over the course of their employment, rather than based solely on the duties associated with a position.47 Essentially, job descriptions, job evaluation plans, and job-based salary surveys are replaced by skill profiles, skill evaluation plans, and skill-based salary surveys. The system assumes that employees who know more are more valuable to the firm and, therefore, they deserve a reward for their efforts in acquiring new skills. When employees obtain additional job-relevant skills, both individuals and the departments they serve benefit. For example, a department may have six different types of machines, each requiring different skills to operate. Under a skill-based pay system, the worker would increase his or her pay as additional machines are learned.

profit sharing Compensation plans that result in the distribution of a predetermined percentage of the firm’s profits to employees.

employee stock plans The right to purchase shares of company stock.

company stock The total equity or worth of the company.

company stock shares Equity segments of equal value, which increase with the number of stock shares held.

stock options Incentive plan in which employees can buy a specified amount of stock in their company in the future at or below the current market price.

job-based pay Employee compensation for jobs employees currently perform.

person-focused pay Compensation for developing the flexibility, knowledge, and skills to perform a number of jobs effectively.

skill-based pay System that compensates employees for their job-related skills and knowledge, not for their job titles.

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260 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

Although skill-based pay appears to have advantages for both employer and employee, there are some challenges for management. The firm must provide adequate training opportunities or else the system can become a demotivator. Also, because it takes an average of only three years for a worker to reach a maximum level in a skill-based pay system, what will keep employees motivated? Notwithstanding these concerns, there is evidence to suggest that companies with skill-based plans were more likely than other plans to have greater levels of workforce flexibility. That greater flexibility, in turn, led to greater productivity.48

As we discussed in Chapter 4, competencies refer to an individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently over time to perform work successfully in the required work situations. Traditionally, as we have seen, work has been described by many dimensions including knowledge, skills, and abilities. Another common person-focused plan is competency-based pay. Competency-based pay plans generally reward employees for acquiring job-related competencies, knowledge, or skills rather than for demon- strating successful job performance. There are times when companies combine competency-based pay programs with traditional job-based pay programs by awarding pay raises to employees according to how well they demonstrate competencies.

Building Job Structures As noted earlier, a job structure is an ordered set of jobs that represents the job structure or hier- archy. That is, jobs that require higher qualifications, more responsibilities, and more complex job duties should be paid more than jobs that require lower qualifications, fewer responsibilities, and less-complex job duties. Internally consistent job structures formally recognize differences in job characteristics that enable compensation managers to set pay accordingly. HR professionals use job evaluation systematically to recognize differences in the relative worth among a set of jobs and to establish pay differentials accordingly.

When done properly, job evaluation helps to eliminate internal pay inequities that exist because of illogical pay structures. For example, pay inequity probably exists if the mailroom supervisor earns more than the chief accountant. For obvious reasons, organizations prefer internal pay equity. However, when a job’s pay rate is ultimately determined to conflict with the market rate, the latter is almost sure to take precedence. Job evaluation measures job worth in an administrative rather than an economic sense. The latter can be determined only by the marketplace and made known through compensation surveys.49 We will discuss compensation surveys later in this chapter.

The HR department may be responsible for administering job evaluation programs. How- ever, committees made up of individuals familiar with the specific jobs to be evaluated often perform the actual evaluations. A typical committee might include the HR executive and rep- resentatives from other functional areas such as finance, production, information technology, and marketing. The composition of the committee usually depends on the type and level of the jobs being evaluated. In all instances, it is important for the committee to keep personalities out of the evaluation process and to remember that it is evaluating the job, not the person(s) performing the job. Some people have difficulty making this distinction. This is understandable because some job evaluation systems are similar to some performance appraisal methods. In addition, the duties of a job may, on an informal basis, expand, contract, or change depending on the person holding the job.

The four traditional job evaluation methods are the ranking, classification, factor compari- son, and point. There are innumerable versions of these methods, and a firm may choose one and modify it to fit its purposes. Another option is to purchase a proprietary method such as the Hay Plan. The ranking and classification methods are nonquantitative, whereas the factor comparison and point methods are quantitative approaches.

Ranking Method The ranking method is the simplest of the four job evaluation methods. In the job evaluation ranking method, the raters examine the description of each job being evaluated and arrange the jobs in order according to their value to the company. The procedure is essentially the same as the ranking method for evaluating employee performance. The only difference is that you evaluate jobs, not people.

competency-based pay Compensation plan that rewards employees for the capabilities they attain.

9.3 Discuss job structures and how they are established.

job structure An ordered set of similar jobs based on worth.

job evaluation Process that determines the relative value of one job in relation to another.

job evaluation ranking method Job evaluation method in which the raters examine the description of each job being evaluated and arrange the jobs in order according to their value to the company.

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Classification Method The classification method involves defining many classes or grades to describe a group of jobs. In evaluating jobs by this method, the raters compare the job description with the class description. Class descriptions reflect the differences between groups of jobs at various difficulty levels. The class description that most closely agrees with the job description determines the classification for that job. For example, in evaluating the job of receptionist, the description might include these duties:

$ Greet and announce visitors $ Answer phone and route calls $ Receive and route mail

If the remainder of the job description includes similar routine work, this job would probably be placed in the lowest job class.

Each class is described in such a way that it captures sufficient work detail, yet is general enough to cause little difficulty in slotting a job description into its appropriate class.

Factor Comparison Method The factor comparison method is somewhat more involved than the two previously discussed qualitative methods. The factor comparison method of job evaluation assumes that there are five universal factors consisting of mental requirements, skills, physical requirements, responsibilities, and working conditions; the evaluator makes decisions on these factors independently.

The five universal job factors are:

$ Mental requirements, which reflect mental traits such as intelligence, reasoning, and imagination

$ Skills, which pertain to facility in muscular coordination and training in the interpretation of sensory impressions

$ Physical requirements, which involve sitting, standing, walking, lifting, and so on $ Responsibilities, which cover areas such as raw materials, money, records, and supervision $ Working conditions, which reflect the environmental influences of noise, illumination, ven-

tilation, hazards, and hours

In this method, the evaluation committee creates a monetary scale, containing each of the five universal factors, and ranks jobs according to their value for each factor. Unlike most other job evaluation methods, which produce relative job worth only, the factor comparison method deter- mines the absolute value as well.

Point Method In the point method, raters assign numerical values to specific job factors, such as knowledge required, and the sum of these values provides a quantitative assessment of a job’s relative worth. Quantitative methods assign numerical values to compensable factors (e.g., knowledge and skills) that describe jobs, and these values are summed as an indicator of the overall value for the job. The point method evaluates jobs by comparing compensable factors. Each factor is defined and assigned a range of points based on the factor’s relative value to the company. Compensable fac- tors are weighted to represent the relative importance of each factor to the job.

Point plans require time and effort to design. A redeeming feature of the method has been that, once developed, the plan was useful over a long time. In today’s environment, the shelf life may be considerably less because job requirements change frequently. In any event, as new jobs are created and old jobs substantially changed, job analysis must be conducted and job descriptions rewritten on an ongoing basis. The job evaluation committee then evaluates the jobs. Only when job factors change, or for some reason the weights assigned become inappropriate, does the plan become obsolete.

Establishing Competitive Compensation Policies A compensation policy refers to choices that compensation professionals make to promote com- petitive advantage. Broadly, policy choices are made about pay level and pay mix. Pay level compensation policies determine whether the company will be a pay leader, be a pay follower, or strive for an average position in the labor market. Pay level policies have the greatest impact

classification method Job evaluation method in which classes or grades are defined to describe a group of jobs.

HR Web Wisdom

The Hay Group Guide Chart-Profile Method www.haygroup.com

Homepage of the Hay Plan, the most widely used job measurement system in the world, is provided.

factor comparison method Job evaluation method that assumes there are five universal factors consisting of mental requirements, skills, physical requirements, responsibilities, and working conditions; the evaluator makes decisions on these factors independently.

point method Job evaluation method in which the raters assign numerical values to specific job factors, such as knowledge required, and the sum of these values provides a quantitative assessment of a job’s relative worth.

9.4 Summarize competitive pay policies: pay level and pay mix.

compensation policy Policies that provide general guidelines for making compensation decisions.

pay level compensation policies Determine whether the company will be a pay leader (market lead), a pay follower (market lag), or assume an average position (market match) in the labor market.

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on attracting and retaining employees. Pay mix compensation policies refer to the combination of direct and indirect financial compensation and employee benefits components (see Figure 9-1) that make up an employee’s compensation package. Pay mix policies have the greatest impact on motivating employees. The components of the compensation package help focus an employee’s performance on what the employer expects, such as excellent customer service, sales, innovative use of technology, and so forth.

Pay Level Compensation Policies We will review the three pay level policies followed by pay mix. Figure 9-5 illustrates the market lead, market match, and market lag pay level policies.

MARKET LEAD Companies that pursue a market lead policy are organizations that pay higher wages and salaries than competing firms. In most companies, a lead policy translates to pay at the 75th percentile. That is, 75 percent of the market pay rates for comparable jobs are lower. Using this strategy, they feel that they will be able to attract high-quality, productive employees and thus achieve lower per-unit labor costs. Higher-paying firms usually attract more highly qualified applicants than lower-paying companies in the same labor market. The Mayo Clinic, headquartered in Rochester, Minnesota, is a pay leader.50 The Mayo Clinic is known for its leading research and medical care, which requires it to hire and retain bright and talented researchers and medical practitioners.

MARKET MATCH The market match policy is usually the median pay that most employers provide for a similar job in an area or industry.51 Median pay is expressed as the 50th percentile. That is, 50 percent of the market pay rates for similar jobs are lower. Many organizations have a policy that calls for paying the market rate. In such firms, management believes that it can still employ qualified people and remain competitive.

MARKET LAG Companies may choose to pay below the market rate (market lag policy) because of poor financial conditions or because they are hiring employees whose skills and expected impact on the company’s success are relatively lower than employees whose skills and expected impact are much greater. Market lag policies typically translate to pay at the 25th percentile, meaning that 25 percent of the market pay rates for similar jobs are lower. For example, in pharmaceutical companies that rely heavily on research and development, janitorial services workers might receive below-market pay rates compared to research scientists who are directly responsible for the firm’s success through innovative product development.

pay mix compensation policies Combination of direct (monetary compensation) and indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) components that make up an employee’s total compensation package.

market lead policies Pay policy that distinguishes companies from the competition by compensating employees more highly than most competitors. Leading the market denotes market levels above the market pay line.

market match policy Average pay that most employers provide for a similar job in an area or industry.

market lag policies Pay policy that distinguishes companies from the competition by compensating employees less than most competitors. Lagging the market indicates that market levels fall below the market pay line.

FIGURE 9-5 Pay Level Policy

Clerk I

$45,000

$40,000

$35,000

$30,000

$25,000

$20,000

Clerk II Job Worth (Based on Job Evaluation)

A n

n u

a l Sa

la ry

Clerk III Chief Clerk

Ma rke

t M atc

h

Pol icy

Ma rke

t la g P

olic y

Ma rke

t l ea

d

Po licy

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Besides the considerations already discussed, two additional issues bear mention. First, most companies do not pursue a single pay level policy. As emphasized in the market lag discussion, the relative importance of jobs to the company and the level of knowledge and skills required to perform the jobs influence pay policy level choices. Second, the principles of labor supply and demand factor into companies’ decisions about which pay level policy to choose. For example, companies will likely choose the pay leader policy for jobs that are in high demand by companies, but for which jobs are in relatively low supply. Consider the case of biomedical engineers.

Employment of biomedical engineers is projected to grow 23 percent from 2014 to 2024, much faster than the average for all occupations. Growing technology and its application to medical equipment and devices, along with an aging population, will increase demand for the work of biomedical engineers.52

Pay Mix As noted earlier, pay mix compensation policies refer to the combination of direct and indirect financial compensation and employee benefits components (see Figure 9-1) that make up an employee’s compensation package. Pay policy mix may be expressed in dollars (or other currency as relevant) or as a percentage of total dollars allocated for an employee’s total compensation. Figure 9-6 illustrates an example of a pay policy mix.

This example indicates that base pay accounts for 57 percent of the money allocated to an employee’s total compensation. Let’s assume that the company spends $200,000 annually to fund an employee’s total compensation package. Of the total, an employee receives base pay in the amount of $114,000 (that is, $200,000 * 57 percent).

What is an appropriate pay mix? For policy purposes, it makes sense to consider guidelines for jobs within a structure (for example, managerial, administrative, or sales) because of the common job content and worker requirements of jobs. For example, in a technology company, a greater portion of incentive compensation might be allocated to engineers than to administrative staff. Engineers possess crucial skills relating to the company’s ability to find innovative applica- tions of technology, and awarding bonuses throughout the year may promote innovation initiatives. On the other hand, the administrative staff, though important to the company, may not play a central role in determining the company’s profitability or objectives. Therefore, less of their total compensation would likely be devoted to incentive awards. Also, some employees, such as sales representatives, may receive much of their compensation in the form of incentive pay. To motivate a sales force to continually exceed quarterly targets, quarterly bonuses equal to or exceeding their annual base salaries might be used.

Building Pay Structures Pay structures represent pay rate differences for jobs of unequal worth and the framework for recognizing employee contributions. These structures result from an analysis based on compensa- tion survey work. Compensation surveys involve the collection and subsequent analysis of

9.5 Explain what pay structures are and how they are created.

pay structures Pay rate differences for jobs of unequal worth and the framework for recognizing employee contributions.

compensation survey A means of obtaining data regarding what other firms are paying for specific jobs or job classes within a given labor market.

FIGURE 9-6 Pay Mix Policy

Base Wage 57%

6%

10%

Benefits 27%

Short-Term Incentives

Long-Term Incentives

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264 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

competitors’ compensation data. Compensation surveys traditionally focused on competitors’ wage and salary practices. Employee benefits have more recently also becomes a target of surveys because benefits are a key element of market-competitive pay systems. For instance, some indi- viduals may accept an offer from one company rather than another because it provides generous paid family leave. Compensation surveys are important because they enable compensation profes- sionals to obtain realistic views of competitors’ pay practices. Companies recognize these differ- ences by paying individuals according to their credentials, knowledge, or job performance. When completed, pay structures should define the boundaries for recognizing employee contributions. Well-designed structures should promote the retention of valued employees. Pay grades and pay ranges are structural features of pay structures.

☛ F Y I Approximately 90 percent of companies rely on market pricing to determine the value of jobs.53

FIGURE 9-7 Scatter Diagram of Evaluated Jobs Illustrating the Wage Curve, Pay Grades, and Pay Ranges

Average Pay per Hour

(Current Rates or Market Rates)

$19.80

18.50

17.20

15.90

14.60 14.00 13.30 12.90

12.00 100 200 300 400 500

1 2 3

Evaluated Points

Pay Ranges for Pay Grades

Wa ge

Cu rve

Pay Grades

Summary Evaluated Points

0–99 100–199 200–299 300–399 400–500

1 2 3 4 5

$12.00 13.30 14.60 15.90 17.20

$13.30 14.60 15.90 17.20 18.50

$14.60 15.90 17.20 18.50 19.80

Pay Grade Minimum Pay Range Midpoint Maximum

4 5

1

2

3

4

5

Pay Grades A pay grade is the grouping of similar jobs to simplify pricing jobs. For example, it is much more convenient for organizations to price 15 pay grades than 200 separate jobs. The simplicity of this approach is like a college or university’s practice of grouping grades of 90-100 into an A category, grades of 80-89 into a B, and so on. In following this approach, you also avoid a false suggestion of preciseness. Although job evaluation plans may be systematic, none are scientific.

Plotting jobs on a scatter diagram is often useful to managers in determining the appropriate number of pay grades for a company. Looking at Figure 9-7 notice that each dot on the scatter diagram represents one job. The location of the dot ref lects the job’s relationship to pay and evaluated points, which reflects its worth. When this procedure is used, a certain point spread determines the width of the pay grade (100 points in this illustration). Although each dot repre- sents one job, it may involve dozens of individuals who have positions in that one job. The large dot at the lower left represents the job of receptionist, evaluated at 75 points. The receptionist’s hourly rate of $12.90 represents either the average wage currently paid for the job or its market rate. This decision depends on how management wants to price its jobs.

pay grade Grouping of similar jobs to simplify pricing jobs.

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Pay Ranges After pay grades have been determined, the next decision is whether all individuals performing the same job will receive equal pay or whether pay ranges should be used. A pay range includes a minimum and maximum pay rate with enough variance between the two to allow for a significant pay difference. Pay ranges are generally preferred over single pay rates because they allow a firm to compensate employees according to performance and length of service. Pay then serves as a positive incentive. When pay ranges are used, a firm must develop a method to advance individuals through the range. Companies typically use larger range spreads for jobs that are more valuable to the company.

POINTS ALONG THE RANGE A wage curve (or pay curve) is the fitting of plotted points to create a smooth progression between pay grades. The curve often equates to the market match policy. The line drawn minimizes the distance between all dots and the line; a line of best fit may be straight or curved. However, when the point system is used, a straight line is often the result, as illustrated in Figure 9-7. The use of statistical methods to determine the line is essential given the sheer number of data points (pay rates) collected during the compensation survey process.

Pay ranges are centered along the wage curve. That is, the midpoint of each pay range equals the typical market pay rate for jobs within a pay grade. Referring again to Figure 9-7, note that anyone can readily determine the minimum, midpoint, and maximum pay rates per hour for each of the five pay grades. For example, for pay grade 5, the minimum rate is $17.20, the midpoint is $18.50, and the maximum is $19.80. The minimum rate may be the hiring-in rate that a person receives when joining the firm, although in practice, new employees often receive pay that starts above this level. The maximum pay rate represents the maximum that an employee can receive for that job regardless of how well he or she performs the job.

TOPPING OUT A person at the top of a pay grade should be promoted to a job in a higher pay grade to receive a pay increase unless: (1) an across-the-board adjustment is made; or (2) the job is re-evaluated and placed in a higher pay grade. This situation has caused numerous managers some anguish as they attempt to explain the pay system to an employee who is doing a tremendous job but is at the top of a pay grade. Consider this situation:

Everyone in the department realized that Beth Smithers was the best administrative assistant in the company. At times, she appeared to do the job of three people. Bob Marshall, Beth’s supervi- sor, was especially impressed. Recently, he had a discussion with the human resource manager to see what he could do to get a raise for Beth. After Bob described the situation, the human resource manager’s only reply was, “Sorry, Bob. Beth is already at the top of her pay grade. There is nothing you can do except have her job upgraded or promote her to another position.

Situations like Beth’s present managers with a perplexing problem. Many would be inclined to make an exception to the system and give Beth a salary increase. However, this action would violate a traditional principle, which holds that every job in the organization has a maximum value, regardless of how well an employee performs the job. The rationale is that making exceptions to the compensation plan would result in widespread pay inequities. Having stated this, today many organizations are challenging traditional concepts as they strive to retain top-performing employees.

RATE RANGES AT HIGHER LEVELS The rate ranges established should be large enough to provide an incentive to do a better job. At higher levels, pay differentials may need to be greater to be meaningful. There may be logic in having the rate range become increasingly wide at each consecutive level. Consider, for example, what a $200-per-month salary increase would mean to a file clerk earning $2,000 per month (a 10 percent increase) and to a senior cost accountant earning $5,000 per month (a 4 percent increase). Assuming an inflation rate of 4 percent, the accountant’s real pay would remain unchanged.

Broadbanding Broadbanding is a technique that collapses many pay grades (salary grades) into a few wide bands to improve organizational effectiveness. Employees today perform more diverse tasks than they previously did. Broadbanding creates the basis for a simpler compensation system that

pay range Minimum and maximum pay rate with enough variance between the two to allow for a significant pay difference.

wage curve Fitting of plotted points to create a smooth progression between pay grades (also known as the pay curve).

broadbanding Compensation technique that collapses many pay grades (salary grades) into a few wide bands to improve organizational effectiveness.

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266 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

de-emphasizes structure and control and places greater importance on judgment and f lexible decision making. Bands may also promote lateral development of employees and direct atten- tion away from vertical promotional opportunities. The decreased emphasis on job levels should encourage employees to make cross-functional moves to jobs that are on the same or an even lower level because their pay rate would remain unchanged. Broadbanding allows for more flexibility within ranges, allows more movement of employees within the ranges, and can reduce the need for promotions.54

The use of broadbanding has declined in recent years. According to a WorldatWork survey, the use of broadbanding steadily declined from 14 percent in 2010 to 6 percent in 2016. This shift may be in response to possible pitfalls.55 Because each band consists of a broad range of jobs, the market value of these jobs may also vary considerably. Unless carefully monitored, employees in jobs at the lower end of the band could progress to the top of the range and become overpaid.56

Two-Tier Wage System Two-tier wage systems reward newly hired employees less than established employees. Compa- nies may choose to keep newly hired workers in the lower tier on a temporary or permanent basis. Under the temporary basis, employees can progress from lower entry-level pay rates to the higher rates enjoyed by more senior employees. Permanent two-tier systems reinforce the pay-rate dis- tinction by retaining separate pay scales; lower-paying scales apply to newly hired employees, and current employees enjoy higher-paying scales. Although pay progresses within each scale, the maximum rates to which newly hired employees can progress are always lower than more senior employees’ pay scales.

Two-tier pay structures also enable companies to reward long-service employees while keep- ing costs down by paying lower rates to newly hired employees who do not have an established performance record. Higher-tier employees who leave the company are usually replaced with workers who are compensated on the lower-paying scale.

Two-tier wage systems are more prevalent in unionized companies, particularly in the manu- facturing industry. During economic recessions, unions sometimes reluctantly agree to include two-tier wage structures in their contracts with management. A union’s motivation to accept a two-tier wage structure is to help lower labor costs in exchange for greater job security. When economic conditions improve and companies return to profitability, unions resist the inclusion of two-tier wage structures in subsequent agreements. For example, at Ford Motor Company, a two- tier wage structure was eliminated even though management expressed concern about the impact of substantially higher labor costs on competitive pricing. Still, Ford recognizes some benefits coming from the elimination of the two-tier wage system, including reduced tension between upper- and lower-tier workers. Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of the Americas, stated, “That’s really good, because one of the things you really need in a manufacturing plant is there to be focus and discipline. Anxiety or distraction is the enemy of process discipline.”57

Adjusting Pay Rates When pay ranges have been determined and jobs assigned to pay grades, it may become obvious that some jobs are overpaid and others underpaid. Underpaid jobs are normally brought up to the minimum of the pay range as soon as possible. Referring again to Figure 9-7, you can see that a job evaluated at about 225 points and having a rate of $14.00 per hour is represented by a circled dot immediately below pay grade 3. The job was determined to be difficult enough to fall in pay grade 3 (200-299 points). However, employees working in the job are being paid 60 cents per hour less than the minimum for the pay grade ($14.60 per hour). If one or more female employees should be in this circled job, the employer might soon learn more than desired about the Equal Pay Act. Good management practice would be to correct this inequity as rapidly as possible by placing the job in the proper pay grade and increasing the pay of those in that job.

Overpaid jobs present a different problem. Figure 9-7 illustrates an overpaid job for pay grade 4 (note the circled dot above pay grade 4). Employees in this job earn $19.00 per hour, or 50 cents more than the maximum for the pay grade. An ideal solution to the problem of an overpaid job is to promote the employee to a job in a higher pay grade. This is a great idea if the employee is qualified for a higher-rated job and a job opening is available. Another possibility would be to bring the job rate and employee pay into line through a pay cut. Although this decision may appear logical, it is generally not a good management practice because this action would punish

two-tier wage system A wage structure where newly hired workers are paid less than current employees for performing the same or similar jobs.

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employees for a situation they did not create. Somewhere in between these two possible solutions is a third: to freeze the rate until across-the-board pay increases bring the job into line.

Pricing jobs is not an easy task. It requires effort that never ends. It is also one of those tasks that managers may dislike but must do anyway.

Pay Compression Pay compression occurs whenever a company’s pay spread between newly hired or less quali- fied employees and more qualified job incumbents is small. In extreme cases, less experienced employees are paid as much as or more than employees who have been with the organization a long time because of a gradual increase in starting salaries and limited salary adjustments for long-term employees.

As workers discover inequities in their pay, resentment and lower productivity may follow with the employees ultimately leaving the company when the economy improves. Further, from a risk man- agement perspective, companies need to make sure that salary compression is not causing problems with such laws as the Equal Pay Act. Unfortunately, no easy solution is available, and it is projected that the gap between current and new employees is getting wider and will continue to do so.

In principle, the solution to salary compression is simple. Unfortunately, the solution usually requires money, which is limited for most organizations. A company can build in compression funding to any annual budget increases. Still yet another way to remedy salary compression is to focus a primary portion of raises to your best employees and not waste compensation on across- the-board adjustments.

Exceptions to the Rules: Sales Professionals, Contingent Workers, and Executives The discussion of compensation components and structures, thus far, applies to most occupational groups in a variety of organizations. There are some exceptions to the rules: sales professionals, contingent workers, and executives. We briefly review each of them next.

Sales Professionals Designing compensation programs for sales employees involves unique considerations. Bob Cartwright, SPHR, president and CEO of Texas-based Intelligent Compensation LLC, advises companies on sales strategies saying, “Understanding what the business needs are, where the gaps exist and what needs to be driven to get business from point A to point B—that’s the key.”58 Proper ratio of base pay, commissions, and bonuses must be established. For this reason, this task may belong to the sales staff rather than to HR. Nevertheless, many general compensation practices apply to sales jobs. For example, job content, relative job worth, and job market value are all relevant factors.

The straight salary approach is one extreme in sales compensation. In this method, salesper- sons receive a fixed salary regardless of their sales levels. Organizations use straight salary primarily to emphasize product support after the sale. For instance, sales representatives who deal largely with the federal government on a continuous basis often receive this form of compensation.

At the other extreme is straight commission, in which the person’s pay is totally determined as a percentage of sales. If the salesperson makes no sales, the individual receives no pay. On the other hand, highly productive sales representatives can earn a great deal of money under this plan.

Between these extremes are the endless varieties of part-salary, part-commission combina- tions. The possibilities increase when a firm adds various types of bonuses to the basic compen- sation package. The emphasis given to either commission or salary depends on several factors, including the organization’s philosophy toward service, the nature of the product, and the amount of time required to close a sale.

pay compression A company’s pay spread between newly hired or less qualified employees and more qualified job incumbents is small.

9.6 Review exceptions to the rules: compensation for sales representatives, contingent workers, and executives.

Try It! If your professor has assigned this, sign onto www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the Motivation simulation and test your application of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

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268 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

Contingent Workers As we discussed in Chapter 5, contingent workers are those who do not have an implicit or explicit contract for ongoing employment. Some contingent workers are employed through an employment agency or on an on-call basis and often earn approximately 10.6 percent less on an hourly basis than traditional employees.59 The magnitude and direction of the gap dif- fer by industry. For instance, contingent workers in professional/technical services earn 17 percent less than their noncontingent counterparts. On the other hand, contingent workers in the construction industry earn 0.8 percent more.60 Other contingent workers provide services as independent contractors, which represents the most common type of contingent workers (Chapter 5). Flexibility and lower costs for the employer are key reasons for the growth in the use of contingent workers. An inherent compensation problem relates to internal equity. You may have two employees working side by side, one a contingent worker and the other a regular employee, performing the same or near identical tasks, and one makes more money than the other. In most cases, contingents earn less pay and are far less likely to receive health or retire- ment benefits.61 In March 2017, 88 percent of full-time workers were offered participation in a health insurance plan whereas only 19 percent of part-time workers were offered the same.62 Similarly, 81 percent of full-time workers had access to retirement plans whereas this was the case for only 38 percent of part-time workers.

Executive Compensation Executive compensation amounts are on the rise. Median compensation (without perquisites such as country club memberships) rose nearly 15 percent to $7.4 million between 2013 and 2015.63 Although there has been considerable discussion regarding what some say are excessive salaries by executives, one should remember that the skills possessed by company executives largely determine whether a firm will prosper, survive, or fail. A company’s executive compensation program is a critical factor in attracting and retaining the best available talent. Thus, compensa- tion programs need to be developed that motivate these executives to strive to achieve long-term success for the firm. The five main components of executive compensation packages include: base salary, bonuses and performance-based pay, stock option plans, perquisites (perks), and severance packages.

BASE SALARY Although it may not represent the largest portion of the executive’s compensation package, base salary is obviously important. It is a factor in determining the executive’s standard of living. Salary also provides the basis for other forms of compensation. For example, it may determine bonus amounts and certain benefits. The U.S. tax law does not allow companies to deduct more than $1 million of an executive’s salary unless it is performance based and meets specified criteria.64

BONUSES AND PERFORMANCE-BASED PAY As shareholders become increasingly disenchanted with the high levels of executive compensation for less-than-stellar accomplishments, performance- based pay is gaining in popularity. Although the Dodd-Frank Act has influenced executive pay, it appears that the greater influence has been the initiative to link pay to performance.65 If pay for performance is appropriate for lower-level employees, should top executives be exempt from the same practice? The true superstars can still have huge earnings if their targets are met.

Payment of bonuses reflects a managerial belief in their incentive value. Cash bonuses, paid periodically based on performance goals, often provide real incentives. In the past, bonuses could be quite large and often were not tied to “real” performance goals. Hopefully, million-dollar pay packages not tied to performance are becoming a thing of the past. It appears that some progress is being made. According to an Equilar survey, the median performance- versus time-based equity mix for S&P 500 CEOs was 51.6 percent performance- and 48.4 percent time-based in 2015, compared to 31.5 percent performance- and 68.5 percent time-based in 2011.66

Sometimes, executives miss their performance targets even though they have already received compensation in anticipation of meeting them. Many boards of directors and shareholders were displeased with this reality. This problem has been remedied, in part, by the Dodd-Frank Act, which established clawback policies. A clawback policy allows the company to recover compen- sation if a later review indicates that payments were not calculated accurately or performance goals were not met. For instance, the Wells Fargo board of directors took back cash bonuses for

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eight executives after the company fraudulently opened bank accounts in customers’ names. The board said the move was intended, “to show their [executives’] accountability for the bank’s overall performance and reputation risk as a result of the scandal.”67

The Dodd-Frank Act also requires the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other government agencies to regulate incentive pay at financial institutions. The SEC requires that institutions with $1 billion or more in assets be required to discourage “inappropriate risk” and disclose bonus details. Firms with $50 billion in assets would have to defer at least half of the top executives’ bonuses for three years. These mechanisms are designed to discourage short- term thinking.

STOCK OPTION PLANS Stock option plans give the executive the option to buy a specified amount of stock in the future at or below the current market price. The stock option is a long-term incentive designed to integrate the interests of management with those of the organization. To ensure this integration, some boards of directors require their top executives to hold some of the firm’s stock. Stock options have lost some of their appeal because of accounting rule changes that require companies to value and book an appropriate expense for options as they are granted. Nevertheless, there are several bona fide reasons for including stock ownership in executive compensation plans. In addition to potentially aligning employees’ interests with those of shareholders, retaining top executives is also a factor.

PERQUISITES (PERKS) Perquisites (perks) are any special benefits provided by a firm to a small group of key executives and designed to give the executives “something extra.” Possible perks include a company-provided car, limousine service, use of the company plane and yacht, and security services. A Willis Towers Watson survey found that 82 percent of S&P 500 companies awarded one or more types of perks, and 47 percent offered at least three different types of perks.68 And, perks are costly. Overall, companies are spending more on perks than ever before. Between 2013 and 2015, perquisites grew 21.6 percent to a median value of $126,550.69 The more expensive perks were personal use of corporate aircraft (median value of $103,799), home security ($28,505), and use of a company car ($20,618).70 At the high end, Facebook’s Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg received aircraft perks equaling about $775,000, and Coca-Cola’s Chairman and CEO Muhtar Kent received automobile perks totaling $198,217.71

SEVERANCE PACKAGES What most people may not understand is that massive severance payments are not set up by a board of directors after a CEO has quit or been fired. These payments were negotiated prior to being hired and are referred to as golden parachute contracts. A golden parachute contract is a perk that protects executives if another company acquires their firm or if the executive is forced to leave the firm for other reasons. To hire and retain talented individuals, some corporations negotiate employment agreements that include golden parachutes.72 At times, golden parachute contracts have been abused. For example, United Airlines (former) CEO Jeff Smisek resigned during a federal probe after allegedly engaging in many illegal dealings. One could say that Smisek was rewarded for wrongdoing. He received a severance package worth $28.6 million which includes a $5 million payment, stock and bonus awards, and expensive company perks (among them, free first class airfare for himself and a companion for life).73 Not only should CEO pay be considered but CEO pay contracts should also be examined. But hopefully the environment is changing.

The SEC has adopted far-reaching executive compensation disclosure rules that apply to publicly traded companies. The new rules require companies to list all the agreements for each executive, to disclose the payment triggers, and, most importantly, to give an estimated dollar value of potential payments and benefits and the specific factors used to determine them. For the first time, investors will see the estimated total dollar value of the exit packages. No longer will these agreements become exposed only at the time of a merger and acquisition deal or when the board removes a CEO.

WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT (DODD–FRANK ACT) We have referred to the clawback provision of the Dodd-Frank Act, which has increased the transparency of how executives are compensated. The Dodd-Frank Act contains several additional provisions. We review two of the more noteworthy ones here. The first provision, say on pay, gives shareholders in all but the smallest companies an advisory vote on executive pay. This is

clawback policy Allows the company to recover compensation if subsequent review indicates that payments were not calculated accurately or performance goals were not met.

perquisites (perks) Special benefits provided by a firm to a small group of key executives and designed to give the executives something extra.

golden parachute contract Perquisite that protects executives if another company acquires their firm or the executive is forced to leave the firm for other reasons.

say on pay Provision that gives shareholders in all but the smallest companies an advisory vote on executive pay.

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something that governance advocates have long wanted. Those who support the concept of say on pay believe that the vote will cause greater accountability on executive pay decisions.74 The Dodd-Frank Act requires 5,000 companies to hold nonbinding shareholder say-on-pay votes at least every three years. Companies must also hold shareholder votes on the frequency of say on pay with the option of one, two, or three years, or to abstain. Frequency votes are required to be held every three years. Thus far, shareholder votes appear to be highly favorable in support of company pay plans. A survey by Semler Brossy revealed that 76 percent of companies have passed say on pay with more than 90 percent shareholder approval.75 A recent study found that boards that give CEOs higher pay opportunities are more likely to receive lower levels of support in shareholder say-on-pay votes than those with lower CEO pay.76 Also, shareholders appear to want their say on pay on an annual basis as opposed to every two or three years.77 Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), which recommends mutual funds and other large shareholders on how to vote in corporate elections, has recommended “no” votes on executive pay in about 13 percent of the proposals it has reviewed this proxy season.78 All of the companies with a failed say-on-pay vote in 2012 had a negative recommendation from the proxy advisory firm ISS.79 One major company to receive a negative vote on say on pay was Spectrum Pharmaceuticals. The negative vote may have been inf luenced by the high pay relative to shareholder return.80

The second provision requires that companies report the ratio of CEO compensation to the median compensation of its employees in SEC filings. This disclosure will help inform share- holders when taking a “say on pay” vote. The SEC adopted this rule in August 2015, with which companies must comply for their first fiscal year beginning on or after January 1, 2017. The rule provides companies with flexibility in calculating this pay ratio. For instance, a company may choose the methodology for identifying its median employee and that employee’s compensation. The pay ratio rule has come with extensive criticism. Many companies have reported problems with meeting the compliance requirements. Other companies have strongly argued that disclosing this ratio has little to do with whether investors will buy or sell shares of company stock. These concerns have prompted the SEC to review the rule.81

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Summarize the usual components of a total compensa-

tion plan and the environment of compensation practice. Total compensation represents both the intrinsic and extrinsic rewards employees receive for performing their jobs. Direct financial compensation (monetary compensa- tion) consists of the pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salaries, commissions, and bonuses. Indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) consists of all financial rewards that are not included in direct financial compensation. Nonfinancial compensation consists of the satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological or physical environment in which the person works. Direct financial compensation is set within a structure of three elements: job structures, competitive compensation policies, and pay structures. There are many factors that HR professionals must con- sider when building compensation programs. The most prominent considerations are labor markets, cost-of-living differences, labor unions, the economy, interindustry wage differentials, and a variety of legislation.

2. Explain the direct financial compensation practices. These practices include base pay (hourly wage and salary) and var- ious adjustments to base pay over time. The categories are cost-of-living adjustments, seniority pay, performance-based pay (merit pay and various types of incentive pay practices), and person-focused pay (including competency-based pay).

3. Discuss job structures and how they are established. Job evaluation is a process that determines the relative value of one job in relation to another. In the job evaluation rank- ing method, the raters examine the description of each job being evaluated and arrange the jobs in order according to their value to the company. The classification method involves defining several classes or grades to describe a group of jobs. In the factor comparison method, raters need not keep the entire job in mind as they evaluate; instead, they make decisions on separate aspects or factors of the job. In the point method, raters assign numerical values to specific job factors, such as knowledge required, and the sum of these values provides a quantitative assessment of a job’s relative worth.

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4. Summarize competitive pay policies: pay level and pay mix. Broadly, competitive pay policies refer to pay level and pay mix. Pay level choices include whether to lag, match, or lead the market pay rates, on average. Pay mix refers to the composition of an employee’s direct (monetary compensa- tion) and indirect (employee benefits) financial compensa- tion. Choices about how to structure pay (for example, base pay, short-term incentives, and employee benefits versus incentives and employee benefits) must be made.

5. Explain what pay structures are and how they are created. Pay structures represent pay rate differences for jobs of unequal worth and the framework for recognizing employee contributions. Pay structures result from an anal- ysis based on compensation survey work. Compensation surveys enable HR professionals to know the pay level and pay mixes of its competitors. Assigning dollar values to the company’s jobs is job pricing. Features of pay structures include pay grades and pay ranges. Pay grades refer to the grouping of similar jobs to simplify job pricing. Pay ranges

specify a minimum and maximum pay rate with enough variance between the two to allow for a significant pay dif- ference. Broadbanding and two-tier wage structures are alternative pay structure designs.

6. Review exceptions to the rules: compensation for sales representatives, contingent workers, and executives. Contingent workers are employed on the expectation of a defined term of employment. Most often, contingent workers receive less pay and employee benefits than work- ers who do not have an expectation of a defined term of employment. Designing compensation programs for sales employees involves unique considerations such as the for- mula for determining incentive payments. In determining executive compensation, firms typically prefer to relate salary growth for the highest-level managers to overall corporate performance. Executive compensation often has five basic elements: base salary, bonuses and performance- based pay, stock option plans, perquisites, and severance packages.

Key Terms total compensation 245 direct financial compensation (monetary

compensation) 246 indirect financial compensation

(employee benefits) 246 nonfinancial compensation 246 labor market 248 spillover effect 249 interindustry wage or compensation

differentials 249 exempt employees 251 nonexempt employees 251 base pay 252 hourly pay (wage) 252 salary 252 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) 252 real hourly compensation 252 nominal hourly compensation 252 seniority 252 seniority pay 252 human capital theory 253 human capital 253

General Schedule 253 merit pay 254 merit bonuses 254 spot bonuses 255 incentive pay 255 piecework 256 management incentive plans 256 behavioral encouragement plans 256 referral plans 256 gain sharing 258 Scanlon plan 258 profit sharing 259 employee stock plans 259 company stock 259 company stock shares 259 stock options 259 job-based pay 259 person-focused pay 259 skill-based pay 259 competency-based pay 260 job evaluation 260 job evaluation ranking method 260

classification method 260 factor comparison method 261 point method 261 compensation policy 261 pay level compensation policies 261 Pay mix compensation policies 261 market lead policies 262 market match policies 262 market lag policies 262 pay mix compensation policies 262 pay structures 263 compensation survey 263 pay grade 264 pay range 265 wage curve 265 broadbanding 265 two-tier wage systems 266 pay compression 267 clawback policy 268 perquisites (perks) 269 golden parachute contract 269 say on pay 270

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

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272 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

HRM Is Everyone’s Business HR professionals and other managers share the responsibility for building and maintaining pay structures that are most suitable for recognizing employee contributions. They should follow some general guidelines for building effective pay structures. Over time, companies will likely benefit from higher retention of high-performing employees.

Questions for Review 9-1. Define each of the following terms:

(a) compensation (b) direct financial compensation (c) indirect financial compensation (d) nonfinancial compensation

9-2. What are the contextual influences on direct financial compensation?

9-3. Discuss the determinants of direct financial compensation.

9-4. Discuss the difference between pay-for-performance and person-focused pay.

9-5. What are the differences between pay level and pay mix compensation policies?

9-6. How has government legislation affected compensation? 9-7. What is the difference between an exempt and a nonex-

empt employee? 9-8. Distinguish between the following job evaluation methods:

(a) ranking (b) classification (c) factor comparison (d) point method

9-9. Define job pricing. What is the purpose of job pricing? 9-10. Define pay grades. State the basic procedure for deter-

mining pay grades. 9-11. Define pay ranges. What is the purpose of establishing

pay ranges? 9-12. Define broadbanding. What is the purpose of using

broadbanding? 9-13. Distinguish between merit pay, bonus, spot bonuses,

and piecework. 9-14. Discuss the key issues that are associated with compen-

sating contingent workers. 9-15. What are some companywide pay plans? Briefly dis-

cuss each. 9-16. How is the compensation for sales representatives

determined? 9-17. Describe each of the following:

(a) say on pay (b) golden parachute contract (c) clawback policies

9-18. What are the various types of executive compensation?

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Sales Tactics at Wells Fargo Bank82

In September 2016, news about Wells Fargo Bank’s questionable sales practice made the headlines. It was esti- mated that more than 5,000 employees opened approximately 2 mil- lion bank accounts for customers who did not request them. The bank’s leadership claimed that the employees acted on their own volition, and they were subsequently fired. Many current and past employees claimed that Wells Fargo raised daily sales goals to unre- alistic levels, creating a high-pressure environment. Other employees talked about how managers regularly asked them about their prog- ress, focusing exclusively on the number of accounts opened rather than discussing appropriate sales techniques that could help employ- ees legitimately meet their quotas. When goals were not met, these

individuals alleged that they were threatened with formal written warnings and termination.

Many employees used fraudulent sales tactics to meet their sales quotas out of fear of receiving a bad employment reference; others could not afford to be unemployed even for a brief time. Apparently, employees who called the company’s ethics line to report their con- cerns were punished or fired. Even branch managers felt the pinch. Allegedly, high-ranking bank officials ordered employees to shred documents before auditor inspections.

9-19. What would you do? 9-20 What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less than ethical decision?

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HRM by the Numbers Pay Progression in a Job Classification Plan

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

The federal government’s General Schedule (GS) is an example of a job classification plan in which pay rates are based, in part, on compensable factors such as knowledge and skills. Jobs are grouped into 15 classifications, ranging from GS level 1 through GS level 15 as well as the level or degrees of compensable factors (e.g., follow procedures vs. establishing procedures). Over time, employees receive pay increases according to length of service (Steps 1-10) and progression through the steps assumes a minimum of acceptable performance. The pay increase from step to step equals the within-grade increase (WGI) amount. The waiting periods within steps are:

$ Steps 1-3: 1 year in each step $ Steps 4-6: 2 years in each step $ Steps 7-9: 3 years in each step

2017 General Schedule

Annual Rates by Grade and Step ($)

Grade Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 Step 7 Step 8 Step 9 Step 10 WITHIN GRADE INCREASE (WGI)

1 18,526 19,146 19,762 20,375 20,991 21,351 21,960 22,575 22,599 23,171 VARIES 2 20,829 21,325 22,015 22,599 22,853 23,525 24,197 24,869 25,541 26,213 VARIES 3 22,727 23,485 24,243 25,001 25,759 26,517 27,275 28,033 28,791 29,549 758 4 25,514 26,364 27,214 28,064 28,914 29,764 30,614 31,464 32,314 33,164 850 5 28,545 29,497 30,449 31,401 32,353 33,305 34,257 35,209 36,161 37,113 952 6 31,819 32,880 33,941 35,002 36,063 37,124 38,185 39,246 40,307 41,368 1,061 7 35,359 36,538 37,717 38,896 40,075 41,254 42,433 43,612 44,791 45,970 1,179 8 39,159 40,464 41,769 43,074 44,379 45,684 46,989 48,294 49,599 50,904 1,305 9 43,251 44,693 46,135 47,577 49,019 50,461 51,903 53,345 54,787 56,229 1,442 10 47,630 49,218 50,806 52,394 53,982 55,570 57,158 58,746 60,334 61,922 1,588 11 52,329 54,073 55,817 57,561 59,305 61,049 62,793 64,537 66,281 68,025 1,744 12 62,722 64,813 66,904 68,995 71,086 73,177 75,268 77,359 79,450 81,541 2,091 13 74,584 77,070 79,556 82,042 84,528 87,014 89,500 91,986 94,472 96,958 2,486 14 88,136 91,074 94,012 96,950 99,888 102,826 105,764 108,702 111,640 114,578 2,938 15 103,672 107,128 110,584 114,040 117,496 120,952 124,408 127,864 131,320 134,776 3,456

Action checklist for managers and HR—keeping the focus on employees as pay structures are built HR takes the lead

A single firm-wide pay structure is rarely sufficient to support differences in job functions. Relying on an understanding of the company’s strategic objectives and the role of various job structures, recommend separate pay structures such as ones for hourly workers and salaried workers or for business and occupational functions such as ones for engineering professionals and marketing professionals.

Partner with compensation specialists to group employees into pay grades that are determined by similarity in the work they produce; corresponding ranges will also be established for each grade.

HR professionals work with compensation specialists to conduct market analyses and certify that current employees are com- pensated in line with the competition.

Managers take the lead Communicate with HR regarding desired job-related behaviors in the employee population—HR and other managers work together to ensure that the compensation and benefits incentives are continuing to encourage the correct behaviors.

Employees will continue to progress within their pay grade, receiving pay increases (as determined by their managers in consultation with HR) commensurate with job performance attainments—compensation specialists will work with HR and managers to ensure that, with these pay increases, equity still exists in the grade and that the pay raise percentage increases correspond to levels of performance.

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Questions 9-21. Using the General Schedule, calculate the number of years it would take an employee to advance from her starting posi-

tion in Grade 11 (Step 1) to Step 10 if she is demonstrating acceptable performance. 9-22. Another employee asked what his salary would likely be after completing two additional years of service. This employee

just entered his first year in Grade 4 (Step 5). If he was to demonstrate acceptable performance, calculate the expected salary after completing two years of service.

9-23. All pay rates typically increase each year based on changes in the Consumer Price Index. Calculate the Grade 7 WGI amount based on an overall 3 percent increase.

I N C I D E N T 1 The Pay Gap at Barker Enterprise Roger Babbit is an administrative assistant at Barker Enterprise. For the past 12 years, he has been working for Maria Mendoza, Director of Human Resources, and they have developed a good working rapport. Roger’s cur- rent annual salary of $75,000 places him slightly higher than the midpoint of his salary range. His work has been consistently exemplary, earning the highest performance appraisal score every year. In addition, Roger regularly receives recognition rewards (a plaque and an Amazon.com gift certificate) for his willingness to go the extra mile. In fact, Roger is known for his trustworthiness, leading many coworkers to ask for career advice.

On a recent Monday morning, Maria introduced Roger to Bianca McCann, a newly hired administrative assistant in the marketing depart- ment. Roger offered to meet Bianca for lunch to share his positive expe- riences at Barker. During their conversation, Roger learned that Bianca earned her associate degree in administrative science from his alma mater where he earned the same degree 13 years ago. She graduated 2 years ago, and held a job as an administrative assistant at Madigan Manufacturing prior to joining Barker Enterprise. Bianca said that she enjoyed her work at Madigan, but was dissatisfied with the pay because of substantial student loan debt. Barker’s pay scale is substantially higher than Madigan’s, making it difficult to refuse a $70,000 salary offer.

Roger thought a lot about his conversation with Bianca, partic- ularly, the relatively small pay difference of $5,000, considering his

outstanding track record. He started to resent Bianca. Rather than let- ting his resentment get out of control, Roger made an appointment with Maria to discuss his concerns.

Maria listened carefully to Roger’s concerns. He stated the salary difference and went on to explain that he is a proven quantity given his consistent track record of top notch performance and many more years of work experience than Bianca possesses. Maria assured Roger that he is a highly valued employee and that the department would suffer if he were ever to leave the company. She also under- stood and openly acknowledged Roger’s perspective. Roger then asked Maria for a salary increase. Maria denied Roger’s request, telling him that there are many other similar pay gaps within the company and the salary budget could not accommodate making pay adjustments for everyone else in this situation. Surprised by Maria’s answer, Roger left her office pondering what his next steps should be.

Questions 9-26. Name and explain the issue underlying the pay gap between

Roger and Bianca. 9-27. What might be problems associated with withholding a pay

adjustment for Roger under these circumstances?

I N C I D E N T 2 The Controversial Job David Rhine, compensation manager for Farrington Lingerie Com- pany, was generally relaxed and good-natured. Although he was a no-nonsense, competent executive, David was one of the most popular

managers in the company. This Friday morning, however, David was not his usual self. As chairperson of the company’s job evaluation committee, he had called a late-morning meeting at which several

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives and come up with a team response. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

As a group, use O*NET (which we reviewed in Chapter 4) to select a job for further study. Start by browsing jobs in dif- ferent occupations (www.onetonline.org/find/). Next, from the find occupations drop down list, select job family. There, you will see 23 unique job families (occupations). Then, select a job family (click on the link for the chosen job family). Finally, select a job from the chosen job family (click on the link for the chosen job) and review the information contained in the detailed report.

9-24. Based on your understanding of the various components of direct financial compensation (Learning Objective 9-2), which approach is most fitting for recognizing job incumbents’ contributions? Explain.

9-25. Which approach is least fitting for the job? Explain.

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jobs were to be considered for re-evaluation. The jobs had already been rated and assigned to pay grade 3. But the office manager, Ben Butler, was upset that one was not rated higher. To press the issue, Ben had taken his case to two executives who were also members of the job evaluation committee. The two executives (production man- ager Bill Nelson and general marketing manager Betty Anderson) then requested that the job ratings be reviewed. Bill and Betty supported Ben’s side of the dispute, and David was not looking forward to the confrontation that was almost certain to occur.

The controversial job was that of receptionist. Only one recep- tionist position existed in the company, and Marianne Sanders held it. Marianne had been with the firm 12 years, longer than any of the committee members. She was extremely efficient, and virtually all the executives in the company, including the president, had noticed and commented on her outstanding work. Bill Nelson and Betty Anderson were particularly pleased with Marianne because of the cordial way she greeted and accommodated Farrington’s customers and vendors, who frequently visited the plant. They felt that Marianne projected a positive image of the company.

When the meeting began, David said, “Good morning. I know that you’re busy, so let’s get the show on the road. We have several

jobs to evaluate this morning and I suggest we begin . . . ” Before he could finish his sentence, Bill interrupted, “I suggest we start with Marianne.” Betty nodded in agreement. When David regained his com- posure, he quietly but firmly asserted, “Bill, we are not here today to evaluate Marianne. Her supervisor does that at performance appraisal time. We’re meeting to evaluate jobs based on job content. To do this fairly, regarding other jobs in the company, we must leave personalities out of our evaluation.” David then proceeded to pass out copies of the receptionist job description to Bill and Betty, who were obviously very irritated.

Questions 9-28. Do you feel that David was justified in insisting that the job,

not the person, be evaluated? Discuss. 9-29. Do you believe that there is a maximum rate of pay for every

job in an organization, regardless of how well the job is being performed? Justify your position.

9-30. Assume that Marianne is earning the maximum of the range for her pay grade. In what ways could she obtain a salary increase?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

9-31. Why is it important for HR professionals to understand legislation, labor unions, and interindustry wage differentials when establishing compensation programs?

9-32. Why might a firm want to be a pay leader as opposed to paying market rate?

Endnotes 1 Jen Schramm, “The Big Issues Facing HR,”

Society for Human Resource Management online (March 1, 2016). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www.shrm.org/hr-today/news/hr- magazine/0316/ pages/the-big-issues-facing-hr.aspx.

2 CNBC, “The 25 Highest-Paying Companies in America,” CNBC.com. Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.cnbc.com/2016/08/03/the-25-highest- paying-companies-in-america.html.

3 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

4 Ibid.; and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensa- tion—March 2014,” (USDL 14-1075). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

5 Adobe, “Careers/Engineering.” Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.adobe.com/careers/ engineering.html.

6 Jeffrey Sparshott, “The Short List of Jobs with High and Rising Pay,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 26, 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

7 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Information Secu- rity Analysts. Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2016-17 Edition. Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ooh/computer-and-information- technology/information-security-analysts.htm.

8 Joshua Jamerson, “Starbucks to Raise Wages Up to 15%,” The Wall Street Journal online (July 11, 2016). Accessed February 15, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

9 Laura Stevens, “How Amazon Gets Its Holiday Hires Up to Speed in Two Days,” The Wall Street Journal online (November 28, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

10 “Cost of living: How Far Will My Salary Go in Another City?” CNN Money online. Accessed February 28, 2017, at http://money.cnn.com/ calculator/pf/cost-of-living/.

11 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Consumer Price Index,” Accessed March 17, 2017, at www.bls.gov/cpi/.

12 Loren M. Solnick, “The Effect of the Blue Collar Unions on White Collar Wages and Benefits.” Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 38 (1985): 23–35.

13 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employment and Earnings,” (January 2017). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.bls.gov/opub/ ee/2017/ces/summarytable_201701.pdf.

14 Jane Osburn, “Interindustry Wage Differentials: Patterns and Possible Sources. Monthly Labor Review, February (2000): 34–46.

15 Tim Low, “Why It’s So Hard to Figure Out What to Pay Top Talent,” Harvard Business Review online (February 19, 2015). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

16 U.S. Department of Labor. Minimum Wage Laws in the States—January 1, 2017. Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.dol.gov/whd/ minwage/america.htm.

17 Eric Morath, “Minimum Wages Set to Increase in Many States in 2017,” The Wall Street J ournal online (December 30, 2016). Accessed February 3, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

18 Denise Martin, Stephanie Plancich, and Janeen McIntosh, “Trends in Wage and Hour Settlements: 2012 Update,” NERA Economic Consulting, Insight in Economics™ (March 12, 2013). Accessed September 4, 2013, at www.nera.com.

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19 Roger S. Achille, “FLSA Requires Education for Professional Exemption,” HR Magazine 55 (February 2010): 70.

20 S. Rep. No. 176, 88th Congress, 1st Session, 1 (1963).

21 Karin Agness, “Don’t Buy into the Gender Pay Gap Myth,” Forbes online (April 12, 2016). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

22 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employment and Earnings,” (January 2017). Accessed February 28, 2017, at: www.bls.gov/opub/ ee/2017/ces/summarytable_201701.pdf.

23 Joseph Cayer, Public Personnel Administra- tion in the United States. New York: St. Martin Press.

24 Gary Becker, Human Capital. New York: St. Martin Press, 1975.

25 “Compensation Programs and Practices Survey,” WorldatWork (August 2016). Accessed December 29, 2016, at www.worldatwork.org/ adimLink?id=80656.

26 “Study Says Pay for Performance Linked to Positive Results,” Report on Salary Surveys 11 (March 2011): 10–11.

27 Eric Krell, “All for Incentives, Incentives for All,” HR Magazine 56 (January 2011): 34–38.

28 Kathryn Tyler, “Design an Effective Rewards Program,” HR Magazine 56 (October 2011): 94.

29 Peck, C. (1984). Pay and Performance: The Interaction of Compensation and Performance Appraisal (Research Bulletin No. 155). New York: The Conference Board.

30 “Stuck Below,” Workspan (September 2016): 20-25.

31 “Pay for Performance,” Controller’s Report 2010 (January 2010): 6–8.

32 “Use Variable Pay to Promote Success in the Workplace,” HR Focus 87 (July 2010): 5–6.

33 “Compensation & Incentives: The Entitlement Era Is Over,” HR Magazine 57 (Special Supple- ment, SHRM 2012 HR Trend Book): 60.

34 “Raises Cut in ‘09, But Bonus Budgets Inch Up,” Treasury & Risk (September 2009): 8.

35 “Bonus Programs and Practices,” A Report by WorldatWork (July 2016). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.worldatwork.org.

36 Angie Herbers, “Bonus Babies,” Investment Advisor 30 (February 2010): 47–48.

37 “Bonus Programs and Practices,” A Report by WorldatWork (July 2016). Accessed January 5, 2017, at www.worldatwork.org.

38 Ibid. 39 “Compensation Programs and Practices,”

A Report by WorldatWork (August 2016). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www. worldatwork.org.

40 Drucker, P. (1954). The Practice of Management. New York: Harper.

41 “Inventory of Total Rewards Programs & Practices,” A Report by WorldatWork ( January 2017). Accessed March 9, 2017, at www. worldatwork.org.

42 Frank Gluck “Nursing Demand Driving Hospital Hiring Spree, Bonuses,” News-Press online (February 15, 2016). Accessed March 8, 2017, at www.news-press.com/story/news/ local/2016/02/15/nursing-demand-driving- hospital-hiring-spree-bonuses/80007832/.

43 Greene, R. J. (2007). Team incentives. In D. Scott (Ed.), Incentive Pay: Creating a

Competitive Advantage. Phoenix, AZ: Worldat- Work Press.

44 Matt Bloch, “Rewarding the Team,” HR Magazine 52 (February 2007): 91–93.

45 Belcher, J. G., Jr. “Gain Sharing and Variable Pay: The State of the Art.” Compensation & Benefits Review (May–June 1994): 50–60.

46 Joann Muller, “GM Factory Workers Take Home $12,000 Bonuses on Record 2016 North American Profits,” Forbes online (February 7, 2017). Accessed March 8, 2017, at www.forbes. com.

47 “Demand for Highly Skilled Labor Requires Effective Pay Strategy,” HR Focus 90 (March 2013): 8–9.

48 Mitra, Atul, Nina Gupta, N., and Jason D. Shaw, J. D. “A Comparative Examination of Traditional and Skill-Based Pay Plans.” Journal of Managerial Psychology 26 (April 2011): 278–296.

49 Nancy Hatch Woodward, “Matching Jobs with Pay,” 57 HR Magazine (May 2012): 55–58.

50 Jean Christofferson, “The Mayo Way . . . With Pay,” Workspan (February 2012): 19–23.

51 Lauren Weber, “What Is the Best Way to Pay Workers?” The Wall Street Journal online (August 2, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

52 “Biomedical Engineers,” Occupational Outlook Handbook (2016–2017 Edition). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

53 “Compensation Programs and Practices Survey,” WorldatWork (August 2016). Accessed December 29, 2016, at www.worldatwork.org/ adimLink?id=80656.

54 “Strategic Use of Pay Ranges Can Maximize a Tight Budget,” Report on Salary Surveys (May 2010): 8–9.

55 “Compensation Programs and Practices Survey,” WorldatWork (August 2016). Accessed December 29, 2016, at www.worldatwork.org/ adimLink?id=80656.

56 Frank L. Giancola, “A Framework for Under- standing New Concepts in Compensation Man- agement,” Benefits & Compensation Digest 46 (September 2009): 1–16.

57 Nick Bunkley, “Ford Finds Mixed Blessing in End of Tiered Wages,” Automotive News online (May 8, 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.autonews.com.

58 Scott Ladd, “May the Sales Force Be with You,” HR Magazine 55 (September 2010): 105–107.

59 U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Contingent Workforce: Size, Characteristics, Earnings, and Benefits,” Report: GAO-15-168R (April 20, 2015). Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.gao.gov/assets/670/669766.pdf.

60 Ibid. 61 Nancy Hatch Woodward, “Part-Time Benefits:

A Moving Target,” HR Magazine 57 (November 2012): 61–64.

62 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employee Benefits in the United States—March 2017,” USDL: 17-1013. Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

63 John Simons, “CEOs Enjoy Rich Perks,” The Wall Street Journal online (December 6, 2016). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www .wsj.com.

64 Susan R. Holmberg and Lydia Austin, “Fixing a Hole: How the Tax Code for Executive Pay Distorts Economic Incentives and Burdens Taxpayers.” Accessed September 4, 2013, at http://rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ big-ideas/fixing-hole-how-tax-code-executive- pay-distorts-economic-incentives.

65 “Executive Pay Recovers Heartily in 2010, Three Surveys Find,” Report on Salary Surveys 11 (June 2011): 1–5.

66 “One in Nine CEOs Are Paid without Ties to Performance,” Equilar Blog (January 6, 2017). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.equilar.com/ blogs/199-one-in-nine-ceos-are-paid-without- ties.html.

67 Emily Glazer and Austen Hufford, “Wells Fargo: Top Executives Won’t Get Cash Bonus for 2016,” The Wall Street Journal online (March 1, 2017). Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

68 Mina Ahmed, “An Update on Executive Perquisite Trends in the S&P 500,” Executive Compensation Bulletin (February 17, 2016). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www. towerswatson.com/en-US/Insights/Newsletters/ Global/executive-pay-matters/2016/Executive- Compensation-Bulletin-Update-Executive- Perquisite-Trends-SP-500.

69 Emily Glazer and Austen Hufford, “Wells Fargo: Top Executives Won’t Get Cash Bonus for 2016,” The Wall Street Journal online (March 1, 2017). Accessed March 2, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

70 Mina Ahmed, “An Update on Executive Perquisite Trends in the S&P 500,” Executive Compensation Bulletin (February 17, 2016). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www. towerswatson.com/en-US/Insights/Newsletters/ Global/executive-pay-matters/2016/Executive- Compensation-Bulletin-Update-Executive- Perquisite-Trends-SP-500.

71 “Which S&P 500 Execs Received the Largest Aircraft and Auto Perks?” Equilar Blog (January 20, 2017). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www. equilar.com/blogs/205-500-execs-received- largest-aircraft-and-auto-perks.html.

72 William G. Ruffner, “The Golden Parachute Paradox,” Pennsylvania CPA Journal 82 (Summer 2011): 1.

73 Brad Tuttle, “Why Disgraced CEOs Get Insanely Generous Payout Packages When They’re Fired,” Money online (September 11, 2015). Accessed March 2, 2017, at http:// time.com/money/4031287/united-jeff-smisek- scandal-ceo-severance-package/.

74 David Lynn, “Implementing Say-On-Pay in 2011,” Corporate Board 32 (July/August 2011): 17–20.

75 Semler Brossy, “Say on Pay Results,” (July 17, 2013). Accessed September 4, 2013, at www. semlerbrossy.com/sayonpay.

76 Dori Meinert, “High CEO Pay Leads to Lower Shareholder Support,” 57 HR Magazine (May 2012): 18.

77 Melissa Klein Aguilar, “Lack of Investor Support for Less-Frequent Say-on-Pay Votes,” Compliance Week 8 (April 2011): 9–10.

78 Semler Brossy, “Say on Pay Results,” (July 17, 2013). Accessed September 4, 2013, at www. semlerbrossy.com/sayonpay. “Company Dinged

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for Failure to Disclose CEO Perks,” Compliance Week 8 (March 2011): 8–10.

79 John K. Wilson and Joshua A. Agen, “Say on Pay Best Practices for 2012,” Corporate Board 33 (March/April 2012): 6–10.

80 Semler Brossy, “Say on Pay Results,” (July 31, 2013). Accessed September 4, 2013, at www. semlerbrossy.com/sayonpay. Arielle Bikard, “Say-on-Pay Losses Catch HP, Others Off Guard,” Compliance Week 8 (June 2011): 44–45.

81 Benjamin Bain, “Pay Ratio Rule That CEROs Hate is Getting a Fresh Look at the SEC,” Bloomberg online (February 6, 2017). Accessed March 8, 2017, at www.bloomberg.com.

82 Sources Referenced: Emily Glazer, “Wells Fargo Fires Four Executives Following Probe of Sales-Practices Scandal,” The Wall Street Journal online (February 21, 2017). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com; Ariel Zambelich, “Former Wells Fargo Employees Describe Toxic Sales Culture, Even at HQ,”

National Public Radio online (October 4, 2016). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.npr. org; Geoff Colvin, “The Wells Fargo Scandal Is Now Reaching VW Proportions,” Fortune online (January 26, 2017). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www.fortune.com; Michael Corkery and Stacy Cowley, “Wells Fargo Warned Work- ers Against Sham Accounts, but ‘They Needed a Paycheck,”’ The New York Times online (September 16, 2016). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www.nytimes.com.

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278

10 Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

10.1 Define indirect financial compensation (employee benefits).

10.2 Describe legally required benefits and the various kinds.

10.3 Define discretionary benefits and explain the various types.

10.4 Explain workplace flexibility (work–life balance).

10.5 Describe customized benefits plans.

10.6 Summarize the issues of communicating information about benefits plans.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 10 Warm-Up.

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279

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: In Chapter 9, we considered the importance of monetary compensation, which contributes to recruitment and retention of highly qualified employees. Assorted surveys reveal the same for employee benefits. For instance, an Employee Benefit Research Institute survey revealed that 77 percent of employees said that a company’s benefits package is either very important or extremely important in their decision to accept or reject a job offer.1 In a Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) survey, human resource (HR) professionals reported changing benefits packages to promote retention. For example, 61 percent made changes to health care benefits, 31 percent modified flexible work arrangements, and 25 percent adjusted retirement savings and planning benefits.2

Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) Most organizations recognize that they have a responsibility to their employees to provide certain benefits such as insurance and other programs for their health, safety, security, and general welfare (see Figure 10-1). Indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) consists of all financial rewards not included in direct financial compensation. These rewards typically account for about 30 percent of a firm’s financial compensation costs. As stated in Chapter 9, in March 2017, com- panies spent on average, $35.28 per hour worked per employee for wages and employee benefits for all civilian workers. Of this total, companies spent $24.10 on wages and $11.18 on all employee benefits.3 Benefits accounted for 31.6 percent of total compensation costs. The increase in the cost of employee benefits was greater, equalling 12.6 percent.4 The most expensive benefit was health insurance, which cost $2.94 per hour worked for each employee.5

As a rule, employees receive benefits because of their membership in the organization. Ben- efits are typically unrelated to employee productivity; therefore, although they may be valuable

10.1 Define indirect financial compensation (employee benefits).

indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) All financial rewards that are not included in direct financial compensation.

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280 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

in recruiting and retaining employees, they do not generally serve as motivation for improved performance.6 For instance, excellent performers do not receive more comprehensive health insur- ance coverage than average performers.

Employee benefits derive from two broad sources. First, the U.S. federal government requires that most employers contribute so that employees can receive certain benefits. We refer to these items as legally required benefits. Laws such as the Social Security Act of 1935 mandate a variety of programs designed to provide income to retired workers, disability income, survivor benefits, and health care for older Americans; and, these programs are administered by federal government agencies. Legally required benefits can take other forms such as workers’ compensation insurance, which the employer purchases and administers. Moreover, some cities and states have legislation that enhance federal government benefits such as paid sick leave. Sec- ond, companies may choose to offer additional benefits on a discretionary basis—for example, educational benefits and retirement savings plans. We refer to choice benefits as discretionary benefits. Discretionary benefits are benefit payments made because of unilateral management decisions in non-union firms and from labor-management negotiations in unionized firms.

FIGURE 10-1 Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits) Financial Nonfinancial

Direct Indirect (Benefits) The Job Meaningful Appreciated Satisfying learning Enjoyable Challenging

Job Environment Sound Policies Capable Managers Competent Employees Congenial Co-workers Appropriate Status Symbols Working Conditions

Workplace Flexibility Flextime Compressed Workweek Job Sharing Telecommuting Part-Time Work

EXTERNAl ENVIRONMENT

INTERNAl ENVIRONMENT

Compensation

Legally Required Benefits Health Care Social Security Unemployment Compensation Workers‘ Compensation Discretionary Benefits Paid Time-Off life Insurance Retirement Plans disability Protection Employee Stock Option Plans Employee Services Premium Pay

☛ F Y I The cost of employee benefits differs for the government and private sectors (per hour worked for each employee):

$ Local and state government: $17.90 ($2.68 for legally required benefits; $15.22 for discretionary benefits);

$ Private sector: $10.06 ($2.60 for legally required benefits; $7.46 for discretionary benefits).7

Legally Required Benefits The U.S. government established programs to protect individuals from catastrophic events such as disability and unemployment. Legally required benefits are protection programs that attempt to promote worker safety and health, maintain family income streams, and assist families in crisis. The cost of legally required benefits to employers is quite high. As of March 2017, U.S. compa- nies spent an average of $5,408 per employee annually to provide legally required benefits.8 HR staffs and compensation professionals must follow a variety of laws as they develop and imple- ment programs.

Legally required benefits historically provided a form of social insurance. Prompted largely by the rapid growth of industrialization in the United States in the early 19th and 20th centuries

10.2 Describe legally required benefits and the various kinds.

HR Web Wisdom

Employee Benefits www.ifebp.org

It is important to stay abreast of the latest developments in employee benefits practice.

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and the Great Depression of the 1930s, initial social insurance programs were designed to mini- mize the possibility that individuals who became unemployed or severely injured while working would become destitute. In addition, social insurance programs aimed to stabilize the well-being of dependent family members of injured or unemployed individuals. Furthermore, early social insurance programs enabled retirees to maintain subsistence income levels. These intents of legally required benefits remain intact today.

The most substantial legally required benefits include various kinds of Social Security ben- efits, unemployment insurance, workers’ compensation, and employer-sponsored health care.

Social Security The Social Security Act of 1935 created a retirement benefits program. Amendments to the act added other forms of protection, such as disability insurance (1965) and survivors’ benefits (1939). The acronym—OASDI—stands for the Old-Age (that is, retirement), Survivor, and Disability Insurance programs. The government instituted Medicare in 1965.

Disability insurance protects employees against loss of earnings resulting from total incapacity. Survivors’ benefits provide family members with payments when the employee dies. Family members include the widow or widower and unmarried children. Unmarried children may be eligible for survivors’ benefits until they are 18-years-old. In some cases, students retain eligibility until they are 19. Medicare provides hospital and medical insurance protection for individuals 65 years of age and older and for those who have become disabled at an earlier age.

The Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) requires that employees and employers pay a portion of the cost of OASDI and Medicare coverage. Both the employer and employee each pay 6.2 percent of an employee’s pay for the Social Security portion and 1.45 percent for Medi- care. FICA and Medicare (or HI for hospital insurance) designations in paychecks refer to these deductions. Self-employed individuals pay the entire amount (15.3 percent). The Social Security rate applies up to a maximum taxable wage of $127,200, which is subject to increase each year. Annual pay above the taxable wage base is not subject to FICA tax. The rate for Medicare applies to all earnings. Approximately 95 percent of the workers in this country pay into and may draw Social Security benefits. In 2017, approximately 61 million people were receiving at least one type of Social Security benefit.9

The age for receiving full Social Security retirement benefits is increasing slowly until it reaches 67. These changes will not affect Medicare, with full eligibility under this program hold- ing at age 65.

Unemployment Insurance Unemployment insurance provides workers whose jobs have been terminated through no fault of their own monetary payments until they find a new job, up to 26 weeks. The basic program is state-run with oversight from the U.S. Department of Labor. States pay the benefits; the federal government pays the states for administrative costs. Employers pay the Federal Unemployment Tax at a rate of 6.0 percent (2017 rate) on the first $7,000 each employee earns. The permanent Extended Benefits Program provides an additional 13 or 20 weeks of compensation to workers who exhaust basic benefits in states where unemployment has worsened.

The intent of unemployment payments is to provide an unemployed worker time to find a new job equivalent to the one lost without suffering financial distress. Without this benefit, workers might have to take jobs for which they are underqualified. Unemployment compensation also serves to sustain consumer spending during periods of economic adjustment. In the United States, both federal and state statutes established unemployment insurance programs, and although the federal government provides guidelines, states administer them, and therefore benefits vary by state. Unlike Social Security retirement and Medicare benefits, only the employer pays unem- ployment tax.

Workers’ Compensation Self-employment and the employment of family members was common in agriculture-based economies. The industrialized economy, in contrast, mainly entailed ownership of manufacturing facilities that employed scores of workers. Many workers became seriously ill or injured while

unemployment insurance Provides workers whose jobs have been terminated through no fault of their own monetary payments for up to 26 weeks, or until they find a new job.

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performing their jobs due to the absence of health and safety regulations. (The U.S. Congress passed the Occupational Safety and Health Act [OSHA] in the early 1970s.) In the 1800s and early 1900s, seriously injured and ill workers had virtually no recourse, because social insur- ance programs to protect injured and ill workers were nonexistent.10 Thus, these workers faced impoverishment.

Workers’ compensation provides a degree of financial protection for employees who incur expenses resulting from job-related accidents or illnesses in the form of coverage of rehabilitation costs and temporary or permanent partial income replacement based on severity. As with unem- ployment insurance compensation, the various states administer individual programs, which are subject to federal regulations. Employers pay the entire cost of workers’ compensation insurance, and their experience with job-related accidents and illnesses largely determines their premium expense. These circumstances should provide further encouragement to employers to be proactive with health and safety programs.

Health Care Until the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA or ACA) of 2010, companies chose whether to offer health care plans. Since then, most must provide employees with affordable health care options. Failure to provide affordable health coverage results in costly penalties. We will discuss the ACA later in this section.

As noted earlier, health care coverage represents the most expensive employee benefit. In fact, according to data from the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, the United States spends more per person on health care than any other country.11 These costs threaten to go even higher.12 The Office of Management and Budget indicated that the United States spent more than $3.2 trillion in health care per year in health-care costs.13 Costs will likely increase 5.8 percent annually through 2025. Some companies have reduced or eliminated salary increases or bonuses, or both, to provide increasingly expensive medical benefits for employees.

A few factors have combined to create the high cost of health care:

$ An aging population $ A growing demand for medical care $ Increasingly expensive medical technology

Companies can choose from the following ways to provide health-care coverage, and larger companies usually offer more than one option:

$ Fee-for-service plans $ Alternative managed care plans $ Any health-care plan associated with consumer-driven health care

FEE-FOR-SERVICE PLANS Fee-for-service plans provide protection against health care expenses in the form of a cash benefit paid to the insured or directly to the health care provider after the employee has received health care services. That is, these plans pay benefits on a reimbursement basis. Three types of eligible health expenses are hospital expenses, surgical expenses, and physician charges. Under fee-for-service plans, policyholders (employees) may generally select any licensed physician, surgeon, or medical facility for treatment.

Fee-for-service plans contain a variety of stipulations designed to control costs and to limit a covered individual’s financial liability. Some of the common fee-for-service stipulations include deductibles, coinsurance, out-of-pocket maximums, and maximum benefits limits. We will con- sider some of these features. Over a designated period, employees must pay for services before the insurance plan begins to pay for services. This feature is referred to as a deductible. The deductible is usually a fixed amount ranging anywhere between $100 and $6,000 depending on the plan. Deductible amounts may also depend on annual earnings, expressed either as a fixed amount for a range of earnings or as a percentage of income.

Most insurance plans feature coinsurance, which becomes relevant after the insured pays the deductible. Coinsurance refers to the percentage of covered expenses paid by the insured. Most fee-for-service plans stipulate 20 percent coinsurance. This means that the plan will pay 80 percent of covered expenses, whereas the policyholder is responsible for the difference, in this case, 20 percent up to an out-of-pocket maximum amount.

workers’ compensation Provides a degree of financial protection for employees who incur expenses resulting from job- related accidents or illnesses.

fee-for-service plans Insurance protection for three types of medical expenses: hospital expenses, surgical expenses, and physician’s charges.

deductible Over a designated period, employees must pay for services before the insurance plan begins to pay for services.

coinsurance The percentage of covered expenses paid by the insured. Most fee-for-service plans stipulate 20 percent coinsurance. This means that the insured will pay 20 percent of covered expenses, whereas the insurance company pays the remaining 80 percent.

out-of-pocket maximum The maximum amount an employee pays for health care during a calendar or plan year.

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MANAGED CARE PLANS Managed care plans emphasize cost control by limiting an employee’s choice of doctors and hospitals. The most common is Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO). HMOs provide prepaid medical services because fixed periodic enrollment fees cover HMO members for all medically necessary services only if the HMO approves or delivers services. HMOs generally provide hospital care, as well as services from physicians, surgeons, and other health care professionals.

HMO plans share several features in common with fee-for-service plans; however, HMOs differ from fee-for-service plans in three important ways. First, HMOs offer prepaid services, whereas fee-for-service plans operate on a reimbursement basis. Second, HMOs include the use of primary care physicians as a cost-control measure. Third, managed care plans rely on copay- ments rather than coinsurance to describe cost sharing between patients and insurance companies. Copayments refer to fixed amounts that vary by the service. For example, the copayment to visit the primary care physician tends to be lowest (e.g., $20) and emergency room visits are usually most expensive (e.g., $250).

HMOs designate some of their physicians, usually general or family practitioners, as primary care physicians. HMOs assign each member to a primary care physician or require each member to choose one. Primary care physicians determine when patients need the care of specialists. HMOs use primary care physicians to control costs by significantly reducing the number of unnecessary visits to specialists.

CONSUMER-DRIVEN HEALTH CARE PLANS Managed care plans became popular alternatives to fee-for-service plans mainly to help employers and insurance companies more effectively manage the costs of health care. As discussed, managed care plans by design imposed substantial restrictions on an employee’s ability to make choices about from whom they could receive medical treatment—the gatekeeper role of primary care physicians—and the level of benefits they could receive based on designated in- and non-network providers.

Despite the cost control objectives of managed care, health care costs have continued to rise dramatically over the years while also restricting employee choice. Companies continue to find better ways to control the costs of health insurance. Increasingly, companies are adopting a consumer-driven health-care plan (CDHP) approach. This approach refers to the objective of helping companies maintain control over costs while also enabling employees to make wise choices about their health care. High-deductible health insurance plans (HDHPs) require sub- stantially higher deductibles compared to managed care plans and traditional fee-for-service plans. What exactly distinguishes an HDHP from traditional health-care plans? For employee-only cov- erage, the minimum annual deductible is $1,300 with a maximum out-of-pocket limit at or below $6,550 in 2017. For family coverage, the deductible is $2,600 with a maximum out-of-pocket limit at or below $13,100. Generally, deductibles and copayments count toward the maximum out-of-pocket limit. Membership in these plans has increased steadily since 2006—from 7 percent to 28 percent in 2015.14 They are a good way for employers to provide the same caliber of benefits to their employees while also reducing premiums and involving employees in managing the cost of coverage.

Companies may choose to combine a HDHP with a health savings account (HSA). An HSA is a tax-free health spending and savings account available to individuals and families who have qualified high-deductible health insurance policies as determined by government regulations. HSAs are an important tool in the search to change consumers’ health care spending behaviors and better manage health costs. It gives individuals a stake in managing their own health care dollars. Individuals and their employers deposit up to $6,550 a year in a pretax account to pay for deductibles for doctor visits, prescriptions, and other health expenses, as well as saving for future and long-term medical expenses. HSA-eligible health plans typically have lower premiums than other plans because of their higher deductibles. Another advantage is that even if a worker takes another job, the HSA stays with that individual.15

LEGISLATION PERTAINING TO HEALTH CARE With the high cost of medical care, an individual without health care insurance is vulnerable. The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) of 1985 gives employees the opportunity to continue their coverage temporarily, which they would otherwise lose because of termination, layoff, or other changes in employment status. The act applies to employers with 20 or more employees. Under COBRA, individuals may keep their coverage, as well as coverage for their spouses and dependents, for up to 18 months after

managed care plans Health care delivery that emphasizes cost control by limiting an employee’s choice of doctors and hospitals. These plans also provide protection against health care expenses in the form of prepayment to health care providers.

prepaid medical services HMOs are sometimes described as providing prepaid medical services because fixed periodic enrollment fees cover HMO members for all medically necessary services only if the services are delivered or approved by the HMO.

copayments Fixed amount paid for medical services and the amount varies by type of service.

primary care physicians Designated by HMOs to determine whether patients require the care of a medical specialist. This functions to control costs by reducing the number of medically unnecessary visits to expensive specialists.

consumer-driven health care Refers to the objective of helping companies maintain control over costs while also enabling employees to make greater choices about health care.

high-deductible health insurance plans Plans that require substantially higher deductibles compared to managed care plans and traditional fee-for-service plans.

health savings account (HSA) Tax-free health spending and savings accounts available to individuals and families who have qualified high-deductible health insurance policies as determined by IRS regulation.

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their employment ceases. Certain qualifying events can extend this coverage for up to 36 months. The individual, however, must pay for this health insurance.

The Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA), the 1990 amendment to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, placed additional restrictions on employer benefits practices. For instance, under certain circumstances, employers can require older employees to pay more for health care, disability, or life insurance than younger employees because these benefits gener- ally become costlier with age; older workers may be more likely to incur serious illnesses, thus, insurance companies may charge employers higher rates.

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996 ensures that indi- viduals will have ready access to coverage under a subsequent employer’s health plan, regardless of their health or claims experience. In addition, HIPAA protects the transfer, disclosure, and use of health-care information. HIPAA requires written approval before a person’s health care provider shares information with others.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA or ACA) of 2010, is often called “ObamaCare,” named after former President Barack Obama who championed the law. The law created considerable political debate because it effectively reshaped major portions of the health care industry in the United States.16 The act is based on the idea that when more people have health insurance—young, healthy people in addition to older, sicker people—risk will be spread out and costs will come down. Following are some of the major features of the law:

$ All individuals are required to have health insurance coverage if they do not receive health coverage through their employer. Those who choose not to have insurance will pay a penalty.

$ Employers are required to offer employees affordable health insurance or pay a penalty. Coverage is excessive if an employee premium contribution is above 9.5 percent of family income. To handle this situation, some companies are considering offering wage-based pre- miums where lower-wage earners pay less than those who are more highly paid.17

$ Children can stay on their parents’ policy until they are 26. $ Insurance companies cannot cancel a policy if the insured gets sick. $ An insurance company cannot deny coverage simply because of a pre-existing condition,

which is a medical condition for which a diagnosis was made or treatment given prior to enrolling in a health-care plan.

$ There is no maximum limit on insurance coverage. $ Pre-existing conditions are covered immediately.

It may appear odd to have a topic regarding smoke-free workplaces in the chapter on benefits, but the ACA justifies the placement. Insurance companies may charge tobacco users up to one and a half times the price that a nonuser pays for the same insurance plan. The law permits charging different rates because it is well documented that smokers increase health care costs because they tend to be ill more than nonsmokers are. The following paragraphs highlight the cost of smoking to organizations.

Ann Skye, wellness manager at Quintiles Transnational Corporation, said, “Smoking is the number one culprit in poor health, and its negative effects are indisputable. We feel it would be irresponsible for any employee wellness program not to aggressively address tobacco use.”18 Smoking is the biggest factor in controllable health care costs. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable death in this country, accounting for roughly 480,000 deaths.19 Numerous studies have concluded that workplace smoking is not only hazardous to employees’ health, but also detrimental to the firm’s financial health. Statistics show that cigarette smoking costs $156 billion in productivity losses in the workplace annually.20 Employees who smoke consume more health-care resources, experience greater absenteeism, and tend to be less productive while at work.

Employers have grown increasingly intolerant of smokers and many workplaces are smoke- free, although about 36.5 million Americans continue to smoke.21 Even though some smokers remain adamant that passive cigarette smoke is not harmful, the Surgeon General has concluded that there is no safe level of secondhand smoke exposure. The evidence that secondhand tobacco smoke causes serious harm becomes more concrete every day and may be an under-recognized cause of heart attack deaths. Having smoke-free workplace policies helps to fulfill an employer’s legal obligation to provide a safe workplace under the Occupational Safety and Health Act’s general duty clause, which requires organizations to furnish a workplace free from recognized hazards that

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are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm. The policy also reduces the risk of litigation, potentially reduces workers’ compensation premiums, and protects employees from harm.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, 50,000 people die from exposure to second- hand smoke each year.22 A study released by the University of Minnesota Cancer Center revealed that nonsmoking employees had up to 25 times more nicotine in their bodies on days when they worked in restaurants and bars than on days they were not at work.23

Recently, companies are also using penalties against workers for unhealthy behaviors. The most common penalty is higher premium benefits and increased deductibles. At PepsiCo, smokers pay an annual $600 insurance surcharge, and Gannett Publishing charges an additional $60 per month. Some business owners have taken a personal stand against smoking in general, not just smoking in the workplace. Alaska Airlines, Union Pacific, and Turner Broadcasting have refused to hire smokers for more than 20 years.24 Four employees from Weyco, a firm that manages benefit plans for workers on behalf of other companies, were fired after refusing to take a nicotine test to determine whether they had smoked. President Howard Weyers said, “Some call this a violation of privacy, pointing to the principle that what you do in your own home is your own business. But they forget the part about so long as it doesn’t harm anyone else.”25 There potentially may be a problem with such a policy because 30 states and the District of Columbia have “lifestyle” statutes that limit an employer’s ability to make adverse employment decisions based on what employees or applicants do while off duty. Some of those statutes may prevent an employer from terminating an employee or refusing to hire an applicant who smokes.26

Discretionary Benefits Discretionary benefits are benefit payments made because of unilateral management decisions in non-union firms and from labor–management negotiations in unionized firms. An employee’s desire for a specific benefit may change, requiring organizations to check the pulse of its workforce to determine the most sought after benefits. Discretionary benefits fall into three broad categories: protection programs, paid time off, and services. Protection programs provide family benefits, pro- mote health, and guard against income loss caused by such catastrophic factors as unemployment, disability, or serious illnesses. Paid time off provides employees time off with pay for such events as vacation or holidays. Services provide such enhancements as tuition reimbursement and day-care assistance to employees and their families.

As we noted, social maladies prompted some federal and state legislation that created employee benefits. Quite different from these reasons are other factors that have contributed to the rise in discretionary benefits.

Most discretionary benefits originated in the 1940s and 1950s. During both World War II and the Korean War, the federal government mandated that companies not increase employees’ wages or salaries, but it did not place restrictions on companies’ employee benefits expenditures. Companies invested in expanding their offerings of discretionary benefits as an alternative to pay hikes as a motivational tool to enhance worker productivity.

Separate from the benevolence of employers, employee unions directly contributed to the increase in employee welfare practices through the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) of 1935, which legitimized bargaining for employee benefits. Union workers tend to participate more in benefits plans than do non-union employees (94 percent versus 66 percent).27 Unions also indirectly contributed to the rise in benefits offerings because non-union companies often fashion employment practices after union companies as an approach to minimize the chance that employees will seek union representation and may offer employees benefits that are comparable to the benefits received by employees in union settings.

10.3 Define discretionary bene- fits and explain the various types.

discretionary benefits Benefit payments made because of unilateral management decisions in non-union firms and from labor–management negotiations in unionized firms.

☛ F Y I Access to employee benefits differs based on full- and part-time work status:

Health Retirement Life Insurance Vacation

Full time 88% 81% 75% 87% Part time 19% 38% 13% 35%28

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Retirement Plans Retirement income security is a major concern to individuals of all ages, but particularly to the members of the baby boom generation who are entering retirement in unprecedented numbers. Individuals rely on three sources for retirement income. Employer-sponsored retirement plans provide employees with income after they have met a minimum retirement age and have left the company. Second, as we discussed previously in this chapter, the Social Security OASDI program provides government-mandated retirement income to employees who have made sufficient contributions through payroll taxes. Third, individuals may use their initiative to take advantage of tax regulations that have created such retirement programs as individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and Roth IRAs. Our focus will be on employer-sponsored retire- ment plans.

According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, the first plan in the United States, established in 1759, benefited widows and children of Presbyterian ministers.29 Then, in the pri- vate sector, the American Express Company established a formal pension plan in 1875. Plans were adopted primarily in the railroad, banking, and public utility industries, and eventually became increasingly popular in the private sector. It is believed that more and more companies adopted retirement plans to attract and retain employees. Nevertheless, there were limits to which com- panies chose to retain employees. Approximately 30 years of service qualifies an employee for retirement benefits, and the mandatory retirement age was 65 in most states during the early twen- tieth century. According to economics professor Joanna Short, “Because of the lengthy service requirement and mandatory retirement provision, firms viewed pensions to reduce labor turnover and as a more humane way to remove older, less productive employees.”30 The most significant growth occurred after the government granted favorable tax treatment through the passage of the Revenue Act of 1921 and the Revenue Act of 1928. During World War II, government-imposed wage controls led companies to adopt discretionary employee benefits plans, which were excluded from those wage increase restrictions. As we will see in Chapter 11, the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 instituted retirement plans as a mandatory subject of bargaining subject between unions and management. This requirement contributed substantially to the growth of retirement plans in the union work setting.

As noted, tax incentives encourage companies to offer pension programs. Some of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 provisions set the minimum standards required to “qualify” pension plans for favorable tax treatment. Failure to meet any of the minimum standard provisions “disqualifies” pension plans for favorable tax treatment. Qualified plans meet these minimum standards. Nonqualified plans refer to pension plans that do not meet at least one of the minimum standard provisions; typically, highly paid employees benefit from participation in nonqualified plans.

One of the minimum standards is vesting. Vesting refers to an employee’s non-forfeitable rights to retirement plan benefits.31 Keep in mind that an employee always possesses ownership of their contributions and any investment gains (accrued benefit). Vesting applies to the employer’s accrued contribution on your behalf. Some employers may grant vesting rights immediately; however, most follow the ERISA guidelines. There are two options: cliff vesting schedule or 6-year graduated schedule. Under a cliff vesting schedule employers must grant employees 100 percent vesting after no more than three service years. That is, after 3 years of participation in the retirement plan, an employee has the right to receive all the accrued employer’s contributions made on your behalf. Leaving one’s job prior to vesting under this schedule is the same as falling off a cliff—an employee loses all the accrued employer contributions. On the other hand, compa- nies may use a graduated vesting schedule. The 6-year graduated schedule allows workers to become 20 percent vested after 2 years and to vest at a rate of 20 percent each year thereafter until they are 100 percent vested after 6 years of service.

Companies establish retirement plans following one of three design configurations: defined benefit plans, defined contribution plans, or hybrid plans that combine features of traditional defined benefit and defined contribution plans. We will review each type next.

DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS A defined benefit plan is a formal retirement plan that provides the participant with a life-long fixed benefit throughout retirement. Although defined benefit formulas vary, typical factors include the participant’s final years’ average salary, years of service, and age. These generous plans provide 50 to 80 percent of an employee’s final earnings. For instance, assume

qualified plans Welfare and pension plans that meet various requirements set forth by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974; these plans entitle employees and employers to favorable tax treatment by deducting the contributions from taxable income. Qualified plans do not disproportionately favor highly compensated employees.

nonqualified plans Welfare and pension plans that do not meet various requirements set forth by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), disallowing favorable tax treatment for employee and employer contributions.

vesting An employee’s non-forfeitable rights to retirement plan benefits.

cliff vesting schedule Employers must grant employees 100 percent vesting after no more than three service years.

6-year graduated schedule Workers become 20 percent vested after 2 years and to vest at a rate of 20 percent each year thereafter until they are 100 percent vested after 6 years of service.

defined benefit plan Retirement plan that provides the participant with a fixed benefit throughout retirement.

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that a person’s final average annual earnings are $50,000 in a plan that pays 50 percent. She or he would earn annual benefit equaling $25,000. Use of defined benefit plans has substantially declined in recent years. In 2015, only 15 percent of employees participated in defined benefit plans.32 There are two key reasons for this low participation rate. First, the employer must ensure payment of benefits to retirees. In some years, larger contributions are required based on the level of investment performance. Second, longer life expectancies have contributed to the costliness of these plans.

DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS The most popular option is the defined contribution with 44 percent employee participation.33 A defined contribution plan permits employees to contribute to their accounts based on a chosen percentage of annual pay. At their discretion, the company makes matching contributions, which we will review shortly. Most Fortune 100 companies offer employees only a defined contribution plan. Employees know in advance how much employers will contribute to a defined contribution plan; the amount of retirement income from a defined contribution plan will depend on the investment success of the investment fund.

There is a variety of defined contribution plans. The most common is the 401(k) plan. A 401(k) plan is a defined contribution plan in which employees may defer income up to a maximum amount allowed. Sometimes, the employer chooses to add to employees’ 401(k) accounts. A matching contribution is money the employer deposits into an employee’s defined contribution account contingent on the employee contributing first. For instance, assume that an employer contributes 50 cents for each dollar contributed by an employee. Also, assume that an employee has an annual salary of $100,000 and contributes 10 percent to his or her defined contribution account ($10,000). Based on this match policy, the company would deposit $5,000 into the employee’s account (50 percent * $10,000). You will have the opportunity to explore matching contributions in the HR by the Numbers feature at the end of this chapter.

CASH BALANCE PLANS For some organizations, a hybrid arrangement may be the desired approach to retirement plans. A cash balance plan is a plan with elements of both defined benefit and defined contribution plans. During economic recessions, 401(k) account balances substantially decline. Thus, many employers felt having employees assume 100 percent of the risks was too much. A middle ground uses a cash balance plan. When used as a stand-alone plan, a cash balance plan provides all the benefits that would otherwise be available under a standard defined benefit plan. It resembles a defined contribution plan because it uses an account balance to communicate the benefit amount. However, it is closer to being a defined benefit plan because the employer normally bears the responsibility for and the risks of managing the assets.34

Coca-Cola has a cash balance plan for all employees. Kevin Wagner, a senior retirement con- sultant in the Atlanta office of Watson Wyatt Worldwide, which worked with Coca-Cola in design- ing the cash balance plan, said, “It is refreshing to see a company understand the value of its defined benefit plan, which, at least in Coca-Cola’s situation, brings great value to both the company and its employees.”35 Other companies that have converted to cash balance plans include Bank of America, Boeing, FedEx, Honeywell International, Massachusetts General Hospital, and 3M.

LEGISLATION PERTAINING TO RETIREMENT PLANS Two important laws inf luence retirement design, funding, and implementation: Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 and Pension Protection Act (PPA) of 2006. ERISA regulates the implementation and administration of various employee benefits programs, particularly defined benefit programs. Since the law’s passage, amendments extend to the design and operations of defined contribution and cash balance plans as well.

ERISA has several major objectives:

$ To ensure that workers and beneficiaries receive adequate information about their benefits plans.

$ To set standards of conduct for those managing employee-benefits plans and plan funds. $ To determine that adequate funds are being set aside to pay promised pension benefits. $ To ensure that workers receive pension benefits after they have satisfied certain minimum

requirements (vesting). $ To safeguard pension benefits for workers whose pension plans are terminated (Pension

Benefit Guarantee Corporation [PBGC]). The PBGC is a government agency that ensures that employees owed benefits under private-sector defined benefit pensions receive those benefits if a company terminates its plan.

HR Web Wisdom

Types of Retirement Plans www.dol.gov/dol/topic/ retirement/

Retirement information from the U.S. Department of Labor.

defined contribution plan Retirement plan that requires specific contributions by an employee or an employer to a retirement or savings fund established for the employee.

401(k) plan Defined contribution plan in which employees may defer income up to a maximum amount allowed.

matching contribution Money the employer deposits into an employee’s defined contribution account contingent on the employee contributing first.

cash balance plan Retirement plan with elements of both defined benefit and defined contribution plans.

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The PPA strengthened protections for employees’ company-sponsored retirement plans in at least two ways. First, this law should strengthen the financial condition of the PBGC by requiring that private sector companies that underfund their defined benefit plans pay substantially higher costs to ensure payment of retirement benefits.

Second, the PPA makes it easier for employees to participate in employer-sponsored defined contribution plans such as 401(k) plans. Millions of workers who are eligible to participate in defined contribution plans do not contribute to them. There are various reasons why employees choose not to participate, however, a prominent reason is that most individuals feel they do not have sufficient knowledge about choosing investment options (e.g., a high-risk mutual fund ver- sus a fixed-rate annuity). In addition, once employees make the decision to participate in these plans and have been making regular contributions, they are not likely to stop. With these issues in mind, the PPA enables companies to enroll employees automatically in defined contribution plans and provides greater access to professional advice about investing for retirement. The act further requires that companies give multiple investment options to allow employees to select how much risk they are willing to bear. As an aside, risky investments usually have the greater potential for substantial gains or losses in value. Less risky investments usually have the potential for lower gains or losses.

Life Insurance and Disability Insurance Employer-sponsored life insurance protects employees’ families by paying a specified amount upon the employee’s death. These plans often include accidental death and dismemberment claims, which pay additional benefits if death was the result of an accident or if the employee incurs accidental loss of a limb. The cost of group life insurance is relatively low, costing employ- ers about $105 annually per employee.36 Perhaps because of the low cost, approximately 95 percent of employers pay the entire life insurance premium.37 Two of the more common life insurance plans are term life and whole life. Term life insurance provides protection to employees’ beneficiaries only during a limited period based on a specified number of years subject to a maxi- mum age. After that, the insurance automatically expires. Whole life insurance pays an amount to the designated beneficiaries of the deceased employee, but unlike term life policies, whole life plans do not terminate after beneficiaries receive payment.

Workers’ compensation protects employees from job-related accidents and illnesses. Some firms, however, provide additional protection that is more comprehensive. When short-term ben- efits run out, a firm’s long-term plan may become active; such a plan may provide 50 to 70 percent of an employee’s pretax pay. Long-term disability provides a monthly benefit to employees who because of illness or injury are unable to work for an extended period.

Paid Time-Off Most employers recognize that employees need time away from the job for many purposes. Dis- cussed in the following sections are vacations, sick pay and paid time off banks, parental leave, sabbaticals, volunteerism, and other forms of paid time off.

VACATION Vacation time serves important compensation goals. For instance, vacations help workers to be more creative and productive, reduce stress, brings families and friends closer, and improves job performance.38 They may also encourage employees to remain with the firm.39 Vacation time typically increases with seniority. For example, employees with 1 year of service might receive two weeks each year; 10 years’ service, three weeks; and 15 years’ service, four weeks.

Interestingly, many Americans do not take full advantage of their vacation benefits. A 2017 Alamo Rent A Car Family Vacation Survey revealed that 49 percent of U.S. workers felt guilt by coworkers for using vacation time.40 Millennial employees were more prone to shaming by their peers than older employees (68 percent versus 37 percent). Some employees believe their employers do not want them to take vacations or are afraid to ask for time off. A Project: Time Off shed insight into why employees feel this way. Fewer than half of the managers surveyed talk to employees once a year or less frequently about vacation.41 In addition, nearly half (45 percent) of managers themselves did not feel supported in taking time off. Many workers choose not to use any (or much) vacation because they believe that coworkers are not qualified to perform their jobs; and, on the flip side, others are concerned that coworkers will try to steal their jobs. As compared

term life insurance Protection for providing monetary payments to an employee’s beneficiaries upon the employee’s death and offered only during a limited period based on a specified number of years or maximum age.

whole life insurance A type of life insurance that provides protection to employees’ beneficiaries during employees’ employment and into the retirement years.

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with other countries, the average 13 days Americans take annually is small. According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, many countries, excluding the United States, have laws that provide for annual vacation. For example, the French take 30 days, British take 28 days, Danes take 25 days, Australians and Italians take 20 days, and Canadians and the Japanese take 10 days.42 In the absence of a vacation law in the United States, companies choose whether to offer vacation. Typically, U.S. companies offer 10 to 14 vacation days per year.43 In one survey, Americans lost more than 650 million days in unused vacation in 2016.44 No doubt, the reasons we discussed account for much of this underutilization.

Companies consider various ways to encourage employees to use all their vacation benefits. For instance, some companies signal the importance of taking vacation by paying employees (additional money) to take vacation. HR professionals often refer to this approach as “paid, paid vacation.” Not only do employees receive their pay while on vacation, but they also receive addi- tional compensation. Two standout examples are software companies BambooHR and FullCon- tact.45 BambooHR reimburses employees up to $2,000 annually for the cost of plane tickets, hotel rooms, and vacation activities. FullContact provides each employee with $7,500 cash to spend on vacation. The following Watch It video describes this highly generous approach to vacations and the company’s rationale for offering it.

Watch It 1 If your instructor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Best Boss Ever Pays Employees to Go on Vacation and respond to questions.

A few other companies offer unlimited paid vacation, including Grubhub, Netflix, LinkedIn, and the Virgin Group. Lindsey Ruthen, public relations associate at Grubhub, stated, “We do so to encourage work/life balance, and because we trust our employees to deliver great results and choose how their time is spent.”46 LinkedIn adopted an unlimited vacation policy as an element in the company’s efforts to cultivate a unique corporate culture. Earlier, we said that many American employees do not take full advantage of vacation benefits. Therefore, why do these companies provide unlimited vacation benefits? These companies have created a longstanding culture of trust where employees are less likely to feel threatened by taking time off.47 In principle, unlimited vacation sounds wonderful! In practice, the jury is still out on whether these plans will catch on or be successful where they already exist. These unlimited policies are simply too new to judge.

SICK PAY AND PAID TIME-OFF BANKS Each year, many firms allocate a certain number of paid sick days they may use when ill. Employees who are too sick to report to work continue to receive their pay up to the maximum number of days accumulated. As with vacation pay, the number of sick pay days often depends on seniority.

Some managers are critical of sick pay programs. At times, individuals have abused the system by calling in sick when all they wanted was an additional day of vacation. One approach in dealing with the problem of unscheduled absences is paid time off banks.48 In lieu of sick leave, vacation time, and a personal day or two, a growing number of companies are providing paid time off (PTO) banks, a certain number of days off provided each year those employees can use for any purpose. PTO banks group all categories of time off such as sick leave, vacation, and personal days. Possible benefits from PTOs include simpler administration, high employee satisfaction, fewer creative excuses for time off, earlier notice of time-off needs, fewer last- minute absences, and fewer conflicts about time-off usage.

paid time off (PTO) banks Means of dealing with the problem of unscheduled absences by providing a certain number of days each year that employees can use for any purpose.

☛ F Y I The number of average annual days allotted in a PTO bank increases with years of service:

$ 1 year: 15 days $ 5 years: 19 days $ 10 years: 22 days $ 15 years: 24 days49

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Some companies are experimenting with different forms of PTO plans. A few companies use a so-called results-only work environment (ROWE). This plan allows employees to work wherever and whenever they wish if they complete projects on time. It often provides the “perfect blend” to the younger generation or those who are young at heart where both work life and personal life can be enjoyed.50 The attitude of many workers today is that if I can get it done, and get it done well, why does it matter where or when I work?51 Employers Resource Council, a HR services company based in Mayfield Village, Ohio, gives employees all the time off that they want. There is no schedule and no limit for earned vacation and leave time. The firm’s 30 employees must get their work done on time.52

Compared to many other countries, companies in the United States offer paid sick leave on a discretionary basis. However, times are changing. In recent years, several states have instituted laws governing paid sick leave and those laws specify the criteria for what constitutes illness. For instance, California law mandates how employees accrue and use paid sick leave benefits. Employers must include a carryover provision for unused sick leave from one calendar year to the next. That is, employees may use unused benefits in future years.

Paid sick laws are not limited to the states. Dozens of cities are jumping in. Seattle requires that employers with 5 to 49 employees provide 5 paid sick days per year, and additional days for larger employers. In San Francisco, employers with 10 or more employees must provide 9 paid sick days and 5 sick days in companies with fewer than 10 employees.

PARENTAL LEAVE The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) of 1993 mandates that most companies provide employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for family reasons, including illness or the birth or adoption of a child. In recent years, many companies voluntarily instituted paid parental leave policies, including Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp., Netflix Inc., and Blackstone Group LP. Netflix offers one of the most generous family benefits, where employees may take up to one year of paid leave to care for a child.

Paid family leave traditionally benefited female workers because they played the role of primary caregiver. Increasingly, companies are working diligently to legitimize paternity leave. There continues to be a social stigma associated with fathers who choose to take time off (paid or unpaid) following the birth or adoption of a child. Unfortunately, a prevalent corporate norm devalues men who take such time off, in part, characterizing them as far less committed to their careers or career advancement. The following Watch It video describes Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to take an extended leave after the birth of his first child, setting an example to legitimize paternity leave by taking extended leave himself.

Watch It 2 If your instructor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Facebook CEO Takes 2 Months Paternity Leave and respond to questions.

SABBATICALS Sabbaticals are temporary leaves of absence from an organization, usually at reduced pay. Sabbaticals are customary in the academic community, focusing on faculty professional development. Private sector companies are beginning to consider the value of sabbaticals for employees. Approximately 20 percent of companies on Fortune magazine’s list of the Top 100 Best Companies to Work For provide sabbaticals.53 Increasingly, companies that offer sabbatical leave benefits focus on rejuvenation, helping employees “recharge their batteries” and return to work as refreshed and poised to be highly productive. According to Marla Kaplowitz, the North America CEO of media agency MEC, “A sabbatical is a way of recognizing that everyone needs a break at a certain point.”54 Sabbaticals come with a cost other than continuing to provide pay and benefits. According to Capterra’s CEO, the cost of a sabbatical equals a 10 percent reduction in productivity on an annual basis, but only 2 percent over a five-year period.55 He maintains that the benefit to the company and the employee’s health and personal growth is a worthwhile expense. Eligibility criteria vary widely. At Clif Bar and Company, which manufactures organic food products (for example, protein bars), workers who complete seven years with the company are eligible to take an eight- week sabbatical with full pay.56 Stonyfield Farm instituted a two-month paid sabbatical for anyone who has worked at least five years with the firm. Xerox has a Social Service Leave program where selected employees receive six-month paid leaves to provide service to the community.57

sabbaticals Temporary leaves of absence from an organization, usually at reduced pay.

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VOLUNTEERISM Volunteerism refers to giving of one’s time to support a meaningful cause. More and more companies are providing employees with paid time off to contribute to causes of their choice. In 2013, approximately 20 percent of companies offered paid time off for volunteer activities, trending up since 2007.58 In many instances, companies tout this benefit as a form of work–life balance and a mechanism for the betterment of the community. Brokerage Company Charles Schwab provides employees with eight paid hours per year for this purpose. Managers have the discretion to provide additional paid time off for volunteer activities.59 From a company’s standpoint, a meaningful cause is associated with the work of not-for-profit organizations, such as the United Way, to help improve the well-being of people. Many meaningful causes throughout the world include improving literacy, providing comfort to terminally ill patients, serving food at homeless shelters, serving as a mentor to children who do not have one or more parents, and spending time with elderly or disabled residents of nursing homes who may no longer have living friends or family. Companies generally do not dictate the causes for which employees would receive paid time off, except they exclude political campaign and political action groups for eligibility because of possible conflicts of interest with company shareholders and management.

Companies favor providing paid time off for volunteer work for three reasons. First, volunteer opportunities allow employees to balance work and life demands. Second, giving employees the opportunity to contribute to charitable causes on company time represents positive corporate social responsibility, enhancing the company’s overall image in the public eye. Third, paid time off to vol- unteer helps to promote retention. Employees are likely to feel that the employer shares similar val- ues, possibly boosting commitment to the company. Salesforce made the Fortune magazine’s annual rankings of the 100 best companies to work for. One employee said, “This is an extraordinarily special place that really cares about its employees, customers, and community. We are strongly encouraged to give back. I have done everything from volunteering in a soup kitchen, to working at a children’s hospital in Morocco—all supported by the company.”60 For younger employees, company-sponsored volunteer benefits can help with recruitment. According to Sales Foundation’s Suzanne DiBiana, “In Silicon Valley young graduates and employees are accepting jobs depending upon whether a company has a CSR [corporate social responsibility initiative] in place.”61

OTHER TYPES OF PAID TIME OFF Although vacations, sick pay and PTO banks, volunteerism, and sabbaticals constitute the largest portion of paid time off benefits,62 companies use numerous other types. Some companies routinely permit employees to take off during work hours to handle personal affairs without taking vacation time. When a worker participates in jury duty, some organizations continue to pay their salary; others pay the difference between jury pay and their salary. When the National Guard or military reserve are on duty, as has been the case in Afghanistan and Iraq, some companies pay employees a portion of their salary while on active duty. Further, during an election, many companies permit employees voting time. Still other firms permit bereavement time for the death of a close relative. Finally, there is the payment for time not worked while at the company such as rest periods, coffee breaks, lunch periods, cleanup time, and travel time. The Fair Labor Standards Act does not require employers to give workers a rest break, and only nine states require it.63 In these states, usually the mandated break is 10 minutes for every four hours worked.

Employee Services Organizations offer a variety of benefits that can be termed “employee services.” These benefits encompass several areas, including childcare, educational assistance, food services/subsidized cafeterias, scholarships for dependents, relocation benefits, and benefits for domestic partner and individuals in same-sex marriages.

CHILDCARE A benefit offered by some firms is subsidized childcare. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, an estimated 80 percent of employees miss work because of unexpected child-care coverage issues. Approximately every $1 invested in backup childcare yields $3 to $4 in returned productivity and benefit. At the Abbott Laboratories headquarters campus 30 miles north of Chicago, the company has built a $10 million state-of-the-art child- care center for more than 400 preschool children of Abbott workers. For parents who prefer a different arrangement, if their babysitter is sick, Abbott provides emergency backup service. Company child-care arrangements tend to reduce absenteeism, protect employee productivity, enhance retention and recruiting, promote the advancement of women, and make the firm an employer of choice.

volunteerism Time to support a meaningful cause.

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EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE Educational assistance plans can go a long way in improving employee retention. In a recent survey of HR professionals, 58 percent said their organizations offered educational assistance for undergraduate education, and 54 percent offered graduate education assistance.64 Some companies reimburse employees after they have completed a course with a grade of “C” or above while others provide for advance payment of these expenses. Still, other employers provide half the reimbursement up front and the rest on satisfactory completion of the course. United Technologies Corporation pays an employee’s entire tuition and books up front. It also offers paid time off—as much as three hours a week, depending on the course load—to study. Internal Revenue Service regulations allow educational assistance benefits to be nontaxable up to $5,250 per year. Starbucks Coffee is an example of a company that offers generous educational assistance, named the “College Achievement Program.” In 2015, the company announced a policy, permitting most employees (approximately 238,000) to earn a bachelor’s degree from Arizona State University’s online course offerings.

FOOD SERVICES/SUBSIDIZED CAFETERIAS There is generally no such thing as a free lunch. However, firms that supply food services or subsidized cafeterias provide an exception to this rule. What they hope to gain in return is increased productivity, less wasted time, enhanced employee morale, and in some instances, a healthier workforce. Most firms that offer free or subsidized lunches feel that they get a high payback in terms of employee relations. Northwestern Mutual is one such company. Free lunches are available in its cafeterias, where the menus list calories instead of prices. Keeping the lunch hour to a minimum is an obvious advantage, but employees also appreciate the opportunity to meet and mix with people they work with. Making one entree a heart-healthy choice and listing the calories, fat, cholesterol, and sodium content in food is also appealing to many employees.

SCHOLARSHIPS FOR DEPENDENTS Often companies provide scholarships for dependents of employees. Scholarship programs can help boost employee recruitment and retention. Franciscan Health Systems, a nonprofit health care provider in Tacoma, Washington, targets its awards primarily to employees’ children who are interested in entering the health care field, although it also awards scholarships for study in other areas. NRG Energy conducts an annual competition for student scholarships up to $60,000 each. An independent committee selects participants to avoid the appearance of favoritism. Committee members include teachers, educators, and other academic professionals.

RELOCATION Relocation benefits are company-paid shipments of household goods and temporary living expenses, covering all or a portion of the real estate costs associated with buying a new home and selling the previously occupied home. Relocation packages vary but most companies will pay for household moving and packing expenses and temporary living expenses for up to six months until the home sells. Companies may also pay for weekly or bimonthly trips back home over the weekends. On average, companies spent approximately $13,000 per employee in 2014 on corporate relocation within the United States.65

Although relocating can be a hassle, it can also produce many benefits. Employees typi- cally feel their employer has made an investment if they relocate and the firm pays all relocation expenses. Some companies have programs that help trailing spouses or partners secure employ- ment. Other firms also provide outplacement help to spouses.

DOMESTIC PARTNER BENEFITS AND SAME-SEX MARRIAGE A challenge facing managers and HR professionals is deciding whether to offer domestic partner or civil union benefits. These arrangements may apply to same-sex or opposite-sex couples and one survey indicated that almost half of all firms offered benefits to opposite-sex domestic partners.66 However, there has been much press about same-sex benefits. Unmarried domestic partners and those in registered civil unions are more often being included as qualified for coverage under employee benefit plans with larger companies. Of Fortune 500 companies, about 81 percent offer same-sex partner benefits and 74 percent provide transgender-inclusive benefits.67 Many companies are reimbursing gay and lesbian employees for the additional taxes they incur for their same-sex domestic partnership health care benefits. For example, New York-based Ernst & Young recently announced it would reimburse eligible employees for the tax, which averaged $1,100 per employee annually.68

Numerous counties, states, and municipalities offer domestic partner benefits and provide a basis for comparison of policies, legal hurdles, coverage, and costs. Many states, such as

relocation benefits Company-paid shipments of household goods and temporary living expenses, covering all or a portion of the real estate costs associated with buying a new home and selling the previously occupied home.

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California, Connecticut, New Jersey, Illinois, Iowa, New York, and Vermont, have joined this trend, as have hundreds of cities and counties. Employers require that employees who wish to enroll in an employer’s domestic partner benefits meet eligibility requirements. Domestic part- ners must be of the same sex, have resided together for a year or more prior to application, and be financially interdependent. In addition, supporting documentation, including a Declaration of Domestic Partnership, is required, but once the domestic partner is added, dependent children are also eligible for coverage.69 Companies use similar criteria for individuals who are in a registered civil union.

The Supreme Court’s Obergefell v. Hodges ruling in June 2015 ensured in most cases that same-sex couples possess the same constitutional rights to marry and every state must recognize them. Now, companies are obliged to provide same-sex spouses benefits equal to spouses of opposite-sex marriages. The focus has been particularly on health care coverage.

The court’s ruling has raised questions whether companies will continue to offer domestic partner benefits. A recent survey by the International Foundation of Employee Benefits Plans revealed that nearly 30 percent of companies surveyed said they are unlikely to continue to offer domestic partner benefits (and 20 percent for opposite-sex domestic partners).70 Companies including Verizon, Delta Air Lines, IBM, and Corning eliminated domestic partner benefits. One reason for eliminating domestic partner benefits is equality that all individuals possess the constitutional right to marry regardless of sexual orientation.71 There is concern among members of the LGBT community who feel that eliminating domestic partner benefits can have negative consequences. Sara Warbelow, legal director of the Human Rights Campaign warned, “If an LGBT employee is, in effect, ‘outed’ by being required to obtain a public marriage license in a state that doesn’t provide explicit non-discrimination protections, it could place that employee and their family at risk of being denied credit, housing, and public accommodation.” In 2017, 20 states did not have anti-discrimination laws protecting individuals based on sexual orienta- tion, and three of these states did not include provisions protecting individuals based on gender identity.72

OTHER BENEFITS The number of possible service benefits is left to the imagination of companies and goal to attract and retain talent. Examples of additional service benefits include paid public transportation passes and employee discounts. A relatively new benefit is student loan repayment assistance. In 2015, student loan debt averaged more than $30,000 for undergraduate education.73 Employers have many concerns about the negative impact of high student loan debt. First, there are concerns that employees do not have the resources to contribute to retirement savings plans. Second, retention worries increase because many employees are more likely to seek graduate level education in hopes of earning substantially more pay.74 Finally, some believe that debt-laden employees are likely to feel substantial stress, possibly interfering with productivity. For instance, technology company NVIDIA is an example. Andrea Trudelle, director of global benefits, said, “As an employer, we want to see our employees lead happy and fruitful lives. Our intent was to improve employees’ overall experience and help ease this burden so they can focus on other things.”75

Workplace Flexibility (Work–Life Balance) Effective work/life balance programs focus on solving any personal issues that can detract from an employee’s work. For employers, creating a balanced work/life environment can be a key strategic factor in attracting and retaining the most talented employees. As Tina Tchen, executive director of the White House Council on Women and Girls, said, “Flexible work policies are an economic imperative for American families and companies.”76 Workplace flexibility is high on employees’ lists of company benefits desired and continues to grow. It has moved from being a great benefit that a company can offer to a business necessity. By providing such an environment, employees are better able to fit family, community, and social commitments into their schedule. The homogeneous workforce that the United States once had is quite different now. Consider the following statistics and envision how the workplace profile has changed: 27 percent of single parents are men, 40 percent of the workforce is unmarried, one in five workers is 50 or older, and four million households are multi-generational. In addition, nearly 25 percent of Americans are caring for elders.77

10.4 Explain workplace flexibil- ity (work–life balance).

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For men and women seeking to balance their work and personal lives, time is nearly as important as money and may even be more important for some.78 According to a Baylor Univer- sity study, new mothers who return to work are more likely to stay on the job if they have greater control over their work schedules.79 More employees are requesting workplace flexible benefits to achieve a better work and life balance. Marcee Harris Schwartz, the New York–based direc- tor of BDO USA’s Flex program, said, “We do not think of flexibility as a set of options, or an employee benefit, or even a program. We really see it as a business strategy—a strategy that can help employees manage their own working life.”80 Some companies offer many of the factors typically associated with workplace flexibility. State Street Corporation, a multinational financial services provider with more than 29,000 employees in 26 countries, provides five options that give employees flexibility on when, how, and where they work.81 These include flextime, compressed workweek, job sharing, two-in-a-box, telecommuting, and part-time work.

Flextime Flextime is the practice of permitting employees to choose their own working hours, within cer- tain limitations. Sometimes, companies offer f lexible work hours in lieu of a salary increase, although guaranteed job security ranked number one. An important benefit of flextime is that it can bring better health to employees by reducing employee stress levels. For many old-economy managers who think they must see their employees every minute to make sure they are working, this may be difficult. Primarily, they believe flexible work arrangements could hamper collabora- tion because work schedules do not align.82

In a flextime system, employees typically work the same number of hours per day as they would on a standard schedule. However, they work these hours within what a bandwidth, which is the maximum length of the workday (see Figure 10-2). Core time is that part of the day when all employees must be present. Flexible time is the period within which employees may vary their schedules. A typical schedule permits employees to begin work between 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. and to complete their workday between 3:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. Marianne Mansfield, a case worker for the state of Massachusetts goes to work at 6:30 a.m. and is off at 3:00, p.m. a schedule she very much enjoys. This permits her to miss much of Boston’s horrible traffic congestion.

Because flexible hours are highly valued today, providing a flexible work schedule gives employers an edge in recruiting new employees and retaining highly qualified ones.83 In addi- tion, flextime allows employees to expand their opportunities. For example, it may be easier for them to continue their education than if they were on a traditional work schedule. The public also seems to reap benefits from f lextime. Transportation services, recreational facilities, medical clinics, and other services assist by reducing competition for service at conventional peak times. Yet, flextime is not suitable for all types of organizations. For example, its use may be severely limited in assembly-line operations and companies using multiple shifts.

Compressed Workweek The compressed workweek is an arrangement of work hours that permits employees to fulfill their work obligation in fewer days than the typical five-day, 8-hour-a-day workweek. A common compressed workweek is four 10-hour days. Another form of the compressed workweek is four 9-hour days and a half-day on Friday. Some hospitals permit their registered nurses to work three 12-hour days during a workweek. Still other firms are allowing employees to work longer, how- ever, fewer days in the summer in exchange for a day off each week. There are endless different combinations of compressed workweeks.

Working under this arrangement, employees have reported greater job satisfaction. In addi- tion, the compressed workweek offers the potential for better use of leisure time for family life,

flextime Practice of permitting employees to choose their own working hours, within certain limitations.

compressed workweek Any arrangement of work hours that permits employees to fulfill their work obligation in fewer days than the typical five-day workweek.

FIGURE 10-2 Illustration of Flextime

6 A.M. 9 A.M. Noon

Flexible Time

(lunch) Core Time

Flexible Time

Core Time

Flexible Time

Bandwidth

3 P.M. 6 P.M.

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personal business, and recreation. Employers in some instances have cited advantages such as increased productivity and reduced turnover and absenteeism. Other firms, however, have encoun- tered difficulty in scheduling workers’ hours and at times employees become fatigued from work- ing longer hours. In some cases, these problems have resulted in lower product quality and reduced customer service.

Job Sharing In job sharing, two part-time people split the duties of one job in some agreed-on manner and receive pay according to their contributions. It is an attractive option to people who want to work fewer than 40 hours per week.

Some have equated the benefits job sharing provides to that of running a marathon. Given equal athletic ability, two athletes running half a marathon back to back will invariably run faster than one runner going the entire distance alone will. Although the arrangements vary, the outcome is the same: Job sharing provides the flexibility to enjoy life. It provides an option to retain work- ers, particularly women who often opt out of the workforce to raise families. Often job sharers work as hard in, say, three days, as those working full time and are pleased they can combine work and motherhood or other interests.

There appears to be a growing trend as more companies offer job sharing. Two Ford Motor Company engineers used job sharing as a means of advancing their careers and still have time with their newborns. Julie Levine and Julie Rocco were joint program manager for the 2011 Explorer Crossover and each earned 80 percent of their full-time salaries and benefits. Rocco and Levine supervised 10 people. Rocco worked Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and Levine worked Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday. Both worked about 40 hours a week each, which they consider part-time in the automobile industry.84

Job sharing also provides a means of encouraging older workers to remain on the job past retirement age. Sharing jobs has potential benefits that include the broader range of skills the partners bring to the job. For job sharing to work, however, the partners must be compatible, have good communication skills, and have a bond of trust with their manager. Job sharing also can pose challenges, including the need for additional oversight—such as conducting administrative tasks and performance reviews for two employees rather than one. However, if the option is the loss of two valued employees, the additional effort is certainly worth it.

Two-in-a-Box Some companies are giving two executives the same responsibilities and the same title and letting them decide how the work is to be divided (Two-in-a-Box). Unlike job sharing, it is a full-time job for both executives. It certainly has some risk, as in the case of the 1998 DaimlerChrysler Corpora- tion disaster of an attempt at Two-in-a-Box when one executive was unwilling to share authority, resulting in the resignation of the other executive. Problems certainly can occur as the egos of two executives meet, but it has proven successful in certain instances. A major advantage of this approach is that it can ease transition, permitting a newer manager to learn from a more experi- enced manager. It is also useful as managers confront the requirement of global traveling. One manager could be at the home office taking care of regular business while the other is traveling. For two-and-a-half years, two executives shared a job as heads of Cisco’s routing group. The two had complementary skills and each gained experience from the other. Cisco typically com- bines a technically oriented manager with a business-oriented one.85 The Two-in-a-Box approach requires work and constant communication, but for the right two executives, the benefits derived are worth it.

There are other examples of Two-in-a-Box. Aon Consulting is chaired by co-CEOs Kathryn Hayley and Baljit Dail.86 German business software provider SAP AG appointed Bill McDermott and Jim Hagemann Snabe as co-CEOs.87 Other companies that use co-CEOs include BlackBerry maker Research in Motion and restaurant chain P. F. Chang’s China Bistro.

Telecommuting Telecommuting is a work arrangement whereby employees, called “teleworkers” or “telecom- muters,” can remain at home (or otherwise away from the office) and perform their work using computers and other electronic devices that connect them with their offices.

job sharing Two part-time people split the duties of one job in some agreed-on manner and are paid according to their contributions.

HR Web Wisdom

Telecommuting www.telework.gov/

Governmental Web site for employees who think they might like to telecommute (or are already doing so), for managers and supervisors who supervise teleworkers, and for agency tele- work coordinators.

telecommuting Work arrangement whereby employees, called “teleworkers” or “telecommuters,” can remain at home (or otherwise away from the office) and perform their work using computers and other electronic devices that connect them with their offices.

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Telecommuting has become more popular in recent years. More than 4 million workers have telecommuting arrangements.88 By 2020, up to 30 percent of the workforce will likely be telecommuting because of traffic congestion and frustration with commuting and high gas prices. According to a Gallup survey, 37 percent say they have telecommuted.89 For self-motivated workers, telecommuting can increase worker productivity and improve job satisfaction and loy- alty. Modern communications and information technologies permit people to work just about anywhere. Today, physical location is largely immaterial when it comes to working. Telecommut- ing is significantly changing not just the way people work, but also where they do it. One study indicates that employees who telecommute for most of the time are more satisfied with their jobs than those working primarily in an office.90 Workers like telecommuting because there are fewer interruptions, less company politics, and less face-to-face communication. These benefits improve their work/life balance.

Despite the benefits, some companies are reconsidering the value of telecommuting arrange- ments and others have suspended those policies altogether. For instance, Yahoo CEO Marissa Meyer ended the company’s telecommuting policy in 2013, reportedly after a review of “logins to the company server” showed that many people were not consistently online. IBM was a pioneer in legitimizing telecommuting arrangements; however, in 2017, the company terminated telecom- muting arrangements for about 2,600 employees, particularly in the marketing area.91 Michelle Peluso, IBM’s chief marketing officer, stated, “ . . . there is something about a team being more powerful, more impactful, more creative, and frankly hopefully having more fun when they are should to shoulder.”92

Telecommuters generally are information workers. They accomplish jobs that require, for example, analysis, research, writing, budgeting, data entry, or computer programming. Teleworkers also include illustrators, loan executives, architects, attorneys, and publishers. Employees can accomplish both training and job duties without losing either efficiency or quality by using the Internet. Thanks largely to telecommuting, when the New York City transit union went on strike, knowledge workers could work from home, which greatly lessened the effect of the strike.

Another advantage of telecommuting is that it eliminates the need for office space. The expense of employees is not just their salaries and benefits, but also the overhead associated with office space. Deloitte LLP offers most of its 45,000 employees nationwide the option to telecommute as many as five days a week and have been doing this for 15 years. As leases come up for renewal, the firm can reduce office space and energy costs by 30 percent. Com- panies reconfigure facilities to accommodate mobile workers who do not need permanent offices.93

In addition, commuting distances are not a factor for teleworkers. The average time it takes to get to work continues to increase, which often contributes to tardiness and lost work hours. With telecommuting, firms may hire the best available employees located virtually anywhere in the world for many jobs. The ability to employ disabled workers and workers with young children further broadens the labor market. Finally, telecommuting is an alternative for executives who are unwilling to relocate. If the company is willing to permit the executive not to work out of headquarters, telecommuting may be the answer.

Part-Time Work Historically, many have viewed part-time employees as second-class citizens. These workers reluctantly accepted a low-paying job until a full-time career break occurred. Today, increasing highly educated professionals are choosing part-time opportunities in their fields to address both job and personal needs. Alison Doyle, an About.com job search and employment expert, said, “Professional moms would be thrilled to lower their hours to spend more time with their children, and they don’t mind giving up benefits to achieve that work/life balance.”94

At Deloitte, managers discuss employee performance during twice-a-year evaluations focused not just on career targets but also on larger life goals. Employees can request to do more or less travel or client service. The employee can also request to move laterally into a new role—that may or may not come with a pay cut. About 10 percent of employees choose to “dial up” or “dial down” at any given time. The program is in response to Millennials demanding a better work/life balance and boomers looking to ease into retirement.95

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If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

The Job-Sharing Problem at SunTrust Bank As the HR Manager at SunTrust Bank, Jerry

James manages the company’s generous benefit program that includes flexible work options. Many employees telecommute or take advantage of the company flextime policy. Generally, employees appreciate the flexible work options, but right now Jerry has a problem in the loan processing department. Two different employees from Loan Processing approached him several months ago about their desire for a flexible work option. Both employees had recently started families and both wanted part-time work, so Jerry suggested job sharing. No workers have requested this option before, but because these two employees did the same job for the company, Jerry thought it was a great idea. The two

could share one job, and he could easily hire a new employee to take on the other job. However, after finishing another stressful call from one of the employees and reading a frustrated e-mail message from the other, Jerry knows they need some help working together. Jerry first recom- mended that they talk to their manager, but both employees told Jerry that they did not trust their manager to help them. The employees now do not seem to be even talking to each other at all and Jerry’s discussion with their manager about their problems was not very helpful. The man- ager told Jerry he was surprised when these two employees requested the job sharing arrangement to begin with because they did not get along with each other very well. Now Jerry is not sure what to do.

Customized Benefit Plans Customized benefit plans permit employees to make yearly selections to determine their benefit package by choosing between taxable cash and numerous benefits.

Not long ago, firms offered a uniform package that generally reflected a typical employee based on tradition, budgets, and management choices. Today, the workforce has become consider- ably more heterogeneous, and this prototype is no longer representative. Companies must serve different interests in this increasingly diverse workforce.96 With four generations of workers now in the workplace, customization and flexibility become important in developing a benefits package that meets the needs of everyone. Workers have considerable latitude in determining how much they will take in the form of salary, life insurance, pension contributions, and other benefits. Customized cafeteria plans permit flexibility in allowing each employee to determine the compensation components that best satisfy their needs.97

Obviously, organizations cannot permit employees to select all their benefits. For one thing, firms must provide the benefits required by law. In addition, it is probably wise to require that each employee have core benefits, especially in areas such as retirement and medical insurance. However, the freedom to select highly desired benefits would seem to maximize the value of an individual’s compensation. Employees’ involvement in designing their own benefit plans would also effectively communicate to them the cost of their benefits. In keeping the program current, management depends on an upward flow of information from employees to determine when benefit changes are needed.

The downside to customized benefit plans is that they are costly. Development and admin- istrative costs for these plans exceed those for traditional plans. Even though customized benefit plans add to the organization’s administrative burden, some firms apparently find that the advan- tages outweigh shortcomings.

Communicating Information about the Benefits Package Employee benefits can help a firm recruit and retain a top-quality workforce. Organizations spend millions of dollars each year for benefits. Yet, many do not do a good job of communicating the value of this investment to the employees. Often organizations do not have to improve benefits to keep their best employees, rather, workers need to understand their benefits.

The HR director of Elm City Market discusses a variety of HR issues, including educating employees about their employee benefits options. The following Watch It video describes some of the benefit package components.

10.5 Describe customized benefits plans.

customized benefit plan Benefit plan that permits employees to make yearly selections to largely determine their benefit package by choosing between taxable cash and numerous benefits.

10.6 Summarize the issues of communicating information about benefits plans.

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298 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Define indirect financial compensation (employee ben-

efits). Indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) includes all financial rewards that generally are not paid directly to the employee in the form of a wage, salary, or performance-based pay.

2. Describe legally required benefits and the various kinds. Legally required benefits currently account for nearly 10 percent of total compensation costs. These include Social Security, unemployment insurance, workers’ compensa- tion, and health insurance. Legally required benefits were often prompted by poor social or economic conditions. Companies can choose from a variety of health insurance set-ups based on its objectives. There are two long-standing approaches—fee-for-service plans and managed care plans. Some give employees a vast amount of choice over health care providers (fee-for-service plans), whereas others are more restrictive such as is the case for managed care plans. An emerging approach, consumer-driven health care, is the least costly to employers, but employees bear greater costs for health care services, often because these plans have high deductible features.

Several laws regulate the practice of the employee benefits practices we reviewed in this section, such as the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, the Health Insur- ance Portability and Accountability Act, and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. These laws define the obligation of employers and the rights of employees.

3. Define discretionary benefits and explain the various types. Discretionary benefits are benefit payments made because of unilateral management decisions in non-union

firms and from labor/management negotiations in union- ized firms.

Discretionary benefits fall into three broad categories: protection programs, paid time off, and services. Protec- tion programs provide family benefits, promote health, and guard against income loss caused by such catastrophic factors as unemployment, disability, or serious illnesses. Paid time off provides employees time off with pay for such events as vacation. Services provide such enhance- ments as tuition reimbursement and day-care assistance to employees and their families.

Various laws regulate the practice of discretionary employee benefits practices we reviewed in this section. These include the Employee Retirement Income Security Act and the Pension Protection Act. These laws define the obligation of employers and the rights of employees.

4. Explain workplace flexibility (work–life balance). Work- place flexibility practices include flextime, the compressed workweek, job sharing, Two-in-a-Box, telecommuting, and part-time work.

5. Describe customized benefits plans. Customized benefit plans permit employees to make yearly selections to deter- mine their benefit package by choosing between taxable cash and numerous benefits.

6. Summarize the issues of communicating information about benefits plans. Organizations spend millions of dol- lars each year for benefits. Yet, many do not do a good job of communicating the value of this investment to the employees. Often organizations do not have to improve benefits to keep their best employees, rather, workers need to understand the benefits that they receive.

Key Terms indirect financial compensation

(employee benefits) 279 unemployment insurance 281 workers’ compensation 282 fee-for-service plans 282

deductible 282 coinsurance 282 out-of-pocket maximum 282 managed care plans 283 prepaid medical services 283

copayments 283 primary care physician 283 consumer-driven health care plans

(CDHPs) 283

Watch It 3 If your instructor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Elm City Market: Designing and Administering Benefits and respond to questions.

ERISA provides still another reason for communicating information about a firm’s benefits program. This act requires organizations with a pension or profit sharing plan to provide employ- ees with specific data at specified times. The act further mandates that companies present the information in a manner that is easy to understand. In addition, under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, employers must provide a benefits summary and coverage explanation to all applicants and enrollees at the time of initial enrollment and at the annual enrollment, in addition to the summary plan description required by ERISA.

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CHAPTER 10 • INdIRECT FINANCIAl COMPENSATION (EMPlOyEE BENEFITS) 299

Questions for Review 10-1. Define indirect financial compensation (employee

benefits).

10-2. What are the mandated or legally required benefits? Briefly describe each.

10-3. What are the basic categories of discretionary ben- efits? Describe each.

10-4. What items are included in the discretionary benefit of paid time off category?

10-5. Define each of the following: (a) fee-for-service plan (b) health maintenance organization (HMO) (c) consumer-driven health care plan (d) health savings account (HSA)

10-6. There are numerous forms of retirement plans. Describe each of the following: (a) defined benefit plan (b) defined contribution plan (c) 401(k) plan (d) cash balance plan

10-7. Define each of the following benefit laws: (a) Employee Retirement Income Security Act (b) Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (c) Health Insurance Portability and Accountability

Act (d) Family and Medical Leave Act (e) Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (f) Pension Protection Act (g) Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

10-8. What are topics included within employee services? 10-9. What is the purpose of a customized benefits plan? 10-10. What is the relationship between smoke-free workplaces

and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act? 10-11. Define each of the following workplace flexibility

practices: (a) flextime (b) compressed workweek (c) job sharing (d) telecommuting

10-12. What is the purpose of the staffing practice called Two-in-a-Box?

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

high-deductible health insurance plans (HDHPs) 283

health savings account (HSA) 283 discretionary benefits 285 qualified plans 286 nonqualified plans 286 vesting 286 cliff vesting schedule 286 6-year graduated schedule 286

defined benefit plan 286 defined contribution plan 287 401(k) plan 287 matching contribution 287 cash balance plan 287 term life insurance 288 whole life insurance 288 paid time off (PTO) banks 289 sabbaticals 290

volunteerism 291 relocation benefits 292 flextime 294 compressed workweek 294 job sharing 295 telecommuting 295 customized benefit plan 297

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

A Poor Bid You are vice-president of HR for a large con-

struction company, and your company is bidding on an estimated $2.5 million public housing project. A local electrical subcontractor submit- ted a bid that you realize is 20 percent too low because labor costs have been incorrectly calculated. It is obvious to you that benefits amounting to more than 30 percent of labor costs have not been included. In fact,

the bid was some $30,000 below those of the other four subcontrac- tors. However, accepting it will improve your chance of winning the contract for the big housing project. 10-13. What would you do? 10-14. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a person

to make a less-than-ethics decision?

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HRM Is Everyone’s Business Many employees feel entitled to receive employee benefits. While some laws require that companies provide benefits, it will be up to the organization to decide on which other benefits they will offer. As a manager or HR professional, you might oversee creating a benefits program, but employee requests will certainly require you to interpret policy to guide your responses. Whether you are dealing with the creation or interpretation of benefits, you will want to have access to accurate information so your organization’s offerings serve as true benefits for employees and not a source of frustration and ambiguity.

Action checklist for managers and HR—helping employees understand and make use of their benefits

Ensure that the employee benefits handbook is up to date and accurate. Make an online and paper version accessible. Set up workshops to help employees understand the elements of the benefits offered by the organization—highlight confus- ing aspects and aspects that are not well known. Particularly emphasize unique features.

While many companies now have call centers that answer employees’ questions about their benefits, stay current on company policies and legal requirements so that, when more complex benefits issues arise (e.g., health care coverage), the questions can be dealt with in a thoughtful and timely manner.

Managers take the lead Suggest ways to keep the “explaining your benefits” portion of new employee orientation engaging and interesting. HR (or the benefits specialist) should conduct the session.

Keep track of the most common questions that employees raise. Keep HR apprised of this information, which will help shape informative sessions.

When changing benefits, call employees together to discuss rationale and the tasks to make full use of the existing benefits.

HRM by the Numbers Calculating 401(k) Matching Contributions

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Companies decide whether to institute matching contributions. Ones that offer matching contributions do so for numerous reasons, including recruitment and retention of the most qualified individuals. Also, companies choose the formulas for making contributions and setting maximum limits. Here are three common approaches for determining matching contributions:

$ Full match: The employer fully matches an employee’s contribution to the 401(k) plan account up to an amount set by law. For illustrative purposes, an employee earning $50,000 annually contributes $2,000 to her 401(k). Then, the company’s matching contribution equals $2,000.

$ Fixed dollar match: The employer deposits $1 for every $1 the employee contributes to the plan up to a specified limit, for instance, 5 percent of pay. One employee contributes 3 percent of her $100,000 pay equaling $3,000: (3 percent * $100,000). The employer contributes the same amount. Another employee contributes 10 percent of his $100,000 pay equaling $10,000: (10 percent * $100,000). In this case, the company deposits $5,000: (5 percent * $100,000) because the plan specifies a 5 percent contribution maximum.

$ Variable dollar match: The employer’s contribution decreases as an employee’s contribution increases. For example, an employer might deposit $1 for every $1 on the first 3 percent of pay contributed by the employee, and 50 cents per dollar on the next 3 percent of pay. An employee who earns $100,000 annually contributes 6 percent to the 401(k) plan, equaling $6,000: (6 percent * $100,000). The employer contributes a total of $4,500: [($1 * (3 percent * $100,000)) + ($0.50 * (3 percent * $100,000))].

Now, let’s calculate the employer’s matching contributions for three employees, Amanda, Shiyu and Onkar using each method. Amanda earns $35,000 annually and does not contribute anything to the 401(k) plan. Shiyu earns $125,000 annually and contrib- utes 7 percent of pay to the 401(k) plan. Onkar earns $80,000 annually and contributes 2 percent of pay.

Questions 10-15. Full match: What is the employer’s contribution for (a) Amanda, (b) Shiyu, and (c) Onkar? What is the total contribu-

tion (employee’s contribution plus employer’s matching contribution) to each employee’s 401(k) account: (d) Amanda, (e) Shiyu, and (f) Onkar?

10-16. Fixed dollar match: 75 cents per each $1 employee contribution. What is the employer’s contribution for (a) Amanda, (b) Shiyu, and (c) Onkar? What is the total contribution (employee’s contribution plus employer’s contribution) to each employee’s 401(k) account: (d) Amanda, (e) Shiyu, and (f) Onkar?

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CHAPTER 10 • INdIRECT FINANCIAl COMPENSATION (EMPlOyEE BENEFITS) 301

10-17. Variable dollar match: $1 per each $1 employee contribution on the first 2 percent of pay and 75 cents per $1 employee contribution for the next 3 percent of pay. What is the employer’s contribution for (a) Amanda, (b) Shiyu, and (c) Onkar? What is the total contribution (employee’s contribution plus employer’s contribution) to each employee’s 401(k) account: (d) Amanda, (e) Shiyu, and (f) Onkar?

I N C I D E N T 1 Flextime Kathy Collier is a supervisor of a government office in Washington, D.C. Morale in her office has been quite low recently. The workers have gone back to an 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. work schedule after having been on flextime for nearly two years.

When the directive came down allowing Kathy to place her office on flextime, she spelled out the rules carefully to her people. Each per- son was to work during the core period from 10:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; however, they could work the rest of the eight-hour day at any time between 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Kathy felt her workers were honest and well-motivated, so she did not bother to set up any system of control.

Everything went along well for a long time. Morale improved, and all the work seemed to get done. In November, however, an audi- tor from the General Accounting Office investigated and found that

Kathy’s workers were averaging seven hours a day. Two employees had been working only during the core period for more than two months. When Kathy’s department manager reviewed the auditor’s report, Kathy was told to return the office to regular working hours. Kathy was upset and disappointed with her people. She had trusted them and felt they had let her down.

Questions 10-20. What are the advantages and disadvantages of flextime? 10-21. What could Kathy have done to keep the situation from

occurring? 10-22. Are there other workplace flexibility arrangements that Kathy

might use to improve morale?

I N C I D E N T 2 Communicating Benefits at Seaview Property Management Company

With several changes in the company’s health insurance options, Monique Solara knew that benefits open enrollment this year would be challenging. As the Manager of Employee Benefits at Seaview Property, Monique is responsible for administering Seaview’s benefits program. The company recently announced changes to health insurance options as well as a reduction in the company’s 401(k) matching contributions. Monique immediately received calls from several confused or angry employees. Because of the changes, some employees may need to change health care providers, which will be costlier to them. Other employees have concerns about their retirement benefits, particularly how much lower matching contributions will be.

Seaview offers a full menu of benefit options including three alternate health insurance plans and a generous 401(k) program. Even with the changes, Monique is confident that the value of Seaview’s benefits pro- gram still exceeds competitors’ offerings. However, she is not confident that employees understand how their benefits compare to other compa- nies’ benefits. In addition, she believes that employees generally feel enti- tled to their benefits, making any reductions a source of dissatisfaction.

The swift and negative response to the benefits changes reinforced Monique’s belief as many employees complained that Seaview did not have a right to make such changes. Some employees even suggested the changes are illegal.

Prior to the recent changes, Monique thought the company’s benefits communication was sufficient. New employees receive an informational

packet that details the features of each benefit. There is extensive infor- mation about each health insurance option including lists of health care providers and an outline of specific coverage for common medical pro- cedures. Then, during open enrollment each year, employees receive an updated packet of information listing any changes in the health insur- ance plans. Monique has included as much information as possible in both the new hire packets and the annual update packets. In fact, the packets have become quite bulky, which has raised concerns as many employees have mentioned they feel overwhelmed with the volume of information.

Monique is also concerned that the current information provided to the employees fails to help them understand the value of the ben- efits program. Seaview invests significantly in the benefits program and employee understanding is important for employee retention. Overall, Monique believes the current communication process is not effective, but she is unsure of the best communication strategy.

Questions 10-23. Why is it important to provide effective communication

about employee benefits? Explain. 10-24. What is your opinion of Seaview’s current benefits communi-

cation practices? Explain. 10-25. How can Seaview improve their benefits communication?

Discuss.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Think about your work and non-work goals for the next five and ten years, respectively. Discuss these goals with group members and put together a list.

10-18. What are some of your work and non-work goals after you graduate from school for each time frame? Briefly describe them. 10-19. What are two employee benefits that will support the attainment of your goals during each time frame? Explain.

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302 PART 4 • COMPENSATION

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

10-26. How does the use of discretionary benefits contribute to recruitment and retention?

10-27. Why is it important to communicate information about the benefits package?

Endnotes 1 Paul Fronstin and Ruth Helman, “Views on

the Value of Voluntary Workplace Benefits: Findings from the 2015 Health and Voluntary Workplace Benefits Survey,” Employee Benefit Research Institute Notes (November 2015), Vol. 36, No. 11: 1. Accessed April 4, 2017, at www. ebri.org/pdf/notespdf/EBRI_Notes_11_Nov15_ WBS-PolFor.pdf.

2 Karen Wessels, Evren Esen, Jennifer Schramm, and Samantha DiNicola, “SHRM Survey Find- ings: 2016 Strategic Benefits—Leveraging Ben- efits to Retain and Recruit Employees,” Society for Human Resource Management (November 30, 2016). Accessed March 31, 2017, at www. shrm.org/hr-today/trends-and-forecasting/ research-and-surveys/Documents/SHRM- Survey-Findings-Strategic-Benefits-Leveraging- Benefits-to-Retain-and-Recruit-Employees.pdf.

3 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

4 Ibid. 5 Ibid. 6 Joseph J. Martocchio. (2018). Employee

Benefits: A Primer for Human Resource Profes- sionals, 6th ed. Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill/ Irwin.

7 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0321). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

8 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

9 U.S. Social Security Administration. Monthly Statistical Snapshot, January 2017. Accessed March 17, 2017, at www.ssa.gov.

10 Melvyn Dubofsky and Joseph A. McCartin, “Labor in America: A History,” (ninth edition). New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2017.

11 Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, “Total Expenditures on Health per Capita.” Accessed March 20, 2017, at www. oecd.org/els/health-systems/health-statistics.htm.

12 Matt Bolch, “Realities Drive Change in Health Care Delivery,” Financial Executive 28 (Janu- ary/February 2012): 36–39.

13 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, “NHE Fact Sheet,” Accessed March 12, 2017, at www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and- systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/national- healthexpenddata/nhe-fact-sheet.html.

14 Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research & Educational Trust, “Employer Health Benefits 2016 Annual Survey,” Accessed March 20, 2017, at http://files.kff.org/

attachment/Report-Employer-Health-Benefits- 2016-Annual-Survey.

15 Rhea Brittany Luebke, “Create a Retirement Savings Strategy Using a Health Savings Account,” Journal of Financial Service Profes- sionals 66 (January 2012): 27–29.

16 Lori Chordas, “New Year, New Rules,” Best’s Review 112 (January 2012): 52–53.

17 Nancy Hatch Woodward, “Earn Less, Pay Less,” HR Magazine 57 (March 2012): 67–70.

18 “Even in Difficult Times, Employees See the Value of Smoking Cessation Programs,” Managed Care Outlook 22 (June 1, 2009): 10–12.

19 “Tobacco-Related Mortality,” Centers for Disease Control online (December 1, 2016). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www. cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/ health_effects/tobacco_related_mortality/.

20 “Economic Trends in Tobacco,” Centers for Disease Control online (March 3, 2017). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www.cdc.gov/ tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/economics/ econ_facts/.

21 “Fast Facts,” Centers for Disease Control online (February 9, 2017). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/ fact_sheets/.

22 “Tobacco-Related Mortality,” Centers for Disease Control online (December 1, 2016). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www. cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/ health_effects/tobacco_related_mortality/.

23 Paul McIntyre, “A Smoking Ban Isn’t About Your Bottom Line, It’s About Protecting Your Workers’ Health,” Nation’s Restaurant News 39 (December 5, 2005): 24–34.

24 Joanne Deschenaux, “Is a ‘Smoker-Free’ Workplace Right for You?” HR Magazine 56 (July 2011): 42–45.

25 Monica Dobie, “Quit Smoking or Lose Your Job,” World Tobacco (May 2005): 20–21.

26 Susan K. Lessack, “Where There’s Smoke . . . Can You Fire (or Refuse to Hire)?” HR Specialist: Employment Law 40 (May 2011): 7.

27 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2017,” (USDL 17-1013). Accessed August 2, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

28 Ibid. 29 Employee Benefits Research Institute, “Pension

Plans” (Chapter 4) in Fundamentals of Employee Benefits Programs. Washington, DC, 1997.

30 Joanna Short, “Economic History of Retirement in the United States.” In R. Whaples (ed.), EH. Net Encyclopedia, October 1, 2002. Accessed March 2, 2017, https://eh.net/encyclopedia/

economic-history-of-retirement-in-the-united- states/.

31 I.R.C. §§411(a) (2), 411(a) (5); Treas. Reg. §1.411(a)-3T; ERISA §203(a).

32 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “National Compensation Survey: Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2016,” (Bulletin 2785). Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ncs/ ebs/benefits/2016/ebbl0059.pdf.

33 Ibid. 34 Lisa Murton Beets, “Cash Balance Pension

Plans,” Smart Business Columbus 20 (January 2012): 42.

35 Jerry Geisel, “Coca-Cola Makes Move to Cash Balance Plan,” Business Insurance 43 (February 23, 2009): 3.

36 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

37 Ibid. 38 “Get Out of Town,” Benefits Magazine 49 (Feb-

ruary 2012): 74. 39 Frank L. Giancola, “Vacation Benefits

Maligned, Manipulated, and Misunderstood,” 50 (September 2013): 1–4.

40 Alamo Rent A Car, “Vacation Shaming On the Rise: Alamo Rent A Car’s Annual Study Reveals Guilt Among Vacationing Millennials,” (March 7, 2017). Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.alamo.com/en_US/car-rental/scenic-route/ family-travel/2017-family-vacation-survey. html?mcid=pressrelease:685.

41 “The High Price of Silence: Analyzing the Business Implications of an Under-Vacationed Workforce,” Project: Time Off. Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.projecttimeoff.com/ sites/default/files/High_Price-of_Silence_ FINAL.pdf.

42 Rebecca Ray, Milla Sanes, and John Schmitt, No-Vacation Revisited (January 19, 2017). Accessed March 1, 2017, at http://eqxdesign. com/read/2017/1/19/no-vacation-nation-revis- ited-by-the-center-for-economic-policy-and- research.

43 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “National Compensation Survey: Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2016,” (Bulletin 2785). Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.bls.gov/ncs/ ebs/benefits/2016/ebbl0059.pdf.

44 “The High Price of Silence: Analyzing the Busi- ness Implications of an Under-Vacationed Work- force,” Project: Time Off. Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.projecttimeoff.com/sites/default/ files/High_Price-of_Silence_FINAL.pdf.

45 Jeanne Sahadi, “These Companies Offer Paid Vacation . . . And Pay for Your Vaca- tion,” MoneyCNN Marketwatch (July

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28, 2016). Accessed February 23, 2017, at http://money.cnn.com/2016/07/26/pf/ companies-that-pay-for-employee-vacations/.

46 Thomas C. Frohlich, “7 Companies with Unlimited Vacation,” 24/7 Wall St. online (December 19, 2015). Accessed March 21, 2017, at http://247wallst.com/special- report/2015/12/13/7-companies-with-unlimited- vacation/2/.

47 David Burkus, “How to Make Unlimited Vaca- tion Time Work at Your Company,” Harvard Business Review online (June 15, 2015). Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

48 Martocchio, Employee Benefits. 49 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer

Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

50 Jason Blumer, “The Perfect Blend: A Firm’s Path to Ensuring Work-Life Balance,” CPA Practice Advisor 22 (February 2012): 21.

51 Justin G. Roy and Sullivan Kreiss, “Ten Tips for Retaining the Next Generation,” Offshore 72 (January 2012): 10–11.

52 Joseph Coombs, “Flexibility Still Meeting Resistance,” HR Magazine 56 (July 2011): 72.

53 Lucinda Shen, “These 19 Great Employers Offer Paid Sabbaticals,” Fortune online (March 7, 2016). Accessed April 3, 2017, at www.for- tune.com.

54 Rachel. Feintzeig, “Cure for Office Burnout: Mini Sabbaticals,” Fortune online (October 28, 2014). Accessed January 10, 2016, www.for- tune.com.

55 Kate Harrison, “The Most Popular Employee Perks of 2014,” Fortune online (February 19, 2014). Accessed January 4, 2016, www.fortune. com.

56 Jillian Berman, “Why Clif Bar Offers Sab- baticals and Other Conventional Work Perks,” Huffington Post (August 26, 2013). Accessed September 11, 2013, at www.huffingtonpost. com.

57 Gary M. Stern, “Recharging Employees with More Free Time,” Investor’s Business Daily (January 7, 2013): A08.

58 Society for Human Resource Management (2013). “2013 Employee Benefits: An Overview of Employee Benefits Offerings in the U.S.” Accessed February 5, 2015, at www.shrm.com.

59 Sarah Halzack, “Paid Time Off for Volunteering Gains Traction as a Way to Retain Employees. The Washington Post online (August 11, 2013). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.washing- tonpost.com.

60 Fortune Editors, “The 50 Best Work- places for Giving Back,” Fortune online (February 9, 2017). Accessed March 1, 2017, at http://fortune.com/2017/02/09/ best-workplaces-giving-back/.

61 Ryan Scott, “The Best Volunteer Programs Do This,” Forbes online (June 15, 2015). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

62 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Com- pensation Survey.

63 U.S. Department of Labor, “Minimum Paid Rest Period Requirements Under State Law for Adult Employees in Private Sector,” (January 1, 2017). Accessed March 21, 2017, at www.dol.gov/ whd/state/rest.htm.

64 Jennifer Schramm, “Undereducated,” HR Maga- zine 56 (September 2011): 136.

65 Worldwide ERC, “U.S. Domestic Transfers: Relocation Statistics,” (2015). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.worldwideerc.org/ Resources/Research/Pages/Facts-and-Statis- tics.aspx.

66 “Domestic Partner Benefits After the Supreme Court Decision: 2015 Survey Results,” Inter- national Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans (2015). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www. ifebp.org/bookstore/domestic-partnership- survey/Pages/default.aspx.

67 Human Rights Campaign, “Corporate Equal- ity Index 2017,” The Human Rights Campaign Foundation (2016). Accessed March 3, 2017, at http://assets.hrc.org//files/assets/resources/CEI- 2017-FinalReport.pdf?_ga=1.197800748.20558 24107.1490191225.

68 Rebecca Vesely “Some Companies Offer Tax Relief for Domestic Partners,” Workforce Man- agement 91 (February 2012): 15.

69 “Regional Briefs,” Managed Care Outlook 24 (June 15, 2011): 4–5.

70 “Domestic Partner Benefits After the Supreme Court Decision: 2015 Survey Results,” Interna- tional Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans (2015). Accessed February 28, 2017, at www. ifebp.org/bookstore/domestic-partnership- survey/Pages/default.aspx.

71 Rachel Emma Silverman, “What Employers Need to Know About Supreme Court Gay Mar- riage Ruling,” The Wall Street Journal online (June 26, 2015). Accessed March 22, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

72 American Civil Liberties Union, “Non-Discrim- ination Laws: State by State Information—Map. Accessed March 22, 2017, at www.aclu.org/ map/non-discrimination-laws-state-state-infor- mation-map.

73 Katie Lobosco, “Students Are Graduating with $30,000 in Loans,” Money CNN online (October 18, 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at http:// money.cnn.com.

74 Chris Duchesne, “New Benefits Arte Key to Hiring the Best People for Your Organization,” Workspan (October 2016): 19–22.

75 Ibid. 76 “Work/Life Policies Enhance Business,” HR

Magazine 57 (January 2012): 69. 77 “Work-Family Conflicts Affect Employees at All

Income Levels,” HR Focus 87 (April 2010): 9. 78 Henry G. Jackson, “Flexible Workplaces: A

Business Imperative,” HR Magazine 56 (Octo- ber 2011): 10.

79 “Working Moms Need Flexibility,” OfficePro 71 (August/September 2011): 5.

80 “Employers Embracing Programs as Morale Booster, Business Strategy,” HR Focus 88 (Sep- tember 2011): 1–4.

81 Alison Quirk, “The Business Case for Flex,” HR Magazine (April 2012): 44–45.

82 Susan Dominus, “Rethinking the Work-Life Equation,” New York Times Magazine online, February 16, 2016, accessed April 4, 2017, at www.nytimes.com; WorldatWork and FlexJobs, “Trends in Workplace Flexibility,” WorldatWork, September 2015; Robin D. Richards, “The 2015 Workplace Flexibil- ity Study,” Workplace Trends (February 3, 2015). Accessed April 1, 2017, at https:// workplacetrends.com/the-2015-workplace- f lexibility-study/; Nicholas Bloom, “To Raise Productivity, Let More Employees Work from Home,” Harvard Business Review online, (January–February 2014. Accessed March 2, 2016, at http://www.hbr.org.

83 Justin G. Roy, “Ten Tips for Retaining the Next Generation,” Power Engineering 116 (January 2012): 11–12.

84 Jamie LaReau, “Ford’s 2 Julies Share Devo- tion—and Job,” Automotive News 85 (October 25, 2010): 4–26.

85 Scott Thurm, “Power-Sharing Prepares Manag- ers,” Wall Street Journal (December 5, 2005): B4.

86 Ed Frauenheim, “Co-CEOs: Two at the Top,” Workforce Management 88 (May 18, 2009): 40–42.

87 “SAP AG Reports Departure of CEO and Appointment of Co-CEOs,” Telecomworldwire (M2) (February 8, 2010).

88 Kate Lister, “Latest Telecommuting Statistics,” Global Workplace Analytics, January 2016. Accessed March 22, 2017, at http://globalwork- placeanalytics.com/telecommuting-statistics.

89 Jeffrey M. Jones “In U.S. Telecommuting for Work Climbs to 37%,” Gallup online (August 19, 2015) Accessed March 2, 2017, at www. gallup.com/poll/184649/telecommuting-work- climbs.aspx.

90 “The Virtual Office Gains Momentum,” Trends Magazine (January 2011): 16–19.

91 Chris Weller, “IBM was a Pioneer in the Work-From-Home Revolution—Now It’s Cracking Down,” Business Insider online (March 27, 2017). Accessed April 2, 2017, at www.businessinsider.com/ ibm-slashes-work-from-home-policy-2017-3.

92 Shaun Nichols, “IBM’s Marissa Mayer Moment? Staff Told to Work in 1 of 6 Main Offices or Face the Axe,” The U.K. Register online (February 8, 2017). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www.theregister.co.uk/2017/02/08/ ibm_no_more_telecommuting/.

93 Dori Meinert, “Make Telecommuting Pay Off,” HR Magazine 56 (June 2011): 32–37.

94 Adrienne Fox, “Part-Timers,” HR Magazine 55 (August 2010): 28–33.

95 Laura Fitzpatrick, “We’re Getting off the Lad- der,” Time 173 (May 25, 2009): 45.

96 Todd Henneman, “Workers Pick Their Perfect Perquisites,” Workforce Management 91 (Janu- ary 2012): 9.

97 Martocchio, Employee Benefits.

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Part Five Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Safety, and Health Chapter 11

Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining

Chapter 12

Internal Employee Relations

Chapter 13

Employee Safety, Health, and Wellness

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11 Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

11.1 Explore the role of labor unions.

11.2 Describe the basic union structure and organized labor’s strategies for a stronger movement.

11.3 Discuss laws affecting collective bargaining.

11.4 Summarize the formation of bargaining units and the collective bargaining process.

11.5 Describe the grievance procedure in a union environment.

11.6 Explain union decertification.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 11 Warm-Up.

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307

Labor unions and the process of collective bargaining are important considerations in the human resources (HR) field, which, as we described in Chapter 1, is the business function of managing people. Labor unions refer to organizations that exist to represent the interests of employees in the workplace and to ensure fair treatment when conf licts arise between one or more employee and management. Labor union leadership enters into good faith negotiations with management representatives over terms of employment such as work hours, pay, and job security. Collective bargaining refers to the process of negotiation. The result of a success- ful collective bargaining process is the collective bargaining agreement or contract, which specifies the negotiated terms.

In this chapter, we will explore a variety of important issues pertaining to labor unions. These include why labor unions exist and why employees join unions, the organizational structure of unions, laws affecting the relationship between unions and management, the collective bargaining process, grievance procedures, and how members can decertify unions if members do not feel that their best interests are being served.

The Role of Labor Unions Labor unions in the United States came about out of necessity. Family agricultural farms and small family craft businesses were the bases for the U.S. economy before the early part of the twentieth century. The turn of the twentieth century marked the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the United States. During the Industrial Revolution, the economy’s transition from agrarian and craft businesses to large-scale manufacturing, or factory systems, began. Increasingly, individuals were becoming employees of large factories instead of self-employed farmers or small business owners. Factory owners, also referred to as capitalists, sought profits. Profits refer to the money that capitalists enjoy after deducting the costs of doing business (for example, raw materials, employee wages). Highly efficient workforces were therefore an essential part of the capitalist’s profit motive.

The profit motive and the sheer size of factory employment gave rise to divisions of labor based on differences in worker skill, effort, and responsibilities. In other words, many people held positions performing the same job (for example, multiple employees perform the work specified in the job description for assembler) and the job types were diverse (for example, management,

11.1 Explore the role of labor unions.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

collective bargaining The process in which labor union leadership enters into good faith negotiations with management representatives over terms of employment such as work hours, pay, and job security.

collective bargaining agreement Written document that describes the terms of employment reached between management and unions.

labor unions Organizations that exist to represent the interests of employees in the workplace and to ensure fair treatment when conflicts arise between one or more employee and management.

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308 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

production, and clerical). The growth in the size of the workplace necessitated practices to guide such activities as hiring, training, setting wages, handling grievances, and terminating employ- ment for work rule violations or poor job performance. Factory owners sought out the expertise of mechanical engineers to promote efficient production systems and productive workers. The work of these engineers defined the scientific management movement. Ultimately, scientific manage- ment practices contributed to labor cost reductions by replacing inefficient production methods with efficient production methods.

Although a variety of unions had existed for decades, management was not obligated to recog- nize them. The industrialization of the U.S. economy when business owners sought out efficiency while sacrificing the welfare of workers and the economic devastation during the Great Depres- sion placed workers at a disadvantage. Workers were subject to poor pay, unsafe working condi- tions, and virtually no job security. During the Great Depression, scores of businesses failed and most workers became chronically unemployed, giving management even greater power because many workers would accept substandard employment terms as an alternative to unemployment. Some workers banded together to negotiate better terms of employment, but employers were not willing to listen because collective action could jeopardize employers’ control over the terms of employment. Still, employees experienced poor working conditions, substandard wage rates, and excessive work hours. As we discuss shortly, Congress enacted the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) of 1935 to remove barriers to free commerce and to restore equality of bargaining power between employees and employers.

Throughout the years that followed, unions successfully negotiated favorable terms of employment for its members as well as job security provisions in collective bargaining agree- ments, particularly during economic recessions. However, as we discuss shortly, unioniza- tion has declined dramatically over the past several decades along with the need for greater compromise.

Why Employees Join Unions Individuals join unions for many different reasons, which tend to change over time, and may involve job, personal, social, or political considerations. It would be impossible to discuss them all, but the following are some of the major reasons. From an HR professional’s standpoint, the issues associated with employees’ dissatisfaction with management are most relevant.

Every job holds the potential for real dissatisfaction. Everyone has a boiling point that can cause him or her to consider a union as a solution to actual or perceived problems. Union organizers look for arbitrary or unfair management decisions and then emphasize the advantages of union membership as a means of solving these problems. We describe some other common reasons for employee dissatisfaction next.

COMPENSATION AND EMPLOYEE BENEFITS Employees want their compensation to be fair and equitable. Wages are important because they provide both the necessities and standard of living. If employees are dissatisfied with their wages, they may look to a union for assistance in improving their standard of living. An important psychological aspect of compensation involves the amount of pay an individual receives in relation to that of other workers performing similar work (employee equity). If an employee perceives that management has shown favoritism by paying someone else more to perform the same or a lower-level job, the employee will likely become dissatisfied. Union members know precisely the basis of their pay and how it compares with that of others.

Employees who are covered under a collective bargaining agreement enjoy higher wages and are more likely to participate in a variety of employee benefit programs. In 2017, private sector employers whose employees were covered by a union contract spent an average $48.94 per employee per hour worked for wages and benefits.1 This compares to $31.58 for nonunion employees. Of this amount, the average hourly wage rate was $29.34 and $22.44 in union and nonunion settings, respectively. Figure 11-1 shows the percentage of workers in private industry who had access to various employee benefits in 2017. In every case, union workers were more likely to have benefits than nonunion employees were. As the data show, there is a nearly 24 per- cent wage gap between union and nonunion employees. The amount varies by occupational group and some are higher. For example, the wage gap between nonunion workers in the installation, maintenance and repair occupation is 31 percent.2

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JOB SECURITY Historically, young employees have been less concerned with job security than older workers have. Young employees seem to think, “If I lose this job, I can always get another.” However, if they witness management consistently terminating older workers to make room for younger, lower paid employees, they may begin to think differently about job security. If the firm does not provide its employees with a sense of job security, workers may turn to a union.

ATTITUDE OF MANAGEMENT People like to feel that they are important. They do not like to be considered a commodity that can be bought and sold. Employees do not like to be subjected to arbitrary actions by management. In some firms, management is insensitive to the needs of its employees. In such situations, employees may perceive that they have little or no inf luence in job-related matters. Workers who feel that they are not part of the organization are prime targets for unionization. Tesla automobile workers complained to the United Autoworkers union about excessive overtime and unsafe working conditions at the Freemont, California plant, and they are requesting help with starting a union. CEO Elon Musk rejected workers claims, asserting, “The safety and job satisfaction of our employees here at Tesla has always been extremely important to us. We have a long history of engaging directly with our employees on the issues that matter to them, and we will continue to do so because it’s the right thing to do.”3 Organizations that treat people with dignity and respect are typically difficult to organize, however, the contrasting perspectives in this example raise the likelihood that employees will join a union, particularly because they are clearly not satisfied with management’s approach to addressing their concerns.

Prevalence of Unions The U.S. Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the percentage of wage and salary workers who were union members was 10.7 percent.4 The number of wage and salary workers belonging to unions is at approximately 14.6 million. In 1983, the first year for which comparable union data are available, the union membership rate was 20.1 percent and there were 17.7 million union workers. Clearly, the unionization rate is declining and fewer employees receive union protection.

In 2016, 7.2 million public-sector employees belonged to a union, compared with 7.4 million union workers in the private sector. Public-sector workers had a union membership rate of 34.4 percent—more than five times higher than that of the private-sector workers rate of 6.4 percent. Private-sector industries with high unionization rates included utilities (24.5 percent) and con- struction (13.9 percent), whereas low unionization rates occurred in food service and drinking places (1.6 percent), agriculture and related industries (1.3 percent), and in financial services (1.2 percent). Indeed, the statistics show a noteworthy decline in unionization. There are many possible reasons for this trend, and we consider five.

First, in decades past, unions often intimidated workers to become members even if they did not care to do so. Unions used such tactics to boost their membership, thus, their power to nego- tiate with employers over terms of employment. Quite simply, it is more difficult to ignore the

Employee Benefits Union (%) Nonunion (%)

Retirement 92 64 Medical Care 93 65 Medical Care (share of premiums) Employer pays 87 77 Employee pays 13 23 Life Insurance 79 67 Paid Leave Paid sick leave 79 67 Paid vacation 89 75 Paid holidays 89 76

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employee Benefits in the United States– March 2017 (USDL 17–1013). Accessed August 1, 2017, at http://www.bls.gov.

FIGURE 11-1 Percentage of Employees Who Have Access to Employee Benefits in Union and Nonunion Settings

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310 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

voices of the many rather than the few. Over time, legislation outlawed unions’ use of intimidation, after which the prevalence of unions began to decline.

Second, historically, unions provided a voice to protect the rights of disadvantaged groups, includ- ing women, older workers, and racial minorities. However, starting in the 1960s, anti-discrimination laws such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act instituted protections. The array of legislation lessened the role of unions.

Third, globalization of business has contributed to the decline in unionization in a variety of ways. For example, higher quality automobile imports (such as Toyota and Honda automobiles) than U.S. automobile manufacturers required greater investments quality control and workforce flexibility, which unions tend to resist. Unions resist giving management too much discretion over employee assignments and pay out of concern that they would treat them unfairly, however, the survival of companies required that unions accept flexibility. Unions’ willingness to permit greater management discretion raised questions about the ability of unions to protect workers.

Globalization through offshoring activities threatens unionization. Offshoring can be thought of as the migration of all or a significant part of the development, maintenance, and delivery of services to a company located in another country. With rare exception, employees do not move with the jobs. Traditionally, the reason given for offshoring is to reduce costs. Many of the lost jobs in the United States were unionized, which, as we showed, are most costly to employers than nonunion jobs. Moreover, the absence of or less restrictive labor laws (e.g., minimum wage laws) in other countries generally permit U.S. companies to lower employment costs.

Fourth, large companies such as Boeing, which have highly unionized workforces, are estab- lishing new facilities in states where unionization rates are low. German automobile manufacturer Volkswagen built a state-of-the-art factory in Tennessee, which possess right-to-work laws. Right-to-work laws prohibit management and unions from entering into agreements requiring union membership as a condition of employment. At the beginning of 2017, 28 states had right- to-work laws, of which seven were passed since 2011.

Fifth, unionization is substantially higher in the public or government sector than in the pri- vate sector. Still, public sector unionization faces challenges throughout the country. Traditionally, there was much less resistance to unionize in the public sector than in the private sector. However, the tide is changing. For example, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed a law in 2011 that eliminated most union rights for government workers. The state lost nearly 100,000 public sector union members between 2011 and 2016.5

Management’s attitude may be reflected in even small actions. Employees may begin to feel they are being treated more as machines than as people. Supervisors may fail to give reasons for unusual assignments and may expect employees to dedicate their lives to the firm without pro- viding adequate rewards. The prevailing philosophy may be, “If you don’t like it here, leave.” A management philosophy that does not consider the needs of employees as individuals makes the firm ripe for unionization. Management must keep in mind that unions will be less likely to gain a foothold if they are not abusive of power. Companies that are pro-employees are not likely to be unionized.

Union Structure and Labor Strategies The labor movement has developed a multilevel organizational structure. This complex of organi- zations ranges from local unions to the two principal federations—the AFL-CIO and the Change to Win Coalition. Structured unions then pursue strategies to build membership and representation of workers in as many workplaces as possible.

Structure of Unions LOCAL UNION The basic element in the structure of the U.S. labor movement is the local union (or, the local). To the individual union member, the local is the most important level in the structure of organized labor. Through the local, individuals deal with the employer on a day-to-day basis. A local union may fill a social role in the lives of its members, sponsoring dances, festivals, and other functions. It may be the focal point of the political organization and activity of its members.

There are two basic kinds of local unions: craft and industrial. A craft union, such as the Carpenters and Joiners Union, is typically composed of members of a trade or skill in a specific

right-to-work laws Laws that prohibit management and unions from entering into agreements requiring union membership as a condition of employment.

11.2 Describe the basic union structure and organized labor’s strategies for a stronger movement.

local union Basic element in the structure of the U.S. labor movement.

craft union Bargaining unit, such as the Carpenters and Joiners Union, which is typically composed of members of a trade or skill in a specific locality.

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locality. Members usually acquire their job skills through an apprenticeship-training program. An industrial union generally consists of all the workers in a plant or group of plants. The type of work they do and the level of skill they possess are not a condition for membership in the union. An example of an industrial union is the United Auto Workers.

The local union’s functions are many and varied. Administering the collective bargaining agreement and representing workers in handling grievances are two very important activities. Other functions include keeping the membership informed about labor issues, promoting increased membership, maintaining effective contact with the national union, and when appropriate, negoti- ating with management at the local level.

NATIONAL UNION The most powerful level in the union structure is the national union. As stated previously, most locals affiliate with national unions. A national union is composed of local unions, which it charters. As such, it is the parent organization to local unions. The local union, not the individual worker, holds membership in the national union. Each local union provides financial support to the national union based on its membership size. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is the largest and fastest-growing national union in North America, with 2.1 million members in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico. According to the SEIU Web site, the SEIU has more than 1.1 million members in the health care field, including nurses, LPNs, doctors, lab technicians, nursing home workers, and home care workers. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters indicates that it has about 1.4 million members.

The national union is governed by a national constitution and a national convention of local unions, which usually meets every two to five years. Elected officers, aided by an administrative staff, conduct the day-to-day operations of the national union. The national union is active in organizing workers within its jurisdiction, engaging in collective bargaining at the national level, and assisting its locals in their negotiations. In addition, the national union may provide numerous educational and research services for its locals, dispense strike funds, publish the union newspaper, provide legal counsel, and actively lobby at national and state levels.

AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR AND CONGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) is the central trade union federation in the United States. It is a loosely knit organization of national unions that has little formal power or control. The member national unions remain completely autonomous and decide their own policies and programs.

The AFL-CIO is a voluntary federation of 55 national and international labor unions rep- resenting 12.5 million members according to its Web site, including about 3 million members in Working America, its community affiliate. It represents the interests of labor and its member national unions at the highest level. The federation does not engage in collective bargaining; however, it provides how member unions can cooperate to pursue common objectives and attempt to resolve internal problems faced by organized labor. The federation is financed by its member national unions and is governed by a national convention, which meets every two years.

The structure of the AFL-CIO is complex. National unions can affiliate with one or more of the trade and industrial departments. These departments seek to promote the interests of specific groups of workers who are in different unions but have common interests. The federation’s major activities focus on improving the image of organized labor and lobbying on behalf of labor inter- ests. In addition, politically educating constituencies is crucial, as is resolving disputes between national unions and policing internal affairs of member unions.

CHANGE TO WIN COALITION The Change to Win Coalition is a union federation consisting of unions that broke from the AFL-CIO and formally launched a rival labor federation representing 6 million workers from seven labor unions. The mission of the Change to Win Coalition is, “to unite the 50 million American workers who work in industries that cannot be outsourced or shipped overseas into strong unions that can win them a place in the American middle class— where their jobs provide good wages, decent working conditions and a voice on the job.”6

The coalition, led by the SEIU, focuses its energies on new membership growth and not as much on lobbying. Also, included in the new coalition are Unite Here, the United Food and Com- mercial Workers International Union, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, the United Farm Workers of America, and the Laborers’ International Union of North America. The coalition wanted to direct its efforts at workers in industries in which employers could not

industrial union Bargaining unit that generally consists of all the workers in a plant or group of plants.

national union Organization composed of local unions, which it charters.

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) Central trade union federation in the United States.

HR Web Wisdom

Change to Win Coalition www.changetowin.org

Topics related to “What they say they stand for, campaigns, strategic organizing, key facts, and who we are” are included on the Web site.

Change to Win Coalition Union federation consisting of seven unions that broke from the AFL-CIO and formally launched a rival labor federation representing about 6 million workers from 7 labor unions.

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easily outsource jobs. The primary targets for organizing included industries in cleaning, health care, hotels and restaurants, retailing, and transportation, whereas the AFL-CIO focused on elec- toral politics as a strategy to promote the labor movement. For example, the AFL-CIO typically invests resources into helping union-friendly politicians being elected into political office.

Organized Labor’s Strategies for Promoting a Stronger Labor Movement Even though the labor movement has suffered setbacks over the past few decades, it is likely that union membership would have been even lower if the following strategies had not been used.

STRATEGICALLY LOCATED UNION MEMBERS The importance of the jobs held by union members significantly affects union power. For instance, an entire plant may have to be shut down if unionized machinists performing critical jobs decide to strike. Thus, a few strategically located union members may exert a disproportionate amount of power. The type of firm that is unionized can also determine a union’s power. Unionization of truckers or dockworkers can affect the entire country, and subsequently, enhance the union’s power base. This is precisely what the longshoremen did in the Baltimore, Maryland, strike of 2013, which affected about 15,000 individuals employed in port-related businesses and several tens of thousands more employees who work for the port. Through control of key industries, a union’s power may extend to firms that are not unionized.

PULLING THE UNION THROUGH One union tactic that has worked effectively at times is to put pressure on the end user of a company’s product to have a successful organizing attempt. The United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America authorized a strike against four Johnson Controls Inc. (JCI) factories that made interior parts for some of the country’s best-selling vehicles. The quick two-day strike cost workers little lost income, but it hurt General Motors Corporation by shutting down production of their popular Chevy Trail Blazer sport utility vehicle. Worried about lost sales in a profitable segment and desiring to preserve good relations with the UAW, GM played an active behind-the-scenes role by pressuring JCI to settle the dispute. The result was a major UAW victory.

POLITICAL INVOLVEMENT The political arm of the AFL-CIO is the Committee on Political Education (COPE). Founded in 1955, its purpose is to support politicians who are friendly to the cause of organized labor. The union recommends and assists candidates who will best serve its interests. In presidential and congressional elections, union support may have a significant impact. Union members also encourage their friends and families to support those candidates. Joshua Freeman, professor of labor history at the City University of New York Graduate Center, said, “Unions have gotten weaker, but that weakness is not reflected in the political arena. They are very effective in mobilizing their members and families. It’s now fairly common to have one out of four votes in an election coming from a union household.”7 The union’s political influence increases as the size of the voting membership grows. With friends in government, the union is in a stronger position to maneuver against management. Political involvement means more than endorsing candidates at all levels of politics, and then attempting to deliver the union membership’s vote. Unions give money to candidates who pledge to help pass pro-labor legislation. During the 2016 election season, labor unions spent nearly $110 million to support elections, representing a 38 percent increase spent during the 2012 election season.8 The SEIU donated $19 million, the National Education Association donated $18.1 million, and the AFL-CIO spent $14.6 million.9

UNION SALTING Union salting is the process of training union organizers to apply for jobs at a company and, once hired, working to unionize employees. A “union salt” is an employee who serves this role. Traditionally, union salting is a common activity used by blue-collar labor unions within the construction and building industries. Unions in other sectors, including the hotel and restaurant industries, have adopted union salting activities. For instance, James Walsh, author of Against the House: The Dramatic World of an Undercover Union Organizer, described his success as a union salt organizing worker at two Florida casinos. Walsh made two important points pertaining to achieving success.10 First, one person cannot achieve salting. He needed fellow employees who commanded their peers’ respect and were influential. Identifying leaders required him to socialize with coworkers. He took time to “hang out” with coworkers to get to know them and some of their workplace concerns. Second, union salters sometimes reveal their intentions,

Committee on Political Education (COPE) Political arm of the AFL-CIO.

union salting Process of training union organizers to apply for jobs at a company and, once hired, working to unionize employees.

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but often they do not.11 Walsh chose not to reveal his intentions because many workers would fear losing their jobs if asked to speak about their concerns, especially if management found out. Naturally, company management would be displeased to know if one or more employee was trying to organize workers.

There has been a variety of court cases regarding legal protections for union salts. In general, a company cannot terminate these employees solely because they also work for a union. However, if productivity suffers, a company may justifiably terminate a worker’s employment.

FLOODING THE COMMUNITY Flooding the community is the process of the union inundating communities with organizers to target a business in an organizing attempt. With their flooding campaigns, unions typically choose companies in which nonunionized employees have asked for help in organizing. Generally, national unions recruit and train organizers. They are typically young, ambitious, college-educated people with a passion for the U.S. labor movement. Organizers meet with employees in small groups and even visit them at home. They know every nuance of a company’s operations and target weak managers’ departments to appeal to dissatisfied employees who may be willing to organize.

PUBLIC AWARENESS CAMPAIGNS Public awareness campaigns involve labor maneuvers that do not coincide with a strike or an organizing campaign to pressure an employer for better wages, benefits, and the like. Increasingly, these campaigns serve as an alternative to strikes because more employers are willing to replace their striking employees. Employers have less recourse against labor campaigns that involve joining political and community groups that support union goals or picketing homes of a company’s board of directors. They are also defenseless in dealing with the union’s initiating proxy challenges to actions negative to labor, writing letters to the editors of the local newspapers, and filing charges with administrative agencies such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the National Labor Relations Board (NRLB). These types of public awareness campaigns, which are not tied directly to labor gains, are often effective methods of developing union leverage. In some cases, the goal is creating public awareness to improve workplace conditions without the necessity of unionizing. For instance, Working America, a community affiliate of the AFL-CIO, launched the Massage Advocacy Group Project in 2015, in Portland, Oregon, to educate the public about the health benefits of massage as well as expose undesirable employment arrangements experienced by most therapists. Massage therapist Arwyn Daemyir said, “We are speaking about low wages, long hours, and unfair workplace practices, and being asked to do work that isn’t paid for.”12 Generally, massage therapists receive pay for the time they are providing massages, but not for other work expected by employers, including laundry and front office tasks. Ultimately, campaign organizers hope that public awareness will encourage employers to provide fairer employment terms.

BUILDING ORGANIZING FUNDS To encourage workers to come together, the AFL-CIO often asks its affiliates to increase organizing funds. The federation may also increase funding to its Organizing Institute, which trains organizers, and even launches advertising campaigns to create wider public support for unions. National unions also create organizing funds.

UNIONS COLLABORATING WITH HIGH SCHOOLS Some high schools are pairing up with labor unions to prepare students for a career. Ten students from Saydel High School’s construction shop class have entered a pilot program that allows them direct entry into the United Association of Plumbers and Steamfitters Local Union 33 once they graduate. At Local 33, apprentices receive training in plumbing, heating, air conditioning, medical gas, high purity piping, and water treatment. Greg Foshe, business manager of Local 33, said, “The goal of this program is to bring people into the union at a younger age. When students go from high school directly into their trade, they are going from learning situation to learning situation, creating a fast track educational experience.”13

ORGANIZING YOUNGER WORKERS Union organizers often pursue a strategy of recruiting younger workers, and it may be coming at the right time because the lowest union membership rate is occurring among this group. In fact, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the lowest union membership rate occurred among those ages 16 to 24 (4.4 percent).14 In the past, senior organizers often considered younger organizers as second-class citizens. Consider what Rachael Hunt, a young union organizer, said, “Too many times, more experienced trade unionists have spoken to

flooding the community Process of the union inundating communities with organizers to target a business.

public awareness campaigns Labor maneuvers that do not coincide with a strike or organizing campaign to pressure an employer for better wages, benefits, and the like.

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314 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

me as if I were a blank slate: ready to mold and be shaped to meet older organizers’ viewpoints and goals. This same top-down, stale, bureaucratic organizational model that is crippling unions is also its biggest barrier to recruiting young people.”15 Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO president, said the following about including the ideas of younger workers: “I’m not suggesting that the labor movement ought to abandon all its traditions. But what I am saying is that nostalgia for the past is no strategy for the future. Tradition should always have a vote; we just can’t let it have a veto.”16

ORGANIZING THROUGH THE CARD CHECK The card check is an organizing approach by labor in which employees sign a non-secret card of support if they want unionization, and if 50 percent of the workforce plus one worker signs a card, the union is formed. This organizing method’s success depends on management not objecting to the use of card check. It permits workers to decide in a non-secret election their union status. Essentially, organizations decide to remain neutral and peacefully permit their employees to decide whether they want to unionize and not interfere as the union passes out authorization cards.

In 2013, the UAW launched a card-check campaign at the Volkswagen manufacturing facility in Tennessee. The card check procedure avoids holding a secret ballot by having workers sign cards to join a union. Most workers in a bargaining unit must sign cards, which are then certified, before the company recognizes the union. The union failed when eight workers represented by the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation filed charges with the NLRB alleging that the UAW had lied to workers and bullied them into signing cards.17 The NLRB dismissed the charges; however, many workers protested the card-check approach, which pressured Volkswagen to hold a secret-ballot election. Some card check campaigns lead to unionization. In 2008, the Teamsters union launched a nationwide card-check campaign. Bargaining units from across the country signed authorization cards and were recognized as a union.18 The largest was the drivers and dockworkers employed by UPS Freight, which added more than 9,900 members.19

Laws Affecting Collective Bargaining A variety of laws influence the collective bargaining process and outcomes. Some are geared specifically toward the process and others are laws that we have previously discussed that influ- ence outcomes.

National Labor Relations Act The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act) is one of the most significant labor/management relations statutes ever enacted. The act declared legisla- tive support, on a broad scale, for the right of employees to organize and engage in collective bargaining. Section 7 conveys the spirit of the Wagner Act, which defines the substantive rights of employees:

Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organiza- tions, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities, for collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.

The NRLA created the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). At the time, the board helped the labor movement, which at times resulted in heated and sometimes violent management resistance.20 The NLRB was given two principal functions: (1) to establish procedures for holding bargaining unit elections and to monitor the election procedures (representation elections); and (2) to investigate complaints and prevent unlawful acts involving unfair labor practices. Much of the NLRB’s work is delegated to 33 regional offices throughout the country. The President makes appointments to the NLRB, which require Senate confirmation. They decide on detailed rules governing union and management behavior, then on how to conduct elections.

Section 8 is a key part of the NLRA because it defines unfair labor practices. Unfair labor practices may result from an employer or union’s actions. The act specifies five possible unfair employer labor practices:

$$ Interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization.

$$ Dominating or interfering in the affairs of a union.

card check Organizing approach by labor in which employees sign a nonsecret card of support if they want unionization, and if 50 percent of the workforce plus one worker signs a card, the union is formed.

11.3 Discuss laws affecting col- lective bargaining.

HR Web Wisdom

National Labor Relations Board www.nlrb.gov

The NLRB is a federal agency that administers the National Labor Relations Act.

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$$ Discriminating concerning hire or tenure or any condition of employment for encouraging or discouraging union membership.

$$ Discriminating against or discharging an employee who has filed charges or given testi- mony under the act.

$$ Refusing to bargain with chosen representatives of employees.

The law prohibits unions from engaging in unfair labor practices. Primarily, unions cannot force employees to waive their rights as defined in Section 7. In addition, unions may not encour- age employer discrimination against employees who have been denied union membership unless such a denial was the result of failure to pay union membership dues.

Following passage of the Wagner Act, union membership increased from approximately 3 million to 15 million between 1935 and 1947.

Labor-Management Relations Act In 1947, with public pressure mounting, Congress passed the Labor-Management Relations Act (Taft-Hartley Act). The Taft-Hartley Act extensively revised the NLRA. A new period began in the evolution of public policy regarding labor. The pendulum had begun to swing toward a more balanced position between labor and management.

Some of the important changes introduced by the Taft-Hartley Act included the following:

$$ Modifying Section 7 to include the right of employees to refrain from union activity as well as engage in it.

$$ Prohibiting the closed shop and narrowing the freedom of the parties to authorize the union shop.

$$ Broadening the employer’s right of free speech. $$ Providing that employers need not recognize or bargain with unions formed by supervisors. $$ Giving employees the right to initiate decertification petitions. $$ Providing for government intervention in national emergency strikes.

Another significant change extended the concept of unfair labor practices to unions. Labor organizations were to refrain from the following:

$$ Restraining or coercing employees in the exercise of their guaranteed collective bargaining rights.

$$ Causing an employer to discriminate in any way against an employee to encourage or dis- courage union membership.

$$ Refusing to bargain in good faith with an employer regarding wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Stopping Unionization at Packer Industries It appears that the rumors about a union orga-

nizing effort at Packer Industries are true. Jay Golden, the Director of HR, just confirmed with a supervisor that the employees have started signing authorization cards. Jay suspected this was coming because he had received an increased number of complaints about pay and work- ing conditions over the last several months. He learned that a small group of employees is leading efforts to build interest in a union and Jay is very concerned. He is convinced that a union would create long- term challenges for the company and his instincts tell him he should do whatever is necessary to discourage employees from organizing.

The company’s CEO agrees with Jay and together they have started efforts to convince employees that they are better off without the union. The CEO started by holding a mandatory meeting where she made it very clear that if the union is certified, they can all count on a reduction in pay and benefits. Jay also has identified one of the leaders of the unionizing efforts. He has decided to transfer him to the second shift where there are fewer employees for him to talk to about the union. Jay is sure that this employee’s transfer will make it clear to all employees that Packer Industries will do whatever it takes to prevent them from unionizing.

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316 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

$$ Engaging in certain types of strikes and boycotts. $$ Requiring employees covered by union-shop contracts to pay initiation fees or dues in an

amount which the board finds excessive or discriminatory under all circumstances. $$ Featherbedding, or requiring that an employer pay for services not performed.

☛ $F Y I In fiscal year 2016, the NLRB received 21,326 complaints of unfair labor practices and only 6,010 were settled during the same period.21

One of the most controversial elements of the Taft-Hartley Act is its Section 14b, which per- mits states to enact right-to-work legislation. In the 22 states without right-to-work laws, it is legal for an employer to agree with the union that a new employee must join the union after a certain period (generally 30 days), or be terminated. This is referred to as a “union-shop agreement.” Right-to-work laws prohibit management and unions from entering into agreements requiring union membership as a condition of employment. These laws are state statutes or constitutional provisions that ban the practice of requiring union membership or financial support as a condition of employment. They establish the legal right of employees to decide for themselves whether to join or financially support a union.

Antidiscrimination Laws and Executive Orders In Chapter 3, we discussed a variety of federal laws and executive orders that are designed to protect employees from illegal discrimination. Some of these federal laws include the Age Dis- crimination in Employment Act, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, and the Equal Pay Act. We also noted that a variety of state and local laws provide similar or enhanced protection. These laws and executive orders made it easier for unions to protect the rights of many members.

Bargaining Unit Formation and the Collective Bargaining Process Before a union can negotiate a contract, it must first be formed or certified. The primary law gov- erning the relationship of companies and unions is the NLRA, as amended. Collective bargaining is one of the key parts of the act. Section 8(d) of the act defines collective bargaining, which we described as the process of negotiation between union representatives and representatives of management to agree on a collective bargaining agreement or contract. The act specifies that both the employer and representatives of employees meet at reasonable times to confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms related to conditions of employment, or to negotiate an agreement.

Once the NLRB certifies the union, labor and management can engage in collective bargaining. Most union/management agreements in the United States are for a three-year period though contracts may be in effect for as long as seven or eight years. The bargaining structure can affect the conduct of collective bargaining. The four major structures are one company dealing with a single union, several companies dealing with a single union, several unions dealing with a single company, and several companies dealing with several unions. Most contract bargaining is carried out under the first type of structure. The process can become quite complicated when several companies and unions are involved in the same negotiations. However, even when there is only one industry involved and one group of workers with similar skills, collective bargaining can be very difficult.

Forming a Bargaining Unit The act further provides that the designated representative of the employees shall be the exclusive representative for all the employees in the unit for purposes of collective bargaining. A bargaining unit consists of a group of employees, not necessarily union members, recognized by an employer or certified by an administrative agency as appropriate for representation by a labor organization for purposes of collective bargaining.

11.4 Summarize the formation of bargaining units and the col- lective bargaining process.

bargaining unit Group of employees, not necessarily union members, recognized by an employer or certified by an administrative agency as appropriate for representation by a labor organization for purposes of collective bargaining.

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A unit may cover the employees in one plant of an employer, or it may cover employees in two or more plants of the same employer. Although the act requires the representative to be selected by the employees, it does not require any procedure to be used so long as the choice clearly reflects the desire of most employees in the bargaining unit. The employee representative is normally chosen in a secret-ballot election conducted by the NLRB. When workers desire to become the bargaining representative for a group of employees, several steps leading to certification must be taken (Figure 11-2).

Prior to observing the distribution of authorization cards, there are usually signs of an upcom- ing union organizing attempt. Some indications might be an increase in the number or intensity of employee complaints on wages, hours, working conditions, or management practices; unusual or more frequent employee challenges to management authority; and, an increase in the number of formal complaints to government agencies such as the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, and state or federal equal employment agencies.

SIGNING OF AUTHORIZATION CARDS A prerequisite to becoming a recognized bargaining unit is to determine whether there is sufficient interest on the part of employees to justify the unit. Evidence of this interest is expressed when at least 30 percent of the employees in a work group sign an authorization card (Table 11-1). The authorization card is a document indicating that an employee wants to be represented by a labor organization in collective bargaining. Most union organizers will not proceed unless at least 50 percent of the workers in the group sign cards.

PETITION FOR ELECTION After the authorization cards have been signed, a petition for an election may be made to the appropriate regional office of the NLRB. When the petition is filed, the NLRB will investigate. The purpose of the investigation is to determine, among other things, the following:

$$ Whether the board has jurisdiction to conduct an election. $$ Whether there is a sufficient showing of employee interest to justify an election. $$ Whether a question of representation exists (for example, the employee representative has

demanded recognition, which has been denied by the employer).

authorization card Document indicating that an employee wants to be represented by a labor organization in collective bargaining.

FIGURE 11-2 Steps That Lead to Forming a Bargaining Unit

INTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

EXTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

Signing of Authorization

Cards

Petition for

Election

Election Campaign

Election and

Certification

YES, I WANT THE UNION

I, the undersigned, and employee of

(Name of Company)

Hereby authorize the (Name of the Union) to act as my collective bargaining agent with the company for wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.

NAME ___________________________DATE __________________________________________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________________

CITY ____________________________ STATE _________________ZIP ____________________

JOB TITLE _______________________________________________________________________

SIGN HERE ______________________________________________________________________

NOTE: THIS AUTHORIZATION IS TO BE SIGNED AND DATED IN EMPLOYEE’S OWN HANDWRITING. YOUR RIGHT TO SIGN THIS CARD IS PROTECTED BY LAW.

TABLE 11-1

Example of an Authorization Card

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318 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

$$ Whether the election will include appropriate employees in the bargaining unit (for instance, the board is prohibited from including plant guards in the same unit with the other employees).

$$ Whether the representative named in the petition is qualified (for example, a supervisor or any other management representative may not be an employee representative).

$$ Whether there are any barriers to an election in the form of existing contracts or prior elec- tions held within the past 12 months.22

If these conditions have been met, the NLRB will ordinarily direct that an election be held. A 2015 rule permits elections to be held as soon as 13 days after the union’s petition.23 Election details are left largely to the agency’s regional director.

ELECTION CAMPAIGN Both union and management usually promote their causes actively during an election. Unions will continue to encourage workers to join the union, and management may begin a campaign to tell workers the benefits of remaining union free. The supervisor’s role during the campaign is crucial. Supervisors need to conduct themselves in a manner that avoids violating the law and committing unfair labor practices. Specifically, they should be aware of what can and cannot be done during the pre-election campaign period. Throughout the campaign, supervisors should keep upper management informed about employee attitudes.

Theoretically, both union and management may tell their stories without interference from the other side. At times, the campaign becomes quite intense. Election results are invalid if the NLRB identifies conduct that interfered with the employees’ freedom of choice. Examples of such conduct include the following:

$$ An employer or a union threatens loss of jobs or benefits to influence employees’ votes or union activities.

$$ An employer or a union misstates key facts in the election campaign when the other party does not have a chance to reply.

$$ Either an employer or a union incites racial or religious prejudice by inflammatory cam- paign appeals.

$$ An employer fires employees to discourage or encourage their union activities or a union causes an employer to take such an action.

$$ An employer or a union makes campaign speeches to assembled groups of employees on company time within 24 hours of an election.

ELECTION AND CERTIFICATION The NLRB monitors the secret-ballot election on the date set. Its representatives are responsible for making sure that only eligible employees vote and for counting the votes. Following a valid election, the board will issue a certification of the results to the participants. If a majority of the employees voting in the bargaining unit has chosen a union, it will receive a certificate showing that it is now the official bargaining representative of the employees in the unit. However, the right to represent employees does not mean they have the right to dictate terms to management that would adversely affect the organization. The bargaining process does not require either party to make concessions, it only compels them to bargain in good faith in collective bargaining.

Collective Bargaining Process The collective bargaining process is fundamental to union and management relations in the United States. Regardless of the current state of labor/management relations, the general aspects of the collective bargaining process are the same and are illustrated in Figure 11-3. Depending on the type of relationship encountered, the collective bargaining process may be relatively simple, or it may be a long, tense struggle for both parties. Regardless of the complexity of the bargaining issues, the ability to reach agreement is the key to any successful negotiation.

As you can see, both external and internal environmental factors can influence the process. The first step in the collective bargaining process is preparing for negotiations. This step is often extensive and ongoing for both union and management. After the issues to be negotiated have been determined, the two sides confer to reach a mutually acceptable contract. Although breakdowns in negotiations can occur, both labor and management have at their disposal tools and arguments that can be used to convince the other side to accept their views. Eventually, however, management and the union usually reach an agreement that defines the rules for the duration of the contract.

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CHAPTER 11 • LABOR UNIONS AND COLLECTIvE BARgAININg 319

The next step is for the union membership to ratify the agreement. There is a feedback loop from “Administration of the Agreement” to “Preparing for Negotiation.” Collective bargaining is a continuous and dynamic process, and preparing for the next round of negotiations often begins the moment a contract is ratified.

Bargaining Issues Because of the complex issues facing labor and management today, negotiating teams must care- fully prepare for the bargaining sessions. Prior to meeting at the bargaining table, the negotiators should thoroughly know the culture, climate, history, present economic state, and wage and ben- efits structure of both the organization and similar organizations. Because the length of a typical labor agreement is three years, negotiators should develop a contract that is successful both now and in the future. This consideration should prevail for both management and labor, although it rarely does. During the term of an agreement, the two sides usually discover contract provisions that need to be added, deleted, or modified. These items become proposals to be addressed in the next round of negotiations.

Bargaining issues can be divided into three categories: mandatory, permissive, and prohibited. Mandatory bargaining issues fall within the definition of wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment. These issues generally have an immediate and direct effect on workers’ jobs. A refusal to bargain in these areas is grounds for an unfair labor practice charge. At times, collective bargaining toward new wage, rules, and benefits agreements may drag on for a long time. Permissive bargaining issues may be raised, but neither side may insist that they be bar- gained over. For example, management may want to bargain over health benefits for retired

mandatory bargaining issues Bargaining issues that fall within the definition of wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.

permissive bargaining issues Issues that may be raised, but neither side may insist that they be bargained over.

FIGURE 11-3 Collective Bargaining Process

INTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

EXTERNAL ENvIRONMENT

Bargaining Issues

Reaching the Agreement

Ratifying the Agreement

Preparing for Negotiation

Negotiating the Agreement

Overcoming Breakdowns

Negotiation Breakdowns?

Yes

No

Administration of the Agreement

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320 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

workers, but the union may choose not to bargain over the issue. Another permissive bargaining issue might be the union wanting management to provide child-care arrangements. Prohibited bargaining issues, such as the issue of the closed shop, an arrangement whereby union member- ship is a prerequisite, are statutorily outlawed. The Taft-Hartley Act made the closed shop illegal. However, the act was modified 12 years later by the Landrum-Griffin Act to permit a closed shop in the construction industry. This is the only exception allowed.

Despite much dissimilarity, certain topics are included in virtually all labor agreements. Each topic discussed in the following section may be an issue in negotiations.

RECOGNITION This section usually appears at the beginning of the labor agreement. Its purpose is to identify the union that is recognized as the bargaining representative and to describe the bargaining unit—that is, the employees for whom the union speaks. A typical recognition section might read as follows:

The XYZ Company recognizes the ABC Union as the sole and exclusive representative of the bargaining unit employees for collective bargaining regarding wages, hours, and other conditions of employment.

MANAGEMENT RIGHTS A section that is often but not always written into the labor agreement spells out the rights of management. If no such section is included, management may reason that it retains control of all topics not described as being able to be bargained in the contract. The precise content of the management rights section will vary by industry, company, and union. When included, management rights generally involve three areas:

$$ Freedom to select the business objectives of the company $$ Freedom to determine the uses to which the material assets of the enterprise will be

devoted $$ Power to take disciplinary action for cause

Management essentially possesses the right to determine the work to be done and where, when, and how it is to be done; the number of employees who will do the work; supervise and instruct employees in doing the work; correct employees whose work performance or personal conduct fails to meet reasonable standards; and, hire, dismiss, and promote workers based on performance.

UNION SECURITY Union security is typically one of the first items negotiated in a collective bargaining agreement. The objective of union security provisions is to ensure that the union continues to exist and perform its functions. A strong union security provision makes it easier for the union to enroll and retain members. Some basic forms of union security clauses are next described.

A closed shop is an arrangement whereby union membership is a prerequisite for employment. As noted previously, closed shops are illegal in every industry except for the construction industry.

A union shop arrangement requires that all employees become members of the union after a specified period of employment (the legal minimum is 30 days) or after a union-shop provision has been negotiated. Employees must remain members of the union as a condition of employment for the duration of the contract. The union shop is generally legal in the United States, except in states that have right-to-work laws.

With maintenance of membership, employees who are members of the union at the time the labor agreement is signed, or who later voluntarily join must continue their memberships until the termination of the agreement as a condition of employment. This form of recognition is also prohibited in most states that have right-to-work laws.

An agency shop provision does not require employees to join the union; however, the labor agreement requires that, as a condition of employment, each nonunion member of the bargaining unit pay the union the equivalent of membership dues as a kind of tax, or service charge, in return for the union acting as the bargaining agent. The NLRA requires the union to bargain for all members of the bargaining unit, including nonunion employees. The agency shop is outlawed in most states that have right-to-work laws.

An open shop describes the absence of union security, rather than its presence. The open shop, strictly defined, is employment on equal terms to union members and nonmembers alike. Under this arrangement, no employee is required to join or contribute to the union financially.

prohibited bargaining issues Issues that are statutorily outlawed from collective bargaining.

closed shop Arrangement making union membership a prerequisite for employment.

union shop Requirement that all employees become members of the union after a specified period of employment (the legal minimum is 30 days) or after a union-shop provision has been negotiated.

maintenance of membership Employees who are members of the union when the labor agreement is signed or who later voluntarily join must continue their memberships until the termination of the agreement as a condition of employment.

agency shop Labor agreement provision requiring, as a condition of employment, that each nonunion member of a bargaining unit pay the union the equivalent of membership dues as a service charge in return for the union acting as the bargaining agent.

open shop Employment on equal terms to union members and nonmembers alike.

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Another type of security that unions attempt to achieve is the checkoff of dues. A checkoff agreement may be used in addition to any of the previously mentioned shop agreements. Under the checkoff of dues provision, the company agrees to withhold union dues from members’ paychecks and to forward the money directly to the union. Because of provisions in the Taft-Hartley Act, each union member must voluntarily sign a statement authorizing this deduction. Dues check- off is important to the union because it eliminates much of the expense, time, and hassle of col- lecting dues from each member every pay period or once a month.

COMPENSATION This section typically constitutes a large portion of most labor agreements. Virtually any item that can affect compensation may be included in labor agreements. Some of the items frequently covered include the following:

The wage rate schedule refers to the base rates to be paid each year of the contract for each job are included in this section. At times, unions can obtain a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), or escalator clause, in the contract to protect the purchasing power of employees’ earnings. Another section of the agreement may cover hours of work, overtime pay, hazard pay, and premium pay, such as shift differentials.

For some firms, jury pay amounts to the employee’s entire salary when he or she is serving jury duty. Others pay the difference between the amount employees receive from the court and the compensation that would have been earned. The procedure covering jury pay is typically stated in the contract.

Layoff or severance pay sections specify the amount that employees in various jobs or seniority levels will be paid if they are laid off or terminated is a frequently included item.

Recognized holidays and the amount of pay that a worker will receive if he or she must work on a holiday is specified here. In addition, the pay procedure for times when a holiday falls on a worker’s normal day off is provided.

The vacation section spells out the amount of vacation that a person may take based on seniority. Any restrictions as to when the vacation may be taken are also stated.

GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE Virtually all labor agreements include some form of grievance procedure. A grievance can be broadly defined as an employee’s dissatisfaction or feeling of personal injustice relating to his or her employment. A grievance procedure (discussed later in this chapter) is a formal, systematic process that permits employees to express complaints without jeopardizing their jobs.

EMPLOYEE SECURITY This section of the labor agreement establishes the procedures that cover job security for individual employees. Seniority is a key topic related to employee security. Seniority is the length of time an employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job. Seniority may be determined companywide, by division, by department, or by job. Agreement on seniority is important because the person with the most seniority, as defined in the labor agreement, is typically the last to be laid off and the first to be recalled. The seniority system also provides a basis for promotion decisions. When qualifications are met, employees with the greatest seniority will likely be considered first for promotion to higher-level jobs.

JOB-RELATED FACTORS Many of the rules governing employee actions on the job are also included. Some of the more important factors are company work rules, work standards, and rules related to safety. This section varies, depending on the nature of the industry and the product manufactured.

Preparation for Negotiations The union must continuously gather information regarding membership needs to isolate areas of dissatisfaction. The union steward is normally in the best position to collect such data.24 A union steward is both an official of the union and a company employee who represents and defends the interests of fellow employees. Union stewards are elected by their peers and are well informed regarding union members’ attitudes. The union steward constantly funnels information up through the union’s chain of command, where the data are compiled and analyzed. Union leadership attempts to uncover any areas of dissatisfaction because the general union membership must approve any agreement before it becomes final. Because they are elected, union leaders will lose their positions if the demands they make of management do not represent the desires of the general membership.

checkoff of dues Agreement by which a company agrees to withhold union dues from members’ paychecks and to forward the money directly to the union.

grievance Employee’s dissatisfaction or feeling of personal injustice relating to his or her employment.

grievance procedure Formal, systematic process that permits employees to express complaints without jeopardizing their jobs.

seniority The length of time an employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job.

union steward An individual who is both an official of the union and a company employee who represents and defends the interests of fellow employees.

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Management also spends long hours preparing for negotiations. All aspects of the current contracts are considered, including flaws that should be corrected. When preparing for negotia- tions, management should listen carefully to first-line managers. These individuals administer the labor agreement on a day-to-day basis and must live with errors made in negotiating the contract. An alert line manager is also able to inform upper management of the demands unions may plan to make during negotiations.

Management also attempts periodically to obtain information regarding employee attitudes. Surveys are often administered to workers to determine their feelings toward their jobs and job environment. Union and management representatives like to know as much as possible about employee attitudes when they sit down at the bargaining table.

Another part of preparation for negotiations involves identifying various positions that both union and management will take as the negotiations progress. Each usually takes an initially extreme position, representing the optimum conditions union or management would prefer. The two sides will likely determine absolute limits to their offers or demands before a breakdown in negotiations occurs. They also usually prepare fallback positions based on combinations of issues. Preparations should be detailed because clear minds often do not prevail during the heat of negotiations.

A major consideration in preparing for negotiations is the selection of the bargaining teams. The makeup of the management team usually depends on the type of organization and its size. Normally, labor relations specialists, with the advice and assistance of operating managers, con- duct bargaining. Sometimes, top executives are directly involved, particularly in smaller firms. Larger companies use staff specialists (a HR manager or industrial relations executive), managers of principal operating divisions, and in some cases, an outside consultant, such as a labor attorney.

The responsibility for conducting negotiations for the union is usually entrusted to union officers. At the local level, rank-and-file members who are elected specifically for this purpose will normally supplement the bargaining committee. In addition, the national union will often send a representative to act in an advisory capacity or even to participate directly in the bargain- ing sessions. The real task of the union negotiating team is to develop and obtain solutions to the problems raised by the union’s membership.

Negotiating the Agreement There is no way to ensure speedy and mutually acceptable results from negotiations. At best, the parties can attempt to create an atmosphere that will lend itself to steady progress and productive results. For example, the two negotiating teams usually meet at an agreed-on neutral site, such as a hotel. When a favorable relationship can be established early, eleventh-hour (or last-minute) bargaining can often be avoided. It is equally important for union and management negotiators to strive to develop and maintain clear and open lines of communication. Collective bargaining is a problem-solving activity; consequently, good communication is essential to its success. Negotia- tions should be conducted in the privacy of the conference room, not in the news media. Often in the media, the unions belittle management and naturally management strikes back. The results can be harmful, often to both sides. If the negotiators feel that publicity is necessary, joint releases to the media may avoid unnecessary conflict.

The negotiating phase of collective bargaining begins with each side presenting its initial demands. Because a collective bargaining settlement can be expensive for a firm, the cost of vari- ous proposals should be estimated as accurately as possible. Some changes can be quite expensive, and others cost little or nothing, but the cost of the various proposals being considered must always be carefully deliberated. The term negotiating suggests a certain amount of give-and-take, the purpose of which is to lower the other side’s expectations. For example, the union might bargain to upgrade its members’ economic and working conditions and the company might negotiate to maintain or enhance profitability.

One of the costliest components of any collective bargaining agreement is a wage increase provision. An example of the negotiation of a wage increase is shown in Figure 11-4. In this example, labor initially demands a 40-cent-per-hour increase. Management counters with an offer of only 10 cents per hour. Both labor and management, as expected, reject each other’s demand. Plan B calls for labor to lower its demand to a 30-cents-per-hour increase. Management counters with an offer of 20 cents. The positions in plan B are feasible to both sides, as both groups are in the bargaining zone. Wages within the bargaining zone are those that management and labor

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can both accept, in this case, an increase of between 20 cents and 30 cents per hour. The exact amount will be determined by the power of the bargaining unit and the skills of the negotiators.

The realities of negotiations are not for the weak of heart and at times are like a high-stakes poker game. A certain amount of bluffing and raising the ante takes place in many negotiations. The ultimate bluff for the union is when a negotiator says, “If our demands are not met, we are prepared to strike.” Management’s version of this bluff would be to threaten a lockout. Each of these tactics will be discussed later as a means of overcoming breakdowns in negotiations. The party with the greater leverage can expect to extract the most concessions.

Finding solutions to conflict can be win/win or win/lose. In the case of win/win, both parties to a conflict receive something of value even if it is not what each party wanted. For example, workers and management are at odds over a request for a higher hourly pay rate from $15 to $25. Management claims that raising wages to the $25 level could threaten job security if company sales declined by any amount. If workers and management can agree to a compromise increase (say, a pay raise to $20 per hour), then this would be a win/win situation. This is a win/win situ- ation because workers received a pay raise and management provided more to employees while limiting compensation cost increases. Had management not agreed to any raise, the situation would have been win/lose because labor costs would have been contained at the expense of employee morale. In the Watch It Video, the importance of finding a win/win outcome to resolve conflict is discussed.

FIGURE 11-4 Example of Negotiating a Wage Increase

LABOR Additional Cents

per Hour Demanded

Labor’s Final Offer

(before strike)

Labor’s Plan B

MANAgEMENT Additional Cents per Hour Offered

Bargaining Zone

10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Labor’s Plan A

Management’s Plan B

Management’s Plan A

Management’s Final Offer (before plant lockout)

Bargaining Zone

10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Rudi’s Bakery: Conflict and Negotiation and to respond to questions.

Even though one party in the negotiating process may appear to possess the greater power, negotiators often take care to keep the other side from losing face. They recognize that the balance of power may switch rapidly. By the time the next round of negotiations occurs, the pendulum may be swinging back in favor of the other side. Even when management appears to have the upper hand, it may make minor concessions that will allow the labor leader to claim gains for the union. Management may demand that workers pay for grease rags that are lost if the loss of these rags has become excessive. To obtain labor’s agreement to this demand, management may agree to provide new uniforms for the workers if the cost of these uniforms would be less than the cost of lost rags. Thus, labor leaders, although forced to concede to management’s demand, could show the workers that they have obtained a concession from management. Each side usually does not expect to obtain all the demands presented in its first proposal. Labor can lose a demand and continue to bring it up in the future. Demands for benefits that the union does not expect to receive when they are first made are known as beachhead demands.

beachhead demands Demands that the union does not expect management to meet when they are first made.

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324 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

Overcoming Breakdowns in Negotiations At times negotiations break down, even though both labor and management may sincerely want to arrive at an equitable contract settlement. Several means of removing roadblocks may be used to get negotiations moving again.

THIRD-PARTY INTERVENTION Often, an outside person can intervene to help when an agreement cannot be reached and the two sides reach an impasse. The reasons behind each party’s position may be quite rational, or the breakdown may be related to emotional disputes that tend to become distorted during the heat of negotiations. Regardless of the cause, something must be done to continue the negotiations. The two basic types of third-party intervention are mediation and arbitration.

In mediation, a neutral third party enters the negotiations and attempts to facilitate a resolution to a labor dispute when a bargaining impasse has occurred. A mediator serves a facilitator role. The objective of mediation is to persuade the parties to resume negotiations and reach a settlement. For instance, the Stop & Shop supermarket and the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) union could not find common ground in setting terms for wages and employee benefits. Most union members authorized a strike, which prompted Stop & Shop management to agree to have a media- tor facilitate negotiations. Daniel P. Clifford, president of UFCW Local 1459 indicated, “They hope to avoid a complete breakdown in negotiations and reach a settlement as we all do.”25

A mediator has no power to force a settlement but can help in the search for solutions, make recommendations, and work to open blocked channels of communication. Successful mediation depends to a substantial degree on the tact, diplomacy, patience, and perseverance of the mediator. The mediator’s fresh insights are used to get discussions going again. Mediation is voluntary at every step of the process. The mediator serves as an informal coach, helping to ensure that the discussions are fair and effective.

The principal organization involved in mediation efforts, other than some state and local agen- cies, is the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS). The Taft-Hartley Act established the FMCS as an independent agency. Either one or both parties involved in negotiations can seek the assistance of the FMCS, or the agency can offer its help if it feels that the situation warrants it. Federal law requires that the party wishing to change a contract must give notice of this intention to the other party 60 days prior to the expiration of a contract. If no agreement has been reached 30 days prior to the expiration date, the FMCS must be notified.

In arbitration, a dispute is submitted to an impartial third party for a binding decision; an arbitrator acts as a judge and jury. There are two principal types of union management disputes: rights disputes and interest disputes. Disputes over the interpretation and application of the various provisions of an existing contract are submitted to rights arbitration, which will be discussed shortly under the heading of “Grievance Procedure in a Union Environment.” This type of arbitra- tion is common in the United States.

The other type of arbitration, interest arbitration, involves disputes over the terms of pro- posed collective bargaining agreements. In the private sector, the use of interest arbitration as an alternative for impasse resolution has not been a common practice. Unions and employers rarely agree to submit the basic terms of a contract (such as wages, hours, and working conditions) to a neutral party for disposition. They prefer to rely on collective bargaining and the threat of eco- nomic pressure (such as strikes and lockouts) to decide these issues.

For either rights or interest arbitration, the disputants are free to select any person as their arbitrator, so long as they agree on the selection. Most commonly, however, the two sides make a request for an arbitrator to either the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or the FMCS. The AAA is a nonprofit organization with offices in many cities. Both the AAA and the FMCS maintain lists of arbitrators. When considering potential arbitrators, both management and labor will study the arbitrator’s previous decisions to detect any biases. Obviously, neither party wants to select an arbitrator who might tend to favor the other’s position.

After the arbitrator has been selected and has agreed to serve, a time and place for a hearing will be determined. The issue to be resolved will be presented to the arbitrator in a document that summarizes the question(s) to be decided. It will also point out any contract restrictions that prohibit the arbitrator from making an award that would change the terms of the contract.

At the hearing, each side presents its case. Arbitration is an adversarial proceeding, so a case may be lost because of poor preparation and presentation. The arbitrator may conduct the hearing

mediation Neutral third party enters the negotiations and attempts to facilitate a resolution to a labor dispute when a bargaining impasse has occurred.

arbitration Process in which a dispute is submitted to an impartial third party for a binding decision; an arbitrator acts as a judge and jury.

rights arbitration Arbitration involving disputes over the interpretation and application of the various provisions of an existing contract.

interest arbitration Arbitration that involves disputes over the terms of proposed collective bargaining agreements.

HR Web Wisdom

American Arbitration Association www.adr.org/ Provides services to individuals and organizations who wish to resolve conflicts out of court.

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much like a courtroom proceeding. Witnesses, cross-examination, transcripts, and legal counsel may all be used. The parties may also submit or be asked by the arbitrator to submit formal written statements. After the hearing, the arbitrator studies the material submitted and testimony given and is expected to reach a decision within 30 to 60 days. The decision is usually accompanied by a written opinion giving reasons for the decision.

The courts will generally enforce an arbitrator’s decision unless: (1) the arbitrator’s decision is shown to be unreasonable or capricious in that it did not address the issues; (2) the arbitrator exceeded his or her authority; or (3) the award or decision violated a federal or state law. In one arbitration case that ultimately went to the Supreme Court, the arbitrator’s decision appeared to run counter to public policy of prohibiting workers who had tested positive for drugs from operat- ing heavy machinery or being permitted to return to work. However, the Supreme Court wrote, “We recognize that reasonable people can differ as to whether reinstatement or discharge is the more appropriate remedy here. But both employer and union have agreed to entrust this remedial decision to an arbitrator.”26

UNION STRATEGIES FOR OVERCOMING NEGOTIATION BREAKDOWNS There are times when a union believes that it must exert extreme pressure to get management to agree to its bargaining demands. Strikes and boycotts are the primary means that the union may use to overcome breakdowns in negotiations.

☛ $F Y I In 2016, there were 15 major labor strikes, idling 99,000 workers over a combined 1.54 million days.27

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled LA Port Strike and to respond to questions.

When union members refuse to work to exert pressure on management in negotiations, their action is referred to as a strike. For instance, in 2016, 36,000 Verizon employees walked off the job after negotiations with management failed. Outsourcing jobs was one of the main reasons for workers’ decision to strike. At the time, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that the Verizon strike was the largest number of employees to strike in a single company. A strike halts production, resulting in lost customers and revenue, which the union hopes will force management to submit to its terms. In Korea, Hyundai workers conducted 21 partial strikes in 2016 that caused a production loss of about 117,000 vehicles costing the company more than $2.5 billion.28 Some strikes can have far-reaching consequences for other firms and their customers. For example, when port workers on the west coast went on strike, many cargo ships were prohibited from reaching port and thousands of empty transport trucks remained empty. Many firms ranging from car deal- ers to retail companies experienced dwindling inventories of imported goods and the inability to serve all customer demand. The following Watch It video briefly describes the Los Angeles port strike and its effects.

strike Action by union members who refuse to work to exert pressure on management in negotiations.

The timing of a strike is important in determining its effectiveness. An excellent time is when business is thriving and the demand for the firm’s goods or services is expanding. However, the union might be hard-pressed to obtain major concessions from a strike if the firm’s sales are down and it has built up a large inventory. In this instance, the company would not be severely damaged.

Contrary to many opinions, unions prefer to use the strike only as a last resort. During a strike, workers have little income. The strike fund may only pay for items such as food, utilities, and motor fuel. In recent years, many union members have been even more reluctant to strike because of the fear of being replaced. When a union goes on an economic strike and the company hires replacements, the company does not have to lay off these individuals at the end of the strike. For example, Edw. C. Levy Co., headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, hired permanent replacements for the 130 members of the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 who struck the contractor’s operations at Mittal Steel Company’s Burns Harbor plant.29

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326 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

Companies have typically been free to hire replacement workers on a temporary or per- manent basis. A recent NLRB ruling limits a company’s choice. Companies have latitude to hire permanent workers to ensure continuous operations rather than as punishment to striking workers. For example, the NLRB ruled that American Baptist Homes’ decision to hire replace- ment workers was unlawful. The attorney for American Baptist Homes said that the company hired replacement workers because it, “wanted to teach the strikers and the union a lesson. They wanted to avoid any future strikes, and this was the lesson that they were going to be taught.”30

A union’s treasury is often depleted by payment of strike benefits to its members. In addi- tion, members suffer because they are not receiving their normal pay. Striking workers during one General Motors strike got paid about $150 a week strike pay instead of the roughly $1,000 a week that they normally took home. Although strike pay helps, union members certainly cannot maintain a normal standard of living with these minimal amounts.

Sometimes during negotiations (usually at the beginning), the union may want to strengthen its negotiating position by taking a strike vote. Members often give overwhelming approval to a strike. This vote does not necessarily mean that there will be a strike, only that the union leaders now have the authority to call one if negotiations reach an impasse. A favorable strike vote can add a sense of urgency to efforts to reach an agreement.

Successful passage of a strike vote has additional implications for union members. Virtu- ally every national union’s constitution contains a clause requiring the members to support and participate in a strike if one is called. If a union member fails to comply with this requirement, he or she can be fined as high as 100 percent of wages if union pickets remain outside the company. However, the Supreme Court has ruled that an employee on economic strike may resign from the union and avoid being punished by the union. In today’s economy, union members are using more subtle measures, such as sick-outs and work slowdowns, to avoid the impact of a strike while still bringing pressure on the company to meet union demands.

The boycott is another of labor’s weapons to get management to agree to its demands. A boycott involves an agreement by union members to refuse to use or buy the firm’s products. A boycott exerts economic pressure on management, and the effect often lasts much longer than that of a strike. Once shoppers change buying habits, their behavior will likely continue long after the boycott has ended. At times, significant pressures can be exerted on a business when union members, their families, and their friends refuse to purchase the firm’s products. This approach is especially effective when the products are sold at retail outlets and are easily identifiable by brand name. For instance, 7,000 members of Teamsters Local 688 boycotted grocery chain Schnuck Markets Inc. after the company laid off more than 200 warehouse workers to outsource those jobs.31

The practice of a union attempting to encourage third parties (such as suppliers and custom- ers) to stop doing business with the company is known as a secondary boycott. The Taft-Hartley Act declared this type of boycott to be illegal.

MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES FOR OVERCOMING NEGOTIATION BREAKDOWNS There are times when management believes that it must exert extreme pressure to get the union to back away from a demand. The lockout and operating the firm by placing management and nonunion workers in the striking workers’ jobs are the primary means management may use to overcome breakdowns in negotiations.

Management may use the lockout to encourage unions to come back to the bargaining table. In a lockout, management keeps employees out of the workplace and runs the operation with management personnel or replacements. In 2016, Honeywell’s South Bend manufacturing plant locked out more than 300 union workers for 9 months.32 The company initiated the lockout because the union rejected new contract terms that did not specify how much health insurance will cost them. Some of the highest-profile lockouts have involved professional sports teams. The National Hockey League and the National Basketball Association used a lockout to get players to return to negotiations. Unable to work, the employees are not paid; the fear of a lockout may bring labor back to the bargaining table. A lockout is particularly effective when management is dealing with a weak union, when the union treasury is depleted, or when the business has excessive inven- tories. The lockout is also used to inform the union that management is serious regarding certain bargaining issues.

boycott Agreement by union members to refuse to use or buy the firm’s products.

secondary boycott Union attempt to encourage third parties (such as suppliers and customers) to stop doing business with a firm; declared illegal by the Taft-Hartley Act.

lockout Management keeps employees out of the workplace and runs the operation with management personnel or replacements.

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A course of action that a company can take if the union goes on strike is to operate the firm by placing management and nonunion workers in the striking workers’ jobs. The type of industry involved has considerable effect on the impact of this maneuver. If the firm is not labor-intensive and if maintenance demands are not high, such as at a petroleum refinery or a chemical plant, this practice may be quite effective. When appropriate, management may attempt to show how using nonunion employees can increase production. At times, management personnel will live in the plant and have food and other necessities delivered to them. This situation occurred when the 900 members of Local 470 of the International Association of Machinists struck at the PPG Plant in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Management continued to run the plant with management and contract labor personnel. The union members struck because of an increase in insurance payments and a new hiring-in rate for entry-level workers. Prior to the strike, the local had taken a strike vote, and an overwhelming number of workers had voted in favor of the strike. Later in negotiations, the union permitted members to vote on whether to accept or reject management’s proposal. It was rejected by most workers. Then management sent registered letters to all union members sug- gesting that they were not willing to maintain the current work situation, and the company was considering hiring replacement workers. Another vote was taken and the contract was accepted. Prior to the final vote, approximately 100 workers had resigned from the union and crossed the picket line.

Reaching the Labor-Management Agreement The document that emerges from the collective bargaining process is known as a “labor/ management agreement” or “contract.” It regulates the relationship between employer and employees for a speci- fied period. It is still an essential but difficult task because each agreement is unique, and there is no standard or universal model.

Ratifying the Labor-Management Agreement Most collective bargaining leads to an agreement without a breakdown in negotiations or disrup- tive actions. Typically, agreement is reached before the current contract expires. After the negotia- tors have reached a tentative agreement on all contract terms, they prepare a written agreement covering those terms, complete with the effective and termination dates. The approval process for management is often easier than for labor. The president or CEO has usually been briefed regu- larly on the progress of negotiations. Any difficulty that might have stood in the way of obtaining approval has probably already been resolved with top management by the negotiators.

However, the approval process is more complex for the union. Until most members voting in a ratification election approve it, the proposed agreement is not final. At times, union members reject the proposal and a new round of negotiations must begin. Many of these rejections might not occur if union negotiators were better informed about members’ desires.

Administration of the Labor-Management Agreement Negotiating, as it relates to the total collective bargaining process, may be likened to the tip of an iceberg. It is the visible phase, the part that makes the news. The larger and perhaps more impor- tant part of collective bargaining is administration of the agreement, which the public seldom sees. The agreement establishes the union/management relationship for the duration of the contract. Usually, neither party can change the contract’s language until the expiration date, except by mutual consent. However, the main problem encountered in contract administration is uniform interpretation and application of the contract’s terms. Administering the contract is a day-to-day activity. Ideally, the aim of both management and the union is to make the agreement work to the benefit of all concerned. At times, this is not an easy task.

Management is primarily responsible for explaining and implementing the agreement. This process should begin with meetings or training sessions not only to point out significant features but also to provide a clause-by-clause analysis of the contract. First-line supervisors must know their responsibilities and manage disagreements when they arise. In addition, supervisors and middle managers should be encouraged to notify top management of any contract modifications or new provisions required for the next round of negotiations.

The HR manager or industrial relations manager plays a key role in the day-to-day admin- istration of the contract. He or she gives advice on matters of discipline, works to resolve

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328 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

grievances, and helps first-line supervisors establish good working relationships within the terms of the agreement. After becoming unionized, the HR manager’s function tends to change rather significantly. It may even be divided into separate HR and industrial relations departments. In such situations, the vice president of HR may perform all HR management tasks except for dealing with union-related matters. All nonunion employees would go to the HR professional for assistance needed. The vice president of industrial relations would likely deal with all union- related matters.

The issues we have discussed thus far have largely been focused on the private sector. There are some differences in collective bargaining between the private and public sectors. We briefly highlight some of the differences next.

Public Sector Collective Bargaining Executive Order 10988 established the basic framework for collective bargaining in federal gov- ernment agencies. Title VII of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 regulates most of the labor– management relations in the federal service. It establishes the Federal Labor Relations Authority, which is modeled after the NLRA. The intent of the Federal Labor Relations Act is to bring the public-sector model in line with that of the private sector. Requirements and mechanisms for recognition and elections, dealing with impasses, and handling grievances are covered in the act. Collective bargaining for federal unions has traditionally been quite different from private-sector bargaining because wages were off the table. President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized that the bargaining relationship that exists in the private sector cannot also exist in the public sector saying it, “cannot be transplanted into the public service. . . . The employer is the whole people.”33 Title V of the U.S. Code, the law that dictates rules for federal employees, did not allow bargaining over wage issues, except for the U.S. Postal Service.

There is no uniform pattern to state and local bargaining rights. More than two-thirds of the states have enacted legislation granting public-sector collective bargaining rights to some groups (e.g., teachers, police, and firefighters). However, the diversity of state labor laws makes it difficult to generalize about the legal aspects of collective bargaining at the state and local levels.

In the public sector, most governmental jurisdictions prohibit their employees from striking. This fact was vigorously pointed out in the 1981 strike by air traffic controllers when President Ronald Reagan used replacement workers to end the first declared national strike against the federal government. The Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) sacrificed a substantial pay increase, a generous benefit package, and its existence in its attempt to legitimize strikes in the public sector.34 Thus, interest arbitration is used more than in the private sector, although there is no uniform application of this method. A procedure used in the public sector is final-offer arbitration, which has two basic forms: package selection and issue-by-issue selec- tion. In package selection, the arbitrator must select one party’s entire offer on all issues in dispute. In issue-by-issue selection, the arbitrator examines each issue separately and chooses the final offer of one side or the other on each issue. Final-offer arbitration is often used to determine the salary of a professional baseball player. Both players and management present a dollar figure to an arbitrator. The arbitrator chooses one figure or the other.

Grievance Procedure in a Union Environment As previously defined, a grievance procedure is a formal, systematic process that permits employ- ees to express complaints without jeopardizing their jobs. A grievance procedure under a collective bargaining agreement is normally well defined. It is usually restricted to violations of the terms and conditions of the agreement. Other conditions that may give rise to a grievance include the following:

$$ A violation of law $$ A violation of the intent of the parties as stipulated during contract negotiations $$ A violation of company rules $$ A change in working conditions or past company practices $$ A violation of health or safety standards

Grievance procedures have many common features. However, variations may reflect differ- ences in organizational or decision-making structures or the size of a plant or company. Some

final-offer arbitration An arbitration procedure used in the public sector whereby the arbitrator must select one party’s offer either as a package or issue- by-issue selection.

11.5 Describe the griev- ance procedure in a union environment.

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general principles based on widespread practice can serve as useful guidelines for effective griev- ance administration:

$$ Grievances should be settled promptly. $$ Procedures and forms used for airing grievances must be easy to use and well understood

by employees and their supervisors. $$ Direct and timely avenues of appeal from rulings of line supervision must exist.

The multi-step grievance procedure is the most common type. In the first step, the employee usually presents the grievance orally and informally to the immediate supervisor in the presence of the union steward. This step offers the greatest potential for improved labor relations, and a large majority of grievances is settled here. The procedure ends if the grievance is resolved at this initial step. If the grievance remains unresolved, the next step involves a meeting between the plant manager or HR manager and higher union officials, such as the grievance committee or the business agent or manager. Prior to this meeting, the grievance is written out, dated, and signed by the employee and the union steward. The written grievance states the events, as the employee perceives them, cites the contract provision that allegedly has been violated, and indicates the settlement desired. If the grievance is not settled at this meeting, it moves to the third step, which typically involves the firm’s top labor representative (such as the vice president of industrial rela- tions) and high-level union officials. At times, depending on the severity of the grievance, the president may represent the firm. Arbitration is the final step in most grievance procedures. In arbitration, the parties submit their dispute to an impartial third party for binding resolution. Most agreements restrict the arbitrator’s decision to application and interpretation of the agreement and the final decision is binding on both parties. If the union decides in favor of arbitration, it notifies management. At this point, the union and the company select an arbitrator.35

When arbitration is used to settle a grievance, a variety of factors may be considered to evaluate the fairness of the management actions that caused the grievance. Some factors include:

$$ Nature of the offense $$ Due process and procedural correctness $$ Double jeopardy $$ Past record of grievant $$ Length of service with the company $$ Knowledge of rules $$ Warnings $$ Lax enforcement of rule $$ Discriminatory treatment

The large number of interacting variables in each case makes the arbitration process difficult. The arbitrator must possess exceptional patience and judgment in rendering a fair and impartial decision.

Labor relations problems can escalate when a supervisor is not equipped to handle grievances at the first step. Because the union steward, the aggrieved party, and the supervisor usually handle the first step informally, the supervisor must be fully prepared. The supervisor should obtain as many facts as possible before the meeting because the union steward is likely to have also done his or her homework.

The supervisor needs to recognize that the grievance may not reflect the real problem. For instance, the employee might be angry with the company for modifying its pay policies, even though the union agreed to the change. To voice discontent, the worker might file a grievance for an unrelated minor violation of the contract.

Any disciplinary action administered may ultimately be taken to arbitration, when such a remedy is specified in the labor agreement. Employers have learned that they must prepare records that will constitute proof of disciplinary action and the reasons for it. Although the formats of written warnings may vary, all should include the following information:

$$ Statement of facts concerning the offense $$ Identification of the rule that was violated $$ Statement of what resulted or could have resulted because of the violation $$ Identification of any previous similar violations by the same individual $$ Statement of possible future consequences should the violation occur again $$ Signature and date

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330 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

FIGURE 11-5 Example of a Written Warning

Date:

To:

From:

Subject:

August 1, 2013

Wayne Sanders

Judy Bandy

Written Warning

We are quite concerned because today you were thirty minutes late to work and offered no justification for this. According to our records, a similar offense occurred on July 25, 2013. At that time, you were informed that failure to report to work on time is unacceptable. I am, therefore, notifying you in writing that you must report to work on time. It will be necessary to terminate your employment if this happens again. Please sign this form to indicate that you have read and understand this warning. Signing is not an indication of agreement.

Name

Date

☛ $F Y I In a recent 10-year period, employees held 2,398 decertification elections and voted to decertify the union in 1,448 of them.36

An example of a written warning is shown in Figure 11-5. In this instance, the worker has already received an oral reprimand. The individual is also warned that continued tardiness could lead to termination. It is important to document oral reprimands because they may be the first step in disciplinary action leading ultimately to arbitration.

Union Decertification Until 1947, once a union was certified, it was certified forever. However, the Taft-Hartley Act made it possible for employees to decertify a union. Decertification is the reverse of the process that employees must follow to be recognized as an official bargaining unit. It results in a union losing its right to act as the exclusive bargaining representative of a group of employees. As union membership has declined, the need for decertification elections has also diminished.

11.6 Explain union decertification.

decertification Reverse of the process that employees must follow to be recognized as an official bargaining unit.

Members of a union’s bargaining unit typically choose to decertify a union when it feels that the union is not creating an advantage such as in wage rates, benefits, and other employment- related matters. Bargaining unit members may also choose to decertify a union when it disagrees how money is spent. For example, in 2014, the police union in New Haven, Connecticut, over- whelmingly voted to decertify from AFSCME Council 15. Union members were dissatisfied with

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the use of the lump-sum payments it made to the union (for its members’ education and legal representation of police officers if needed) because the Union spent a portion of these payments to subsidize activities for small police forces rather than to the exclusive benefit of its members.37

The rules established by the NLRB spell out the conditions for filing a decertification petition; it is essentially the reverse of obtaining union recognition. At least 30 percent of the bargaining unit members must petition for an election. As might be expected, this task by itself may be difficult because union supporters are likely to oppose the move. Few employees know about decertification and fewer still know how to start the process. In addition, although the petitioners’ names are supposed to remain confidential, many union members are fearful that their signatures on the petition will be discovered. The timing of the NLRB’s receipt of the decertification petition is also critical. The petition must be submitted between 60 and 90 days prior to the expiration of the current contract. When all these conditions have been met, the NLRB regional director will schedule a decertification election by secret ballot.

The NLRB carefully monitors the events leading up to the election. Current employees must initiate the request for the election. This is what happened regarding professional football when the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA) decertified in March 2011. If the NLRB determines that management initiated the action, it will not certify the election. After a petition has been accepted, however, management can support the decertification election attempt. If most votes cast is against the union, the employees will be free from the union. Strong union supporters are all likely to vote. Thus, if a substantial number of employees is indifferent to the union and chooses not to vote, decertification may not occur.

In the Watch It video, UPS provides a balanced perspective on the value of union repre- sentation from the standpoint of costs and benefits to employees and the company. Ultimately, employees maintain a choice with or without a union. If employees were dissatisfied with union representation, they could easily choose to decertify it.

Watch It 3 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled UPS: Union Management and to respond to questions.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Explore the role of labor unions. Labor came about out

of necessity. Employers often set unfavorable terms of employment (for example, low wages) and unsafe work- ing conditions. The collective effort of employees pro- vided them with greater power to negotiate better terms of employment.

Employees join unions because of dissatisfaction with management, the need for a social outlet, the need for avenues of leadership, forced unionization, and social pressure from peers.

The latest figures from the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the percentage of wage and salary workers who were members of a union was 10.7 percent. The number of wage and salary work- ers belonging to unions is at approximately 14.6 million.

In 1983, the first year for which comparable union data are available, the union membership rate was 20.1 percent and there were 17.7 million union workers. The unioniza- tion rate is declining steadily.

In 2016, 7.2 million public-sector employees belonged to a union, compared with 7.4 million union workers in the private sector. Public-sector workers had a union membership rate of 34.4 percent—more than five times higher than that of the private-sector workers rate of 6.4 percent. Private-sector industries with high unioniza- tion rates included utilities (24.5 percent) and construction (13.9 percent), whereas low unionization rates occurred in food service and drinking places (1.6 percent), agriculture and related industries (1.3 percent), and in financial ser- vices (1.2 percent).

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332 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

2. Describe the basic union structure and organized labor’s strategies for a stronger movement. The basic element in the structure of the U.S. labor movement is the local union. The national union is the most powerful level, and the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) is the central trade union federa- tion in the United States. It is a loosely knit organization of national unions that has little formal power or control. The member national unions remain completely autonomous and decide their own policies and programs.

Organized labor’s new strategies for a stronger movement include strategically located union members, pulling the union through, political involvement, union salting, flooding the community, public awareness cam- paigns, building organizing funds, collaborating with high schools, and organizing through the card check.

3. Discuss laws affecting collective bargaining. The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act) is one of the most significant labor/management rela- tions statutes ever enacted. The act declared legislative support, on a broad scale, for the right of employees to organize and engage in collective bargaining. The Taft- Hartley Act extensively revised the National Labor Rela- tions Act. A new period began in the evolution of public policy regarding labor.

4. Summarize the formation of bargaining units and the collective bargaining process. The steps involved include signing authorization cards, petitioning for election, campaigning, winning the election, and being certified.

The negotiating phase of collective bargaining begins with each side presenting its initial demands. The term negotiating suggests a certain amount of give-and-take. The party with the greater leverage can expect to extract the most concessions.

Bargaining issues can be divided into three catego- ries: mandatory, permissive, and prohibited. Certain topics are included in virtually all labor agreements. These are

recognition, management rights, union security, compen- sation, grievance procedure, employee security, and job- related factors.

The union must continuously gather information regarding membership needs to isolate areas of dissatis- faction. Management also spends long hours preparing for negotiations. The negotiating phase of collective bargain- ing begins with each side presenting its initial demands. The term negotiating suggests a certain amount of give- and-take. The party with the greater leverage can expect to extract the most concessions.

Breakdowns in negotiations can be overcome through third-party intervention (mediation and arbitration), union tactics (strikes and boycotts), and management recourse (lockouts and continued operation without striking workers).

The document that emerges from the collective bar- gaining process is known as a “labor/management agree- ment” or “contract.”

The approval process for management is often easier than for labor. The president or CEO has usually been briefed regularly on the progress of negotiations. How- ever, the approval process is more complex for the union. Until most members voting in a ratification election approve it, the proposed agreement is not final.

The larger and perhaps more important part of col- lective bargaining is administration of the agreement, which the public seldom sees. The agreement establishes the union/management relationship for the duration of the contract.

5. Describe the grievance procedure in a union environ- ment. A grievance procedure under a collective bargain- ing agreement is normally well defined. It is usually restricted to violations of the terms and conditions of the agreement.

6. Explain union decertification. Decertification is essentially the reverse of the process that employees must follow to be recognized as an official bargaining unit.

Key Terms labor unions 307 collective bargaining 307 collective bargaining agreement 307 right-to-work laws 310 local union 310 craft union 310 industrial union 311 national union 311 American Federation of Labor and

Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) 311

Change to Win Coalition 311 Committee on Political Education

(COPE) 312 union salting 312

flooding the community 313 public awareness campaigns 313 card check 314 bargaining unit 316 authorization card 317 mandatory bargaining issues 319 permissive bargaining issues 319 prohibited bargaining issues 320 closed shop 320 union shop 320 maintenance of membership 320 agency shop 320 open shop 320 checkoff of dues 321 grievance 321

grievance procedure 321 seniority 321 beachhead demands 323 mediation 324 arbitration 324 rights arbitration 324 interest arbitration 324 strike 325 boycott 326 secondary boycott 326 lockout 326 final-offer arbitration 328 decertification 330

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CHAPTER 11 • LABOR UNIONS AND COLLECTIvE BARgAININg 333

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

A Strategic Move You are the plant manager for a medium-

sized manufacturing company that has been experiencing growing employee tensions, and there has been a lot of talk among workers about forming a union. You have even seen what appear to be autho- rization cards being passed out around the plant. Sandy Marshall, one of the workers in your plant, has been seen talking to many of the workers, obviously about forming a union. Sandy is influential with the workers throughout the plant and appears to be a natural leader. You believe that if Sandy continues to promote the union, she will have a major impact among the workers in organizing the union.

You have a supervisory position that has just come open. It pays a lot more than what Sandy currently makes. You think, “If I make her a supervisor, she won’t be able to use her influence to help get the union started.” However, another worker in your department is more qualified and has been with the firm several years longer than Sandy, although he is less influential with other workers throughout the plant. 11-17. What would you do? 11-18. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a per-

son to make a less than ethical decision?

Questions for Review 11-1. What are organized labor’s strategies for a stronger

movement? 11-2. What is the status (prevalence) of unions today? 11-3. Define the following terms:

(a) local union (b) craft union (c) industrial union (d) national union

11-4. What is the difference between the NLRA and the Labor-Management Relations Act?

11-5. Why has the NLRB recently been thrust into the fore- front of labor relations?

11-6. What steps must a union take in establishing the collec- tive bargaining relationship? Briefly describe each step.

11-7. What are the steps involved in the collective bargaining process?

11-8. Distinguish among mandatory, permissive, and prohib- ited bargaining issues.

11-9. What are topics included in virtually all labor agreements?

11-10. Define each of the following: (a) closed shop (b) union shop (c) agency shop (d) maintenance of membership (e) checkoff of dues

11-11. What are the primary means by which breakdowns in negotiations may be overcome? Brief ly describe each.

11-12. What is involved for both management and labor in ratifying the agreement?

11-13. What is involved in the administration of a labor agreement?

11-14. How is the collective bargaining process different in the public sector?

11-15. What is typically involved in the grievance procedure in a unionized organization?

11-16. Define decertification. What are the steps in decertification?

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Gaining Power and Influence This self-assessment helps you understand your proficiency with four closely related skills: gaining power, exercising influence, resisting unwanted influence, and increasing formal authority. If you are not currently employed in a work organization, do your best to apply these questions to another type of role.

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334 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

HRM by the Numbers Costing Union and Nonunion Wages and Benefits

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

We learned that compensation costs are typically higher in union settings than in nonunion settings. Below is a table that illustrates the costs of wages and salaries as well as some employee benefits for union and nonunion employees. These values are expressed as employer costs per hour worked for employee compensation. Answer the questions that follow the table.

Compensation Component Union Costs Nonunion Costs

Wages and salaries ............................................................................................... 28.61 22.27 Paid leave Vacation ................................................................................................................ 1.75 1.12 Holiday ................................................................................................................. 1.02 0.65 Sick ...................................................................................................................... 0.52 0.26 Personal ................................................................................................................ 0.17 0.13 Insurance Life ....................................................................................................................... 0.08 0.04 Health ................................................................................................................... 5.98 2.15 Short-term disability ............................................................................................ 0.17 0.05 Long-term disability ............................................................................................. 0.12 0.04

HRM Is Everyone’s Business The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) bestows upon most employees the right to organize and form a bargaining unit. Both employees and management must comply with the provisions of the NLRA. During an organizing campaign, HR professionals and managers must understand how to comply with NLRA regulations.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understand HR managers’, other managers’, and employees’ roles during organizing campaigns HR takes the lead

HR professionals should carefully educate managers about employees’ rights and responsibilities during an organizing campaign.

Tell managers how they may proactively communicate with employees about active campaigns. For instance, signing a union authorization card does not obligate employees to vote for a union in an election.

Maintain an open-door policy that permits managers and employees the opportunity to inquire about union-related activities that they observe in the workplace and options for responding to the situation. For example, employees are not obligated to speak to union organizers.

Managers take the lead Managers should create a list of their and employees’ rights and responsibilities. During a union organizing campaign, they should communicate management’s position on union representation. For example, it is acceptable to tell employees that the company is opposed to unionization. In addition, managers must ensure employees that they will not be penalized for par- ticipating in organizing activities. Examples of penalties include pay reductions and termination.

Employee dissatisfaction with the fairness of a company’s employment policies and procedures as well as pay and benefits are among the reasons for seeking union representation. Managers should listen to employees’ concerns and discuss them with HR professionals and higher management. Perhaps conducting a survey of local pay rates will facilitate an understand- ing of whether the company should consider awarding pay adjustments.

Managers should never offer to improve working conditions, award larger pay raises, promise additional paid time off, or grant favors on the condition that employees vote against union representation. Such actions unlawfully influence employees’ rights to seek representation.

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Compensation Component Union Costs Nonunion Costs

Retirement and savings Defined benefit ..................................................................................................... 3.09 0.34 Defined contribution ............................................................................................ 1.27 0.68 Legally required benefits Social Security ..................................................................................................... 1.87 1.47 Medicare .............................................................................................................. 0.48 0.37 Federal unemployment insurance ........................................................................ 0.03 0.03 State unemployment insurance ............................................................................ 0.23 0.17 Workers’ compensation ........................................................................................ 1.02 0.40

Questions 11-19. What are the hourly compensation costs for: (a) wages and salaries; (b) paid time off; (c) insurance; (d) retirement

and savings; and (e) legally required benefits in union settings? What are the hourly compensation costs for: (f) wages and salaries; (g) paid time off; (h) insurance; (i) retirement and savings; and (j) legally required benefits in nonunion settings?

11-20. For each of the five categories listed in the table, what is the percent cost difference between union and nonunion settings?

11-21. Let’s say that a company is interested in knowing the annual total compensation costs in the (a) union; and (b) nonunion setting. Assume that for the purposes of calculating annual costs, each employee works 40 hours per week, 52 weeks per year. Calculate these costs for a workforce of 3,000 employees in each setting.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Think about the role of unions based on the ideas discussed in this chapter. From the employee’s perspective, come up with a list of advantages and disadvantages to joining a union. Do the same, looking at it from the employer’s perspective. 11-22. What are the top two advantages and two disadvantages from an employee’s perspective? Explain. 11-23. What are the top two advantages and two disadvantages from an employer’s perspective? Explain.

I N C I D E N T 1 Break Down the Barrier Yesterday, Angelica Angulo received a job offer as a server with GEM Hotel Corporation, located in Las Vegas, Nevada. She had recently gradu- ated from high school in Milford, a small town in New Mexico. Because Angelica had no college aspirations upon graduation, she had moved to Las Vegas to look for a job.

Angelica’s immediate supervisor spent only a brief time with her before turning her over to Laurie Rader, an experienced server, for training. After they had talked, Laurie asked, “Have you given any thought to joining our union? You’ll like all of our members.”

Angelica had not considered this. Moreover, she had never associ- ated with union members, and her parents had never been members either. At Milford High, her teachers had never talked about unions. The fact that this union operated as an open shop meant nothing to her. Angelica replied, “I don’t know. Maybe. Maybe not.”

The day progressed much the same way, with several people asking Angelica the same question. They were all friendly, but there seemed to be a barrier that separated Angelica from the other workers. One worker looked Angelica right in the eyes and said, “You’re going to join, aren’t you?” Angelica still did not know, but she was beginning to lean in that direction.

After the end of her shift, Angelica went to the washroom. Just as she entered, Stephanie Clements, the union steward, also walked in. After they exchanged greetings, Stephanie said, “I hear that you’re not sure about joining our union. You, and everyone else, reap the benefits of the work we’ve done in the past. It doesn’t seem fair for you to be rewarded for what others have done. Tell you what, why don’t you join us down at the union hall tonight? We’ll discuss it more then.”

Angelica nodded yes and finished cleaning up. “That might be fun,” she thought.

Questions 11-24. Why does Angelica have the option of joining or not joining

the union? Hint: Nevada is a right-to-work state. 11-25. What are the pros and cons regarding Angelica joining the

union? 11-26. How are the other workers likely to react toward Angelica if

she chooses not to join? Discuss.

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336 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

11-29. How has globalization influenced the prevalence of unions in the United States?

11-30. What are the primary reasons employees join labor unions?

Endnotes 1 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employer

Costs for Employee Compensation—March 2017,” (USDL 17-0770). Accessed August 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

2 Ibid. 3 Alan Ohnsman, “Musk Draws ‘Fake News’

Rebuke from UAW as Union Eyes Tesla Fac- tory,” Forbes online (February 10, 2017). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

4 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Union Mem- bers—2016,” (USDL 17-0107). Accessed March 30, at www.bls.gov.

5 Barry T. Hirsch and David Macpherson, “Union Membership, Coverage, Density and Employ- ment by State, 1983–2016. Union Membership and Coverage Database from the CPS. Accessed April 1, 2017, at Unionstats.com.

6 Change to Win, “About Us.” Accessed March 3, 2017, at www.changetowin.org/about.

7 “Army Corps Projects Defy Unions’ Upbeat Labor Agreement Tally,” Concrete Products 113 (October 2010): 8.

8 Lucinda Shen, “Labor Unions Up Political Spending for Hillary Clinton and Democrats,” Fortune online (October 18, 2016). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.fortune.com.

9 Dave Jamieson and Paul Blumenthal, “Labor Unions Spent a Record Amount on the

Elections. But Not as Much as These 5 People,” The Huffington Post online (November 8, 2016). Accessed March 30, 2017, at www.huffington- post.com.

10 Bourree Lam, “Life as an Undercover Union Organizer,” The Atlantic online (March 21, 2016). Accessed March 10, 2017, at www.the- atlantic.com.

11 “Union Organizing: What Does the Term “Salt- ing” as a Union Organizing Tactic Mean? Soci- ety for Human Resource Management online (January 10, 2017). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.shrm.org.

12 Karen Menehan, “Massage Therapists Launch Fair Workplace Campaign,” Massage Maga- zine online (February 24, 2016). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.massagemag.com/ massage-therapists-launch-fair-workplace- campaign-34817/.

13 “Unions Takes Proactive Approach to Training,” Plant Engineering 63 (October 2009): 8.

14 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Union Mem- bers—2016,” (USDL 17-0107). Accessed March 30, at www.bls.gov.

15 Rachel Haut, Natalie Kelly, and Max Mishler, “Youth Activism in the Labor Movement,” New Labor Forum 18 (Winter 2009): 98–107.

16 Richard. L. Trumka, “Selling Unions to Young Workers,” Vital Speeches of the Day 75 (October 2009): 475–478.

17 “Volkswagen’s Union Gamble: The German Car Maker Invites the UAW into Its Tennes- see Plant,” Wall Street Journal (February 13, 2014). Accessed February 28, 2014, at www. wsj.com.

18 “UPS Freight Workers Become Teamsters,” Toledo Business Journal 24 (April 2008): 24–28.

19 “Teamsters Ratify UPS Freight Contract,” Florida Shipper 33 (April 21, 2008): 13.

20 Stephanie Armour and Holly Rosenkrantz, “A Backlash Looms for the Federal Labor Board,” Bloomberg Businessweek (February 14, 2011): 26–27.

21 “Charges and Complaints,” National Labor Relations Board. Accessed March 31, 2017, at www.nlrb.gov/news-outreach/ graphs-data/charges-and-complaints/ charges-and-complaints.

22 A Guide to Basic Law and Procedures under the National Labor Relations Act (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, October 1978): 11–13.

23 Dennis G. Collins and Kevin T. McLaughlin, “Key Steps to Prepare for a Union-Organizing

I N C I D E N T 2 We’re Listening Akio Watanabe is the director of customer service at Innovative Solu- tions, a software development company. When he assumed this role 10 years ago, serious customer service complaints were occurring frequently and the company began losing business to competitors. Akio identi- fied the reasons for poor customer service and he developed a plan to turn things around. The plan was a success. Employee morale was high. Everything was looking up! For now, at least.

Six months later, Zofia Nowicki, one of the senior customer service supervisors, scheduled a meeting with Akio. Akio greeted Zofia and exclaimed, “The customer service department is operating like a well- oiled machine!”

Zofia replied, “That has definitely been the case until recently.” She went on to explain, “As you know, we’ve implemented manda- tory overtime and have informed employees not to schedule more than three consecutive days of vacation at a time.”

Akio stated, “Well, Zofia, that doesn’t seem to be creating a prob- lem. After all, our customer service ratings are at an all-time high. And, besides, the overtime pay should help ease financial pressures they may feel at home.”

“We shouldn’t expect that to last very long. In fact, there are many disgruntled employees,” Zofia explained. In a worried voice, she expressed concern that employees often gathered in small groups and stopped talking when she approached. “Akio, that is highly unusual!”

“Zofia, aren’t you being overly sensitive?” She replied, “Well, I thought so at first. Then, I found a brochure

on a table from a labor union that has had much success in organizing workers at similar companies.”

“What do you propose we do, Zofia? If employees successfully unionize, wages, and benefits costs will rise, and we will have less flexibility to schedule overtime. We won’t have the resources to hire additional customer service representatives if our labor costs go up.” In a panicked tone, he lamented, “Our customer service ratings will plummet.”

Questions 11-27. Why are employees considering union representation? 11-28. If you were Akio, what would you do now?

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CHAPTER 11 • LABOR UNIONS AND COLLECTIvE BARgAININg 337

Campaign,” Society for Human Resource Man- agement online (February 23, 2016). Accessed March 15, 2017, at www.shrm.org.

24 T. L. Stanley, “Union Stewards and Labor Rela- tions,” Supervision 71 (February 2010): 3–6.

25 Jim Kinney, “Federal Mediators to Intervene in Dispute Between Stop & Shop, Labor Union,” MassLive online (March 3, 2016). Accessed March 31, 2017, at www.masslive.com/busi- ness-news/index.ssf/2016/03/stop_shop_union_ to_resume_negotiations_n.html.

26 “Arbitrator’s Decision Upheld,” Business Insur- ance 34 (December 4, 2000): 2.

27 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Work Stop- pages in 2017,” (USDL 17-0180). Accessed March 31, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

28 Frank Ahrens, “Hyundai Battles Striking Work- ers as Global Ambitions Surge,” Forbes online

(October 5, 2016). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

29 Andrea Holecek, “Levy Co. Replaces Striking Steel Workers, Fires Others,” The Times (March 29, 2006).

30 Allen Smith, “NLRB Limits Rights to Perma- nently Replace Strikers,” Society for Human Resource Management online (June 10, 2016). Accessed February 22, 2017, at www.shrm. org.

31 Lisa Brown, “Teamsters to Boycott Schnucks Stores in Layoff Dispute,” St. Louis Post Dis- patch online (June 16, 2016). Accessed March 30, 2017, at www.stltoday.com.

32 Bob Blake, Lockout Over at Honeywell Plant in South Bend,” South Bend Tribune online (Feb- ruary 26, 2017). Accessed March 31, 2017, at www.southbendtribune.com.

33 Nina Easton, “Labor Unions: Flailing in D.C. and Making Enemies on Main Street,” Fortune 163 (March 21, 2011): 68.

34 Michael R. Carrell and Christina Heavrin, Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining: Cases, Practices, and Law (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2010): 241.

35 Charles A. Borell, “How Unions Can Improve Their Success Rate in Labor Arbitration,” Dispute Resolution Journal 61 (February 2006): 28–38.

36 “Decertification Petitions—RD,” National Labor Relations Board. Accessed April 2, 2017, at www.nlrb.gov.

37 Rich Scinto, “AFSCME Down to 1 Big-City Policy Union Following New Haven Decerti- fication,” New Haven Register (February 26, 2014). Accessed April 1, 2014, at www.nhregis- ter.com.

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338

12 Internal Employee Relations LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

12.1 Explain the concept of employment at will.

12.2 Describe the concept of discipline and summarize disciplinary action.

12.3 Explain employment termination of various occupational groups.

12.4 Explain the use of ombudspersons and alternative dispute resolution.

12.5 Describe transfers, promotions, resignations, and retirements as factors involved in internal employee relations.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 12 Warm-Up.

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339

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: The status of most workers is not permanently fixed in an organization. Employees constantly move upward (promotion), laterally (transfers), downward (demotion), and out of the organization (separation and termination). At times, employees may violate work rules that require manage- ment intervention or employees may possess a grievance based on their claim of inappropriate application of policy or other inappropriate behavior. To ensure that workers with the proper skills and experience are available at all levels, constant and concerted efforts are required to maintain good internal employee relations. Internal employee relations comprise the human resources (HR) management activities associated with the movement of employees within the company and the relationship between employees and employers within the company. Such topics include discipline and disciplinary action, termination, demotion, downsizing, transfers, promotions, res- ignations, and retirement.

Employment at will is first discussed as a factor affecting internal employee relations, particu- larly for employee groups who are not represented by a labor union. Understanding employment at will provides a basis for understanding why movement of employees is more likely in nonunion settings than in union settings.

Employment at Will Employment at will is a legal doctrine that specifies that employment may be terminated by either the employer or employee for any reason. “The employment at will doctrine avows that, when an employee does not have a written employment contract and the term of employment is of definite duration, the employer can terminate the employee for good cause, bad cause, or no cause at all.”1 For unionized workers, a collective bargaining agreement sets aside an employer’s ability to use employment at will provisions because the terms of employment are managed in accordance with the provisions of the collective bargaining agreement. Certainly, there are numerous hiring stan- dards to avoid such as race, religion, sex, national origin, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, and disabilities. Notwithstanding, various employment standards to avoid that are based on laws, court decisions, and executive orders, approximately two of every three U.S. workers depend almost entirely on the continued goodwill of their employer. Individuals falling into this category are known as “at-will employees.”

internal employee relations Those human resource management activities associated with the movement of employees within the organization.

12.1 Explain the concept of employment at will.

employment at will Unwritten contract created when an employee agrees to work for an employer but no agreement exists as to how long the parties expect the employment to last.

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340 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

☛ F Y I Montana is the only state that does not recognize the employment at will doctrine. Instead, the state presumes that employers can fire employees only for just cause (discussed later in this chapter).

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Pilot Files Wrongful Termination Lawsuit Against Allegiant Air and to respond to questions.

There are three exceptions to the at will doctrine, which have been established by courts of law. The first is an implied contract exception. Implied contracts can be formed through an employer’s representation of continued employment in writing or through oral statements. Written statements made in employment handbooks that specify continued employment based on contin- ued satisfactory job performance are an example of an implied contract. A manager or supervi- sor who makes similar oral statements to employees is also an example of an implied contract. Employers can do certain things to help protect themselves against litigation for wrongful dis- charge based on a breach of implied employment contract. Statements in documents such as employment applications and policy manuals that suggest job security or permanent employment should be avoided if employers want to minimize charges of wrongful discharge. Telling a per- son during a job interview that he or she can expect to hold the job as long as they want could be considered a contractual agreement and grounds for a lawsuit. Normally, a person should not be employed without a signed acknowledgment of the at will disclaimer. In addition, the policy manual should have it noticeably stated in bold, larger-than-normal print, so it is clear to the employee that this is an at will relationship. Other guidelines that may assist organizations in avoiding wrongful termination suits include clearly defining the worker’s duties, providing good feedback on a regular basis, and conducting realistic performance appraisals on a regular basis. Most states recognize this exception.

Second, employers generally cannot exercise at will termination if such a termination violates a state’s public policy. For example, workers’ compensation programs are governed by rules in every state. Terminating an employee for filing a workers’ compensation claim after becoming injured while on the job cannot be made on at will grounds. Most states recognize this exception.

Third, only a few states recognize something referred to as an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the employment relationship. Terminating employment without just cause, which we discuss later in this chapter, would be considered an act of bad faith and unfair dealing. An example of employer bad faith would be terminating a long-service employee who consis- tently has demonstrated exceptional job performance and follows work rules. In the following Watch It video, a former Allegiant Air pilot discusses an in-flight emergency and his response that ultimately led to his termination.

Discipline and Disciplinary Action Discipline is the state of employee self-control and orderly conduct that indicates the extent of genuine teamwork within an organization. A necessary but often trying aspect of internal employee relations is the application of disciplinary action, which is invoking a penalty against an employee who fails to meet established standards. Even though disciplinary action may be tense, unpleasant, and fraught with conflict, at times it must be done. Don Crosby, vice-president of international and corporate HR at McDonald’s, said, “It’s the hardest thing a manager has to do. It’s also rocky terrain for many executives, who simply do not know when or how to hold the stick, swinging it haphazardly and inconsistently, striking too hard, too soft, or not at all.”2

Effective disciplinary action addresses the employee’s wrongful behavior, not the employee as a person. Incorrectly administered disciplinary action is destructive to both the employee and the organization. Thus, disciplinary action should not be applied haphazardly. Disciplinary action is not usually management’s initial response to a problem. Normally, there are positive ways to

12.2 Describe the concept of discipline and summarize disci- plinary action.

discipline State of employee self-control and orderly conduct that indicates the extent of genuine teamwork within an organization.

disciplinary action Invoking a penalty against an employee who fails to meet established standards.

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convince employees to adhere to company policies, which are necessary to accomplish organi- zational goals. However, managers must administer disciplinary action at times when company rules are violated.

Disciplinary Action Process The disciplinary action process is dynamic and ongoing. Because one person’s actions can affect others in a work group, the proper application of disciplinary action fosters acceptable behavior by other group members. Conversely, unjustified or improperly administered disciplinary action can have a detrimental effect on other group members.

The disciplinary action process is shown in Figure 12-1. The external environment affects every area of HR management, including disciplinary actions. Changes in the external environ- ment, such as technological innovations, may render a rule inappropriate and may necessitate creating new rules. Laws and government regulations that affect company policies and rules are also constantly changing. For instance, the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) caused many firms to establish safety rules.

Changes in the internal environment of the firm can also alter the disciplinary action process. Through organization development, the firm may change its employer brand. Because of this shift, first-line supervisors may begin to handle disciplinary action more positively. Organization policies can also have an impact on the disciplinary action process. Think how a new smoke-free workplace policy might affect the workplace and the possible need for disciplinary action.

The disciplinary action process deals largely with infractions of rules. Notice in Figure 12-1 that rules are established to better facilitate the accomplishment of organizational goals. Rules are specific guides to behavior on the job. The dos and don’ts associated with accomplishing

FIGURE 12-1 Disciplinary Action Process

INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

Set Organizational

Goals

Establish Rules

Communicate Rules to

Employees

Observe Performance

Compare Performance with Rules

Take Appropriate Disciplinary

Action

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342 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

tasks may be highly inflexible. For example, a company may forbid the use of tobacco products anywhere on company property.

After management has established rules, it must communicate these rules to employees. The manager then observes the performance of workers and compares performance with rules. If employee behavior does not vary from acceptable practices, there is no need for disciplinary action, but when an employee’s behavior violates a rule, corrective action may need to be taken. Taking disciplinary action against someone often creates an uncomfortable psychological climate. However, managers can still sleep well at night after taking disciplinary action if the rules have been clearly articulated to everyone.

The purpose of disciplinary action is to alter behavior that can have a negative impact on achievement of organizational objectives, not to chastise the violator. The word discipline comes from the word disciple, and when translated from Latin, it means, to teach. Thus, the intent of disciplinary action should be to ensure that the recipient sees disciplinary action as a learning process rather than as something that inflicts pain.

Note that the process shown in Figure 12-1 includes feedback from the point of taking appro- priate disciplinary action to communicating rules to employees. When disciplinary action is taken, all employees should realize that certain behaviors are unacceptable and should not be repeated.3 However, if appropriate disciplinary action is not taken, employees may view the behavior as acceptable and repeat it.

Approaches to Disciplinary Action Several approaches to the administration of disciplinary action have been developed. Three of the most important concepts are the hot stove rule, progressive disciplinary action, and disciplinary action without punishment.

HOT STOVE RULE According to the hot stove rule, disciplinary action should have the following consequences, which are analogous to touching a hot stove:

$ Burns immediately. If disciplinary action is to be taken, it must occur immediately so that the individual will understand the reason for it.

$ Provides warning. It is also extremely important to provide warning that punishment will follow unacceptable behavior. As individuals move closer to a hot stove, its heat warns them that they will be burned if they touch it; therefore, they can avoid the burn if they so choose.

$ Gives consistent punishment. Disciplinary action should also be consistent in that everyone who performs the same act will be punished accordingly. As with a hot stove, each person who touches it with the same degree of pressure and for the same period is burned to the same extent.

$ Burns impersonally. Disciplinary action should be impersonal. The hot stove burns anyone who touches it—without favoritism.

If the circumstances surrounding all disciplinary action were the same, there would be no problem with this approach. However, situations are often quite different, and many variables may be present in each disciplinary action case. For instance, does the organization penalize a loyal 20-year employee the same way as an individual who has been with the firm for less than six weeks? Supervisors often find that they cannot be completely consistent and impersonal in taking disciplinary action and they need a certain degree of flexibility. Because situations do vary, progressive disciplinary action may be more realistic and more beneficial to both the employee and the organization.

PROGRESSIVE DISCIPLINARY ACTION Progressive disciplinary action is intended to ensure that the minimum penalty appropriate to the offense is imposed. The progressive disciplinary model was developed in response to the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). The goal of progressive disciplinary action is to communicate formerly problem issues to employees in a direct and timely manner so that they can improve their performance. Its use involves answering a series of questions about the severity of the offense. The manager must ask these questions, in sequence, to determine the proper disciplinary action, as illustrated in Figure 12-2. After the manager has determined that disciplinary action is appropriate, the proper question is, “Does this violation warrant more than

hot stove rule An approach to disciplinary action that have four consequences which are analogous to touching a hot stove.

progressive disciplinary action Approach to disciplinary action designed to ensure that the minimum penalty appropriate to the offense is imposed.

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CHAPTER 12 • INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS 343

an oral warning?” If the improper behavior is minor and has not previously occurred, perhaps only an oral warning will be sufficient. In addition, an individual may receive several oral warnings before a yes answer applies. The manager follows the same procedure for each level of offense in the progressive disciplinary process. The manager does not consider termination until each lower- level question is answered yes. However, major violations, such as assaulting a supervisor or another worker, may justify moving through each level of question to the immediate termination of the employee. It is important for the worker to know what can result if improvement does not result.4

To assist managers in recognizing the proper level of disciplinary action, some firms have formalized the procedure. One approach to establish progressive disciplinary action guidelines in a factory environment is shown in Table 12-1. In this example, a worker who is absent without authorization will receive an oral warning the first time it happens and a written warning the second time; the third time, the employee will be terminated. Fighting on the job is an offense that normally results in immediate termination. Specific guidelines for various offenses should be developed to meet the needs of the organization. For example, the wearing of rings or jewelry for aircraft mechanics is strictly prohibited. There would likely be no such rule in an office environ- ment. The rule should fit the need of the situation.

DISCIPLINARY ACTION WITHOUT PUNISHMENT The process of giving a worker time off with pay to think about whether he or she wants to follow the rules and continue working for the company is called disciplinary action without punishment. The approach throws out formal punitive disciplinary action policies for situations such as chronic tardiness or a bad attitude in favor of affirming procedures that make employees want to take personal responsibility for their actions and be models for accomplishment of the corporate mission. When an employee violates a rule, the manager issues an oral reminder. Repetition brings a written reminder, and the third violation results in the worker having to take one, two, or three days off (with pay) to think about the situation. During the first two steps, the manager tries to encourage the employee to solve the problem. If the third step is taken, upon the worker’s return, the worker and the supervisor meet to agree that the employee will not violate rules again or the employee will leave the firm.

HR Web Wisdom

Progressive Disciplinary Action http://hrdailyadvisor.blr. com/?s=discipline

Numerous articles related to disciplinary action and progressive disciplinary action.

disciplinary action without punishment Process in which a worker is given time off with pay to think about whether he or she wants to follow the rules and continue working for the company.

FIGURE 12-2 Progressive Disciplinary Action Approach

Improper Behavior

No

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Does this violation warrant disciplinary

actions?

Does this violation warrant more than an oral warning?

Does this violation warrant more than a

written warning?

Does this violation warrant more than a

suspension?

No Disciplinary Action

Oral Warning

Written Warning

Suspension

Termination

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When disciplinary action without punishment is used, it is especially important that all rules be explicitly stated in writing. At the time of orientation, new workers should be told that repeated violations of different rules would be viewed in the same way as several violations of the same rule. This approach keeps workers from taking undue advantage of the process. Walmart has a form of disciplinary action without punishment they call “Decision-Making Day.” It provides a paid day off for the employee to decide to either improve or leave the company. It is Walmart’s most severe discipline before termination.5

Problems in the Administration of Disciplinary Action As might be expected, administering disciplinary action is not a pleasant task, but it is a manager’s job to do. Although the manager is in the best position to take disciplinary action, many would rather avoid it even when it is in the company’s best interest. Such reluctance often stems from breakdowns in other areas of HR management. For instance, if a manager has consistently rated an employee high on annual performance appraisals, the supervisor’s rationale for taking disciplin- ary action against a worker for mediocre performance would be weak. In a possible termination situation, it could be that the employee’s productivity has dropped substantially. It might also be that the employee’s productivity has always been low, yet the supervisor had trouble justifying to upper-level management that the person should be terminated. Rather than run the risk of a decision being overturned, the supervisor retains the ineffective worker.

Occasionally, there may be lawsuits involving members of protected groups who claim that the disciplinary action was taken against them because they are members of a protected group. One of the best ways for a company to protect itself against lawsuits claiming discrimi- nation or harassment is to ensure that it has proper, written policies barring unfair treatment of its staff and a system for ensuring that the policies are followed. Disciplinary actions should be fully documented, and managers should be trained in how to avoid bias claims.6 Also, although discrimination laws prohibit employers from making employment decisions based on an employee’s membership in a protected class, basing decisions solely on performance helps prevent violation of these laws.

A supervisor may be perfectly justified in administering disciplinary action, but there is usu- ally a proper time and place for doing so. For example, taking disciplinary action against a worker in the presence of others may embarrass the individual and defeat the purpose of the action. Even when they are wrong, employees resent disciplinary action administered in public. By disciplining employees in private, supervisors prevent them from losing face with their peers.

In addition, many supervisors may be too lenient early in the disciplinary action process and too strict later. This lack of consistency does not give the worker a clear understanding of the penalty associated with the inappropriate action. A supervisor will often endure an unaccept- able situation for an extended period. Then, when a decision is finally made to act, he or she is

Offenses Requiring First, an Oral Warning; Second, a Written Warning; and Third, Termination

Negligence in the performance of duties

Unauthorized absence from job

Inefficiency in the performance of job

Offenses Requiring a Written Warning and Then Termination

Sleeping on the job

Failure to report to work one or two days in a row without notice

Negligent use of property

Offenses Requiring Immediate Termination

Theft

Fighting on the job

Falsifying time card

Failure to report to work three days in a row without notice

TABLE 12-1

Suggested Guidelines for Disciplinary Action

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CHAPTER 12 • INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS 345

apt to overreact and come down excessively hard. However, consistency does not necessarily mean that the same penalty must be applied to two different workers for the same offense. For instance, managers would be consistent if they always considered the worker’s past record and length of service.

Employment Termination Termination is the most severe penalty that an organization can impose on an employee, there- fore, it should be the most carefully considered form of disciplinary action. The experience of being terminated is traumatic for employees regardless of their position in the organization. They can experience feelings of failure, fear, disappointment, and anger. It is also a difficult time for the person making the termination decision. Knowing that termination may affect not only the employee but also an entire family increases the trauma. Not knowing how the terminated employee will react also may create considerable anxiety for the manager who must do the firing. An indi- vidual who is terminated may respond with a wide range of emotions ranging from workplace violence to being very unemotional in the matter.

“Just Cause” as a Standard for Choosing to Terminate Employment Just cause is a standard for determining whether to terminate an employee and the standard is based on whether an employee violated company policy or work rules and the severity of the violation. Employers that embrace the at will doctrine are not compelled to justify a termination decision. However, in an employment contract, just cause separates the basis for termination from that of a mass layoff because of economic reasons or exercise of at will rights by requiring a reason for termination.

In union settings, most collective bargaining agreements require just cause for discipline and discharge. If a union files a grievance over the termination of a union member, the employer typically has the burden to show just cause existed for the termination during a labor arbitration hearing. We discuss labor arbitration later in the alternative dispute resolution section of this chapter. In the nonunion settings, just cause is protection for the employer and employee. For example, assume that a company includes a severance pay policy. In most policies, companies withhold severance pay when termination is for just cause. Just cause provides protection to employers by justifying not making severance pay whose termination is for just cause, and it provides protection to employees by justifying receipt of severance pay whose termination does not meet just cause standards.

In 1972, Professor Carroll R. Daugherty, who served as a labor arbitrator, put forth seven tests to help future arbitrators decide whether employee termination or other adverse actions in union settings, such as demotion, met just cause standards. Although established for use by arbitrators, the questions provide useful guidance for management whose companies have just cause employ- ment provisions. Prior to deciding to terminate an employee, management can review whether the just cause standard will likely be upheld if the termination is subsequently challenged by the former employee. The seven tests follow:

1. Did the company give to the employee forewarning or foreknowledge of the possible or probably disciplinary consequences of the employee’s conduct?

2. Was the company’s rule or managerial [sic] reasonably related to: (a) the orderly, efficient, and safe operation of the company’s business; and (b) the performance that the company might properly expect of the employee?

3. Did the company, before administering discipline to an employer, try to discover whether the employee did in fact violate or disobey a rule or order of management?

4. Was the company’s investigation conducted fairly and objectively? 5. At the investigation, did the company “judge” obtain substantial and compelling evidence

or proof that the employee was guilty as charged? 6. Has the company applied its rules, orders, and penalties even-handedly and without dis-

crimination to all employees? 7. Was the degree of discipline administered by the company in a case reasonably related to:

(a) the seriousness of his employee’s proven offense; and (b) the record of the employee in his service with the company?7

12.3 Explain employment ter- mination of various occupational groups.

termination Most severe penalty that an organization can impose on an employee.

just cause A standard for determining whether to terminate an employee and the standard is based on whether an employee violated company policy or work rules and the severity of the violation.

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Considerations in Communicating the Termination Decision Most of the time, when the decision is made to terminate a worker, the employee should not be surprised because he or she should have been given explicit warnings and counseling prior to being fired. The worker should have been advised of specific steps needed to take to keep the job. Support should have been provided to show what needed to be done. The worker also should have been given a reasonable period to comply with the supervisor’s expectations.

Experts suggest that firings should be on Mondays because it lets the dismissed workers start looking for a job right away.8 Further, firing a worker at the end of the day leaves little chance for discussion among the remaining staff that may interrupt the workplace. HR professionals and managers should try to plan the termination and not make it based on emotions. Certain steps should be followed in the termination process. In the first place, the worker’s manager normally and HR representative should personally communicate the decision and present a termination letter. There are various considerations for preparing termination letters.9 Letters should state that the person’s employment has been terminated, not will be terminated. In addition, HR profession- als include in the letter essential information about collecting their last paycheck, any severance pay, payout of unused vacation or sick leave, and instructions to apply for health benefits under COBRA.

Second, the termination process should be kept short, using nonaccusatory language. Third, the manager should not go into the reason for the dismissal and should not answer any ques- tions regarding the decision.10 In some states, when an employee is involuntarily terminated, the employer must pay all earned and unpaid wages within 24 hours after the employee demands it. To avoid any potential dispute over when a demand was made, most employers simply have the final paycheck available at the termination meeting. Also, select a location where there will be no interruptions. If the employee becomes argumentative, managers may need to get up and leave once the worker has been fired. For that reason, a manager’s office is normally not used.11 Finally, most managers believe that it is best to have a witness because the person being fired may interpret your statements in the worst possible light.12

Termination of Employees at Various Levels Regardless of the similarities in the termination of employees at various levels, distinct differ- ences do exist regarding nonmanagerial/nonprofessional employees, executives, and middle and lower-level managers and professionals.

NONMANAGERIAL/NONPROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES Individuals in this category are neither managers nor professionally trained individuals, such as engineers or accountants. They generally

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Effective Discipline at Berries Groceries As Katie Smith travels to one of the Berries

Groceries store locations, she is worried about the meeting she is about to have with one of the deli clerks. As the HR Manager for the chain of grocery stores, Katie is working to improve the overall performance and retention of the mostly part-time grocery staff. The store manager of this location called Katie about the employee and he asked her to sit in on a disciplinary meeting to give the employee a written warning. Last week, the deli clerk had failed to follow the proper procedures when closing the deli counter at the end of the day, and thus, some food had spoiled and needed to be thrown out. The manager told Katie that this employee and other employees have failed to follow the

proper procedures in the past, but he has never given any disciplinary action before this incident. However, this time there was a significant amount of food product that went to waste, and he felt that he could use this disciplinary action to set an example for all employees so they know that they need to start following the procedure. He said he tells every employee the closing procedures when they are hired and that he should not have to remind them every time they close the deli. Katie understands the importance of ensuring that employees follow proper food handling procedures but has an uneasy feeling that this meeting is not going to go well.

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include employees such as steelworkers, truck drivers, salesclerks, and wait staff. If the firm is unionized, the termination procedure is typically well defined in the labor/management agreement. For example, drinking on the job might be identified as a reason for immediate termination. Absences, on the other hand, may require three written warnings by the supervisor before termination action can be taken.

When the firm is union-free, these workers can generally be terminated more easily because the worker is most likely an at will employee. In most union-free organizations, violations jus- tifying termination are often included in the firm’s employee handbook. At times, especially in smaller organizations, the termination process is informal with the first-line supervisor telling workers what actions warrant termination. Regardless of the size of the organization, management should inform employees of the actions that warrant termination.

TERMINATION OF MIDDLE- AND LOWER-LEVEL MANAGERS AND PROFESSIONALS Typically, the most vulnerable and perhaps the most neglected groups of employees about termination have been middle- and lower-level managers and professionals. Employees in these jobs may lack the political inf luence that a terminated executive has. Although certainly not recommended, termination may have been based on something as simple as the attitude or feelings of an immediate superior on a given day.

EXECUTIVES Unlike workers at lower-level positions, CEOs do not have to worry about their positions being eliminated. Their main concern is pleasing the board of directors because hiring and firing the CEO is a board’s main responsibility. Often the reason for terminating a CEO is that the board of directors lost confidence in the executive. Tenure has become increasingly shaky for new CEOs because the turnover in large corporations is high. According to John Challenger, CEO of the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc., “It’s not a job for someone who thinks they’re going to stay in one spot for a long career right now,” he says. “Tenures are short, particularly in big public companies.”13

Executives usually have no formal appeal procedure. The reasons for termination may not be as clear as for lower-level employees. Some of the reasons include the following:

$ Economic downturns. At times, business conditions may force a reduction in the number of executives.

$ Reorganization/downsizing. To improve efficiency or because of merging with another company, a firm may reorganize or downsize, resulting in the elimination of some execu- tive positions.

$ Philosophical differences. A difference in philosophy of conducting business may develop between an executive and the board. To maintain consistency in management philosophy, the executive may be replaced.

$ Decline in productivity. The executive may have been capable of performing satisfactorily in the past but, for various reasons, can no longer perform the job as required.

This list does not include factors related to illegal activities such as sexual harassment or insider trading. Under those circumstances, the firm has no moral obligation to the terminated executive.

An organization may derive positive benefits from terminating executives, but such actions also present a potentially hazardous situation for the company. Terminating a senior executive is an expensive proposition, often in ways costlier than just the separation package. The impact on the organization should be measured in relationships, productivity, strategic integrity, and investor confidence, as well as dollars. Many corporations are concerned about developing a negative public image that ref lects insensitivity to the needs of their employees. They fear that such a reputation would impede their efforts to recruit high-quality managers. Also, terminated executives have, at times, made public statements detrimental to the reputation of their former employers.

Demotion as an Alternative to Termination Demotion is the process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduction in pay. Demotion may be a legitimate career option that had nothing to do with disciplinary action. However, in this section, demotion is addressed as a disciplinary action option. Emotions may run high when an individual is demoted. The demoted person may

demotion Process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduction in pay.

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348 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

suffer loss of respect from peers and feel betrayed, embarrassed, angry, and disappointed. The employee’s productivity may also decrease further. For these reasons, demotion should be used cautiously. If demotion is chosen instead of termination, efforts must be made to preserve the self-esteem of the individual. The person may be asked how he or she would like to handle the  demotion announcement. A positive image of the worker’s value to the company should be projected.

The handling of demotions in a unionized organization is usually spelled out clearly in the labor–management agreement. Should a decision be made to demote a worker for unsatisfactory performance, the union should be notified of this intent and given the specific reasons for the demotion. Often the demotion will be challenged and carried through the formal grievance procedure. Documentation is necessary for the demotion to be upheld. Even with the problems associated with demotion for cause, it is often easier to demote than to terminate an employee. In addition, demotion is often less devastating to the employee. For the organization, however, the opposite may be true if the demotion creates lingering ill will and an embittered employee.

Downsizing, discussed next, is different from termination, however, the results for workers involved is the same—they no longer have a job.

Downsizing Downsizing, also known as restructuring or rightsizing, is essentially the reverse of a company growing; it suggests a one-time change in the organization and the number of people employed. Typically, both the organizational structure and the number of people in the organization shrink for improving organizational performance. The retail industry has experienced large downsizing. For instance, retailer JCPenney announced that it would close approximately 140 stores in 2017.14 In addition, once-prominent shoe retailer Payless ShoeSource Inc. filed for bankruptcy.15 Retailers such as these whose business is based on physical stores have lost ground to online retailers such as Amazon. JCPenney hopes to reduce costs, using some of those savings to bolster their online shopping presence.

Companies that have downsized should not forget about the workers that remain. Com- munication channels should be open to let those remaining workers know what and why the downsizing occurred. Often those who remain suffer survivor’s guilt or survivor syndrome, and open communication can do much to get by the feeling. Often it is a good idea to have a venting session where workers can express their concerns. Questions should be answered clearly and candidly.

Planning is crucial as a company prepares for downsizing. Often there may be age and other discrimination claims if downsizing results in a disproportionately adverse impact on members of a protected class. At times, older workers with higher salaries than their younger counterparts become targets for cost-cutting measures and age discrimination claims occur. It is important to analyze the breakdown of downsized workers to ensure that all protected groups of workers are not disproportionately affected. It is equally imperative that an employer use objective, job-related criteria to decide which positions will be affected. In addition, the downsizing organization should be prepared to deal with government requirements such as the  Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) and Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).

Workers should understand when they are hired how the system will work in the event of layoffs. When the firm is unionized, the layoff procedures are usually stated clearly in the labor/ management agreement. Seniority usually is the basis for layoffs, with the least-senior employ- ees laid off first. The agreement may also have a clearly spelled-out bumping procedure. When senior-level positions are eliminated, the people occupying them have the right to bump workers from lower-level positions, if they have the proper qualifications for the lower-level job. When bumping occurs, the composition of the workforce is altered.

Union-free firms should also establish layoff procedures prior to facing layoff decisions. In union-free firms, productivity and the needs of the organization are typically key considerations. When productivity is the primary factor, management must be careful to ensure that productivity, not favoritism, is the actual basis for the layoff decision. Therefore, it is important to define accurately productivity considerations well in advance of any layoffs.

downsizing Reverse of a company growing; it suggests a one-time change in the organization and the number of people employed (also known as restructuring or rightsizing).

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NEGATIVE ASPECTS OF DOWNSIZING When downsizing is chosen, companies typically describe the positive results, such as improving the bottom line. Many believe that the guaranteed results of employee downsizing on organizational market returns, profitability, and other financial outcomes are at best evasive.16 There also is a negative side to downsizing. Following are some examples:

$ During layoffs, employers and employees must realize that there is a natural grieving period and a desire to go back to the way things used to be. Friendships may be lost, and there is day-to-day uncertainty about the future. It is difficult to think about contributing to the bottom line when you do not know if tomorrow will be your day to be cut.17

$ Layers are pulled out of a firm, making advancement in the organization more difficult. Thus, more and more individuals find themselves plateaued.

$ Workers begin seeking better opportunities because they believe they may be the next in line to be laid off. Often the best workers find other jobs and there is an increase in volun- tary departures.18

$ Employee loyalty is often significantly reduced. For workers who remain after downsizing, the loyalty level is often low.

$ Institutional memory or corporate culture is lost. $ Workers who remain after downsizing are also faced with the realization of having to do

additional work (some call it “ghost work”). Jim Link, staffing agency Randstad’s manag- ing director for HR, said, “The piling-on of responsibilities is at an all-time high.”19

$ When demand for the products or services returns, the company often realizes that it has cut too deeply. It then begins looking for ways to get the job done.

WORKER ADJUSTMENT AND RETRAINING NOTIFICATION ACT The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act requires covered employers to give 60 days’ notice before a plant closing or mass layoff that will affect at least 100 full-time employees, not counting employees who work an average of less than 20 hours per week.20 As an example of how the process works: Century Aluminum of West Virginia ceased operations on February 20, 2009. It had issued a federal WARN notice in December 2008 to its 679 employees.21 Therefore, no penalty was imposed on the company.

There are severe monetary sanctions for failing to comply with the requirements of WARN. The penalties for WARN notice violations include liability to each affected worker for back pay and benefits for up to 60 days. For example, more than 800 former employees of solar energy company Solyndra received a $3.5 million settlement because the company initiated a mass lay- off.22 The company failed to provide the required 60-day warning notice to employees that it would close. However, if an unforeseeable business circumstance leads to closing earlier than 60 days, the WARN does not apply. Such was the case with Hale-Halsell Company. Six days after the retailer United Supermarket, Hale-Halsell’s biggest customer, severed ties with the company, and the wholesaler announced 200 layoffs.23

OUTPLACEMENT In outplacement, laid-off employees are given assistance in finding employment elsewhere. The use of outplacement began at the executive level, but it has also been used at other organizational levels. Through outplacement, the firm tries to soften the impact of displacement. Barbara Barra, executive vice-president of operations for the consulting firm Lee Hecht Harrison, said, “There is a strong correlation between how a company treats departing employees and its ability to attract and retain top talent now and in the future, particularly when the economy rebounds.”24 Some of the services provided by outplacement include a discussion of pension options, Social Security benefits, expenses for interviews, and wage/salary negotiations. Usually career guidance is provided as well as instructions on how to conduct a self-appraisal directed toward recognizing skills, knowledge, experience, and other qualities recruiters may require in a new job. Tutoring in how to search for a job is usually available, and there is often help available in how to interview in the new employment environment.

When organizational change takes place, there will be a psychological impact on both the individuals who were dismissed and those who remain. Companies use outplacement to take care of employees by moving them successfully out of the company. This proactive response will also likely have a positive inf luence on those who remain with the company after down- sizing. More employers are offering outplacement help to preserve their employer brand and reputation.

outplacement A procedure whereby laid-off employees are given assistance in finding employment elsewhere.

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350 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

SEVERANCE PAY Severance pay is compensation designed to assist laid-off employees as they search for new employment.  (As a reminder, we reviewed golden parachute arrangements in Chapter 9, which are severance packages for executives under certain circumstances.) Although no federal law requires U.S. companies to pay severance, a recent study revealed characteristics of severance packages for companies that do. More than 50 percent indicated “Salary Grade/ Level” as a factor; 40 percent stated full-time employment status and pre-negotiated employment agreements are factors as well.25 Even so, U.S. employees earn the least amount of severance pay worldwide, regardless of their job level or tenure.26 When offered, typically one to two weeks of severance pay for every year of service is provided, up to some predetermined maximum. The employee’s organizational level generally affects the amount of severance pay provided. For example, nonmanagers may get eight or nine weeks of pay even if their length of service is greater than eight or nine years. Middle managers may receive severance pay amounts based on the number of years worked.

There are many compelling reasons to pay severance to employees who are involuntarily terminated. Many managers think that treating ousted workers well sends an important message to those who remain behind. There may be a feeling that “we all could be in that situation some- day.” A major reason a firm offers severance today is that something in return is provided. The departing worker must waive all rights to sue the company, but the waiver has to be voluntary.27 In a recent survey, nearly three-quarters of some 400 HR professionals answered yes when asked if they required workers who were laid off to sign a form releasing their organization from liability for employment actions.28 From the employee’s viewpoint, severance is paid so that they will not sue the organization.29 “It’s not love; it’s not a gift—it’s a business transaction,” notes Alan Sklover, author of Fired, Downsized, or Laid Off.30

Recent developments might lead companies to reconsider whether to provide severance pay to employees. In 2014, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (U.S. v. Quality Stores Inc.) that severance pay is subject to Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) tax.  In Chapter 10, we said that FICA requires that employees and employers pay a portion of the cost of Old Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) and Medicare coverage. Arguably, paying a tax on money that is awarded to former employees can create a substantial cost burden for companies.

Ombudspersons and Alternative Dispute Resolution Not all internal employee relations situations are as severe as termination and layoffs. An ombud- sperson or alternative dispute resolution may be used to resolve these disputes. We will consider these topics next.

Ombudspersons An ombudsperson is a complaint officer who has access to top management and who hears employee complaints, investigates, and recommends appropriate action. Employers use ombud- spersons in their organizations to help defuse problems before they become lawsuits or scandals. The more internal mechanisms a corporation must deal with internal problems, the less likely these problems are to wind up in court. Ombudspersons are impartial, neutral counselors who can give employees confidential advice about problems ranging from abusive managers to allegations of illegal corporate activity. Ombudspersons are used so that all workers may seek informal, confidential assistance to work through problems without losing control over how their concerns will be addressed. The ombudsperson is typically independent of line management and reports near or at the top of the organization.

Melissa Cameron is the ombudsperson for Bayer Corporation North American operations. The firm’s 16,600 employees can contact her confidentially to blow the whistle on bad behavior or discuss other workplace issues. She said, “If you find even one or two cases a year that are substantiated, you have more than paid for my salary in terms of addressing a situation on the front end rather than going through litigation.”31

severance pay Compensation designed to assist laid-off employees as they search for new employment.

12.4 Explain the use of ombud- spersons and alternative dispute resolution.

ombudsperson Complaint officer who has access to top management and who hears employee complaints, investigates, and recommends appropriate action.

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Alternative Dispute Resolution As the number of employment-related lawsuits increases, companies have looked for ways to protect themselves against the costs and uncertainties of the judicial system. Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is a procedure whereby the employee and the company agree ahead of time that any problems will be addressed by an agreed-upon means.

ADR is based on the use of a jury waiver, which is a contractual provision in which an employee waives the right to a trial by jury in a legal proceeding brought against an employer.32 Types of ADR include arbitration, mediation, negotiated rulemaking, neutral fact-finding, and minitrials. Except for binding arbitration, the goal of ADR is to provide a forum for the par- ties to work toward a voluntary, consensual agreement, as opposed to having a judge or other authority decide the case. Mediation is the preferred method for most people. ADR cases run the gamut from racial, gender, and age discrimination to unfair firings. The idea behind ADR is to resolve conf licts between employer and employee through means less costly and contentious than litigation. A successful program can save a company thousands of dollars in legal costs and hundreds of hours in managers’ time. Just as important, perhaps, it can protect a company from the demoralizing tension and bitterness that employee grievances can spread through a workforce. Compared to litigation, ADR processes are less adversarial, faster and more efficient, relatively lower in cost, and private. In the Watch It video, attorneys from the Gordon Law Group discuss the realities of conf lict in the workplace between employees as well as between the employer and employee that occur from time to time. They also refer to approaches to find resolution to conf lict.

alternative dispute resolution (ADR) Procedure whereby the employee and the company agree ahead of time that any problems will be addressed by an agreed-upon means.

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Gordon Law Group and to respond to questions.

When parties agree to mediate, they can reach a settlement in 96 percent of the cases. A presidential executive order requires federal agencies to: (1) promote greater use of mediation, arbitration, early neutral evaluation, agency ombudspersons, and other alternative dispute resolu- tion techniques; and (2) promote greater use of negotiated rulemaking.

The Supreme Court rendered an opinion in Circuit City v. Adams that greatly enhanced an employer’s ability to enforce compulsory ADR agreements. The Court held that the ADR was valid and enforceable and made clear that ADR applied to the clear majority of employees and was available to employers seeking to enforce compulsory arbitration agreements. However, in 2012, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) held that a Florida-based home builder committed an unfair labor practice under federal labor law by maintaining a mandatory arbitration agreement that waived the rights of employees to participate in class or collective actions. Only time will tell how this decision will affect ADR.

More Considerations for Internal Employee Relations HR professionals either may initiate or approve requests for employment status changes. These include transfers, promotions, resignations, and retirements.

Transfers The lateral movement of a worker within an organization is called a transfer. A transfer may be initiated by the firm or by an employee. The process does not and should not imply that a person is being either promoted or demoted. Transfers serve several purposes, five of which we describe here. First, firms often find it necessary to reorganize. Offices and departments are

HR Web Wisdom

Alternative Dispute Resolution www.opm.gov/er/adrguide/ toc.asp

Office of Personnel Management, Alternative Dispute Resolution: A Resource Guide.

12.5 Describe transfers, promo- tions, resignations, and retire- ments as factors involved in internal employee relations.

transfer Lateral movement of a worker within an organization.

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352 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

created and abolished in response to the company’s needs. In filling positions created by reor- ganization, the company may have to move employees without promoting them. A similar situ- ation may exist when an office or department is closed. Rather than terminate valued employees, management may transfer them to other areas within the organization. These transfers may entail moving an employee to another desk in the same office or to a location halfway around the world.

Second, transfers make positions available in the primary promotion channels. At times, productive but unpromotable workers may clog promotion channels. Other qualified workers in the organization may find their opportunities for promotion blocked. When this happens, a firm’s most capable future managers may seek employment elsewhere. To keep promotion channels open, the firm may decide to transfer employees who are unpromotable but productive at their organizational level.

Third, transfers may satisfy employees’ personal needs. The reasons for wanting a transfer are numerous. An individual may need to accompany a transferred spouse to a new location or work closer to home to care for aging parents, or the worker may dislike the long commute to and from work. Factors such as these may be of sufficient importance that employees may resign if a requested transfer is not approved. Rather than risk losing a valued employee, the firm may agree to the transfer.

Fourth, transfers may also be an effective means of dealing with personality clashes. Some people just cannot get along with one another. Because each of the individuals may be a valued employee, a transfer may be an appropriate solution to the problem. Nevertheless, managers must be cautious regarding the “grass is always greener on the other side of the fence” syndrome. When some workers encounter a temporary setback, they immediately ask for a transfer before they even attempt to work through the problem.

Fifth, because of a limited number of management levels, it is becoming necessary for man- agers to have a wide variety of experiences before achieving a promotion. Individuals who desire upward mobility often explore possible lateral moves so that they can learn new skills.

Promotions A promotion is the movement of a person to a higher-level position in the organization. The term promotion is one of the most emotionally charged words in the field of HR management. An individual who receives a promotion normally receives additional financial rewards and the ego boost associated with achievement and accomplishment. Most employees feel good about being promoted. Nevertheless, for every individual who gains a promotion, probably others were not selected. If these individuals wanted the promotion badly enough or their favorite candidate was overlooked, they may slack off or even resign. If the consensus of employees directly involved is that the wrong person was promoted, considerable resentment may result.

Numerous laws, court cases, and executive orders apply when individuals are hired. These same hiring standards apply to promotion decisions. Promotion decisions should not discrimi- nate against employees because of age, race, religion, national origin, color, sex, pregnancy, or disability.33

Resignations Even when an organization is totally committed to making its environment a good place to work, workers will still resign. Some employees cannot see promotional opportunities, or at least not enough, and will therefore move on. A certain amount of turnover is healthy for an organization and is often necessary to afford employees the opportunity to fulfill career objectives. When turnover becomes excessive, however, the firm must do something to slow it. The most qualified employees are often the ones who resign because they are more mobile. On the other hand, mar- ginally qualified workers never seem to leave. If excessive numbers of a firm’s highly qualified and competent workers are leaving, a way must be found to reverse the trend.

ANALYZING VOLUNTARY RESIGNATIONS When a firm wants to determine why individuals leave, it can use the exit interview or the postexit questionnaire. An exit interview is a means of revealing the real reasons employees leave their jobs and it is conducted before an employee departs the company. An important question pertains to whether employees felt they had received a good realistic job preview.34 Determining why employees leave a company can provide an opportunity

promotion Movement of a person to a higher-level position in an organization.

exit interview Means of revealing the real reasons employees leave their jobs; it is conducted before an employee departs the company and provides information on how to correct the causes of discontent and reduce turnover.

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for the firm to make changes to reduce turnover rates and reduce the associated costs.35 Well- designed exit interviews that are executed appropriately should help provide HR professions and other company leaders with the following information and understanding:36

$ Uncover issues related to HR (e.g., pay, benefits, development opportunities, and succes- sion planning)

$ Understand employees’ perceptions of the work itself $ Gain insight into managers’ leadership styles and effectiveness $ Learn about HR benchmarks (e.g., salary, benefits) at competing organizations $ Foster innovation by soliciting ideas for improving the organization $ Create lifelong advocates for the organization

☛ F Y I A survey of companies in more than 35 countries revealed that 75 percent conducted exit interviews.

Often, the reason an employee leaves the job is misleading. Leigh Branham, author of The 7 Hidden Reasons Employees Leave: How to Recognize the Subtle Signs and Act before It’s Too Late, believes that employees will cite pay as the reason they quit their jobs, 60 to 80 percent of the time. His research suggests that only 12 to 15 percent of employees leave for this reason.37 Perhaps departing employees are reluctant to burn bridges by revealing the real reason for leaving because they may need a reference from their supervisor in the future and fear reprisal. However, only after determining the real reason for leaving can a firm develop a strategy to overcome the problem.

At times, women who are on the fast track are not candid about why they quit. A consulting firm was hired to discover why top-performing women were quitting in high numbers, saying in their exit interviews that they wanted to spend more time with their kids. However, the employers later learned that these women had returned to work with another firm, some starting their own firms and working longer hours. In anonymous interviews, the women who had quit explained the problem. Most said they had left their jobs because they could not see a future for themselves there. The wanting-to-spend-more-time-with-kids story was just cover—so they could maintain good relations with their former bosses.38

Often a third party, such as a person in the HR department or an outsource party will conduct the exit interview. A third party may be used because employees may not be willing to air their problems with their former bosses. Outsourcing the exit interviews may be beneficial because employers believe that the person who is leaving will be more honest when he or she is not speaking to a company employee. Over time, properly conducted exit interviews can provide con- siderable insight into why employees leave. Patterns are often identified that uncover weaknesses in the firm’s management system. Knowledge of the problem permits corrective action to be taken. In addition, exit interviews help to identify training and development needs and identify areas in which changes need to be made. They may also be used to identify hidden biases of managers who are hurting the productivity of the unit.39

Another means of determining the real reason employees are leaving the organization is by administering a post-exit questionnaire, which is sent to former employees several weeks after they leave the organization. Usually, they have already started work at their new company. Ample blank space is provided so that a former employee can express his or her feelings about and perceptions of the job and the organization. Because the individual is no longer with the firm, he or she may respond more freely to the questions. However, there are several major weaknesses in the use of the post-exit questionnaire. Participation rates are often low because former workers may not care enough to respond and they may be difficult to reach after they have departed.40 Also, the interviewer is not present to interpret and probe for more information.

ATTITUDE SURVEYS: A MEANS OF RETAINING QUALITY EMPLOYEES Exit and post-exit interviews can provide valuable information to improve HR management practices. The problem, however, is that these approaches are reactions to events that were detrimental to the organization.

post-exit questionnaire Questionnaire sent to former employees several weeks after they leave the organization to determine the real reason they left.

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354 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

An alternative, proactive approach is administering attitude surveys. Attitude surveys seek input from employees to determine their feelings about topics such as the work they perform, their supervisor, their work environment, flexibility in the workplace, opportunities for advancement, training and development opportunities, and the firm’s compensation system. They can provide valuable information to management, but they should not be a substitute for day-to-day discussion between managers and workers.41 Because some employees will want their responses to be confi- dential, every effort should be made to guarantee their anonymity. To achieve this, it may be neces- sary to have the survey administered by a third party. Regardless of how the process is handled, attitude surveys have the potential to improve management practices. For this reason, they are widely used throughout industry today. Joseph Cabral, senior vice-president and chief HR officer for the North Shore-LIJ Health System in Long Island, New York, says, “North Shore has been surveying its 38,000 employees annually for the past three years, but it recently went to a quarterly survey to provide more real-time and actionable results and to allow comparisons across worksites and departments.”42

Employees should be advised of the purpose of the survey. The mere act of giving a sur- vey communicates to employees that management is concerned about their problems, wants to know what they are, and wants to solve them, if possible. Analyzing survey results of various subgroups and comparing them with the firm’s total population may indicate areas that should be investigated and problems that need to be solved. For instance, the survey results of the production night shift might be compared with the production day shift. Should problems show up, management must be willing to make the suggested changes. If the survey does not result in some improvements, the process may be a deterrent to employees and future surveys may not yield helpful data. If you are not going to do anything because of the survey, do not bother to administer it.

OFFBOARDING Offboarding facilitates employee departure from the company by assisting in the completion of exit tasks, including exit interviews, forms completion, the return of company property, and ensuring that employees receive the appropriate extended benefits.43 Topics such as the worker’s 401(k) and COBRA need to be addressed. Teresa Grote, practice director of composite solutions for Ascendum, an information technology company, said, “I think that in our highly litigious society today, making sure that you go through proper offboarding is probably equally, if not more, important than proper onboarding.”44

Retirements Many long-term employees leave an organization by retiring. However, many of today’s employees are not planning for a traditional retirement, in which they have an immediate and abrupt end to their working career at a specific age, such as 65. Some want to work past the normal retirement age because they are healthy and want to keep active; others must work because their retirement account has dwindled and they cannot afford to retire. Phased retirement is any arrangement that allows people to move from full-time work to retirement in steps. In addition, 20 percent of employers say that phased retirement is critical to their company’s HR strategy today. That number nearly triples to 61 percent when employers look ahead five years. Allen Steinberg, a principal at Hewitt Associates, said, “Employers will be losing key talent at a time when attracting and retain- ing skilled workers will be more important.”45 However, a recent study found that major corpora- tions do not have phased retirement programs for older workers who can continue adding value.46 In fact, a Society for Human Resource Management Survey found that only five percent of firms offer such programs.47 Another survey revealed that 42 percent of companies are considering them.48

The Pension Protection Act of 2006 permits limited phased retirement by allowing in-service pension plan withdrawals to begin at age 62 rather than 65. A benefit of phased retirement is that it permits a company to reduce labor costs without hurting morale. It also lets an organization hold on to its experienced workers so they can share their knowledge with a less-experienced workforce. The federal government’s phased retirement program requires participants to spend about 20 percent of their time mentoring employees who plan to assume their job duties once they leave.49 Employees at Lee Memorial can work as few as 16 hours a week and still be eligible for benefits. Mercy Health’s phased retirement plan allows workers aged 50 and older to reduce

attitude survey Survey that seeks input from employees to determine their feelings about topics such as the work they perform, their supervisor, their work environment, flexibility in the workplace, opportunities for advancement, training and development opportunities, and the firm’s compensation system.

offboarding Facilitates employee departure from the company by assisting in the completion of exit tasks, including exit interviews, forms completion, the return of company property, and ensuring that employees receive the appropriate extended benefits.

phased retirement Any arrangement that allows people to move from full-time work to retirement in steps.

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PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Explain the concept of employment at will. Employ-

ment at will is an unwritten contract created when an employee agrees to work for an employer but no agree- ment exists as to how long the parties expect the employ- ment to last.

2. Describe the concept of discipline and summarize dis- ciplinary action. Discipline is the state of employee self-control and orderly conduct present within an organization.

Disciplinary action occurs when a penalty is invoked against an employee who fails to meet established standards.

After management has established rules, it must com- municate these rules to employees. The manager then observes the performance of workers and compares per- formance with rules. If employee behavior does not vary from acceptable practices, there is no need for disciplinary action, but when an employee’s behavior violates a rule, corrective action may be necessary.

Three of the most important concepts are the hot stove rule, progressive disciplinary action, and disciplin- ary action without punishment. As might be expected, administering disciplinary action is not a pleasant task, but it is a job that managers sometimes must do. Although the manager is in the best position to take disciplinary action, many would rather avoid it even when it is in the company’s best interest. Such reluc- tance often stems from breakdowns in other areas of HR management.

3. Explain employment termination of various occupational groups. Termination is the most severe penalty that an orga- nization can impose on an employee, therefore, it should be the most carefully considered form of disciplinary action. Regardless of the similarities in the termination of employ- ees at various levels, distinct differences exist regarding non-managerial/non-professional employees, executives, and middle and lower-level managers and professionals.

Demotion is the process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduction in pay. If demotion is chosen instead of termination, efforts must be made to preserve the self- esteem of the individual.

Downsizing, also known as restructuring or rightsiz- ing, is essentially the reverse of a company growing; it suggests a one-time change in the organization and the number of people employed.

4. Explain the use of ombudspersons and alternative dispute resolution. An ombudsperson is a complaint offi- cer with access to top management who hears employee complaints, investigates, and recommends appropriate action.

Alternative dispute resolution is a procedure whereby the employee and the company agree ahead of time that any problems will be addressed by an agreed-upon means.

5. Describe transfers, promotions, resignations, and retire- ments as factors involved in internal employee relations. The lateral movement of a worker within an organization is called a transfer.

A promotion is the movement of a person to a higher- level position in the organization. Even when an organi- zation is totally committed to making its environment a good place to work, workers will still resign.

Many long-term employees leave an organization by retiring. Much of today’s employees are not plan- ning for a traditional retirement, in which they have an immediate and abrupt end to their working career at a specific age, such as 65. Some want to work past the normal retirement age because they are healthy and want to keep active; others must work because their retirement account has dwindled and they cannot afford to retire.

the number of hours worked while keeping their benefits.50 CVS Caremark has set up a “snow- bird” employment program to retain valuable employees. The program allows pharmacists to transfer south to places such as Florida for the winter, following the business’s customers. Other benefits CVS Caremark provides the more mature workforce include part-time work, training, and flexible scheduling.51

Sometimes employees will be offered early retirement before reaching the organization’s normal length-of-service requirement. Historically, early retirement has been viewed as an attractive solution when workforce reductions had to be made. Early retirement plans, which gained popularity in the 1980s, appealed to older workers facing layoffs. Early retirement is still being used, but companies often reserve the right to reject a highly productive worker’s request.

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356 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

To Fire or Not to Fire You are a first-line supervisor for Kwik Cor-

poration, a medium-sized manufacturer of automotive parts. Work- ers in your company and your department are quite close, and you

view them as family. The work in your department can be quite dan- gerous. It is especially important that all workers wear their safety glasses because in the past there have been some serious injuries.

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Workplace Discipline Indicator This instrument assesses the way you prefer to discipline employees. If you have not yet worked a job where you supervised employees, approach this assessment by considering how you would expect to be treated if disciplined at work.

Questions for Review 12-1. Define internal employee relations. 12-2. What is meant by the term employment at will? 12-3. What is the difference between discipline and disciplin-

ary action? 12-4. What are the steps to follow in the disciplinary action

process? 12-5. Describe the following approaches to disciplinary action:

(a) hot stove rule (b) progressive disciplinary action (c) disciplinary action without punishment

12-6. What are the problems associated with the administra- tion of disciplinary action?

12-7. How does termination often differ regarding non- managerial/non-professional employees, executives, and middle and lower-level managers and professionals?

12-8. Define demotion. Why should it be used cautiously? 12-9. Define downsizing. What are some problems associ-

ated with downsizing? 12-10. Define outplacement and severance pay. 12-11. Define ombudsperson and alternative dispute resolu-

tion (ADR). Why might a firm want to use an ombud- sperson or alternative dispute resolution?

12-12. Distinguish between transfers and promotions. 12-13. Briefly describe the techniques available to determine

the real reasons that an individual decides to leave the organization.

12-14. Define offboarding. Why is it important? 12-15. Define phased retirement. Why do so many employees

desire to have a phased retirement?

Key Terms internal employee relations 339 employment at will 339 discipline 340 disciplinary action 340 hot stove rule 342 progressive disciplinary action 342 disciplinary action without

punishment 343 termination 345

just cause 345 demotion 347 downsizing 348 outplacement 349 severance pay 350 ombudsperson 350 alternative dispute resolution

(ADR) 351 transfer 351

promotion 352 exit interview 353 postexit questionnaire 354 attitude survey 354 offboarding 354 phased retirement 354

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CHAPTER 12 • INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS 357

HRM by the Numbers Why Employees Leave

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Employees choose to leave a company for many reasons and some employees leave for involuntary reasons. Calculating turnover rates to quantify employee departures by reason can help companies identify possible weaknesses in their work practices or company culture. For instance, significant turnover resulting from mediocre performance should prompt a company to review its selection and training practices. Valued employees may leave the company for other jobs to enhance career advancement or compensation. For example, a compensation survey will reveal the competitiveness of pay and benefits offerings relative to the competition, possibly shedding light on those departures.

Companies calculate turnover rates for a desired reference period (e.g., monthly, quarterly, annually) based on the following information: (a) the number of workers leaving during the chosen reference period; and (b) average number of workers employed during the reference period. The turnover rate is calculated as: a/b. Use the data in the table to calculate turnover rates for the questions that follow.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Every employee possesses the responsibility to follow work rules and perform well. Unfortunately, violations occur. In these situations, management is responsible for ensuring that appropriate disciplinary action is taken.

Action checklist for managers and HR—understand HR managers’ and other managers’ roles in the disciplinary process HR takes the lead

HR professionals should carefully educate managers about workplace policies, for example, absence from work, performance expectations, professional conduct, and dress code.

Tell managers how they may proactively communicate policies to employees. It is not sufficient to refer employees to a handbook.

Maintain an open-door policy for managers who choose to discuss concerns about employees who have or may have violated workplace rules, and alternative courses of action.

Managers take the lead Managers should discuss proper conduct and the disciplinary policy with employees. Clearly communicate the desire to have every employee be knowledgeable about workplace expectations and to take responsibility for meeting them.

Except in extreme cases involving documented safety violations, managers should not immediately assume guilt. Rather than accuse an employee of wrongdoing, ask for their side of the story first.

When discipline is warranted, discuss the plan for addressing it with HR. Ask for their participation in the process.

The company has a rule that states that any employee who does not follow the stated policy will receive a written reprimand on the first offense and will be terminated on the second violation. You have had to terminate several workers in the past because of similar violations. The other day, Allen Smith, one of your best and most influential employees, violated the safety glasses rule and you gave him a repri- mand. You hated to do that because he is by far your best worker and he often helps you if you have a problem with the other workers. He has also been with the company for a long time. You would be lost

without him. You walk up to Allen’s workstation and observe him not wearing his safety glasses again. He knows that he has been caught and quickly puts his glasses on and says in a pleading voice, “Please don’t fire me. I promise it will never happen again. I have just had a lot on my mind lately.” 12-16. What would you do? 12-17. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a per-

son to make a less-than-ethical decision?

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358 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH In

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M12_MART9724_15_SE_C12.indd 358 9/27/17 7:01 PM

CHAPTER 12 • INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS 359

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Assume that you are working as the assistant manager of a gas station. An employee told you in confidence that she saw a coworker place a handful of lottery tickets in his backpack without paying for them. Only you and the employee who allegedly stole lottery tickets are working during an evening shift. This is the first time you have worked with this employee and you know very little about him. Also, you did not participate in hiring him.

12-21. Would you address this allegation of theft during your work shift? Explain. 12-22. Besides you and the employee who allegedly stole lottery tickets, who else should be involved and in what capacity?

Explain.

I N C I D E N T 1 Employment at Will Aaradhya Patel is the HR manager for Apothec Pharmaceuticals. She is working with district sales managers who are completing annual per- formance reviews of pharmaceutical representatives. The most impor- tant performance criterion is dollar sales volume for the previous year’s calendar quarters. Each representative is expected to achieve at least $750,000 in quarterly sales.

Aaradhya is meeting with James Johnson, an Apothec district sales manager, to discuss his team member’s sales performance. James recommends firing Richard Smith and Stephen Mayers. Richard’s cur- rent year quarterly sales ranged between $615,000 and $680,000. Stephen’s current year quarterly sales ranged between $625,000 and $675,000. In years past, both employees’ sales were off the charts. In addition to previously demonstrating exemplary sales performance, both Richard and Stephen have consistently received top marks from the physicians who buy Apothec’s products. This past year was no exception.

Aaradhya informed James that he could fire only Stephen. Although their performances were similarly below standard, there were important differences in employment terms. Until five years ago, newly hired Apothec sales representatives signed contracts. The performance

expectations section explicitly states that an employee whose perfor- mance falls below standard shall be given one year to meet expecta- tions; otherwise, face possible employment termination. Since then, Apothec no longer issues contracts. Offer letters clearly specify at-will employment. Richard was hired eight years ago, and Stephen was hired four years ago.

James expressed disappointment. He had already identified two ideal candidates to replace Richard and Stephen, and was eager to make job offers. Aaradhya informed James that the matter was settled for Richard. And, she encouraged James to consider the entirety of Stephen’s performance record since joining Apothec.

Questions 12-23. Do you agree with Apothec’s decision to eliminate employ-

ment contracts? Discuss. 12-24. Do you think James should act on his recommendation to fire

Stephen? Explain. 12-25. What are some of the financial and nonfinancial costs asso-

ciated with employment contracts? At-will employment? Explain.

I N C I D E N T 2 To Heck with Them! Isabelle Anderson is the North Carolina plant manager for Hall Man- ufacturing Company, a company that produces a line of relatively inexpensive painted wood furniture. Six months ago, Isabelle became concerned about the turnover rate among workers in the painting department. Manufacturing plant turnover rates in that part of the South generally averaged about 30 percent, which was the case at Hall. The painting department, however, had experienced a turnover of nearly 200 percent in each of the last two years. Because of the limited number of skilled workers in the area, Hall had introduced an extensive training program for new painters, and Isabelle knew that the high turnover rate was costly.

Isabelle conducted exit interviews with many of the depart- ing painters. Many of them said that they were leaving for more money, others mentioned better benefits, and some cited personal reasons for quitting. But there was nothing to help Isabelle pinpoint the problem. Isabelle had checked and found that Hall’s wages and benefits were competitive with, if not better than, those of other

manufacturers in the area. She then called in Nelson Able, the paint- ing supervisor, to discuss the problem. Nelson’s response was, “To heck with them! They will do it my way or they can hit the road. You know how this younger generation is. They work to get enough money to live on for a few weeks and then quit. I don’t worry about it. Our old-timers can take up the slack.” After listening to Nelson for a moment, Isabelle thought that she might know what caused the turnover problem.

Questions 12-26. Interpret a turnover rate of 200 percent. What does it mean?

(Hint: Refer to the HR By the Numbers Feature for the for- mula as a guide.)

12-27. Do you believe that the exit interviews were accurate? Explain your answer.

12-28. What do you believe was the cause of the turnover problem?

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360 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

Endnotes 1 Charles J. Muhl, “The Employment-at-Will

Doctrine: Three Major Exceptions,” Monthly Labor Review (January 2001): 3.

2 Vadim Liberman, “The Perfect Punishment,” Conference Board Review 46 (January/February 2009): 32–39.

3 Michael S. Lavenant, “The Art of Employee Discipline: How to Retain Control & Increase Production,” Nonprofit World 28 (July/August 2010): 22–23.

4 “What It Means to You,” Legal Alert for Super- visors 5 (September 1, 2009): 2.

5 David B. Ritter and Mari Kaluza, “Lesson from Walmart: How to Cut Risk when a Co-worker Harasses,” HR Specialist: Illinois Employment Law 5 (May 2011): 6.

6 “Document All Disciplinary Actions, Includ- ing Why and When You Decided to Act,” HR Specialist: New Jersey Employment Law 6 (May 2011): 3.

7 Carroll R. Daugherty, “Seven Tests for Learn- ing Whether Employer Had Just Cause for Disciplining an Employee,” as reproduced in the labor arbitration case Whirlpool Corp., 58 LA 421 (1972).

8 Jada A. Graves, “How to Fire Someone Com- passionately,” U.S. News and World Reports (August 22, 2013). Accessed April 4, 2014, at www.money.usnews.com.

9 Dick Grote, “A Step-by-Step Guide to Firing Someone,” Harvard Business Review online (February 17, 2016). Accessed April 11, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

10 “Don’t Pile on Reasons for Firing; You’re Spoil- ing for Retaliation Fight in Court,” HR Special- ist: Texas Employment Law 5 (April 2010): 2.

11 “10 Steps to Stress-free, Lawsuit-free Termi- nation Meetings,” HR Specialist: New York Employment Law 7 (July 2009): 6.

12 “Three Keys to Keep Terminations from Turn- ing into Lawsuits,” Legal Alert for Supervisors 5 (March 15, 2010): 3.

13 Steve Schaefer, “Watch Your Backs, CEOs: The Margin for Error is Shrinking,” Forbes (July 19, 2012). Accessed March 31, 2014, at www. forbes.com.

14 Khadeeja Safdar and Suzanne Kapner, “Six Retail Chains, Six Survival Strategies,” The

Wall Street Journal online (February 28, 2017). Accessed March 30, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

15 Patrick Fitzgerald, “Shoe Retailer Payless Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy,” The Wall Street Journal online (April 4, 2017). Accessed April 10, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

16 Shirley M. Mayton, “Survivor Coping,” OD Practitioner 43 (Winter 2011): 42–47.

17 Susan Storm Smith, “In a Time of Layoffs, Keep Human Resources Humane,” Business- Week Online (March 19, 2009): 11.

18 Pat Galagan, “The Biggest Losers: The Perils of Extreme Downsizing,” T + D 64 (November 2010): 27–29.

19 Vickie Elmer, “The Invisible Promotion,” For- tune 163 (February 7, 2011): 31–32.

20 “The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notifi- cation Act,” U.S. Department of Labor Employ- ment and Training Administration Fact Sheet. Accessed February 1, 2017, at www.doleta.gov/ programs/factsht/warn.htm.

21 “Century Closes W.Va. Smelter,” Metal Produc- ing & Processing 47 (March/April 2009): 4.

22 Megan Leonhardt, “Solyndra to Pay $3.5M to Settle WARN Act Claims,” 360.com web- site (August 13, 2012). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www.law360.com/articles/369272/ solyndra-to-pay-3-5m-to-settle-warn-act-claims.

23 Lauren Williamson, “Grocer Gave Fair WARN- ing,” InsideCounsel 20 (April 2009): 77.

24 “Severance, Outplacement Receive More Atten- tion,” HR Focus 86 (June 2009): 12.

25 “Survey Shows Severance Amounts Unchanged in Three Years,” 2016 Severance Report, Clear- Rock, Inc. (2016). Accessed April 11, 2017, at http://clearrock.com/survey-shows-severance- amounts-unchanged-three-years/.

26 “Survey Finds Severance Pay Declines for U.S. Employees,” Report on Salary Surveys 9 (Janu- ary 2009): 4.

27 Anne E. Moran, “Waivers and Severance Arrangements: EEOC Announcement Offers Reminders for Employers,” Employee Relations Law Journal 35 (2010): 72–80.

28 Rita Zeidner, “Most Employers Require Waivers for Severance Pay,” HR Magazine 54 (January 2009): 27.

29 “How Employers Are Handling Severance,” Managing Benefits Plans 10 (February 2010): 12–15.

30 “8 Keys to Negotiating Severance,” Executive Leadership 24 (June 2009): 8.

31 “5 Questions: Melissa Cameron, Ombudsman, North American Operations, Bayer Corp,” Workforce Management 88 (October 19, 2009): 8.

32 James J. Rooney, “Jury Waivers: Your New Alternative to Arbitration Agreements?” HR Specialist: New York Employment Law 7 (Janu- ary 2012): 6.

33 “Choosing Employees for Promotion: A 6-step Legal Process,” HR Specialist: New York Employment Law 4 (August 2009): 4.

34 Sue Sommercille and Amy-Kate Snowise, “Get the Most Out of Your Exit Interviewing,” Human Resources Magazine 16 (June/July 2011): 28–29.

35 Patricia M. Buhler, “The Exit Interview: A Goldmine of Information,” Supervision 72 (August 2011): 11–13.

36 Everett Spain and Boris Groysberg, “Mak- ing Exist Interview Count,” Harvard Business Review online (April 2016). Accessed March 1, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

37 Kenya McCullum, “The Retention Intention,” OfficePro 69 (2009 Special Edition): 8–11.

38 Sharon Meers and Joanna Strober, “When Women Don’t Tell the Truth,” Conference Board Review 46 (Summer 2009): 9–10.

39 “Use Exit Interviews to Spot Boss’s Hidden Bias,” HR Specialist 9 (May 2011): 3.

40 Terence E. Shea, “Getting the Last Word,” HR Magazine 55 (January 2010): 24–25.

41 Wendy Phaneuf, “Gaining Insight: What Employee Opinion Surveys Can Tell You,” Security: Solutions for Enterprise Security Leaders 48 (July 2011): 23.

42 Lin Grensing-Pophal, “To Ask or Not to Ask,” HR Magazine 54 (February 2009): 53–55.

43 John Lamb, “Offboarding: Completing the Cycle Efficiently,” Employee Benefit Advisor 9 (June 2011): 60–61.

44 Elizabeth Galentine, “Parting Ways Pleasantly,” Employee Benefit News 23 (June 2009): 42–43.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

12-29. What might be some limitations of at will employment from the company’s and employee’s perspectives?

12-30. What are the challenges to employers that are associated with the just cause standard?

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CHAPTER 12 • INTERNAL EMPLOYEE RELATIONS 361

45 Miller Stephen, “Phased Retirement Keeps Boomers in the Workforce,” HR Magazine (December 2008): 61–62.

46 “Firms Don’t Focus on Aging Staffers,” Inves- tor’s Business Daily (January 9, 2012): 1.

47 Nancy Collamer, “Phase A Full-Time Job into Part-Time, Then, Retirement,” Forbes online (March 21, 2017). Accessed April 4, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

48 Tom Anderson, “Employers Offer Older Work- ers Flexible Retirement,” CNBC online (August 21, 2016). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www. cnbc.com.

49 Nicole Ogrysko, “Less Than 100 Federal Employees Have Signed Up for Phased Retire- ment,” Federal News Radio online (August 16, 2016). Accessed April 17, 2017, at http://feder- alnewsradio.com.

50 “Key Steps to Recruiting & Retaining Older Workers,” H&HN: Hospitals & Health Net- works 82 (January 2008): 55–56.

51 Tamara Lytle, “Benefits for Older Workers,” HR Magazine 57 (March 2012): 52–58.

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362

13 Employee Safety, Health, and Wellness LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

13.1 Explain the nature and role of safety, health, and wellness.

13.2 Discuss workplace safety programs.

13.3 Summarize the problems associated with workplace bullying and violence.

13.4 Discuss the negative effects of employee stress and burnout.

13.5 Explain substance abuse, substance- abuse-free workplaces, and how to implement a drug-testing program.

13.6 Describe employee wellness programs and employee assistance programs.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 13 Warm-Up.

M13_MART9724_15_SE_C13.indd 362 9/27/17 7:01 PM

363

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to: Many workplaces have features that could threaten the safety and health of employees if not managed properly. For example, in manufacturing settings, metal presses mold liquid steel into components for engine manufacturing. The temperature of liquefied steel exceeds 1,000°F, which would melt human flesh in an instant. In other manufacturing settings, exposures to substances, such as silica, that have carcinogenic qualities are known to substantially raise lung cancer risks. Safety and health is also a prevalent concern in other settings such as in protective services (e.g., the precarious environments in which firefighters and police officers work) and in health care settings (e.g., doctors, nurses, and lab technicians who meet patients with contagious viruses or blood-borne illnesses).

Besides the influence of a hazardous work environment, employee wellness concerns may manifest in different ways. For example, some employees may have difficulties performing their jobs effectively because of stressful work environments (e.g., intense production scheduling) or emotional stress that results from problems outside the workplace (e.g., the fallout from divorce). Sometimes, behaviors outside the workplace (e.g., the use of illicit drugs or overeating) could negatively affect wellness, and subsequently, job performance.

Human resources (HR) practice takes place in a physical and social work environment that often has an impact on workers’ safety, health, and wellness. Our focus in this chapter is on exploring employee safety, health, and wellness and how companies manage these concerns.

Nature and Role of Safety, Health, and Wellness In our discussion, safety involves protecting employees from injuries caused by work-related accidents. Included within the umbrella definition of safety are factors related to musculoskeletal disorders, stress injuries, and workplace and domestic violence. Health refers to employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness. Problems in these areas can seriously affect a worker’s productivity and quality of work life. They can dramatically lower a firm’s effectiveness and employee morale. In fact, job-related injuries and illnesses are more common than most people realize. For a variety of reasons, which we discuss throughout this chapter, HR professionals play a crucial role in promoting a safe and healthful work environment and addressing ways to support physical and mental wellness. Strictly from a business perspective, HR professionals guard the welfare of its valuable human capital without whom the company cannot achieve its strategic objectives. Also, HR professionals invest time and energy to ensure compliance with government health and safety standards.

13.1 Explain the nature and role of safety, health, and wellness.

safety Protection of employees from injuries caused by work-related accidents.

health Employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness.

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364 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

We begin with the role of promoting occupational safety and health, which is mandated by the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. Afterward, we address employee wellness concerns and programs.

Occupational Safety and Health Administration The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). The mission of OSHA is to promote and ensure workplace safety and health in the United States and to reduce workplace fatalities, injuries, and illnesses. OSHA is committed to ensuring—so far as possible—that every working person in the nation has a safe and healthful working environment. It believes that providing workers with a safe workplace is central to their ability to enjoy health, security, and the opportunity to achieve the American dream. Addressing safety and health issues in the workplace also saves the employer money and adds value to the business. To handle this workload, OSHA has approximately 2,100 inspectors responsible for the health and safety of 130 million workers, employed at more than 8 million worksites around the United States.1 These figures translate to about one compliance officer for every 59,000 workers.

Employers have a responsibility under the general duty clause of the Occupational Safety and Health Act to furnish a workplace free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm. To prove a violation of the general duty clause, OSHA must demonstrate: (1) that a condition or activity in the workplace presented a hazard; (2) that the employer or its industry recognized this hazard; (3) that the hazard was likely to cause death or serious physical harm; and (4) that a feasible and effective means existed to eliminate or materially reduce the hazard. In 2016, two workers employed by Green Bay Manufacturing, a muffler com- ponent manufacturer based in Green Bay, Wisconsin, were severely injured when the safety lock of a molding machine failed. These workers sustained debilitating injuries within 10 days of each other. One worker’s hand was crushed and the other’s injury required a partial amputation of his left middle finger. OSHA proposed penalties in excess of $200,000 for violating the act’s general duty clause by failing to re-evaluate its machine safety procedures and exposing workers to haz- ards even after the injuries.2

Employers possess other rights and responsibilities under OSHA. Likewise, employees pos- sess rights and responsibilities. Figure 13-1 summarizes these rights and responsibilities on an official OSHA poster, which employers are required to display in the workplace.

In 1913, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics documented about 23,000 industrial deaths in a workforce of 38 million, which is a rate of about 61 deaths per 100,000 workers.3 The number of fatal work injuries in the United States in 2015 was 4,836 based on a substantially larger work- force. In 2015, the worker death rate was 3.4 deaths per 100,000 workers.4

general duty clause As used by OSHA, employers are required to furnish, to each employee, a place of employment that is free from recognizable hazards that are causing, or likely to cause, death or serious physical harm to the employee.

☛ F Y I The highest number of fatal occupational injuries in 2015:

$ All transportation accidents: 2,054 $ Roadway accidents: 1,264 $ Fall, slip, trip: 800 $ Contact with objects and equipment: 722 $ Violence and other injuries by persons or animals: 7035

Since its beginning in 1970, OSHA has helped to cut workplace fatalities by more than 60 percent and occupational injury and illness by 40 percent. At the same time, U.S. employment has more than doubled from 56 million workers at 3.5 million work sites to more than 160 million work- ers at 8 million worksites. The agency has helped standardize reasonable worker protections. Rules defining confined spaces, machine guards, or hard hat zones have allowed many plant managers and site supervisors to think more about productivity, not accidents. One of the most frequently mentioned hazards that OSHA addresses must do with missing or inadequate fall protection.6

Even though OSHA would like a successful partnership relationship to exist, at times pen- alties must be given. Financial penalties serve as reminders to companies of the benefits of

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CHAPTER 13 • EMPLOYEE SAFETY, HEALTH, AND WELLNESS 365

FIGURE 13-1 Job Safety and

Health—It’s the Law!

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366 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

maintaining safe and healthy working conditions. A serious hazard citation has a maximum pen- alty of $12,471 in 2016 (indexed annually for inflation).7 A serious violation occurs when there is substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result from a hazard about which the employer knew or should have known.8 A willful or repeated violation might have a maxi- mum amount of $124,709 per violation. Calculated instance by instance, if ten employees were exposed to one hazard the employer intentionally did not eliminate, the penalty amount would immediately jump to as much as $1,247,090. For example, an electronic cigarette manufacturer received penalties amounting to $184,500 for various OSHA violations.9 Of this total, two willful citations carried a penalty of $112,500 because the company did not provide protective gloves when workers handled products containing nicotine and eye protection when they handled cor- rosive chemicals and concentrated nicotine.

OSHA has implemented the Severe Violator Enforcement Program that increases inspec- tions at work sites where “recalcitrant employers” have repeatedly violated safety regulations and endangered workers. It also requires a mandatory follow-up inspection to make sure required changes were made. Auto parts manufacturer Sunfield Inc., received a $3.42 million fine for 46 egregious willful, two willful, one repeat, and eight safety violations.10 The company failed to train workers on how to safely operate heavy equipment, did not service the equipment, and failed to disconnect machinery from a power supply before maintenance and service.

OSHA and Whistle-Blowers A little-known fact is that OSHA is charged with more than just enforcing health and safety matters. Within the Department of Labor, OSHA enforces the whistle-blower protection provisions of 21 statutes, covering not just workplace safety but also the environment, consumer products, the financial system, and other areas. For instance, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has a provision that makes it illegal to fire or otherwise discriminate against a corporate officer for trying to report possible accounting irregularities to higher corporate officials or enforcement agencies. The U.S. Department of Labor administers this portion of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, not the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The whistle-blower provision of the Dodd-Frank Act prohibits employers from retali- ating against employees who raise various protected concerns or provide protected information to the employer or to the government. OSHA Assistant Secretary Dr. David Michaels said, “Whistle- blowers play a vital role in ensuring the integrity of our financial system, as well as the safety of our food, air, water, workplaces and transportation systems. The ability of workers to speak out and exercise their legal rights without fear of retaliation is crucial to many of the legal protections and safeguards that all Americans value.”11 Between 2006 and 2016, the number of OSHA whistle- blower complaints increased nearly 70 percent from 1,195 to 2,030.12 The increase may be due to individuals possessing more confidence in their legal rights. Alternatively, there are simply more potential violations. Or, it could be a combination of both, which is the most likely case.

Recently OSHA ruled that the National Railroad Passenger Corp. (Amtrak) violated the whistle- blower protection provisions of OSHA by discharging a supervisory special agent. While employed, the agent expressed unease about railroad safety, fraud and abuse involving an Amtrak contractor, and he supported another employee’s safety concerns.13 OSHA ordered Amtrak to reinstate the employee, pay the former employee a total $892,551 for back wages ($723,332) and interest ($34,218), punitive damages ($100,000), compensatory damages ($35,000), and reasonable attorneys’ fees.

In 2012, OSHA ordered AirTran Airways, a subsidiary of Southwest Airlines Company, to reinstate a former pilot who was fired after reporting numerous mechanical concerns. The agency also has ordered that the pilot be paid more than $1 million in back wages plus interest and compensatory damages. An investigation by OSHA’s Whistle-Blower Protection Program found reasonable cause to believe that the termination was an act of retaliation in violation of the whistle- blower provision of the Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century.

In another case, OSHA recently ordered a Florida trucking company to reinstate a driver fired for refusing to drive two unsafe trucks. The department ruled that Zurla Trucking, a 42-driver company, violated the Surface Transportation Assistance Act. It was required to pay back wages, plus interest, and compensatory damages and $125,000 in punitive damages. Zurla also had to remove adverse references related to the firing from the employee’s records. However, most of the attention regarding health and safety relates to OSHA.

As one last example, OSHA ordered Head Rush Technologies, a sporting goods manufacturer, to pay $125,000 in back wages and other damages to a former employee who, while employed,

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CHAPTER 13 • EMPLOYEE SAFETY, HEALTH, AND WELLNESS 367

suggested to the company’s chief executive officer that the company conduct more extensive research on product safety. However, the company claimed that it discharged the employee for insubordination. OSHA did not accept the company’s explanation and ruled that it retaliated against the employee in violation of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act.15

As these cases illustrate, OSHA prohibits any person from discharging or in any manner retal- iating against any employee because the employee has exercised rights under OSHA. Rights pro- vided by the act include employee participation in safety and health activities such as complaining to OSHA and seeking an OSHA inspection, participating in an OSHA inspection, participating or testifying in any proceeding related to an OSHA inspection, and reporting a work-related injury, illness, or fatality. Under OSHA, retaliation is generally defined as any action that would dissuade a reasonable employee from engaging in protected activity. Depending on the circumstances of the case, “adverse” action can include:

$ Firing or laying off $ Blacklisting $ Demoting $ Denying overtime or promotion $ Disciplining $ Denial of benefits $ Failure to hire or rehire $ Intimidation $ Making threats $ Reassignment affecting prospects for promotion $ Reducing pay or hours14

OSHA and the Small Business OSHA provides a Web-based step-by-step occupational health and safety guide that can help determine the government requirements that apply to small businesses. The guide is intended to help small business employers meet the legal requirements imposed by OSHA and achieve an in-compliance status before an OSHA inspection. It covers the basics of an occupational safety and health plan for small business owners, tips on how to self-assess the workplace, employee training strategies, and more.

It also has an on-site consultation service that provides small businesses with free advice from trained state government staff. The service is separate from any enforcement programs that the OSHA operates and is entirely confidential. Sessions identify and uncover potential workplace hazards and are intended to help small business owners improve their workplace safety and health systems. Small businesses that participate can qualify for a one-year exemption from routine OSHA inspections.

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

Health and Safety Problems at XIF Chemicals XIF Chemicals is finally able to significantly

grow its market share in the specialty chemical marketplace. The com- pany has had a few problems with safety violations in their laboratories, but HR Director Janet Haven believes that they have finally achieved compliance and can now focus on what is important—new product development. She needs to make one more staffing change and then everything should be in order. Today she is going to inform laboratory employee Joe Jones that the company is transferring him to another division. Joe is a good worker, but he has just caused too many prob- lems in the laboratory. While the laboratory manager has assured Janet

that they are following all safety regulations, Joe has once again placed a call to OSHA to complain about some concern with chemical stor- age and request an inspection. Joe claims he shared his concern with the laboratory manager who ignored him. Janet trusts that the man- ager has followed all safety regulations so she feels Joe’s concerns are unfounded. In fact, in a follow-up call Janet made to him, Joe couldn’t tell her what specific safety regulation was being violated. So, Janet has decided the best option is to have Joe move to a position where he has less access to the chemicals that cause him such a concern.

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The Economic Impact of Safety Job-related deaths and injuries of all types extract a high toll not only in human misery but also in economic loss. According to a Liberty Mutual Workplace Safety Index, workplace illnesses and injuries, causing absences of more than five days, cost U.S. firms nearly $60 billion, an average of more than $1 billion per week.16 The leading cause of workplace injuries and their associated costs are overexertion (e.g., lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, etc.). The significant financial costs are often passed along to the consumer in the form of higher prices. Thus, job-related deaths and injuries affect everyone, directly or indirectly. Safety risks can be significant for employers. In addition to workers’ compensation costs, OSHA can levy major fines. Indirect costs related to turnover and lost productivity add to the expense.

Companies have come a long way in recognizing the importance and cost benefits of safety. Workplaces are safer, thanks to efforts of employers, insurance companies, unions, and state and federal agencies. Safety professionals strive for lower workers’ compensation costs, as do insur- ance companies, who work to keep both their clients’ and their own costs down. However, death and injuries continue to occur.

Workplace Safety Programs Every employer needs to have a comprehensive safety program in place regardless of the degree of danger involved. Safety programs may accomplish their purposes in two primary ways: one focusing on unsafe employee actions and the other on unsafe working conditions.

Unsafe Employee Actions Training and orientation of new employees emphasizing safety is especially important. The early months of employment are often critical because it has been proven that work injuries decrease with length of service. The first approach in a safety program is to create a psychological envi- ronment and employee attitudes that promote safety. A corporate culture needs to exist in which employees are involved and engaged and can provide input on changes to their workplace. Many firms expect a positive link between employee engagement and involvement and safety perfor- mance. A comprehensive study of more than 82,000 business units and 1.8 million employees in 230 organizations, across 49 industries and in 73 countries supports this expectation. The top 25 percent of companies surveyed demonstrated 70 percent fewer safety incidents than companies in the bottom 25 percent.17 Accident rates decline when workers consciously or subconsciously think about safety. This attitude must permeate the firm’s operations, and a strong company policy emphasizing safety and health is crucial. Although there is danger that everyone’s respon- sibility will become no one’s responsibility, a truly safe environment takes the effort of everyone from top management to the lowest-level employee. Every individual in a firm should be encour- aged to come up with solutions to potential safety problems, and the firm’s managers must take the lead. Management’s unique role is clear because OSHA places primary responsibility for employee safety on the employer.

Unsafe Working Conditions The second approach to safety program design is to develop and maintain a safe physical working environment. Here, altering the environment becomes the focus for preventing accidents. Even if Joe, a machine operator, has been awake all night with a sick child and can barely keep his eyes open, the safety devices on his machine will help protect him. Management should create a physical environ- ment in which accidents cannot occur. It is in this area that OSHA has had its greatest influence.

Developing Safety Programs Workplace accident prevention requires safety program planning. Plans may be relatively simple, as for a small retail store, or more complex and highly sophisticated, as for a large automobile assembly plant. Regardless of the organization’s size, the support of top management is essential if safety programs are to be effective.

Table 13-1 shows some of the reasons for top management’s support of a safety program. This information suggests that the lost productivity of a single injured worker is not the only factor to consider. Every phase of HR management is involved. The firm may have difficulty recruiting if it

13.2 Discuss workplace safety programs.

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gains a reputation for being an unsafe place to work. Employee relations erode if workers believe that management does not care enough about them to provide a safe workplace. Firms will see an increase in compensation costs when they must pay a premium to attract and retain qualified applicants. Main- taining a stable workforce may become difficult if employees perceive their workplace as hazardous. To overcome these problems, safety training must be a continuous process to ensure a safe workplace.

JOB HAZARD ANALYSIS Job hazard analysis (JHA) is a multistep process designed to study and analyze a task and then breaks down that task into steps that provide a means of eliminating associated hazards. JHA can have a major impact on safety performance. It results in a detailed written procedure for safely completing many tasks within a plant. A successful JHA program features several key components: management support, supervisor and employee training, written program, and management oversight. It is an effective and useful tool to isolate and address safety issues and risks.

OSHA has issued a comprehensive booklet to assist in JHA. The booklet explains what JHA is and offers guidelines to help firms conduct their own step-by-step analysis.18

SUPERFUND AMENDMENTS REAUTHORIZATION ACT (SARA), TITLE III SARA requires businesses to communicate more openly about the hazards associated with the materials they use and produce and the wastes they generate. Although SARA has been around since 1986, some firms still do not have a satisfactory program in place. The hazard communication standard often leads the list of OSHA violations because the top category for OSHA citations is for no written hazard communication program. Dealing with this standard appears to be relatively simple and inexpensive, except when organizations ignore its provisions.

EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT One way to strengthen a safety program is to include employee input, which provides workers with a sense of involvement. To prevent accidents, each worker must make a personal commitment to safe work practices. A team concept, in which employees watch out for each other as a moral obligation, is a worthy goal. Supervisors can show support for the safety program by conscientiously enforcing safety rules and by closely conforming to the rules themselves. Participation in such teams helps form positive attitudes, and employees develop a sense of ownership of the program. Involved employees may become concerned not only with safety issues but also with ways to improve productivity.

SAFETY ENGINEER In many companies, one staff member coordinates the overall safety program. Titles such as safety engineer and safety director are common. One of the safety engineer’s primary tasks is to provide safety training for company employees. This involves educating line

job hazard analysis (JHA) Multistep process designed to study and analyze a task or job and then break down that task into steps that provide a means of eliminating associated hazards.

Reasons for Management’s Support of a Safety Program

$ Personal loss. The physical pain and mental anguish associated with injuries are always unpleasant and may even be traumatic for an injured worker. Of still greater concern is the possibility of per- manent disability or even death.

$ Financial loss to injured employees. Most employees are covered by company insurance plans or personal accident insurance. However, an injury may result in financial losses not covered by insurance.

$ Lost productivity. When an employee is injured, there will be a loss of productivity for the firm. In addition to obvious losses, there are often hidden costs. For example, a substitute worker may need additional training to replace the injured employee. Even when another worker is available to move into the injured employee’s position, efficiency may suffer.

$ Higher insurance premiums. Workers’ compensation insurance premiums are based on the em- ployer’s history of insurance claims. The potential for savings related to employee safety provides a degree of incentive to establish formal programs.

$ Possibility of fines or imprisonment. Since the enactment of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, a willful and repeated violation of its provisions may result in serious penalties for the employer.

$ Social responsibility. Many executives feel responsible for the safety and health of their employ- ees. Several firms had excellent safety programs years before OSHA existed. They understand that a safe work environment is not only in the best interests of the firm, but also that providing one is the right thing to do.

TABLE 13-1

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370 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

managers about the merits of safety and recognizing and eliminating unsafe situations. Although the safety engineer operates essentially in an advisory capacity, a well-informed and assertive person in this capacity may exercise considerable inf luence in the organization. Some major corporations also have risk management departments that anticipate losses associated with safety factors and prepare legal defenses in the event of lawsuits.

Accident Investigation Accidents can happen even in the most safety-conscious firms. Whether an accident results in an injury, an organization should carefully evaluate each occurrence to determine its cause and to ensure that it does not recur. The safety engineer and the line supervisor usually jointly investigate accidents. One of the responsibilities of any supervisor is to prevent accidents. To do so, the super- visor must learn, through active participation in the safety program, why accidents occur, how they occur, where they occur, and who is involved. Supervisors gain a great deal of knowledge about accident prevention by helping to prepare accident reports. OSHA Form 300 is a log of work-related injuries and illnesses. The log is used in the evaluation of safety programs, discussed next. Most employers electronically transmit records of occupational injuries and illnesses directly to OSHA.

Evaluation of Safety Programs Perhaps the best indicator of a successful safety program is a reduction in the injury frequency rate. OSHA’s formula is:

Injury Frequency Rate = ((number of recordable injuries / total hours worked by all company employees during the calendar year) * the total number of hours worked by a reference group of full-time employees per calendar year). The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics bases the reference group calculation on 10,000 full-time employees working 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year. Thus, the total number of hours worked by full time employees in the reference group is 20,000,000, calculated as 10,000 reference full-time employees * 40 hours per week * 50 weeks per calendar year. The user can adjust the reference to a smaller or larger number that is more fitting for the size of the workforce, such as 1,000 employees or even 100 employees. Also, it is important to note that injury frequency rates can be calculated for the company overall or smaller units within the com- pany such as department or physical location.

Other OSHA metrics currently in use include total cases, nonfatal cases without lost work- days, total lost workday cases, cases with days away from work, and measure of fatalities. In addi- tion to program-evaluation criteria, an effective reporting system helps to ensure that accidents are reported and receive attention. This is important because almost half of workplaces inspected by OSHA are for underreported numbers of employee injuries or illnesses.19 With the start of a new safety program, the number of accidents may decline significantly because some supervisors may fail to report certain accidents to make the statistics for their units look better. Proper evaluation of a safety program depends on the accurate reporting and recording of data.

Organizations must use the conclusions derived from an evaluation for them to be of any value in improving the safety program. Gathering data and permitting this information to collect dust on the safety director’s desk will not solve problems or prevent accidents. Accident investigators must transmit evaluation results upward to top management and downward to line managers to generate improvements.

Musculoskeletal Disorders Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are non-fatal conditions that affect the body’s muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, and nerves. Work-related MSDs, including tendonitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, and back pain, cost U.S. companies $61.2 billion annually just to cover lost productivity.20 Accord- ing to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 356,910 MSD cases accounted for 31 percent of all injury and illness cases in 2015.21 The median days away from work were 12 days. The highest incidence rate occurred for nursing assistants (171 cases per 10,000 full-time workers).

musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) Conditions that affect the body’s muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, and nerves.

☛ F Y I The highest and lowest incidence rates of nonfatal occupational injuries per 10,000 full-time workers in 2015:

$ Police and sheriff’s patrol officers: 497.7 $ Medical and clinical laboratory technicians: 144.522

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A major musculoskeletal disorder is carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) caused by pressure on the median nerve that occurs because of a narrowing of the passageway that houses the nerve. People who have CTS may experience pain, numbness, or tingling in the hands or wrist, a weak grip, the tendency to drop objects, sensitivity to cold, and in later stages, muscle deterioration, especially in the thumb.

CTS tends to develop in people who use their hands and wrists repeatedly in the same way. Illustrators, carpenters, assembly-line workers, and people whose jobs involve work on personal computers are the ones most commonly affected. Workers in an office environment often experi- ence CTS. If employees keyboard 40 words per minutes, they press 12,000 keys per eight-hour day with approximately eight ounces of force needed to press each key. Using these estimates, employees working full-time will exert approximately 16 tons of force each day.23

CTS is preventable, or at least its severity can be reduced. Managers can provide ergonomic furniture, especially chairs, and ensure that computer monitors are positioned at eye level and keyboards at elbow level. Employees can also cooperate by reporting early symptoms of CTS. Also, it helps to often rest the hand and wrist in a neutral position trying not to perform the exact activities that caused the syndrome. Often taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs will help. Certainly, any physical therapy aimed at exercising the hand muscle-tendon units should be stopped until after symptoms have disappeared. Other suggested actions include keeping wrists straight, taking exercise breaks, alternating tasks, shifting positions periodically, adjusting chair height, working with feet flat on the floor, and being conscious of posture. Many of these actions suggest the need for ergonomics.

Ergonomics A specific approach to dealing with health problems such as MSDs and enhancing performance is ergonomics. Ergonomics is the process of designing the workplace to support the capabilities of people and job or task demands. Through ergonomics, the goal is to fit the machine and work environment to the person, rather than require the person to make the adjustment. Ergonomics includes all attempts to structure work conditions so that they maximize energy conservation, promote good posture, and allow workers to function without pain or impairment. Failure to address ergonomic issues results in fatigue, poor performance, and MSDs. In fact, ergonomic disorders are the fastest-growing category of work-related illness.

There is a clear economic payoff in using ergonomics. Blue Grass Energy, a Kentucky dis- tribution cooperative, implemented a proactive and mandatory stretching program for its field crews, purchased battery-operated tools, and tested back-saving technology and has minimized lost labor hours resulting from injuries in the field. All the line workers are required to stretch their muscles before each strenuous work day, resulting in a dramatic decline in pulled hamstrings and other muscles and back injuries.24 Other companies have discovered that improving the work environment boosts morale, lowers injury rates, and yields a positive return on investment. A sound ergonomic approach to avoiding workplace injuries is prevention.

The workforce of the future is expected to be increasingly mobile. With mobile devices, employees can work virtually anywhere. Ergonomics engineers are concerned that this group is setting itself up for musculoskeletal problems, which can range from discomfort to the development of tendonitis. Margo Fraser, executive director of the Association of Canadian Ergonomists, said, “Workers who find they are pulling laptops out in coffee shops and fast-food restaurants must also remember they are not just sitting in non-ergonomic chairs, but ones that are “anti-ergonomic,” purposefully designed to keep people from sitting in them for hours at a time.”25

Herman Miller is a manufacturer of ergonomically well-designed office equipment, including chairs and work surfaces. As you will see in the Watch It video, Herman Miller provides ergo- nomics training to its clients. This company also makes investments in safety training for its employees to promote safety within as well as helping them to serve as more effective consultants to clients.

carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) Caused by pressure on the median nerve that occurs because of a narrowing of the passageway that houses the nerve.

ergonomics Process of designing the workplace to support the capabilities of people and job or task demands.

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Herman Miller: Safety and to respond to questions.

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372 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

Another threat to the safety and security of people on the job is workplace bullying and violence, discussed next.

Workplace Bullying and Violence Unfortunately, workplace bullying and violence has become a fact of life in some workplaces, and these activities threaten the safety of employees, family members, and customers. Increas- ingly, most companies are adopting ways to ensure worker safety against bullying and violence. We discuss these issues next.

Workplace Bullying The definition of workplace violence has been expanded to include bullying because it has become more common, is costly, and is a possible predictor of physical violence. Workplace bullying includes acts of continual hostile conduct that deliberately hurt another person emotion- ally, verbally, or physically. There are basically two types of bullying—physical and psychologi- cal. Physical bullying involves intimidation or threatening actions.26 Screaming, pushing, shoving, or invading a person’s personal space provide examples of physical bullying. Psycho- logical bullying involves activities such as jokingly ridiculing a person in a harmful manner or even staring at somebody in a hostile way. Most companies include bullying behaviors within their workplace violence policy. Usually employees will accept a firm’s expectations if they are clearly stated.

Experts use the term status-blind harassment to separate workplace bullying from workers protected under federal and state statutes. Adeola Adele, EPLI product leader for Marsh’s FINPRO group, says, “Workplace violence starts with bullying.” She tells of a case in which an individual shot his coworkers. The worker had been bullied at work, and no one would listen.27

Some researchers make the case that a definition of bullying should include social hostility, which includes gossiping or social rejection. According to one survey, this is the most common type of bullying committed by women, who are responsible for more than 40 percent of workplace bullying.28

It is often seen as a means of gaining power over another person through repeated aggres- sive behavior. Bullying may cause severe psychological pain for victims and for coworkers who witness the attacks.29 According to a study by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, bullying tends to occur when there is a lack of trust of management, a poor organiza- tional climate, higher absenteeism and turnover rates, reduced productivity, and higher litigation costs.30 In recent years, employers have noted increased workplace rudeness, which may lead to increased bullying.31 According to one study, 35 percent of employees report being bullied.32 In another study, 75 percent of employees report being bullied at work or witnessing it.33 Currently, several states have proposed legislation regarding bullying in the workplace; however, none of those states has passed legislation.

Often, managers and supervisors, not nonsupervisory employees, tend to be bullies. Men are more often bullies than are women.34 Who are the victims? One study revealed that employees who are well regarded by management for their contributions are common targets.35 Also, this study showed that victims tend to be “nice” people, including those who are helpful and nurtur- ing to coworkers.

At this time, there are no legal protections against bullying unless it were to involve physical contact with the victim or to violate existing equal employment opportunity laws that prohibit discrimination such as sexual harassment by creating a hostile work environment. Nevertheless, it is in an employer’s best interests to ensure that bullying does not occur. Apart from the serious impact on victims, the employer is likely to experience unwanted turnover, higher absenteeism, and higher insurance costs.36 A critical intangible consequence is earning a bad institutional reputation, which could turn current or prospective customers away and make it difficult to recruit talent.

The landscape for bullying is expanding, creating greater challenges for firms. Growing social media, texting, and e-mail use has given way to work- and nonwork-related cyberbullying. According to Teresa Daniel, author of Stop Bullying at Work: Strategies and Tools for HR, Legal

13.3 Summarize the problems associated with workplace bully- ing and violence.

workplace bullying Acts of continual hostile conduct that deliberately hurt another person emotionally, verbally, or physically.

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& Risk Management Professionals, “The idea is to trash people we don’t particularly like is not new, but cellphones, computers and social media make it so much easier to inflict widespread damage through the spread of rumors, outright lies or compromising photos.”37 Unfortunately, bullying in the digital age is easier.38 The bully can avoid direct confrontation because activity is not limited to being physically present in the same location. In addition, cyberbullying enables bul- lies to cross outside work boundaries anytime of any day. More disturbing, some bullies maintain anonymity by using an unidentified account. Like face-to-face bullying, cyberbullying that creates a hostile work environment is likely illegal. In Isenhour v. Outsourcing of Millersburg, a female operations manager allegedly harassed a male accounts receivable representative when she sent him sexually explicit texts and asked him for graphic photos of himself. The judge ruled there was sufficient evidence for a jury to decide whether the male employee was subject to a hostile work environment, thus, violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (Chapter 3). An interesting fact: Some of the texts were sent outside work hours; still, the judge considered explicit texting at any time likely to be sexual harassment.

It is quite important for a company to develop a culture that does not accept any type of bullying. Firms should strive to make civility part of the culture.39 Workplace bullying is not likely to occur in a culture in which leaders send the message that each employee is valued, respected, and appreciated. Creating a culture of civility may require careful planning and a change in thinking and behaviors for corporate leaders. There is much work to be done. One survey revealed that 61 percent of respondents indicated their employer failed to respond to abusive conduct.40 The following Watch It video shows employees who were once bullied in the workplace and the negative impact of bullying on their wellbeing. In addition, the narrator offers suggestions for managing bullying in the workplace from the perspective of those being bullied and management.

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Bullying on the Job and to respond to questions.

Workplace Violence All too often, HR professionals are receiving wake-up calls about the potential for workplace violence. Recently, an employee killed two fellow workers at a Kraft Foods Inc. plant in Phila- delphia, and in another instance, a truck driver shot and killed eight coworkers, then himself, at a beer distributor in Connecticut. OSHA defines workplace violence as physical assault, threaten- ing behavior, verbal abuse, hostility, or harassment directed toward employees at work or on duty. The fact that OSHA has included verbal abuse in the definition of workplace violence has HR professionals concerned that the general duty clause could even be cited for obscene language.41

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, violence accounted for nearly 15 percent of all workplace injuries in 2015, and, as noted earlier, 703 people were killed.42 Sadly, homicide is among the top five causes of death. Regardless of who commits the crime, there is the horror of random workplace violence.

There is no way to estimate the physical and psychological damage to other employees, who are only onlookers to the violent behavior. The issue facing most large employers is not if they will ever deal with an act of workplace violence, but when.

VULNERABLE EMPLOYEES Employees at gas stations and liquor stores, taxi drivers, police officers, and convenience store managers working night shifts face the greatest danger from workplace violence. However, no workplace is immune from violence. Hospital managers overwhelmingly say that the biggest threat emergency department workers face is patient violence. Most hospitals now have security guards stationed in their emergency departments, particularly at times such as Saturday nights, when violence seems to escalate.

workplace violence Physical assault, threatening behavior, verbal abuse, hostility, or harassment directed toward employees at work or on duty.

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There are numerous reasons for violent acts committed by employees or former employees. Among the most common are personality conflicts, marital or family problems, drug or alcohol abuse, and firings or layoffs. For instance, a disgruntled former television station employee fatally shot a reporter and cameraman on live television nearly two years after being fired for continually demonstrating belligerent and threatening behavior.43

Domestic violence, unfortunately, also is a relevant topic for HR professionals’ consideration. Spillover from domestic violence is a threat to employees and their coworkers because one of the easiest places to the find the victim is at his or her workplace.44 The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that homicide by a relative or domestic partner accounted for 43 percent of female workers’ deaths in 2015.45 For example, Robert Reza slipped into the Emcore manufac- turing plant in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and shot six employees—killing two—before taking his own life because he was angry with his girlfriend, a plant employee.46 Domestic violence can have an impact on a firm’s bottom line, costing about $5 billion each year in lost productivity (approximately $729 million) and health care costs (more than $4 billion).47 A company’s legal liability also drives up the total cost of domestic violence. Therefore, business organizations have a huge stake in the problem of domestic violence.

Judith A. Lampley, general counsel of the Equal Employment Advisory Council, said, “The biggest mistake an employer can make is to ignore the issue.”48 The general duty clause of the Occupational Safety and Health Act requires a firm to furnish a workplace free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm. This includes pro- tecting not only an intended victim of domestic violence, but also coworkers, who can become victims when angry partners bring weapons to a workplace. An employer could potentiality face claims by the victim, coworkers, third parties, and even the person who caused the domestic violence.

Legal Consequences of Workplace Violence In addition to the horror of workplace violence, there is also the ever-present threat of legal action. Civil lawsuits claiming negligent hiring or negligent retention are a constant threat. Negligent hiring is the liability an employer incurs when it fails to conduct a reasonable investigation of an applicant’s background, and then assigns a potentially dangerous person to a position in which he or she can inflict harm. Negligent retention is the liability an employer may incur when a com- pany keeps persons on the payroll whose records indicate a strong potential for wrongdoing and fails to take steps to defuse a possibly violent situation. If an employer ignores warning signs leading up to a violent incident, it could be held legally liable. As previously mentioned, under OSHA’s general duty clause, employers are required to furnish, to each employee, a place of employment that is free from recognizable hazards that are causing, or likely to cause, death or serious harm to the employee.

Laws passed since the early 1980s recognize the seriousness of domestic violence. In 1984, the Family Violence Prevention and Services Act was passed to help prevent domestic violence and provide shelter and related assistance for victims. The Violence Against Women Act was passed in 1994, creating new federal criminal laws and establishing additional grant programs within the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice (DOJ). The Violence Against Women and DOJ Reauthorization Act of 2005 required a study to be prepared to determine the prevalence of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalk- ing among men, women, youth, and children. At least 29 states plus the District of Columbia have laws that allow people who leave jobs because of domestic violence to become eligible for unemployment benefits. Also, some states such as Florida, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, and Maine, give domestic violence victims the right to take time off. Florida law permits employees to take up to three days leave from work in any 12-month period for a variety of activi- ties connected with domestic violence issues.

INDIVIDUAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS TO MONITOR Some firms that have experience with workplace violence are trying an alternative approach. Instead of trying to screen out violent people, they are attempting to detect employees who commit minor aggressive acts and exhibit certain behaviors. These individuals often go on to engage in more serious behaviors.

negligent retention Liability an employer may incur when a company keeps persons on the payroll whose records indicate a strong potential for wrongdoing and fails to take steps to defuse a possibly violent situation.

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Once identified, these people are required to meet with trained staff members for counseling if needed. This approach may require more commitment on the part of the firm, but the alternative cost of violence may make this expenditure reasonable in the long run.

Although there are no sure signs an employee will commit an act of violence, certain behaviors can signal a problem, such as erratic behavior, increased irritability or hostility, reduced quality of work, poor organizational and time management skills, absenteeism, and a look of physical exhaustion. There are usually signs preceding workplace violence. Workers who shoot and kill their coworkers are likely to be employees who recently experienced a negative change in employment status, including those who have been fired, whose contracts have not been renewed, or who have been suspended because of a dispute with management. In one instance, a Domino’s Pizza employee was discharged and later arrested after setting fires at two stores, causing more than $1 million in damages. The worker entered the buildings using keys he had not been required to turn in.49 All terminations should require employees to return all company property issued, such as keys, access cards and ID badges, and uniforms. Workers who are fired for a violent conf lict should be escorted off company property. If possible, a height- ened security alert should be made at the perimeter for several hours afterward in the event the employee returns to “get even.”

PREVENTIVE ACTIONS The best protection employers can offer is to establish a zero-tolerance policy for workplace violence by and against employees.50 However, there is no way an employer can completely avoid risk when it comes to violence. Incidences of some unbalanced person coming in and shooting people happen randomly, and organizations can do little to anticipate or prevent them. However, there are things that can be done to reduce the risk. There are basically two parts to violence prevention. First, there must be a process in place to help with early detection of worker anger. Second, supervisors and HR staff need to be trained in how to skillfully handle difficult employment issues.

A firm can take certain actions to minimize violent acts and to avoid lawsuits. It should have policies that ban weapons on company property, including parking lots, and under suspicious cir- cumstances, require employees to submit to searches for weapons or examinations to determine their mental fitness for work. A firm should also have a policy stating that it will not tolerate any incidents of violence or even threats of violence, and it should encourage employees to report all suspicious or violent activity to management. In addition, many firms are equipping receptionists and those responsible for checking workers into the facility with panic buttons to enable them to alert security officers instantly.

Can the selection process predict applicants who will be prone to violence? The answer is “No.” On the other hand, the profiles of individuals not prone to violence tend to have certain things in common. The most important characteristic and one with the highest correlation is that an applicant has no history of substance abuse. Other positive factors include being outwardly focused and having outside interests and friendships rather than being mainly self-involved. Finally, applicants with a good work history often are a strong predictor of a person not inclined to violence.

To confirm these characteristics, the firm must conduct a thorough background investigation prior to hiring. Gordon Basichis, cofounder of Corra Group, an international corporate security firm, said, “At first glance, a person’s background check for misdemeanors may not look so bad, but it can get worse because sexual and violent crimes, especially domestic ones, can get plea- bargained down or dropped by family members.”51

An increasingly dire safety concern is having an active-shooter situation. A spate of school and workplace shootings must compel organizations to develop and implement an active-shooter plan. A survey of 900 organizations revealed that 69 percent of the respondents cited active shooters as one of the major threats to workplace safety, yet, 39 percent indicated their organization does not have a communication plan in place, and 70 percent stated their organization is not fully prepared to handle these situations.52 Effective active-shooter plans educate employees how to cope with and respond to emergency situations. The U.S Depart- ment of Homeland Security published guidelines for creating and implementing effective plans (Figure 13-2).

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Employee Stress and Burnout Stress is the body’s non-specific reaction to any demand made on it. It affects people in different ways and therefore is highly individualized. Certain events may be quite stressful to one person but not to another. Moreover, the effect of stress is not always negative. For example, mild stress improves productivity, and it can be helpful in developing creative ideas. For many students, a small bit of stress before an exam improves performance. However, excessive stress may have the opposite effect.

Many believe their stress has increased over the past five years. Several factors account for this rise, including increased workloads, terrorism, corporate scandals, and economic conditions.

13.4 Discuss the negative effects of employee stress and burnout.

stress Body’s nonspecific reaction to any demand made on it.

FIGURE 13-2 Active Shooter Pocket Guide Information

HOW TO RESPOND WHEN AN ACTIVE SHOOTER IS IN YOUR VICINITY

1 • Have an escape route and plan in mind • Leave your belongings behind • Keep your hands visible

2. HIDE • Hide in an area out of the shooter’s view • Block entry to your hiding place and lock the doors • Silence your cell phone and/or pager

3. FIGHT • As a last resort and only when your life is in imminent danger • Attempt to incapacitate the shooter • Act with physical aggression and throw items at the active shooter

HOW TO RESPOND WHEN LAW ENFORCEMENT ARRIVES

• Remain calm and follow instructions • Put down any items in your hands (i.e.,

bags, jackets) • Raise hands and spread fingers • Keep hands visible at all times • Avoid quick movements toward officers

such as holding on to them for safety • Avoid pointing, screaming or yelling • Do not stop to ask officers for help or

direction when evacuating

INFORMATION YOU SHOULD PROVIDE TO LAW ENFORCEMENT OR 911 OPERATOR

• Location of the active shooter • Number of shooters • Physical description of shooters • Number and type of weapons held by

shooters • Number of potential victims at the location

CALL 911 WHEN IT IS SAFE TO DO SO

COPING WITH AN ACTIVE SHOOTER SITUATION

• Be aware of your environment and any possible dangers

• Take note of the two nearest exits in any facility you visit

• If you are in an office, stay there and secure the door

• Attempt to take the active shooter down as a last resort

PROFILE OF AN ACTIVE SHOOTER

An active shooter is an individual actively engaged in killing or

attempting to kill people in a confined and populated area, typically through the use

of firearms.

CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ACTIVE SHOOTER SITUATION

• Victims are selected at random

• The event is unpredictable and evolves quickly

• Law enforcement is usually required to end an active shooter situation Contact your building management or

human resources department for more information and training on active

shooter response in your workplace.

CALL 911 WHEN IT IS SAFE TO DO SO

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Although much of the world has reduced the number of hours worked each year per person over the past decade, Americans have done just the opposite. Each year, more than 550 million working days are lost in the United States because of absenteeism resulting from stress.53 And the costs are staggering. Overall, absenteeism cost employers $500 billion.54 If people work longer hours, they often do not have time to refresh, resulting in a deterioration of their personal lives.

Potential Consequences of Stress Although everyone lives under a certain amount of stress, if it is severe enough and persists long enough, it can be harmful. In fact, stress can be as disruptive to an individual as any accident. It can result in poor attendance, excessive use of alcohol or other drugs, poor job performance, or even overall poor health. There is increasing evidence indicating that severe, prolonged stress is related to the six leading causes of death, including heart disease, cancer, lung ailments, accidents, cirrhosis of the liver, and suicide.55 This is in addition to the everyday headaches, back spasms, overeating, and other annoying ailments the body has developed in response to stress. Stress tops the list of changeable health risks that contribute to health care costs, ahead of other top risks such as current and past tobacco use, obesity, lack of exercise, high blood-glucose levels, depression, and high blood pressure.

Stressful Jobs Many workers could identify with Jet Blue flight attendant Steven Slater when he imploded on the job and exited down the plane’s emergency slide.56 After a rude passenger’s bag hit his head, he used the plane’s intercom to curse the customer, thanked the other passengers, grabbed two beers, activated the emergency chute, left the plane, and went home. There are probably many workers who would like to take similar actions in their workplaces. John Challenger, chief execu- tive officer of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a Chicago-based outplacement firm, said, “Slater tapped into a vein of anger that a lot of people have toward their employers. They are mad about all the layoffs they’ve gone through at work. They are mad about having their benefits cut.”57 Stress and workload strains are real challenges now. Estimates are that one in three people in the United States is living with extreme stress, with a large percentage of all doctor visits being related to stress.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has studied stress as it relates to work and found that some jobs are generally perceived as being more stressful than other jobs. The 12 most stressful jobs are listed in Table 13-2. The common factor among these jobs is lack of employee control over work.58 Workers in such jobs may feel that they are trapped, treated more like machines than people. Workers who have more control over their jobs, such as college professors and master craft persons, hold some of the less stressful jobs.

The fact that certain jobs are identified as more stressful than others has important manage- rial implications. Managers are responsible for recognizing significantly deviant behavior and referring employees to health professionals for diagnosis and treatment. Telling signs of stress may include a reduction in the quantity and quality of work, frequent short periods of absence, increased alcohol consumption, poor time keeping, or becoming tearful or withdrawn. Under excessive stress, a person’s dominant trait may become even more obvious. For example, if the individual is a private person, he or she withdraws from colleagues; if the person is upbeat, he or she becomes hyperactive. Ideally, stress should be dealt with before this occurs. To do so, manag- ers must be aware of potential sources of stress. These sources exist both within and outside the organization. Regardless of its origin, stress possesses devastating potential.

Burnout Burnout, although rarely fatal, is an incapacitating condition in which individuals lose a sense of the basic purpose and fulfillment of their work. It is a special form of stress in which individuals become exhausted either physically or mentally or both. Seemingly the body or the mind can no longer handle the overwhelmingly high demands placed on it. Burnout differs from stress in that it causes people who have previously been highly committed to their work to become disillusioned and lose interest and motivation. Individuals who experience burnout often experience emotional exhaustion and lose interest in work.59 When this occurs, they may lose their motivation to per- form. Burnout is the most common factor leading to the decision to check out temporarily.

burnout Incapacitating condition in which individuals lose a sense of the basic purpose and fulfillment of their work.

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Burnout is frequently associated with people whose jobs require them to work closely with others under stressful and tension-filled conditions. However, any employee may experience burn- out, and no one is exempt. The dangerous part of burnout is that it is contagious. A highly cynical and pessimistic burnout victim can quickly transform an entire group into burnouts. Virtual teams that exist over the long term (more than a year) often run a strong risk of declining performance because of team burnout.

Burnout’s price tag is high: it results in reduced productivity, higher turnover, and generally lousy performance. Employee burnout costs the U.S. economy between $125 million and $190 million annually in healthcare spending alone.60 People often become physically and psychologi- cally weakened from trying to deal with it. Although some employees try to hide their problems, shifts in their behavior may indicate dissatisfaction. They may start procrastinating or go to the opposite extreme of taking on too many assignments. They may lose things and become increas- ingly disorganized. Good-natured individuals may turn irritable. They may become cynical, dis- agreeable, pompous, or even paranoid. Their motivation toward a project may not be the same as it used to be, and they may dread doing work that they used to enjoy. It is very important that the problem be dealt with quickly. Some means of dealing with burnout include keeping expectations realistic, reducing workload, finding means to relax at work, and developing and maintaining interests outside work.

Substance Abuse, Substance-Abuse-Free Workplaces, and Drug-Testing Programs Failure to test for drugs can sometimes have a disastrous effect on companies large and small. For instance, Cake for You is a small specialty bakery. Its service includes making and deliver- ing wedding cakes to receptions. In hiring a delivery driver, Cake for You owners always care- fully determined that job candidates had a valid driver’s license. The owners were quite pleased with their new employee, Mike. He was prompt, neatly attired, and seemed to have a pleasant

13.5 Explain substance abuse, substance-abuse-free work- places, and how to implement a drug-testing program.

The 10 Most Stressful Jobs (1 = greatest amount of stress)

1. Enlisted military personnel 2. Firefighter 3. Airline pilot 4. Police officer 5. Event coordinator 6. Newspaper reporter 7. Corporate executive (senior) 8. Public relations executive 9. Taxi driver

10. Broadcaster

The Least Stressful Jobs (1 = greatest amount of stress)

1. Diagnostic medical sonographer 2. Compliance officer 3. Hair stylist 4. Audiologist 5. University professor (tenured) 6. Medical records technician 7. Jeweler 8. Operations research analyst 9. Pharmacy technician

10. Medical laboratory technician

Source: CareerCast.com, “The Most Stressful Jobs,” and “The Least Stressful Jobs of 2017.” Accessed April 14, 2017, at www.careercast.com/jobs-rated/most-stressful-jobs-2017 and www.careercast.com/ jobs-rated/least-stressful-jobs-2017.

TABLE 13-2

Most and Least Stressful Jobs 2017

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demeanor. Unfortunately, while making a delivery one morning, Mike was involved in, and in fact caused, a four-vehicle accident that resulted in one fatality. The investigation revealed that Mike was high on marijuana. Had the owners of the firm included drug testing as part of their screen- ing process, they might not be facing a huge lawsuit. In certain industries, such as transportation, for example, drug use on the job is especially hazardous and potentially devastating to the firm. Think of the damage that could be caused by a 40-ton truck careening out of control. Under ideal conditions, a fully loaded truck in daylight on a dry road cannot stop in less than 300 feet, or the length of a football field.

Substance abuse involves the use of illegal substances or the misuse of controlled substances such as alcohol and drugs. About 14 million people who are employed either full-time or part-time abuse alcohol or drugs.61 These workers use more sick days and are late more often. They remain in jobs for shorter lengths of time, and their health care costs are twice that of other employees.62 According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, drug-using employees are 3.6 times as likely to be involved in workplace accidents and 5 times as likely to file workers’ compensation claims.63 Further, research indicates that between 10 and 20 percent of the nation’s workers who die on the job test positive for alcohol or drugs.64 Even so, few issues generate more controversy today than substance-abuse testing. Yet, alcohol and drug abuse are workplace issues.

Alcohol Abuse Although our society often attaches a stigma to alcoholism, in 1956, the American Medical Associa- tion described it as a treatable disease. Alcoholism is a medical disease characterized by uncon- trolled and compulsive drinking that interferes with normal living patterns. The National Council on Alcoholism & Drug Dependence reports that 40 percent of workplace fatalities and 47 percent of workplace injuries are related to alcohol consumption. Stress plays a key role in a person becom- ing an alcoholic. It is a significant problem that affects people at every level of society, and it can both result from and cause excessive stress. When under stress, people with a particular genetic arrangement are inclined to act impulsively, increasing their danger of problem drinking.65 As a person starts to drink excessively, the drinking itself produces greater stress. A vicious cycle is cre- ated as this increased stress is dealt with by more drinking. Early signs of alcohol abuse are espe- cially difficult to identify. Often the symptoms are nothing more than an increasing number of days absent from work. Alcohol abusers are also much more likely to be using other substances.66

Drug Abuse Drug users are increasingly gravitating to the workplace. Four percent overall of workplace drug tests (based on 9.5 million urine samples) were positive, indicating the usage of an illegal drug.67 Although the percentage is small, the number of individuals is staggering—approximately 380,000. Imagine having an additional 380,000 employees in the workplace. As it stands, drug use in the workplace costs employers approximately $81 billion each year in lost productivity, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The National Institute of Drug Abuse cites that employees at risk for illegal on-the-job substance use have been shown to have three times more sick days, three times the tardiness rate, three times more accidents, and are five times more likely to file workers’ compensation claims than individuals not engaging in illegal substance use.68 Because most of Fortune 500 companies conduct pre-employment drug screening, a large number of employed drug users work for smaller businesses, many of which do not use drug testing. In fact, 71 percent of companies with 2,500 or more employees require pre-employment drug tests, whereas less than 40 percent of businesses with fewer than 100 employees even had a pre-employment drug-testing policy.69

It has also been estimated that more than 120 million prescriptions for controlled substance painkillers are dispensed annually. These substances include powerful painkillers that also carry an elevated risk of addiction.70 Prescription drugs can be as addictive, impairing, and destructive as common street drugs.

Substance-Abuse-Free Workplace and Drug Testing The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 requires some federal contractors and all federal grantees to agree that they will provide drug-free workplaces as a condition of receiving a contract or grant from a federal agency (details of the act may be seen in Table 13-3). The U.S. Department

substance abuse Use of illegal substances or the misuse of controlled substances such as alcohol and drugs.

alcoholism Medical disease characterized by uncontrolled and compulsive drinking that interferes with normal living patterns.

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380 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

of Transportation (DOT) requires drug and alcohol testing for drivers of commercial vehicles, as well as employees that perform “safety-sensitive duties.” Unless public safety and security are at risk, employers decide if drug testing is performed.

Firms have tackled the drug-abuse problem head-on by establishing a drug-free workplace program. But, some cautions should be taken. Some philosophies and practices that can undermine the effectiveness of drug-free workplace programs may be seen in Table 13-4.

The steps for establishing a substance-abuse-free workplace may be seen in Figure 13-3. Note that the first step is to establish a drug- and alcohol-free policy. The U.S. Department of Labor offers a Drug-Free Workplace Advisor that provides guidance on how to develop a drug- and alcohol-free workplace. At Texas Instruments, the policy is simple and straightforward, “There will be no use of any illegal drug.”

The second step is to provide education and training for supervisors and workers. At a minimum, supervisor training should include a review of the drug-free workplace policy, the supervisor’s specific responsibilities in implementing the policy, and ways to recognize and deal with employees who have job performance problems that could be related to alcohol and drug use. Managers must learn to recognize impaired or intoxicated employees and those who may be addicted. Possible signs that suggest an employee may be a substance abuser includes excessive absenteeism, radical mood swings, and a decline in personal appearance. However, the existence

Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988

The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 requires some federal contractors and all federal grantees to agree that they will provide drug-free workplaces as a condition of receiving a contract or grant from a federal agency.

Organizations, with contracts from any U.S. federal agency, must comply with the provisions of the act if the contract is in the amount of $100,000 or more. Organizations must do the following:

(A) publish a statement notifying employees that the unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispensation, possession, or use of a controlled substance is prohibited in the person’s workplace. The state- ment should also notify employees of any punitive actions that will be taken.

(B) establish a drug-free awareness program to inform employees about (i) the dangers of drug abuse in the workplace;

(ii) the policy of maintaining a drug-free workplace; (iii) any available drug counseling, rehabilitation, and employee assistance programs; and (iv) the penalties that many be imposed on employees for drug abuse violations.

(C) make it a requirement that each employee be given a copy of the workplace substance abuse policy.

If a contractor is found not to have a drug-free workplace, each contract awarded by any federal agency shall be subject to suspension of payments under the contract or termination of the contract, or both. The contractor may also be ineligible for award of any contract by any federal agency, and for participation in any future procurement by any federal agency, for a period not to exceed 5 years.

TABLE 13-3

Philosophies and Practices That Can Undermine the Effectiveness of Drug-Free Workplace Programs

$ Focusing only on illicit drug use and failing to include alcohol—the number-one drug of abuse in our society

$ Accepting drug use and alcohol abuse as part of modern life and a cost of doing business $ Over-reliance on drug testing $ Focusing on termination of users rather than rehabilitation $ Reluctance of supervisors to confront employees on the basis of poor performance $ Reinforcing an individual’s denial regarding the impact of his or her alcohol and drug use $ Restricting benefits or access to treatment of alcoholism and addiction $ Allowing insurers to restrict access to treatment programs

Source: www.dol.gov/elaws/asp/drugfree/drugs/screen5.asp?selection_list= (accessed April 19, 2014).

TABLE 13-4

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of these indicators alone is not adequate to determine the presence or absence of any condition. The supervisor should never try to diagnose, make accusations, or treat such problems. The indica- tors provide the supervisor a basis for making a referral to a person who can help the employee, such as an employee assistance program.

Employees should also be educated as to the purpose and ramifications of the drug- and alcohol-free environment. The purpose of this training is to familiarize employees with the drug- free workplace program and provide general education awareness about the dangers of alcohol and drug abuse. Employees should be informed about the requirements of the organization’s drug-free workplace policy, the prevalence of alcohol and drug abuse and their impact on the workplace, how to recognize the connection between poor performance and alcohol or drug abuse, the pro- gression of the disease of alcohol and drug addiction, and what types of assistance may be avail- able. The program should send a clear message that use of alcohol and drugs in the workplace is prohibited. Employees are encouraged to voluntarily seek help with alcohol and drug problems. It should be noted that individuals who are in recovery from a problem with alcohol or with legal or illegal drugs are protected from discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act.71

There are hundreds of illegal substances that people abuse. These include cocaine, amphet- amines, heroin and other opiates, ecstasy, LSD, PCP, inhalants, alcohol, steroids, and marijuana. Marijuana use has become a more complex challenge for HR professionals. Four states and the District of Columbia permit the recreational use of marijuana, several states deem marijuana use as legal, and marijuana use for medicinal purposes is legal when prescribed by a physician in more than 20 other states.72 For instance, in Coats v. Dish Network LLC, Dish Network fired Brandon Coats, a quadriplegic employee with a valid medical prescription for marijuana, after failing a random drug test.73 Coats filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against the company because he used marijuana exclusively outside of work hours. Although medicinal marijuana use is legal in Colorado where Coats worked, DISH Network argued that marijuana use is illegal under federal law. The Colorado Supreme Court supported the company’s argument, upholding the lawful- ness of Coats’ termination. Wrongful termination lawsuits in other states ruled against former employees’ claims that companies should provide reasonable accommodation for marijuana use under the Americans with Disabilities Act. In general, courts ruled that marijuana use does not fall within the law’s definition of a qualified individual with a disability.

FIGURE 13-3 Developing a Substance- Abuse-Free Workplace

Establish a Drug- and Alcohol-Free Policy

Provide Education and Training

Implement a Drug- Testing Program

Create an Employee Assistance Program

☛ F Y I Workplace drug testing revealed heroin usage has increased 146 percent between 2011 and 2015.74

The third step in establishing a substance abuse-free workplace is to implement a drug-testing program. Proponents of drug-testing programs contend that they are necessary to ensure work- place safety, security, and productivity. A drug-free workplace program should balance the rights of employees and the rights of employers, balance the need to know and rights to privacy, bal- ance detection and rehabilitation, and balance the respect for employees and the safety of all. The difficulty is not in formulating the policy, but rather in implementing it. Also, remember that the Americans with Disabilities Act protects an employee in a substance-abuse rehabilitation program.

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Urine, blood, oral f luids, or hair samples are possible drug-testing methods, with most employers relying on urine testing. However, the majority regard blood tests as the forensic benchmark against which to compare others. The problem with this approach is that it is invasive and requires trained personnel for administration and analysis. The use of hair samples is unique in that drug traces will remain in the hair and will not likely diminish over time. Human hair samples are easy to collect, store, and transport, and they are difficult to change. Although urine and blood testing can detect only current drug use, advocates of hair sample analysis claim it can detect drug use from 3 days to 90 days after drug consumption. This would prohibit an applicant from compromising the test by short-term abstinence. A new method can detect drugs and other substances from the sweat in fingerprints, permitting mobile drug testing with immediate results.75

When the oral fluid method is used, the collection pad is saturated and the individual places the swab in a collection vial, snaps off the handle, seals the container, and hands it over for analy- sis. Oral fluid testing is especially well-suited to cases of reasonable suspicion and post-accident testing. Oral fluid is a great deterrent because it can be done immediately in the workplace and it does not give an individual an opportunity to adulterate or substitute a urine specimen.76 From a prospective employee’s viewpoint, oral fluid and hair testing may be less embarrassing than a urine test. For example, it is humiliating for a candidate to hear, “We’re really happy to have you on board. But, will you take this cup and fill it?”

The final step in obtaining a substance-abuse-free workplace is the creation of wellness pro- grams and employee assistance programs.

Employee Wellness and Employee Assistance Programs Wellness programs are designed to promote the mental and physical well-being of employees and family members.77 Oftentimes, employers create employee assistance programs as a structure within which to offer wellness initiatives. Employee assistance programs (EAPs) help employees cope with personal problems that may impair their personal lives or job performance. Examples of such problems include alcohol or drug abuse, domestic violence, the emotional impact of AIDS and other diseases, clinical depression, and eating disorders.78 EAPs also assist employers in helping troubled employees identify and solve problems that may be interfering with their jobs or personal lives.

Wellness Programs Wellness programs are becoming more widespread as more employers become conscious of the impact employee health has on performance. Employers that start wellness programs not only help lower health-related costs, but also find that employees are more engaged and productive at work.79 A recent study found that medical costs fall by about $3.27 for every dollar spent on well- ness programs, and that the costs of absenteeism declined by $2.73 for every dollar spent.80 Fur- ther program growth is being prompted by the shift toward wellness and prevention in the design of employer-sponsored health care benefits and by federal health care reform legislation. Barry Hall, global wellness research leader at Buck Consultants LLC’s Boston office, said, “Wellness is currently the biggest area of growth in benefits, and it’s primarily fueled by employer demand.”81 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides employers with additional incentives to help workers stay healthy. The cap on health insurance premium discounts increased from 20 per- cent to 30 percent in 2014. Employers can use these discounts to entice employees to participate and meet certain goals in company wellness programs. Under certain situations, employers can move the incentive up to 50 percent. Small businesses with fewer than 100 employees are now eligible for grants to implement new wellness programs.

The traditional view that health is dependent on medical care and is the absence of disease is changing. Today, it is clear that optimal well-being is often achieved through environmental safety, organizational changes, and healthier lifestyles. Laura Karkula, vice-president of Well- ness Products at OptumHealth, said, “The research shows that companies that deploy health and wellness programs and take the approach of building an overall culture of health have a stronger commitment to those values.”82 Health and wellness programs have also been shown to encour- age employees to remain at their companies longer. Important factors in making these programs successful include active strong leadership, especially from the CEO.83

13.6 Describe employee well- ness programs and employee assistance programs.

wellness programs Designed to promote the mental and physical well-being of employees and family members.

employee assistance program (EAP) Comprehensive approach that many organizations have taken to deal with burnout, alcohol and drug abuse, and other emotional disturbances.

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There is growing evidence that in addition to containing direct medical costs, effective health programs boost productivity, reduce absenteeism, lower turnover and recruiting costs, and improve morale. Infectious diseases, over which a person has little control, are not the problem they once were. From 1900 to 1970, the death rate from major infectious diseases dropped dramatically. However, the death rate from major chronic diseases, such as heart disease, cancer, and stroke, has significantly increased. Today, heart disease and stroke are the top two killers worldwide. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer are also growing threats to life. Healthy lifestyle measures such as not smoking, eating healthy foods, and exercising more may help prevent these diseases.

Chronic lifestyle diseases are much more prevalent today than ever before. The good news is that people have a great deal of control over many of them. These are diseases related to smok- ing, excessive stress, lack of exercise, obesity, and alcohol and drug abuse. Increased recognition of this has prompted employers to become actively involved with their employees’ health and to establish wellness programs. Focusing on health care is inherently reactive; focusing on health is proactive, and potentially, a game changer.

There has been a shift toward an approach to improving health that includes involving workers in identifying problems and developing solutions. Wellness programs often expand their focus to include other health issues, such as diet, stress, substance abuse, employee assistance programs, and smoking cessation.

In developing a wellness program, firms should first conduct a health-risk assessment by surveying their employees to determine which workers could benefit from lifestyle change. Then, a wellness program to address appropriate employee health needs can be implemented. Sometimes getting everyone on board to take a health-risk assessment is difficult and incentives such as gift cards and use of big-screen televisions and travel opportunities are used as grand prizes. At Integris Health, employees who completed a health-risk assessment received preferred pricing on benefits, but those who completed the assessment and brought it to a physician during a preventive care visit collected an extra incentive.84 Penalties such as increased insurance premiums are also being used to increase employee participation in wellness programs.85 Beth Umland, director of research for health and benefits at Mercer LLC in New York City, said, “Premium discounts are becoming a real mainstay incentive and the amount of premium discounts is growing.”86

Once companies have identified high-risk employees and the health issues they face, they can determine what programs are needed and offer incentives for participation in activities such as smoking cessation classes or joining Weight Watchers. At Lincoln Plating, everyone gets quarterly health-risk appraisals that include blood-pressure screening and body weight, body fat, and flex- ibility measurements. Each employee reviews the quarterly results with the wellness manager or occupational nurse and sets individual wellness objectives.

The growth in wellness programs has created new leaders with titles such as wellness man- ager, health and wellness manager, well-being director, wellness coordinator, wellness special- ist, and wellness champion. Most of the employees report to a company’s top HR or employee benefits executive who is responsible for defining the wellness mission and working to improve health and well-being.87

Social Networking and Wellness Employers increasingly are adopting social networking to strengthen the success of their wellness programs. In his research, Dr. Nicholas Christakis of the Harvard Medical School found that good health is pervasive. When someone loses weight or quits smoking, their friends and family are more likely to also do so. He said, “The implication of this research is that interventions can leverage this phenomenon to purposefully spread healthy behaviors.”88 Social networking brings employees together and works to increase peer support. Social networking also generates partici- pation rates higher than any traditional form of wellness initiative. Using social network tools such as Twitter and Facebook, employees can tell others how well they are doing regarding quitting smoking or losing weight. Jamie Curtis, vice-president of business development with Spectrum Health Systems, said, “If employees are given access to a social platform as part of a Wellness program, they feel more empowered to participate.”89 Once workers quit smoking or lose weight, they are certain to tell others, creating a sort of competition. Can you imagine the impact before and after pictures of a person who has lost weight would have on other friends? Such might be the same case with a Tweet that says, “I lost another 10 pounds.”

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Limeade Inc. of Washington offers social media–based wellness programs that permit employees to engage in healthy activities. The system permits workers to track their progress and share tips with colleagues. Limeade CEO Henry Albrecht said, “Our programs are social because the science of behavioral change shows that people make changes when they have support of friends and peers.”90

Employee Assistance Programs The Drug-Free Workplace Act also requires federal employees and employees of firms under government contract to have access to employee assistance program services. Compared to well- ness programs, an EAP is a more comprehensive approach that many organizations have taken to deal with numerous problem areas such as burnout, alcohol and drug abuse, and other emotional disturbances.

As you would imagine, EAPs grew rapidly in number following that act. Returns on invest- ment in EAPs will vary but one estimate is that a mature, well-run program will return a minimum of three dollars for every dollar spent on it. Advantages claimed for EAPs include lower absentee- ism, decreases in workers’ compensation claims, and fewer accidents.

Whether managed in-house or outsourced, EAPs have traditionally focused first on mental health, including substance-abuse counseling. Today, companies are aware that the advantages of an EAP extend well beyond assistance for alcohol or drug-related problems. Many have expanded to include financial and legal advice, referrals for day care and elder care, and a host of other services, including assistance with marital or family difficulties, job performance problems, stress, and grief. EAPs are also being used to help with managing critical events in the workplace such as mass shooting in domestic violence cases. In an EAP, most or all the costs (up to a predetermined amount) are borne by the employer. The EAP concept includes a response to personal psycho- logical problems that interfere with both an employee’s well-being and overall productivity. The purpose of EAPs is to provide emotionally troubled employees with the same consideration and assistance given employees with physical illnesses. Just having an EAP sends a message that the employer cares, and this can provide considerable encouragement for employees.

A primary concern with an EAP is getting employees to use the program. Some employees perceive that there is a stigma attached to needing help. Supervisors must receive training designed to provide specialized interpersonal skills for recognizing troubled employees and encouraging them to use the firm’s EAP. Addicted employees are often experts at denial and deception, and they can fool even experienced counselors.

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Explain the nature and role of safety, health, and well-

ness. Safety involves protecting employees from injuries because of work-related accidents. Health refers to the employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness. Wellness programs are designed to promote the mental and physical well-being of employees and family mem- bers. The role of OSHA is to ensure a safe and healthful workplace for every U.S. worker.

Within the Department of Labor, OSHA enforces the whistle-blower protection provisions of 21 statutes, cover- ing not just workplace safety but also the environment, consumer products, the financial system, and other areas.

Small businesses are not exempt from the mandate to provide a safe and healthful work environment. OSHA provides online resources and free consulting assistance to help small businesses comply with OSHA requirements.

Job-related deaths and injuries of all types extract a high toll not only in human misery, but also in economic loss. The significant financial costs are often passed along to the consumer in the form of higher prices. Thus, job- related deaths and injuries affect everyone, directly or indirectly. Safety risks can be significant for employers. In addition to workers’ compensation costs, OSHA can levy major fines.

2. Discuss workplace safety programs. Safety programs may be designed to accomplish their purposes in two pri- mary ways. The first approach is to create a psychological environment and attitude that promote safety. The second approach to safety program design is to develop and main- tain a safe physical working environment.

There many ways to evaluate the effectiveness of workplace safety programs. Perhaps the best indicator of a

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CHAPTER 13 • EMPLOYEE SAFETY, HEALTH, AND WELLNESS 385

successful safety program is a reduction in the injury fre- quency rate. Other OSHA metrics currently in use include total cases, nonfatal cases without lost workdays, total lost workday cases, cases with days away from work, and measure of fatalities.

Preventing musculoskeletal disorders is an impor- tant objective of workplace safety programs. Musculo- skeletal disorders (MSDs) are conditions that affect the body’s muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, and nerves. Work-related MSDs, including tendonitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, and back pain, cost U.S. businesses billions of dollars annually just to cover the lost productivity costs associated with these ailments. A major musculoskeletal disorder is carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) caused by pres- sure on the median nerve that occurs because of a narrow- ing of the passageway that houses the nerve.

Ergonomics is the study of human interaction with tasks, equipment, tools, and the physical environment. Through ergonomics, the goal is to fit the machine and work environment to the person, rather than require the person to make the adjustment.

3. Summarize the problems associated with workplace bul- lying and violence. Workplace bullying includes acts of continual hostile conduct that deliberately hurt another per- son emotionally, verbally, or physically. Companies have expanded the definition of workplace violence to include bullying because they recognize that it is common, costly, and a possible forerunner to acts of physical violence.

OSHA defines workplace violence as physical assault, threatening behavior, verbal abuse, hostility, or harassment directed toward employees at work or on duty. Workplace violence affects more than two million workers each year.

Spillover from domestic violence is a threat to both women and their companies. Domestic violence has become an epidemic in this country.

4. Discuss the negative effects of employee stress and burn- out. Stress is the body’s nonspecific reaction to any demand made on it. Stress may be coped with through numerous means.

Although everyone lives under a certain amount of stress, if it is severe enough and persists long enough, it can be harmful. In fact, stress can be as disruptive to an individual as any accident. It can result in poor atten- dance, excessive use of alcohol or other drugs, poor job performance, or even overall poor health.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has studied stress as it relates to work and found that some jobs are generally perceived as being more stressful than other jobs. The common factor among these jobs is lack of employee control over work.

Burnout, although rarely fatal, is an incapacitating condition in which individuals lose a sense of the basic purpose and fulfillment of their work.

5. Explain substance abuse, describe substance abuse- free workplaces, and how to implement a drug-testing program. Substance abuse involves the use of illegal substances or the misuse of controlled substances such as alcohol and drugs. The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 requires some federal contractors and all federal grantees to agree that they will provide drug-free workplaces as a condition of receiving a contract or grant from a federal agency.

The first step for establishing a substance-abuse-free workplace is to establish a drug- and alcohol-free policy. The second step is to provide education and training for supervisors and workers. The third step in establishing a substance-abuse-free workplace is to implement a drug- testing program. The final step in obtaining a substance- abuse-free workplace is the creation of an employee assistance program.

6. Describe employee wellness programs and employee assistance programs. Wellness programs are designed to promote the mental and physical well-being of employees and family members. These programs are becoming more widespread as more employers become conscious of the impact employee health has on performance. Today, the prevailing opinion is that optimal health can generally be achieved through environmental safety, organizational changes, and changed lifestyles.

Employers increasingly are adopting social network- ing to strengthen the success of their wellness programs. If used effectively and thoughtfully, these strategies have the potential to create high participation rates, long-term engagement, sustainable behavior change, and significant health outcomes for employee populations.

An employee assistance program is a comprehensive approach that many organizations develop to deal with marital or family problems; job performance problems; stress, emotional, or mental health issues; financial trou- bles; alcohol and drug abuse; and grief.

Key Terms safety 363 health 363 general duty clause 364 job hazard analysis (JHA) 369 musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) 370 carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) 371

ergonomics 371 workplace bullying 372 workplace violence 373 negligent retention 374 stress 376 burnout 377

substance abuse 379 alcoholism 379 wellness programs 382 employee assistance program

(EAP) 382

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386 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

E T H I C S D I L E M M A

In Confidence Margaret Tierney recently joined Sweet Scents

Candle Manufacturing as an HR generalist. Prior to joining the com- pany, Margaret worked as an HR generalist at a large bank. Recogniz- ing that there are differences between manufacturing and financial services companies, Margaret knew it was important to become famil- iar with the candle manufacturing process, the working conditions, and the employees on the manufacturing line.

Margaret worked in the corporate office across town from the manufacturing facility. She scheduled some time to meet with Samuel Kemper, plant manager, at the manufacturing facility. Upon Margaret’s arrival, Samuel greeted her at the plant’s entrance. “Margaret, welcome aboard!” He went on to say, “I’ve planned your entire visit. We’ll tour the factory together and I will introduce you to some of the supervisors.”

“Thank you, Samuel.” She asked, “Have you scheduled time for me to walk along the line on my own afterwards?” I would like the opportunity to say hello to some of the workers.”

Samuel replied, “Oh, Margaret, I know that you are very busy. Perhaps you can talk with the workers another time.” He went on to say, “We are operating at full capacity to meet holiday demand, thus, I don’t recom- mend that you interrupt them until production slows early next year.”

The tour commenced. Margaret learned quite a lot about the man- ufacturing process. Samuel and the supervisors explained the steps as they walked the line. At one point during the tour, Samuel was paged to the front office. While away, Margaret pondered Samuel’s response to her intention to chat with workers. She found herself feeling ill at ease. After all, she is the employees’ HR representative.

With that in mind, Margaret spoke to a few workers. Two of them, Melissa and Robert, seemed nervous. Margaret asked if everything was OK. Melissa and Robert looked at each other, Robert shrugged his shoulders, and he turned to Margaret. Robert asked, “Can we tell you something in confidence?”

“Of course,” Margaret replied. After some hesitation, Robert said “We’ve been so busy that regular maintenance has not been per- formed and many of the fire extinguishers require recharging.”

Margaret asked, “Haven’t you brought these concerns to your supervisor’s attention?” Melissa chimed in, “Yes, I did, and I was warned never to bring this up again.” She went on to say, “My super- visor suggested I would be fired if I did. I can’t afford to lose my job. I’m a widow raising a young child.”

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Stress Management This self-assessment is designed to help you understand how well you manage stress. It also provides insights into your overall well-being.

Questions for Review 13-1. Define safety and health. 13-2. What is the purpose of the Occupational Safety and

Health Act? 13-3. What relationship does OSHA have with small

businesses? 13-4. What are the primary ways in which safety programs

are designed? Discuss. 13-5. What is the purpose of job hazard analysis? 13-6. Why are companies concerned with musculoskeletal

disorders? What is carpal tunnel syndrome? 13-7. Define ergonomics. What is the purpose of ergonomics? 13-8. Define workplace bullying. What are the basic forms of

workplace bullying?

13-9. What effect does workplace and domestic violence have on an organization?

13-10. What laws were passed because of domestic violence? 13-11. Define stress. Why should a firm attempt to identify

stressful jobs? 13-12. What is the purpose of substance-abuse-free work-

places in organizations? 13-13. What are the steps for establishing a substance-abuse-

free workplace? 13-14. Why are firms adopting social networking to

strengthen the success of their wellness programs? 13-15. What are employee assistance programs and wellness

programs?

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CHAPTER 13 • EMPLOYEE SAFETY, HEALTH, AND WELLNESS 387

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Emergency situations in the workplace arise when least expected. Companies have an obligation to protect employee welfare, and having emergency plans in place is the first step. Examples of emergency plans focus on responses to fire, violence, environmental hazards (such as chemical spills or release of toxic fumes), and injuries. Both HR professionals and managers play an essential role in developing, implementing, and evaluating these plans.

Action checklist for managers and HR—communicating with workers during an emergency HR takes the lead

HR professionals review and discuss every emergency plan in detail with managers. Tell managers how to proactively share the plans with their employees. Make attendance at emergency plan review workshops a mandatory requirement.

Invite safety experts (e.g., law enforcement, firefighters) to discuss the plans with managers and employees.

Managers take the lead Encourage employees to provide feedback on the plans. When reviewing plans with HR, offer recommendations for clarifying information. Share appropriate information learned from employees.

Educate employees about their roles and responsibilities in promoting safety and responding to emergency situations. Encour- age employees to raise safety concerns with managers or HR professionals, even if not certain that a problem truly exists.

Just as Margaret was about to discuss the matter further, Robert whispered, “Here comes Mr. Kemper.” Then, Melissa and Robert immediately returned to their work stations.

As Samuel approached, he said to Margaret, “Let’s continue with the tour. You’re very busy and we should get you out the door to avoid rush hour traffic.”

On the drive back to her office, Margaret thought about how to respond to the situation and had some ideas. However, Melissa’s and

Robert’s identities would likely be revealed in the process because they are well known in the plant for raising safety concerns. Thus, Melissa risked breeching her promise of confidentiality. She is now unsure about what to do. 13-16. What would you do if you were in Margaret’s shoes? 13-17. What additional factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influ-

ence a person to make a less-than-ethical decision?

HRM by the Numbers Calculating Workplace Injury Frequency Rates

An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

All companies have a vested interest in maintaining safe and healthful workplaces and there are various activities to achieve this goal. Identifying where problems are prevalent is a good start. HR professionals should regularly review departmental safety records as well as calculate injury rates. The following table displays workplace injury data for two years along with additional pertinent information.

2016 2017

Location Number of Accidents Number of Employees Number of Accidents Number of Employees

Manufacturing New York 3 525 2 550 Illinois 14 475 9 425 California 5 650 0 500

Warehouse New York 6 675 4 725 Illinois 9 525 9 575 California 4 850 7 1,000

Company Total 41 3,700 31 3,775

Note: The basis for calculating the injury frequency rate is 100 employees who work full time annually (40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year).

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388 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

I N C I D E N T 1 Something Isn’t Quite Right Liam Murphy was a model employee. He never missed a day of work, he always arrived on time, his performance exceeded expectations, and Liam always gave a helping hand to coworkers. In fact, Liam received the Employee of the Year award five times in the last six years.

Liam’s coworkers have noticed that he has not been himself lately. Liam often comes to work late, he hasn’t been getting all his work completed, and what he completes is filled with errors. Liam has also been withdrawn. In the past, he cheerfully greeted his coworkers. Now, he barely talks to anyone. Upon arriving at work, Liam goes directly to his office and closes the door. He rarely responds to e-mails, which is unlike him.

Two coworkers, Belinda and Marcus, discussed the changes they have seen in Liam. Belinda asked Marcus, “Have you noticed that Liam seems unhappy and keeps his distance from us?” She added, “That simply is not the Liam we have come to know and love.”

Marcus replied, “Yes, I have noticed the changes, and I’m wor- ried.” Scratching his head, he then said, “On occasion, I write an email to Liam asking for his advice. He rarely replies.”

“Enough is enough. Let’s talk to Liam now,” Belinda insisted. Mar- cus agreed and both went to Liam’s office. They found Liam staring

out the window and he barely acknowledged their presence. Belinda approached Liam and noticed the smell of alcohol on his breath. His eyes were bloodshot.

Belinda gently put her hand on Liam’s left shoulder and said, “Liam, Marcus and I would like to talk to you.” She added, “You just don’t seem to be yourself. Everybody has been whispering about the changes in you.”

Liam took a step back from Belinda and said defensively, “Leave me alone. I’m perfectly fine.”

“No, Liam. You are not fine,” Marcus asserted. He added, “Please, let us help you.”

Uncharacteristic of Liam, he screamed, “Get out of my office! Get out of my office right now!” Belinda and Marcus were startled and immediately left Liam’s office.

Questions 13-23. What do you think is likely to be Liam’s problem? Discuss. 13-24. What should Belinda’s and Marcus’ next steps be? 13-25. How might use of an employee assistance program help in

this situation?

I N C I D E N T 2 A Commitment to Safety? Wanda Zackery was extremely excited a year ago when she joined Landon Electronics as its first safety engineer. She had graduated from Florida State University with a degree in electrical engineering and had a strong desire to enter business. Wanda had selected her job at Landon Electronics over several other offers. She believed that it would provide her with a broad range of experiences that she could not receive in a strictly engineering job. Also, when the company president, Martha Lin- coln, interviewed her, she promised her that the firm’s resources would be at her disposal to correct any safety-related problems.

Her first few months at Landon were hectic but exciting. She imme- diately identified numerous safety problems. One of the most danger- ous involved a failure to install safety guards on all exposed equipment. Wanda carefully prepared her proposal, including expected costs, to

make needed minimum changes. She estimated that it would take approximately $50,000 to complete the necessary conversions. Wanda then presented the entire package to Ms. Lincoln. She explained the need for the changes to her, and Ms. Lincoln cordially received her presentation. She said that she would like to think it over and get back to her.

But that was six months ago! Every time Wanda attempted to get some action on her proposal, Ms. Lincoln was friendly but still wanted some more time to consider it. In the meantime, Wanda had become increasingly anxious. Recently, a worker had barely avoided a serious injury. Some workers had also become concerned. She heard through the grapevine that someone had telephoned the regional office of OSHA.

Questions 13-18. Calculate the 2016 injury frequency rates for: (a) manufacturing overall; (b) warehouse overall; and (c) company over-

all; and, the 2017 injury frequency rates for: (d) manufacturing overall; (e) warehouse overall; and (f) company overall. 13-19. Calculate the percent change in injury frequency rates between 2016 and 2017 for: (a) manufacturing overall; (b) ware-

house overall; and (c) company overall. Which areas showed an increase, decrease, or no change between 2016 and 2017?

13-20. If the company set a goal of reducing the 2017 injury rates by 10 percent for 2018, how many accidents would there be for: (a) manufacturing overall; (b) warehouse overall; and (c) company overall. Assume the 2017 staffing levels carry over to 2018.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Think about a job you or a friend or relative have held. Briefly describe the job tasks and the working conditions. 13-21. What are possible safety concerns? Explain. 13-22. How can the jobholder avoid work-related injury or illness? Discuss.

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Endnotes 1 “Commonly Used Statistics,” Occupational

Safety and Health Administration online. Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.osha.gov/osh- stats/commonstats.html.

2 “Green Bay Manufacturer Faces More than $219K in Proposed Penalties after Two Work- ers Suffer Severe Injuries within 10 Days,” OSHA News Release–Region 5 (January 18, 2017). Accessed April 13, 2017, at www .osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_ document?p_table=NEWS_RELEASES&p_ id=33714.

3 Samuel Greengard, “Playing it Safe: The Roar- ing ‘20s & Now,” Workforce Management 91 (January 2012): 1.

4 “Commonly Used Statistics,” Occupational Safety & Health Administration. Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.osha.gov.

5 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “National Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2015” (December 16, 2016, USDL 16-2304). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

6 Ibid. 7 “OSHA Penalty Adjustments to Take Effect

After August 1, 2016). Occupational Safety and Health Administration online. Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.osha.gov/Publications/ OSHA3879.pdf.

8 “Recycling Company Cited for Baling Machine Death,” Industrial Safety & Hygiene News 46 (January 2012): 16.

9 U.S. Department of Labor, “US Labor Depart- ment’s OSHA Fines Lakewood, NJ, Manufac- turer Nearly $185,000 for Exposing Workers to Chemical, Other Hazards,” OSHA Regional News Release (March 27, 2013, OSHA 13-030). Accessed April 10, 2014, at www.osha.gov.

10 Tom Musick, “OSHA’s Top 10 Most Cited Violations,” Safety + Health online (November 26, 2016). Accessed April 13, 2017, at http:// safetyandhealthmagazine.com.

11 “OSHA to Improve Whistleblower Protections,” Material Handling & Logistics 66 (August 2011): 8.

12 U.S. Department of Labor, “The Whistleblower Protection Programs: Whistleblower Investiga- tion Data,” Accessed April 13, 2017, at www. whistleblowers.gov/factsheets_page.html#stats.

13 U.S. Department of Labor, “OSHA Orders Amtrak to Reinstate, Pay $892K to Employee Discharged in Violation of Federal Railroad Safety Act,” OSHA Regional News Release (Jan- uary 18, 2017, OSHA 2017-12-BOS). Accessed April 12, 2017, at http://www.osha.gov.

14 Occupational Safety & Health Administration, “Protection from Discrimination.” Accessed April 5, 2014, at www.osha.gov.

15 U.S. Department of Labor, “OSHA Finds Boul- der Sporting Goods Manufacturer Retaliated Against Worker Who Reported Concerns about Free-Fall Equipment Safety,” OSHA Regional News Release (November 15, 2016, OSHA 16-216-DEN). Accessed April 2, 2017, at www. osha.gov.

16 Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety, 2017 Liberty Mutual Workplace Safety Index. Accessed April 7, 2017, at www.libertymutual- group.com.

17 Brandon Rigoni and Bailey Nelson, “Engaged Workplaces Are Safer for Employees,” Gal- lup online (May 24, 2016). Accessed March 15, 2017, at www.gallup.com/businessjour- nal/191831/engaged-workplaces-safer-employ- ees.aspx.

18 Occupational Safety & Health Administration, “Job Hazard Analysis.” Accessed June 2, 2014 at www.osha.gov/Publications/osha3071.pdf.

19 Dave Zielinski, “What’s Safe? Employers Underreport Injuries and Illnesses,” HR Maga- zine 57 (February 2012): 12.

20 Swati Deshkar, “Ergonomics Investment,” Pro- fessional Safety 55 (October 2010): 48–50.

21 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Nonfatal Occupational Injuries and Illnesses Requiring Days Away from Work, 2015” (November 10, 2016, USDL 16-2130). Accessed April 2, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

22 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Nonfatal Occupational Injuries and Illnesses Requiring Days Away from Work, 2015” (November16, 2016, USDL 16-2134). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

23 Cynthia Roth, “The Importance of Ergonomics for the Safety Professional,” EHS Today 4 (Feb- ruary 2011): 45–47.

24 Dathan Lane, “Ergonomics Protection,” Trans- mission & Distribution World 63 (April 2011): 64F–64I.

25 Lawrence Cummer, “Office? I Don’t Need an Office,” Backbone (April 2011): 20–21.

26 Susanne Sclafane, “Do You Work with a Jerk?” National Underwriter/Property & Casualty Risk & Benefits Management 115 (March 28, 2011): 14–15.

27 Susanne Sclafane, “What Employers Need to Know about Workplace Bullying,” National Underwriter/Property & Casualty Risk & Ben- efits Management 115 (April 11, 2011): 22.

28 “The Next Step in Curbing Workplace Bully- ing?” Security Director’s Report 10 (October 2010): 2–4.

29 Jacqueline Munson and Christopher Thompson, “Addressing Bullying at Work,” Profiles in Diver- sity Journal 14 (January/February 2012): 78.

30 “Bullying Proves the Point—You Should Be a Team Player,” Security Director’s Report 12 (January 2012): 1–15.

31 Kristy Armand, “Standing Up to the Office Bully,” Thrive Magazine (January 2012): 28–29.

32 Carl R. Kjeldsberg, “Workplace Bullying,” American Psychological Association (online). Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.apaexcellence. org/resources/special-topics/workplace-bullying.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

13-29. What are the purposes of wellness programs?

13-30. Why should a firm be concerned with employee burnout?

Her suspicions were confirmed the very next week when an OSHA inspector appeared at the plant. No previous visits had ever been made to the company. Although Ms. Lincoln was not overjoyed, she permitted the inspector access to the company. Later, she might have wished that she had not been so cooperative. Before the inspector left, he wrote violations for each piece of equipment that did not have the necessary safety guards. The fines could total nearly $125,000 if the problems were not corrected right away. The inspector cautioned that repeat violations could cost approximately $1.25 million and possible imprisonment.

As the inspector was leaving, Wanda received a phone call. “Wanda, this is Ms. Lincoln. Get up to my office right now. We need to get your project under way.”

Questions 13-26. Discuss Ms. Lincoln’s level of commitment to occupational

safety. 13-27. Is there a necessary trade-off between Landon’s need for low

expenses and the workers’ need for safe working conditions? Explain.

13-28. Safety programs may accomplish their purposes in two pri- mary ways: one focusing on unsafe employee actions and the other on unsafe working conditions. Which areas of Wanda’s proposal was she directing her efforts? Discuss.

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390 PART 5 • LABOR RELATIONS, EMPLOYEE RELATIONS, SAFETY, AND HEALTH

33 Christine Comaford, “75% of Workers Are Affected by Bulling—Here’s What to Do about It,” Forbes online (August 27, 2016). Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.forbes.com.

34 Workplace Bullying Institute, “2014 WBI U.S. Workplace Bullying Survey” (2014). Accessed April 11, 2017, at http://workplacebullying.org/ multi/pdf/WBI-2014-US-Survey.pdf.

35 “Who Gets Targeted? Why Me?” Workplace Bullying Institute. Accessed April 5, 2017, at http://www.workplacebullying.org/individuals/ problem/who-gets-targeted/.

36 Workplace Bullying Institute, 2014. 37 Aliah D. Wright, “What HR Can Do about

Cyberbullying in the Workplace,” Society for Human Resource Management (May 13, 2016). Accessed April 13, 2017, at www.shrm.org.

38 Denise R. Friedman, “Cyberbullying in the Workplace: Is This Where We Are Headed?” Psychology Today online (June 1, 2016). Accessed April 3, 2017, at www.psychology- today.com/blog/always-more-learn/201606/ cyberbullying-in-the-workplace-is-where-we- are-headed.

39 Donna M. Owens, “Incivility Rising,” HR Magazine 57 (February 2012): 33.

40 Workplace Bullying Institute, 2014. 41 Arthur G. Sapper, “Sticks and Stones,” HR

Magazine 56 (September 2011): 115–118. 42 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “National

Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2015” (December 16, 2016, USDL 16-2304). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

43 Erik Eckholm and Richard A. Oppel Jr. “Vir- ginia Shooting Spotlights Riddle of Workplace Safety,” The New York Times online (August 27, 2015). Accessed January 30, 2017, at http:// nytimes.com.

44 “Preventing Serious Domestic Violence Spill- over Events,” Security Director’s Report 10 (January 2010): 1–13.

45 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “National Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2015” (December 16, 2016, USDL 16-2304). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.bls.gov.

46 Kathryn Hawkins, “Domestic Violence & the Workplace,” OfficePro 70 (October 2010): 16–19.

47 Norbert Alicea, “HR: Domestic Violence and the Workplace,” BenefitsPro online (Sep- tember 1, 2016). Accessed April 11, 2017, at http://healthadvocate.com/downloads/ stories/2016/1512045-HR-Domestic_Violence_ and_the_Workplace.pdf.

48 “Employer Policies on Domestic Violence Para- mount, Experts Assert,” HR Focus 88 (February 2011): 3–5.

49 “Making Difficult Terminations as Safe as Pos- sible,” Security Director’s Report 11 (March 2011): 1–15.

50 Kathryn Tyler, “Safer Separations,” HR Maga- zine 56 (December 2011): 43.

51 Juliette Fairley, “Strategies that Avoid Work- place Violence, a Rising Threat,” Business Insurance 44 (November 11, 2010): 31.

52 Ben Dipietro, “The Morning Risk Report: Companies Lack Active-Shooter Plans,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 31, 2016). Accessed January 31, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

53 Emma Seppala and Kim Cameron, “Proof That Positive Work Cultures Are More Productive,” Harvard Business Review online (December 1, 2015). Accessed March 14, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

54 Ibid. 55 Cris W. Cannon, “The Reality of Stress and the

Need for Management,” Managed Care Outlook 23 (August 15, 2010): 1–8.

56 “Flight Attendant Incident Puts the Spotlight on Workplace Stress,” EHS Today 3 (September 2010): 18.

57 Devin Leonard, “Mad as Hell,” Bloomberg Busi- nessweek (August 16, 2010): 5–6.

58 Katherine Hobson, “Beware: Your Job May Be Killing You,” U.S. News & World Report 147 (February 2010): 50.

59 Steven Berglas, “Can You Prevent Burnout?” Forbes 187 (March 14, 2011): 66.

60 Eric Garton, “Employee Burnout Is a Problem with the Company, Not the Person,” Har- vard Business Review online (April 6, 2017). Accessed April 14, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

61 Linda B. Dwoskin, Melissa Bergman Squire, and Jennifer F. Burdick, “Substance Abuse in the Workplace: ADA and FMLA Issues to Con- sider, Part I,” Employee Benefit Plan Review 66 (January 2012): 27–32.

62 Robert J. Grossman, “What to Do about Sub- stance Abuse,” HR Magazine 55 (November 2010): 32–38.

63 “Are Your Workers Accidents Just Waiting to Happen?” Safety Compliance Letter (February 2012): 7–11.

64 T. L. Stanley, “Workplace Substance Abuse: A Grave Problem,” Supervision 70 (June 2009): 18–21.

65 “Genes Linked to Alcoholism,” Investor’s Busi- ness Daily (April 15, 2011): 1.

66 “Facts about Recovery,” Psychology Today (2012 Best in Treatment): 16–17.

67 Lauren Weber, “Greater Share of U.S. Work- ers Testing Positive for Illicit Drugs,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 14, 2016). Accessed February 20, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

68 Paul Meskanick, “Critical Success Factors for Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO),” Off- shore 69 (June 2009): 8–11.

69 Bill Leonard, “Poll: Majority Favors Drug Test- ing Applicants,” HR Magazine 56 (November 2011): 87.

70 “Employers Reluctant to Play Role in Prevent- ing Abuse of Painkillers,” HR Focus 88 (April 2011): 1–4.

71 Jonathan Segal, “Elephant in the Living Room,” HR Magazine 57 (March 2012): 95–98.

72 “HR Managers Tightening Drug Policies Since Legalization of Pot,” Denver Post online (December 15, 2015 and updated on October 2, 2016). Accessed April 15, 2017, at www.denver- post.com.

73 Mark Berman, “Colorado Supreme Court Says Companies Can Fire Workers for Using Medical Marijuana in Their Off Hours,” The Washington Post online (June 15, 2015). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.washingtonpost.com.

74 Lauren Weber, “Greater Share of U.S. Workers Testing Positive for Illicit Drugs,” The Wall Street Journal online (September 14, 2016). Accessed February 20, 2017, at www.wsj. com.

75 “Fingerprint Drug Testing Seen,” Investor’s Business Daily (November 11, 2011): 2.

76 Catherine McGuire, “What’s New in Oral Drug Testing,” Safety Compliance Letter (January 2012): 7–11.

77 Joseph J. Martocchio, Employee Benefits: A Primer for Human Resource Professionals (2018). Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill.

78 Ibid. 79 Jim Purcell, “Meet the Wellness Programs That

Save Companies Money,” Harvard Business Review online (April 20, 2016). Accessed April 14, 2017, at www.hbr.org.

80 Katherine Baicker, David Cutler, and Zirui Song, “Workplace Wellness Programs Can Generate Savings,” Health Affairs (2010) 29(2): 304–311.

81 Susan J. Wells, “Navigating the Expanding Wellness Industry,” HR Magazine 56 (March 2011): 45–50.

82 “Employees Value Wellness Programs, But Opportunities Exist for Employers to Do Even More,” Managed Care Outlook 24 (March 1, 2011): 1–9.

83 Sandra Price, “Ante Up for Wellness,” HR Magazine 57 (February 2012): 40–42.

84 “With Incentives, Wellness Program Makes Employees Accountable,” Managing Benefits Plans 11 (July 2011): 16.

85 “More Employers Using Wellness Incentives, Experts Say,” Managing Benefits Plans 14 (Feb- ruary 2012): 11–13.

86 Susan J. Wells, “Wellness Rewards,” HR Maga- zine 57 (February 2012): 67–69.

87 Susan J. Wells, “New Calling: Wellness Offi- cer,” HR Magazine 56 (February 2011): 43–49.

88 “Using Social Networks to Bolster Your Well- ness Programs,” Managing Benefits Plans 11 (June 2011): 6–8.

89 Jamie Curts, “Social Well-Being,” Smart Busi- ness Indianapolis 8 (September 2011): 18.

90 Lisa Beyer, “Companies Are Turning to Tech- nology to Help to Keep Workers Well,” Work- force Management 90 (October 2011): 6.

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Part six Operating in a Global Environment Chapter 14

Global Human Resource Management

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392

14 Global Human Resource Management LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

14.1 Discuss the evolution of global business and the context for global human resource management.

14.2 Summarize global staffing practices.

14.3 Describe global performance management and human resource development practices.

14.4 Discuss global compensation practices.

14.5 Explain global safety, health, and employee and labor relations.

14.6 Discuss globalization issues for small to medium-sized businesses.

MyLab Management Improve Your Grade!

If your professor is using MyLab Management, visit www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for videos, simulations, and writing exercises.

Learn It If your professor has chosen to assign this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to see what you should particularly focus on and to take the Chapter 14 Warm-Up.

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The current state of globalization has resulted in a high level of interconnections between the economies of various parts of the world. U.S. employers will increasingly conduct business with entities in a variety of other countries as former underdeveloped parts of the world experience tremendous economic, trade, and standard of living growth. In addition, the move from traditional manufacturing to knowledge- and service-based employment also means that jobs as well as mar- kets are more likely to be dispersed geographically. As the need for employers to interact globally increases, human resource (HR) management professionals are going to have increased opportu- nities to develop programs for U.S. employees in foreign assignments, as well as for indigenous employees in foreign offices of the parent company. In this chapter, we provide a glimpse of HR practices around the world.

Evolution and Context of Global Business and Human Resource Management Throughout this book, we’ve spent considerable time studying the U.S. domestic business envi- ronment and how HR management fits within this context. As we will see, studying business on a global scale adds greater complexity because we are incorporating the norms that vary between countries. In addition, these added features inf luence differences in approaches to managing human resources.

Evolution of Global Business The environment confronted by businesses today is so vastly different from doing business in one or two countries of only a few decades ago. The world is becoming more of a multinational community in which the interdependencies between countries and between organizations are increasing dramatically. It is now one large marketplace consisting of more than 7.5 billion people speaking 6,900 languages, with thousands of governments all having different regulations and tax requirements. There are millions of organizations. The top 500 companies generate more than $27 trillion in value worldwide.1 In fact, only 29 percent of the total number of consumers worldwide resides in the United States.2

The magnitude of the global economy is expressed in the gross domestic product (GDP), which describes the size of a country’s economy. Size is expressed as the market value of all final

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After completing this chapter, students should be able to:

14.1 Discuss the evolution of global business and the con- text for global human resource management.

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394 PART 6 • OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

goods and services produced within the country over a specified period. GDP figures are reported at each nation’s GDP at purchasing power parity (PPP) exchange rates. That is, these figures indicate the sum value of all goods and services produced in the country valued at prices prevail- ing in the United States. The five largest GDPs total more than $58 trillion: China, $21.2 trillion; United States, $19.2 trillion; India, $8.7 trillion; Japan, $4.9 trillion; and Germany, $3.9 trillion.3

With globalization, everybody in the organization, and especially in the HR department, has had to change focus, change attitude, and adjust the approach in the way an organization oper- ates. Not long ago, General Electric was “American,” and Sony was “Japanese,” but today these companies are truly global. Years ago, a lot of U.S. multinational corporations had operations in Canada or perhaps Mexico, but not in many other countries. Now, U.S. firms such as Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, and Texas Instruments do most of their business and employ most of their workers outside the United States. Countless products of U.S. companies are made outside the country. Many non-U.S. companies make products here, such as Toyota American, which manu- factures cars in Kentucky. Companies still regularly do business in Canada and Mexico, but many now have operations in Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Southeast Asia, to name a few. More and more U.S. global corporations are doing business in former Eastern Bloc countries. Vietnam, a country with which the United States was at war throughout the 1960s until the mid-1970s, now has U.S. firms operating there. Stewart McCardle, vice president of global financial services for Weichert Relocation Resources Inc., said, “U.S. companies are placing employees throughout Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. In South America, it’s not just Brazil or Argentina, but also Chile and Colombia.”4

Today, globalization is not limited only to large organizations. It is now important for both large and small firms. Going global can provide a company with an assortment of rewards. The major benefit is that having a global customer base provides some protection against domestic business cycles. Companies that export tend to be more profitable, better organized, and more competitive than companies that are exclusively domestically focused.

Most companies initially become global without making substantial investments in foreign countries by exporting, licensing, or franchising. Ultimately, they may become a multinational or global corporation.

EXPORTING Exporting entails selling abroad, either directly or indirectly, by retaining foreign agents and distributors. It is a way that many small businesses enter the global market. When deciding to enter the global arena, exporters need to identify and understand their target markets. Companies must determine whether the market or country needs their products or services, whether there are any import tariffs or quotas, and the local pricing structures. Also, exporters must understand and manage other countries’ cultures and governmental policies.5

exporting Selling abroad, either directly or indirectly, by retaining foreign agents and distributors.

☛ F Y I The total worldwide value of exports was $16.23 trillion in 2016. The top three exporting countries were:

$ China: $2.01 trillion $ United States: $1.47 trillion $ Germany: $1.28 trillion6

LICENSING Licensing is an arrangement whereby an organization grants a foreign firm the right to use intellectual properties such as patents, copyrights, or trade names for a specific period. The use of a licensing arrangement is expanding in emerging markets. For example, 7-Eleven has granted licenses to use its trademark in Indonesia.

FRANCHISING Franchising is an option whereby the parent company grants another firm the right to do business in a prescribed manner. For example, Subway shops must follow marketing procedures established by the headquarters. Franchising arrangements involve integration of operations with trademark usage. The growth of franchising in the world is phenomenal. Franchisees must follow stricter operational guidelines than licensees. Twenty years ago, only giants such as McDonald’s were meaningfully engaged in international franchising, but now international expansion has become a popular choice for many small U.S. franchises.7 More than 500 U.S. franchises operate internationally. Approximately 16 percent of U.S. franchises generate

licensing Arrangement whereby an organization grants a foreign firm the right to use intellectual properties such as patents, copyrights, manufacturing processes, or trade names for a specific period.

franchising Option whereby the parent company grants another firm the right to do business in a prescribed manner.

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between 25 percent and 30 percent of revenue from international activities.8 High demand U.S. franchise categories include food and beverage, health and beauty, wellness and fitness, professional services, education, apparel/textile, and retail. KFC saw the benefit of being an early entrant into global markets and has more than 15,000 KFCs located outside the United States.9

In determining whether international franchising is justified, the company must evaluate the amount of time, effort, risk, and legal proceedings related to selling a franchise internationally. It also must determine whether the product is valued in the targeted country. Also, the unique culture of the country should be a part of the decision-making process. Most franchise companies should bend and change to the cultural experiences of each individual country. Many countries such as Australia, Brazil, China, France, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Russia, South Korea, Spain, and Venezuela have their own specific regulations.10 Most U.S. companies rely heavily on contractual relationships, however, in many other countries, people conduct business based on relationships first rather than relying on a contract. For example, in countries such as Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom, it is best to focus on the specifics of the contract and provide detailed information when negotiating with prospects or their attorneys. In most Latin American countries, the Middle East, and China, it is important to first build a solid relationship with the investor.11

MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION Companies can vary greatly in their degree of global involvement. A multinational corporation (MNC) is a firm that is based in one country (the parent or home country) and produces goods or provides services in one or more foreign countries (host countries). An MNC directs manufacturing and marketing operations in several countries; these operations are coordinated by a parent company, usually based in the firm’s home country. For example, General Motors is a U.S. corporation, headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, with manufacturing plants located in the United States, China, Mexico, and South Korea. Volkswagen is a German corporation, headquartered in Wolfsburg, Germany, with manufacturing facilities in many other countries, including the United States.

GLOBAL CORPORATION A global corporation is an organization that has corporate units in many countries that are integrated to operate as one organization worldwide. The global corporation operates as if the entire world were one entity. Global corporations sell essentially the same products throughout the world with components that may be made or designed in different countries. Expectations are that as the world becomes more globally open, the globalization of corporations will become much more commonplace. Not many years ago, Procter & Gamble was primarily a U.S. business investing heavily in food brands. Now it is a truly global corporation with more than 300 brands in more than 180 countries crossing the Americas, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and Asia.12 Approximately 56 percent of the company’s sales were made outside the United States.13 Its corporate leaders are an extremely diverse group, representing many cultures and backgrounds. Another global company, Johnson & Johnson has 250 businesses in 60 countries.14

CH2MHILL is a global engineering company that oversees complex projects around the world, including the expansion of the Panama Canal. As the Watch It Video indicates, company leadership carefully anticipates and studies contextual factors that impact how business should be practiced in diverse cultural settings.

multinational corporation (MNC) Firm that is based in one country (the parent or home country) and produces goods or provides services in one or more foreign countries (host countries).

global corporation Organization that has corporate units in several countries that are integrated to operate as one organization worldwide.

Watch It 1 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to watch a video titled CH2MHILL: Management in the Global Environment and to re- spond to questions.

Context of Global Business The world is experiencing an increasing global workforce. Global HR problems and opportunities are enormous and are expanding. Individuals dealing with global HR matters face a multitude of challenges beyond that of their domestic counterparts. These considerations range from cultural to political barriers to demographic considerations in the workforce and international aspects such as compensation. Before upper management decides on a global move, it is vitally important that the critical nature of HR issues be considered. Companies that engage in the global economy

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place even greater emphasis on strategic HR. The functional areas associated with effective global HR management are similar to the ones they experience domestically, as shown in Figure 14-1. Although the six functions are the same, the global external environmental factors may signifi- cantly impact the way they are implemented. Sound global HR management practices are required for successful performance in each area. As with domestic HR, the functional areas are not sepa- rate and distinct, but are highly interrelated. We will discuss the functional areas after giving some consideration to the setting in which global HR happens.

HR practice in the United States is influenced by many factors that we have highlighted at various points throughout the previous chapters. Some of these factors include country political and economic structure, the legal system, national cultural norms, and characteristics of the labor force. When practicing HR within any one country, these factors are relatively constant. For example, the United States has many worker protections such as antidiscrimination laws. Global HR practitioners require, at minimum, an appreciation of the variation in these four factors to understand how to best structure and implement the six HR functions that we revisit later in the chapter.

COUNTRY POLITICS AND ECONOMIC STRUCTURE A country’s political system and its economic structure are highly related. In this section, we consider the United States and China given the substantial size of their economies and their prominence in global business. The United States political system is based on democracy. Democratic governments are formed by participation of all eligible citizens through voting directly on issues (for example, election of the U.S. president) or indirectly through elected representatives (for example, members of Congress and the Senate). Two political parties—the Democratic and Republican parties—dominate the composition of U.S. government. These parties often have differing opinions on how HR management should be accomplished. Democrats tend to favor government regulation that protects the rights of employees, for instance, the Fair Labor Standards Act. Republicans, on the other hand, tend not to favor government regulation, believing that businesses should have as much flexibility as possible to operate successfully. For example, many in the Republican Party do not support an

FIGURE 14-1 Environment of Global Human Resources Management

Customers

Legal Considerations Labor Market

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Human Resource

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Human Resource Development

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CHAPTER 14 • GLOBAL HuMAN REsOuRCE MANAGEMENT 397

increase in the federal minimum wage pay rate because of higher labor costs, which would surely undercut profitability. The U.S. economy is based on the idea of capitalism. Under capitalism, the government does not possess ownership of all land, businesses, or natural resources. This economic system relies on market forces in which supply and demand for products, services, and labor determine monetary value.

China’s political system is based on communism. Communism is set on the principle of com- munity ownership. That is, all property, businesses, and natural resources are community owned, but these items are controlled by the single political party (Communist Party). Also, in communist societies, the government provides necessities. In principle, citizens elect individuals to serve in the Communist Party, but that is rarely the case. In recent decades, China’s economy has become more diverse. While maintaining communist control, economic growth has been fueled by market forces and capitalism. As a result, a growing segment of the population has gained considerable wealth and is adopting similar lifestyles as in the United States that is based on income and wealth. Still, one of the key challenges for the government has been to sustain adequate job growth for tens of millions of workers laid off from state-owned enterprises, migrants, and new entrants to the workforce.

LEGAL SYSTEM The growing complexity of the political and legal landscapes in the global environment is one of the most important trends affecting global business. Managers working for global businesses contend with a growing tide of employment legislation that cuts across national boundaries. Legal and political forces are unique to each country, and sometimes the laws of one contradict those of another, or are ignored altogether. For example, Americans may encounter laws that are routinely ignored by host countries, creating somewhat of a dilemma. The growing complexity of legal compliance in the global environment is one of the most important trends affecting global business. Managers working for global businesses contend with a growing tide of employment legislation that cuts across national boundaries. Legal and political forces are unique to each country, and sometimes, the laws of one contradict those of another. For instance, the French authorities acknowledge that their data-protection laws are in direct conflict with the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act, but they insist that multinationals comply with French law. Further, the nature and stability of political and legal systems vary across the globe. U.S. firms enjoy relatively stable legal and political systems, and the same is true in many of the developed countries. In other nations, however, the legal and political systems are much less stable. Some governments are subject to coups, dictatorial rule, and corruption, which can substantially alter both the business and legal environments. Legal systems can also become unstable, with contracts suddenly becoming unenforceable because of internal politics.

HR regulations and laws vary greatly among countries. In the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada, the list of hiring standards to avoid is quite lengthy and precise. In India, it is legal for an advertisement for an Indian airline flight attendant to read, “18-27 years old, different height minimums for males and females, status unmarried, unblemished complexion and good eye- sight.”15 As previously mentioned, merely conducting a background check is different from one country to another. In many Western European countries, laws on labor unions and employment make it difficult to lay off employees. Because of political and legal differences, it is essential that a comprehensive review of the political and legal environment of the host country is conducted before beginning global operations.

Some have asked the question, “Does operating under local laws and customs free a com- pany of all ethical considerations?” Google certainly understands the problems that can occur when attempting to go global. To do business in China, Google had to submit its search results to government censorship, which was an undesirable concession. Still, company leaders felt the benefits to the Chinese people would exceed the evils of the censored results and went ahead with it. But after repeated squabbling with the Chinese government and evidence of hacking into the Gmail accounts of dissidents in late 2009 and in March 2010, Google removed its search engine from China.16 Each company should evaluate what it would do in instances such as Google encountered.

Americans may encounter laws that are routinely ignored by host countries, creating some- what of a dilemma. For example, the laws in some countries that require a minimum age for fac- tory workers are often not enforced. A U.S. Department of Labor report revealed continued child labor abuses in the apparel and textile industries.17

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NATIONAL CULTURAL NORMS Cultural differences create challenges for managing HR. Cultural values pertain to the norms for behaviors and beliefs. National culture is steeped in a country’s history, and we can describe it based on a society’s social traditions, political and economic philosophy, and legal system. More recently, researchers and practitioners have tried to understand how cultural values influence workplace practices. We often rely on six categories to describe national culture.18 These include power distance, individualism/collectivism, masculine/feminine, uncertainty avoidance, pragmatism/normative, and indulgence/restraint. We focus on the first three because those dimensions are among the most widely discussed in the global HR context.

Power distance describes the extent to which power is unequally distributed. High power distance cultures reinforce hierarchical control, and members generally do not expect justification for the actions taken by those in power. Low power distance cultures embrace greater equality and justification for actions, particularly where actions create a disadvantage to an individual or group. Germany is well known for a culture that rates low in power distance whereas the United Arab Emirates is culture that strongly captures a high-power distance orientation.

Individualism refers to the extent to which an individual focuses on his or her own welfare relative to others. Collectivism describes a concern for the welfare of the larger group such as fam- ily, coworkers, or other groups. The United States and Canada are highly individualistic cultures, whereas Chile, China, and Mexico value collectivistic norms.

Masculine cultures place high value on achievement, material award, and assertiveness. Femi- nine cultures espouse cooperation, modesty, and quality of life. Japan is an example of a highly masculine culture, whereas Norway and Finland embody the values of a feminine culture.

The following Watch It video provides additional perspective on China’s culture. History and religion play an important role in shaping culture. In addition, cultural character influences how to conduct business.

cultural values The norms for behaviors and beliefs.

Watch It 2 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Impact of Culture on Business: Spotlight on China and to respond to questions.

Although Hofstede’s work was published decades ago, the dimensions of cultural values still hold. Nevertheless, it is important to recognize the obvious statement that not all people are alike. Our interactions with individuals from the same culture may differ because a variety of factors, such as personality, influence how people interact with each other. For example, we previously described Americans as being proactive. Indeed, this is a fair characterization of most Americans. But, by nature, some may not live up to this expectation because they are inherently introverted. Introverted people tend to be focused more on internal thoughts, feelings, and moods rather than on seeking out interactions with others. Personality variables are measured on a continuum. Intro- version is typically considered as part of a continuum along with extraversion, or individuals who generally seek out interactions with others.

LABOR FORCE CHARACTERISTICS AND DYNAMICS As in the United States, the characteristics of the labor force worldwide holds implications for global HR practice. For example, China’s work force is aging dramatically, much like in the United States.19 However, the Chinese government’s one-child policy has left a substantial gap in younger generations; thus, a shrinking labor pool. For decades, the Chinese government imposed a policy in which couples could have up to one child. Recently, the government has begun to relax this policy by allowing some couples to have as many as two children.20 For entirely different reasons, Japan is facing a similar labor shortage because of cultural values that increasingly disfavor romantic relationships.21 Economic growth in India has been affected by the widespread return of unskilled factory workers from large cities to rural farming locations.22 Low wages, high costs, and significant rates of inflation have made it difficult for those individuals to meet basic financial obligations. Government policies that provide substantial subsidies to residents create an attractive alternative. Factories struggle to maintain or expand production given the impracticalities of city life.

Educational attainment is an important consideration. The Hays Global Skills Index report warns that many countries throughout the world are facing a labor shortage of highly skilled

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workers that will continue for years to come.23 A McKinsey Global Institute report indicates that gaps between labor supply and demand for labor will increase between 3 percent and 11 percent based on country.24 At the same time, the supply of low-skilled workers will far exceed the demand for their services. Inadequate primary educational systems in many countries are a major contributor to these trends.

The role of gender plays a significant role in influencing employment. The global assign- ment of women and members of racial and ethnic minorities can involve cultural and legal issues. Regrettably, female talent is underused in most emerging countries. Occupational segregation is prevalent worldwide. Women are overrepresented in clerical and support jobs (63 percent) and underrepresented in management jobs (33 percent).25 This situation may be partly explained by family-related constraints and pressures, as well as work-related issues that combine to force women to either settle for dead-end jobs or leave the workforce. For example, in Saudi Arabia, women are not permitted to drive.26 Often, global careers are affected when a worker decides to return to China to take care of her family. In the United Arab Emirates, a single woman cannot board a plane or stay in a hotel unless a male relative is willing to accompany her. In India, a woman returning from a global assignment often is given less-challenging roles or projects or receives lower performance ratings.27

Many women who want to work face barriers, oftentimes, on religious grounds. In Chapter 3, we referred to a U.S. Supreme Court decision (EEOC v. Abercrombie & Fitch) that prohibits an employer from refusing to hire an applicant motivated by religious bias or unwillingness to make reasonable accommodation for religious beliefs. That decision was based on a Muslim woman who was refused employment because of her religious practice of wearing a hijab. Similar reli- gious biases exist throughout the world. For instance, a company in Belgium fired a female employee because she wore a hijab at work. An advocate General with the European Court of Justice asserted that prohibiting head scarves does not constitute religious discrimination, a viola- tion of European regulations, “if that ban is founded on a general company rule prohibiting visible political, philosophical and religious symbols in the workplace, and not on stereotypes or prejudice against one or more particular religions or against religious beliefs in general.”28

The news isn’t all bad. There are some positive trends that have emerged regarding women working in the global environment. According to a recent study, nearly three million female university graduates enter the Chinese workforce each year. Of the total Graduate Management Admission Test applicants, 40 percent are male and 60 percent are female. The study also discov- ered that 76 percent of Chinese women aspire to top-level positions compared to only 52 percent in the United States.29 In addition, women in Asian countries are encouraged in educational pursuits. According to Maria Saab, a research fellow at the New America Foundation, “Women are graduating from universities and graduate programmes at higher rates than men and are bet- ter positioned for senior management positions when they open up [and] this growth can also be traced back to the promotion of women within communist regimes.”30

Women are rapidly moving into the management ranks in some countries. In 2016, women held 45 percent of senior management jobs in Russia. In Asia, women have a significant presence on senior leadership teams: the Philippines (39 percent), Thailand (37 percent), and Indonesia (36 percent).31 China is not far behind at 30 percent female representation in senior management roles.

We now turn our attention to the six functional HR functional areas in a global context: staff- ing, human resources development (training), performance management, compensation, safety and health, and employee and labor relations.

☛ F Y I Women represent 39.4 percent of the labor force worldwide. Female representation varies by country, for example:

$ Rwanda and Mozambique: 54.4 percent $ United States: 45.8 percent $ China: 43.8 percent $ United Arab Emirates: 12.4 percent32

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Global Staffing Companies must choose from various types of global staff members and may use specific approaches to global staffing. Global staff members may be selected from among three different types: expatriates, host-country nationals, and third-country nationals.

Expatriate An expatriate is an employee who is not a citizen of the country in which the firm operations are located but is a citizen of the country in which the organization is headquartered. The U.S. expatri- ate population has grown rapidly because of the large numbers of workers who are being sent to China and India. An example of an expatriate is a U.S. citizen who is employed by General Elec- tric (headquartered in the United States) and is assigned to a position in Italy.

Until recently, many U.S. expatriates accepted assignments in Asia on a short-term basis because the compensation incentives were significant. Their interests fit well with a company’s objectives of setting up operations (months rather than years). There has been a shift toward plac- ing expatriates on a long-term basis (years rather than months), particularly given the interest of younger expatriates from around the world who are seeking “adventure,” prefer to assimilate to the culture over extended periods, gravitate toward learning the language, and are willing to take assignments without lucrative monetary inducements. There are various reasons for this shift. For instance, the unemployment rate in Singapore has been extremely low, leading companies to seek talent from outside. Also, many companies there believe that importing global talent provides a greater diversity of perspectives that better suit the global business environment.33

Host-Country National A host-country national (HCN) is an employee who is a citizen of the country where the sub- sidiary is located. An example would be a U.S. citizen working for a Japanese company in the United States. Normally, the bulk of employees in international businesses will be HCNs. Com- panies that are staffed by locals not only are typically less expensive but also offer advantages from a cultural and business standpoint. In most industries, HCNs comprise more than 98 percent of the workforce in the foreign operations of North American and Western European MNCs. Hal- liburton is a leading energy services company headquartered in the United States with 50,000 employees working in 70 countries, representing 140 nationalities.34 Halliburton’s workforce, including managers, is overwhelmingly made up of citizens of the host country.35 Hiring local people and operating the company like local companies whenever possible is good business. The ultimate goal of most foreign operations is to turn over control to local management.

Third-Country National A third-country national (TCN) is a citizen of one country, working in a second country, and employed by an organization headquartered in a third country. An example would be an Italian citizen working for a French company in Germany.

Approaches to Global Staffing Using the three basic types of global staff, there are four major approaches to global staffing: ethnocentric, polycentric, regiocentric, and geocentric staffing. These approaches reflect how the organization develops its HR policies and the preferred types of employees for different positions.

ETHNOCENTRIC STAFFING With ethnocentric staffing, companies primarily hire expatriates to staff higher-level foreign positions. This would be the case with Rich Products Corporation, based in Buffalo, New York, with $3.5 billion in annual sales. Rich sells food products in more than 112 countries and employs 9,000 workers worldwide.36 Judy Campbell, vice president, international HR, said, “Our strategy has always been to focus on local talent development. We have never had more than six expats in any of our international locations.”37 This strategy assumes that home-office perspectives and issues should take precedence over local perspectives and issues and that expatriates will be more effective in representing the views of the home office. The corporate HR department is primarily concerned with selecting and training managers for foreign assignments, developing appropriate compensation packages, and handling adjustment issues when managers return home. Generally, expatriates are used to ensure that foreign operations are linked effectively with parent corporations.

14.2 Summarize global staffing practices.

expatriate Employee who is not a citizen of the country in which a firm’s operations are located but is a citizen of the country in which the organization is headquartered.

host-country national (HCN) Employee who is a citizen of the country where the subsidiary is located.

third-country national (TCN) Citizen of one country, working in a second country, and employed by an organization headquartered in a third country.

ethnocentric staffing Staffing approach in which companies primarily hire expatriates to staff Staffing approach in which companies primarily hire expatriates to staff higher-level foreign positions.

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POLYCENTRIC STAFFING When HCNs are used throughout the organization, from top to bottom, it is referred to as polycentric staffing. In developed countries such as Japan, Canada, and the United Kingdom, there has been more reliance on local executives and less on traditional expatriate management. The ultimate goal of most foreign operations is to turn over control to local management. The use of the polycentric staffing model assumes that HCNs are better equipped to deal with local market conditions. Organizations that use this approach will usually have a fully functioning HR department in each foreign subsidiary responsible for managing all local HR issues. Corporate HR managers focus primarily on coordinating relevant activities with their counterparts in each foreign operation. Most global employees are usually HCNs because this helps to clearly establish that the company is making a commitment to the host country and not just setting up a foreign operation. HCNs often have much more thorough knowledge of the culture, the politics, and the laws of the locale, as well as how business is done. There is no standard format in the selection of HCNs. The following Watch It video illustrates the importance of polycentric staffing as an element of the Save the Children nonprofit organization’s strategy.

polycentric staffing Staffing approach in which host-country nationals are used throughout the organization, from top to bottom.

Watch It 3 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Save the Children: Global Human Resource Management and to re- spond to questions.

REGIOCENTRIC STAFFING Regiocentric staffing is like the polycentric approach, but regional groups of subsidiaries reflecting the organization’s strategy and structure work as a unit. There is some degree of autonomy in regional decision making, and promotions are possible within the region but rare from the region to headquarters. Each region develops a common set of employment practices.

GEOCENTRIC STAFFING Geocentric staffing is a staffing approach that uses a worldwide integrated business strategy. The firm attempts to always hire the best person available for a position, regardless of where that individual comes from. The geocentric staffing model is most likely to be adopted and used by truly global firms. Usually, the corporate HR function in geocentric companies is the most complicated because every aspect of HR must be dealt with in the global environment.

Recruiting Host-Country Nationals One of the biggest mistakes that can be made in the multinational arena is to assume that the recruiting approaches that work in the parent company will also be effective in recruiting HCNs. For example, an error that many recruiters make is believing that all countries in Europe are similar or the same. Thinking that Italy is like France simply because of their close geographic proximity is like believing that the United States is like Mexico because they are neighbors in North America. The use of technology in global recruiting also varies considerably. For example, although Scan- dinavian companies in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark were among the first to promote Internet use for recruiting, recruiters in France, Italy, and much of southern Europe do not use it as much.38

Selecting Expatriates Expatriates are often selected from those already within the organization, and the process involves four distinct stages: self-selection, creating a candidate pool, technical skills assessment, and making a mutual decision.

In stage one, self-selection, candidates determine whether they are right for a global assignment, whether their spouses and children are interested in relocating internationally, and whether this is the best time for a move. In the case of self-selection, the candidates assess themselves on all the relevant dimensions for a job and then decide whether to pursue a global assignment. The self-assessment extends to the entire family. One survey found that 55 percent of employees facing dual-career issues are less likely to put themselves forward as a candidate for a global assignment.39 When can- didates are selected for expatriate assignments, spouses, partners, and entire families also need to be “selected.” Basically, candidates must decide whether to go to the next step in the selection process.

Stage two involves creating a candidate database organized according to the firm’s staffing needs. Included in the database is information such as the year the employee is available to go overseas, the languages the employee speaks, the countries the employee prefers, and the jobs for which the employee is qualified.

regiocentric staffing Staffing approach that is like the polycentric staffing approach, but regional groups of subsidiaries reflecting the organization’s strategy and structure work as a unit.

geocentric staffing Staffing approach that uses a worldwide integrated business strategy.

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Stage three involves scanning the database for all possible candidates for a given global assignment; then the list is forwarded to the assigning department. There, each candidate is assessed on technical and managerial readiness relative to the needs of the assignment. In the final stage, one person is identified as an acceptable candidate based on his or her technical or managerial readiness and is tentatively selected.

If the decision is made to employ expatriates, certain selection criteria should be carefully con- sidered in stages two and three. It takes a special blend of person to add up to an outstanding expatri- ate who can be productive and accepted in an unfamiliar setting. Expatriate selection criteria should include cultural adaptability, strong communication skills, technical competence, professional or oper- ational expertise, global experience, country-specific experience, interpersonal skills, language skills, family flexibility, and country- or region-specific considerations. However, according to one survey by Cartus, a workforce development provider, when considering employees for international assign- ments, 72 percent of companies chose technical competence and 65 percent chose job experience.40

Background Investigation Conducting a background investigation on potential employees is especially important in the global environment. According to the HireRight, a pre-employment screening company in Irvine, California, 25 percent of global companies either conduct employee screening or have plans to start, an increase from 11 percent in 2009.41 Conducting background investigations when work- ing in the global environment is equally, or even more, important, but differences across cultures and countries often put up barriers. Each country has its own laws, customs, and procedures for background screenings. For instance, Japanese law covers a person working at the Tokyo office of a U.S.-based company and includes privacy statutes that prohibit criminal checks on Japanese citizens. The United Kingdom does not allow third parties such as background-checking firms to have direct access to criminal records held by local police. Instead, the job applicant and the recruiting organization must sign and submit a formal request to a specific agency responsible for handling criminal records. It can take up to 40 business days to get information back. Some countries have not instituted background check laws or procedures. In 2017, the United Arab Emirates began background checks of expatriates, who total more than 4 million of the labor force.42 After a spate of criminal activity from expatriates, the government recognized that it is not sufficient to limit employment background checks to Emirati. For instance, HireRight tells the story of a person who had been in the United States for two years and had applied for a job with a multinational firm. There were no gaps in the individual’s employment history that would suggest he had ever been in jail. However, further checking revealed that he had been convicted of murder in his home country and in accord with a practice that was legal at the time, had paid a proxy to serve his prison term while he remained free and in the workforce.43

If your professor has assigned this, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management to complete the HR Bloopers exercise and test your ap- plication of these concepts when faced with real-world decisions.

H R B L O O P E R S

United Architect’s Expatriate Problems On the flight back from United Architect’s Lon-

don office, Nate Brown is trying to figure out how to handle his cur- rent challenge. As the HR Director of the multinational firm, Nate was in London to meet with an expatriate that has requested a transfer home. The architect moved to London six months ago for a three-year assignment and now she says it just isn’t going to work out. The firm transferred her to London rather quickly and didn’t follow their usual selection and orientation process because of the tight timeframe. The London office had just secured a new project and they needed an archi- tect from the U.S. office to join them immediately to get the project started. The architect that was selected told Nate that her husband

had some concerns about taking the assignment because he would not be able to work while in London and he is at a critical point in his career. Further, although the architect had traveled for the firm previ- ously, she had never traveled abroad. However, she agreed to take the assignment because she thought it would be good for her career. Now she is having problems getting along with her London colleagues and reports that she just is not happy living in London. Nate also believes her husband is pressuring her to move back home as well. The project is at a critical point and Nate knows it will be extremely difficult to find a new architect for the project now.

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Root Capital is a small business that invests in small agricultural businesses in Africa and South America. As described in the Watch It video, company leadership faces challenges in hiring local talent that meets its business objectives. Also, working across multiple national cultures, Root Capital faces challenges in maintaining employee cohesion across the distant locations.

Watch It 4 If your professor has assigned this, sign into www.pearson.com/mylab/management to watch a video titled Root Capital: Human Resource Management and Operations and to respond to questions.

Global Performance Management and Human Resource Development Some training and development professionals believe that performance appraisal as well as train- ing and development strategies that work for a U.S. audience can be equally effective abroad. Unfortunately, nothing could be further from the truth. Also, global training and development is needed because people, jobs, and organizations are often quite different. Next, various aspects of global HR development will be discussed.

Performance Management Two major inf luences on the effectiveness of performance appraisal practices throughout the world are information asymmetry and cultural values.44 Information asymmetry refers to a differ- ence in the quality and amount of information available to two or more individuals or groups. For example, let’s assume that a company’s headquartered in the United States instructed an employee to increase the staffing of its factory in New Delhi, India, by 10 percent in 2018. The headquarters will adopt this goal as a performance criterion come time to conduct the expatriate’s performance appraisal. At the end of the year, the staffing increased by only 4 percent, which leads the company headquarters to judge the expatriate’s performance as negative. The expatriate has learned from immersion in his job that illiteracy or substandard pay relative to the cost of living contributed dramatically to the result. However, the corporate headquarters does not have intimate knowledge of local conditions in New Delhi and simply attributed the outcome to an ineffective expatriate.

Cultural norms inf luence the adoption of performance appraisal practices as well as an employee’s reaction to appraisal. In China and Japan, performance feedback is uncommon because the normative practice of “saving face” is well-ingrained in those cultures. Giving nega- tive performance feedback would cast the employee in a negative light, which is something that the Japanese and Chinese seek to avoid at all costs.

There is some evidence to suggest that performance appraisal practices performed by compa- nies within high power distance cultures rely on the manager or supervisor as the single source of judgment.45 Where power distance is lower, it is not unusual for companies to solicit performance information from multiple sources, including subordinates. In individualistic cultures, perfor- mance appraisal seeks to differentiate employees based on performance. In contrast, performance appraisals in collectivist cultures generally do not focus on individual performance because nega- tive performance information could hurt the solidarity of group members.

Expatriate Human Resource Development The training of employees going on a global assignment has often been bleak but appears to be improving. The development process should start as soon as workers are selected—before they begin the global assignment. Organizations are recognizing that expatriate employees and their families face special situations and pressure that training and development activities must prepare them to deal with. Employees and their families must have an effective orientation program and a readjustment-training program. In addition, the employee must have a program of continual development. Figure 14-2 illustrates the ideal expatriate preparation and development program, which includes pre-move orientation and training, continual development, and repatriation ori- entation and training.

14.3 Describe global perfor- mance management and human resource development practices.

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Pre-Move Orientation and Training Pre-move orientation and training of expatriate employees and their families are essential before the global assignment begins. The pre-move orientation needs to be aggressively undertaken so that the expatriate understands cultural dos and don’ts and is immersed in the language. Obviously, providing an expatriate a cultural “dummies” guide and a basic phrasebook for speaking the lan- guage is not enough. Continuing employee development, in which the employee’s global skills are fitted into career planning and corporate development programs, makes the eventual transition to the host home country less disruptive. Marc Sokol, senior vice president at Personnel Decisions International, said, “The cost of failure is very high. If you leave it to self-study, then you’re roll- ing the dice.”46

Some companies hire life coaches to lead predeparture training, recognizing that language preparation alone, for example, is not sufficient to help expatriates and family members cope in a new culture. Katherine Barton, a London-based life coach said, “They [employers] are realizing that it’s not just about the culture, but about the transition that employees go through abroad.”47 This is the case for both first-time expatriates and seasoned expatriates moving to a new location. Author Pattie McCarthy, a relocation expert, indicated that managing unhappiness is essential to promoting adjustment, “Relocating is enormously difficult, and coaching can really help people because the basis of coaching is figuring out what you are unhappy with and changing it.”48

Many organizations have established a formal buddy system to alleviate the stress new expa- triates and their families normally endure and to reduce the time it takes for expatriates to operate at peak productivity. Buddies often inform expatriates of host-office norms and politics, invite them into their homes, introduce them to friends and networks, and help bolster their credibility in the office.

FIGURE 14-2 The Expatriate Preparation and Development Program

Expatriate Preparation and Development

Prior to Departure: Orientation and Training

Language Culture History Local Customs Living Conditions

During Assignment: Continual Development

Expanding skills Career Planning Home-Country Development

Near Completion: Repatriation Orientation

Training

u.s. Lifestyle u.s. Workplace u.s. Employees

☛ F Y I The rates of expatriate failure range up to 40 percent in developed countries, and up to 70 percent in underdeveloped countries.49

Continual Development: Online Assistance and Training Companies now offer online assistance and training in areas such as career services, cross-cultural training, and employee assistance programs. The Internet offers global employees assistance 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Technology is a timesaving and cost-effective solution for the stress experienced by employees who are on assignment or doing business travel. With a satel- lite phone, individuals can communicate with one another in undeveloped countries. The distance problems from headquarters cannot be overcome without e-mail and voice mail, but, for some issues, Skype can be used if there is an Internet connection. Satellite phones throughout the world can also have Internet access, but the price goes up because additional hardware is required. Even if the assignment is a short-term business trip, technology can be used to provide ongoing contact and support with the home country. For example, online career services can give expatriates and their spouses the opportunity to upgrade skills while on assignment.

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Repatriation Orientation and Training Orientation and training are also necessary prior to repatriation, which is the process of bringing expatriates home. Repatriation is often the weak link in global HR management. Returning expa- triates have not always had a pleasant experience. Even though a company may spend considerable money in sending managers overseas, too many returning managers report dissatisfaction with the process.50 Many companies do not specify in advance how the international experience will fit into an employee’s career progression. In fact, numerous expatriates were not even guaranteed a job on their return.51 Further, expatriates often come home to a company that has undergone significant change from such events as mergers, acquisitions, reorganizations, and workforce contraction or expansion, which can create an unfamiliar environment.52

International businesses spend upward of two to three times of an expatriate’s base salary only to have 16 percent resign within two years of their return.53 Reasons given for leaving include they were not being properly prepared to return to their work and were not able to use skills they learned abroad. Employers should make every effort to find a place in the organization that will use the expatriate’s experience gained during the assignment. Also, the returning expatriate should be given a job with at least the same degree of responsibility and authority.

To counter the challenges of repatriation, firms need to have a formal in-house repatriation program in place. A dialogue regarding expectations and career planning on return will help to manage expectations. Also, the exchange should continue after the employee has returned home. In addition, acknowledgment and recognition of the significant overseas contribution is a courtesy that the returning employee has earned and richly deserves. Ideally, there should be a clear career path or position identified for the expatriate employee on his or her return. An effective repatria- tion training program should support the assignees in defining their new or strengthened skills and knowledge and instruct them on how to posture themselves in the corporate environment to which they have returned.

Global E-learning Globalization has created a special need for e-learning, and companies are embracing it to train the global workforce. In the past, a training program for a Fortune 200 company in Asia would likely cost between $250,000 and $500,000 for travel and related expenses. Many believe that live, instructor-led training is still more effective, but the question that must be asked is, “how much more effective?” E-learning allows companies to keep the money and still receive a good training product. Industry analysts predict that the corporate expenditures on global e-learning will increase approximately 11.4 percent between 2016 and 2020.54 New technology and the novel applications of existing technology emerge from time to time. Some of the trends include mobile learning, gamification, video-based training, and competency-based learning.55

The most obvious deterrent to any global e-learning implementation is the failure to rec- ognize the impact of cultural differences on the program’s success.56 Not analyzing the culture or failing to recognize important cultural differences can seriously damage success. One study found that only 25 percent of e-learning implementation plans addressed cultural differences that affect management. Cultural accessibility is required so all learners can achieve the same learn- ing outcomes by putting in the same amount of effort. A problem that evolves in implementing global e-learning is that the e-learning program is embedded with the culture of the person(s) who developed the program.57

Research showed that 91 percent of employees of global corporations said that English is “required” or “important” in their jobs, and that the need is increasing dramatically. Eighty-nine percent of employees said they are more likely to climb the corporate ladder if they can com- municate in English. Many companies offer courses only in English or in English and one other language, usually Spanish. An English-only focus works for firms that routinely conduct their business all over the world in English. But others need courses in more than one language. Com- panies that want to offer courses in several languages usually turn to translators. Financial ser- vices provider GE Capital relies on translation companies to offer Web-based courses in English, French, German, and Japanese.58

Hilton’s team members are scattered the world over. In a sector that sees high turnover rates, it is also hard to imagine that a classroom trainer could keep up with the demands of hundreds of new workers requiring training. Hilton, along with many multinational companies, realized that it could

repatriation Process of bringing expatriates home.

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save money through online courses. Hilton first introduced e-learning when the company launched its Hilton University with 60 generic business skills programs and 21 finance programs. Over the years, Hilton put in place an additional 40 business skills courses and significantly increased the number of generic online courses offered. Hilton came a long way in a short period, from 5,000 course completions after the first year to more than 40,000 completions in the third year.59

Virtual Teams in a Global Environment Virtual teams are becoming commonplace in many global organizations. A recent survey revealed that 85 percent of employees work on virtual teams, and 41 percent of never met face-to-face in the same location.60 In addition, nearly half of the survey respondents said that more than half of their team members include members from other countries.61 With virtual teams, team members do not have to meet face-to-face to be effective, thereby eliminating “dead time” caused by traveling. These teams operate across boundaries of time and geography and have become a necessity of everyday working life.

Virtual teams enable companies to accomplish things more quickly and efficiently. The times when virtual team members are in one place are few, especially when members are located across the globe. This often makes global teams more difficult to manage effectively. Communication is the key to keeping teams working effectively together.62

Some of the difficulties that virtual teams confront regarding communication are discussed next. Without face-to-face communication, team members often do not feel as connected or com- mitted to the team. The virtual work environment does not provide opportunities to build trust that comes from proximity.63 However, there are numerous considerations for building and main- taining trust. A willingness to give up some control is necessary. Professor Amy Wrzesniewski conducted a study in which she gave team members documents with different information that they could not share with each other. This requirement necessitated that individuals rely on their team members’ interpretation of their own information. Wrzesniewski said, “The second you don’t trust your team or think that they don’t have your group’s best interests in mind with respect to their conduct, people tend to take a collective step back.” She added, “It’s no longer a group that functions as tightly as it could.”64 Obviously, face-to-face communication is best for providing feedback followed by video, telephone, instant messaging, e-mail, and bulletin boards. E-mail and bulletin boards are generally best for tasks that require little collaboration such as informa- tion sharing. When teams need to solve complex problems or make decisions, technology such as videoconferencing or telepresence can be an asset.65

Communication problems between team members appear to be directly proportional to the number of time zones that separate them. An effective virtual leader rotates the time frames when conference calls for team meetings are going to be held so that the same people are not always inconvenienced. If it is only a couple of zones, teammates will be in their offices earlier or later than one another, but their workdays still overlap enough to allow phone calls. If the distance stretches from 9 to 12 time zones, workdays do not overlap at all, and e-mail and voice mail must be used.66 There is also the language problem to contend with. Because English is becoming the world language, those for whom English is a second language may be at a disadvantage. Many Asians are concerned with saving face if they do not understand something. They may be hesitant to ask questions that would reveal their ignorance, thus widening the communication gap. On the other hand, those who are fluent only in English may be at a disadvantage when working with their international colleagues who move easily between their native languages, English, French, and Mandarin.67

There are some general rules to follow in selecting virtual team members. Chad Thompson, Aon Hewitt’s senior consultant with the talent and rewards practice, believes that the best virtual workers are those who thrive on interdependent working relationships. He also believes that employees who do not mind or who like ambiguity in their job responsibilities and who have strong communication skills also tend to succeed in virtual work environments. Workers who have been labeled as “lone wolves” usually do not function well in a virtual team because they do not collaborate well.68

Virtual team members do not have the luxury of getting together over lunch or just communi- cating informally in the office. To overcome this lack of informal getting to know each other, Face- book, a discussion board, a team calendar, or a chat room might be beneficial. Team members can then connect with each other in ways other than meetings and establish a stronger group bond.69

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Global Compensation Companies that are successful in the global environment align their HR programs in support of their strategic business plans. A major component is the way the compensation program supports business structure, organization, and both global and regional operations.

Compensation for Host-Country Nationals Certainly, in compensation-related matters, organizations should think globally but act locally. The realities of global business—in which each country has its own culture and different service expectations—must be reflected in the way employees are serviced.70 Brad Boyson, head of HR and corporate services for Hamptons MENA, a property company with operations throughout the Middle East, believes that prudent HR professionals should, “benchmark on local conditions and add as needed.”71

One reason that organizations relocate to other areas of the world is probably the high-wage pressures in the home country that threaten their ability to compete on a global basis. Globally, the question of what constitutes a fair day’s pay is not as complicated as it is in the United States; nor- mally, it is slightly above the prevailing wage rates in the area. The same is often true of benefits and nonfinancial rewards. Variations in laws, living costs, tax policies, and other factors all must be considered when a company is establishing global compensation packages. For example, Puerto Rico has laws that require paying severance pay and a Christmas bonus. Employers in Nigeria are required to provide a life insurance policy for employees at a rate of three times their salary. In Italy, a mandatory benefit is paid when an employee leaves an organization, regardless of whether this is because of resignation, termination, or retirement. In Belgium, employers offering a defined contribution pension scheme must provide a guaranteed investment return of 3.25 percent.72

Some countries have employment laws that feature specific criteria for terminations, includ- ing those related to layoffs, shutdowns, mergers and acquisitions, and discharge for cause. Other termination laws call for notice periods, severance requirements, payout of paid time off and incentive compensation, benefits continuation, and employee consent and grievance procedures.73

The company will want to create a precise picture of employment and working conditions to establish appropriate practices in each country. Some of the factors that should be considered include minimum-wage requirements, which often differ from country to country and even from city to city within a country; working-time information, such as annual holidays, vacation time and pay, paid personal days, standard weekly working hours, probation periods, and overtime restric- tions and payments; and hiring and termination rules and regulations covering severance practices.

Culture often plays a part in determining compensation. North American compensation prac- tices encourage individualism and high performance; continental European programs typically emphasize social responsibility; the traditional Japanese approach considers age and company service as primary determinants of compensation. In other countries, there is no guarantee that additional compensation will ensure additional output. It has been found that, in some countries, additional pay has resulted in employees’ working less. As soon as employees have earned enough to satisfy their needs, time spent with family or on other noncompany activities is perceived as more valuable than additional cash. In former communist countries, people were used to a system in which pay and performance were not related. Under the old system, good employees were paid the same as poor performers. This practice is changing. Many communist countries’ govern- ments have loosened regulations that permit foreign for-profit companies to operate on their soils. Increasingly, as communist countries’ governments have loosened regulations economies have incorporated noteworthy elements of market-driven business activities (e.g., U.S. profit-oriented joint venture companies in China), pay-for-performance practices have become more prevalent.

In countries such as France and Greece, where the best graduates often choose government positions with secure paychecks for life, it is quite difficult to attract good employees with pay schemes that include high bonuses for achieving specific objectives. In places such as Hong Kong, where people value risk and are motivated by personal financial gains, employees who have achieved a significant professional result expect a financial form of recognition (raise, bonus, or commission) within a matter of weeks. They are likely to look for another employer if they must wait until their next annual performance review. Whereas people in the United States derive great status from high pay, nations in large parts of Europe and Asia shun conspicuous wealth. In Italy, where teamwork is more valued than individual initiative, sales incentives for top sales

14.4 Discuss global compensa- tion practices.

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professionals working in small teams can be demotivating. The recipient of a large award may feel awkward when receiving larger than a fair share of the reward pie.

Because of these and other cultural differences, it is difficult to design a global, one-size- fits-all pay scheme that attracts the best talent in all countries. In particular, pay-for-performance schemes often need to be adapted to local preferences, depending on whether income security or higher risks and returns are preferred.

Expatriate Compensation Expatriate compensation provides exceptional challenges compared to home-country employ- ment, such as developing packages that are reasonably cost-effective while still attractive and motivating. For expatriate managers and professionals, the situation is more complex than simply paying at or slightly above local host-country compensation rates. The largest expatriate costs historically have included overall remuneration, housing, cost-of-living allowances, and physical relocation. Most companies ensure that expatriates’ compensation accounts for additional costs that may be associated with moving to and living in another country. The balance sheet approach provides expatriates the standard of living they normally enjoy in the United States or the expatri- ate’s home country. Thus, the United States or the home country is the standard for all payments. This approach has strategic value to companies for two important reasons. First, this approach protects expatriates’ standards of living. Without it, companies would have a difficult time placing qualified employees in international assignments. Second, the balance sheet approach enables companies to control costs because it relies on objective indexes that measure cost differences between the United States and foreign countries.

Employees receive allowances whenever the costs in the foreign country exceed the costs in the United States. Expense categories include housing and utilities, goods and services, discretionary income, and taxes. Allowance amounts vary according to the lifestyle enjoyed in the United States. Companies can obtain pertinent information about costs for foreign countries from at least three information sources. First, they can rely on expatriates who have spent considerable time on assign- ment or foreign government contacts. Second, private consulting companies (e.g., Towers Watson) or research companies (e.g., Bureau of National Affairs) can conduct custom surveys. Third, most U.S. companies consult the U.S. Department of State Indexes of Living Costs Abroad, Quarters Allow- ances, and Hardship Differentials, which is published quarterly by the U.S. Department of State.

In the past few years, additional challenges have hit companies as they have attempted to go global. First, the devaluation of the U.S. dollar has had a major impact on expatriate compensation. Also, there have been changes to the U.S. tax code that affect expatriate lifestyle. These chal- lenges come at a time when global business is expanding. Meeting these challenges will affect how effectively the United States competes in the global market. In the past, expatriates regularly received a premium for taking an overseas assignment. Today, overseas jobs with rich expatriate packages are becoming less prevalent.74

Global Safety, Health, and Employee and Labor Relations As with the other HR functions, differences in safety, health, and employee and labor relations create challenges for HR professionals. We review each of these in turn.

Safety and Health Special needs are often encountered when global safety and health issues are encountered. Global health care provider CIGNA International has teamed up with CIGNA Behavioral Health to offer employee assistance programs (EAPs) for expatriate employees of multinational firms. The EAP allows CIGNA International participants to access a multilingual support and counseling network. Employees and their dependents can receive assistance through telephone or personal visits for a wide range of behavioral health and work/life concerns. The program is designed to help employees better manage stress and anxiety, depression, and substance abuse, as well as to help them to lead healthy lifestyles.

Specific to global assignments are emergency evacuation services and global security protec- tion. An international firm was preparing to evacuate 15 expatriate employees and dependents

balance sheet approach Provides expatriates the standard of living they normally enjoy in the United States or the expatriate’s home country.

14.5 Explain global safety, health, and employee and labor relations.

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from a country that had suffered an earthquake. When it came time to meet at the departure point, 25 people showed up. Those arranging for the evacuation had not known that two technical teams were in the country supporting clients at the time.

Often, evacuation and care of injured employees is done through private companies. Medical emergencies are frightening under any circumstances, but when an employee becomes sick or injured abroad, it can be a traumatic experience. If the travelers are assigned to more remote or less-developed areas, companies should be aware that in many medical facilities, needles are often reused, equipment is not properly used, and there is a lack of basic medical supplies. Also, employees and their families living abroad must constantly be aware of security issues. Many firms provide bodyguards who escort executives everywhere. Some firms even have disaster plans to deal with evacuating expatriates if natural disasters, civil conflicts, or wars occur.

Global companies continue to face global safety risks. That is one of the lessons learned after the 1984 disaster in Bhopal, India, affected Union Carbide’s worldwide operations. The Bhopal disaster was the worst industrial disaster in history. It was caused by the accidental release of 40 metric tons of methyl isocyanate (MIC) from a Union Carbide India, Limited (UCIL), pesticide plant located in the heart of the city of Bhopal, in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. UCIL was a joint venture between Union Carbide and a consortium of Indian investors. The accident in the early hours produced heavier-than-air toxic MIC gas, which rolled along the ground through the surrounding streets, killing thousands outright and injuring anywhere from 150,000 to 600,000 others, at least 15,000 of whom died later from their injuries. Some sources give much higher fatality figures.75

Health and safety professionals with international experience say one of the most important trends sweeping through successful multinational companies is the shift to a single safety man- agement system that applies to all their operations throughout the world. Although the example of Bhopal revealed the risks of safety failures, experts emphasize that taking a global approach to safety and health is not only about avoiding problems. It opens a wealth of opportunities to improve performance. Although events on the scale of Bhopal are rare, many companies have discovered that the way they treat their workers anywhere on the planet can pose a risk to their corporate reputation.

Employers should also be concerned with health issues for HCNs. In many instances, employee health has deteriorated because of an increase in chronic disease and lifestyle-related health issues, not only in developed countries, but also in emerging economies such as Mexico, China, and India. Twenty years ago, less than 10 percent of Mexican adults were obese; today, 68 percent are overweight and the problem is becoming increasingly widespread in younger people. It is estimated that 57.2 percent of the Indian population will have diabetes by 2025. China and the Philippines are troubled by inconsistent health care, especially among the poor.76

Global Employee Relations Moving the discussion of disciplinary action into the international arena often presents different situations. For instance, the punishment for an employee who stole $10,000 in the United States would likely lead to termination. This is not the case in Japan. A Japanese judge ruled that the $10,000 was too small an amount to justify termination and the worker was reinstated.77

The concept of employment at will is generally accepted in the United States. Remember that employment at will is an unwritten contract created when an employee agrees to work for an employer but no agreement exists as to how long the parties expect the employment to last. When it comes to discharging a worker who is not performing, it is much harder to do in Europe than in North America and other parts of the world. In fact, Europe may have the most employee- friendly laws. Even though they face global competition, unions in several European countries have resisted changing their laws and removing government protections. In many Western Euro- pean countries, laws on labor unions and employment make it difficult to lay off employees. Laws make it hard to fire workers, so companies are reluctant to hire. It is also difficult to discipline a worker for poor performance in China. Laws tend to come down on the side of the employees when addressing disciplinary action.

In India, as soon as a company hires more than 100 employees, it is legally impossible to terminate anyone without permission of the government and then it must be because of criminal wrongdoing. Such laws have long discouraged foreign investors, held back manufacturing, and prevented the nation from experiencing industrial growth like China’s.

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410 PART 6 • OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

Because of the differences in how governments view disciplinary action in the global environment, it is difficult for a global company to establish a standardized policy on disci- plinary action. The company will want to create a precise picture of employment and work- ing conditions to establish appropriate practices in each country. Some of the factors that should be considered include hiring and termination rules and regulations covering severance practices.78

Global Labor Relations Obviously, the strength and nature of unions differ from country to country, with unions rang- ing from nonexistent to relatively strong. In fact, unionism in private companies is a declining phenomenon in nearly all developed countries. Codetermination, which requires firms to have union or worker representatives on their boards of directors, is common in European countries. Even though they face global competition, unions in several European countries have resisted changing their laws and removing government protections. Laws make it hard to fire workers, so companies are reluctant to hire. Generous and lengthy unemployment benefits discourage the jobless from seeking new work. Motorola paid a net pretax charge of about $83 million in related severance fees for jobs cut in Germany. Wage bargaining remains centralized, and companies have little f lexibility to fashion contracts that fit their needs. High payroll taxes raise labor costs, and their laws mandating cumbersome layoff procedures increase the cost of the product.

On the other hand, in some South American countries, such as Chile, collective bargaining for textile workers, miners, and carpenters is prohibited. And unions are generally allowed only in companies of 25 workers or more. This practice has encouraged businesses to split into small companies to avoid collective bargaining, leaving workers on their own.

In China, the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) is the only government-recog- nized union. The ACFTU is putting pressure on foreign-invested enterprises to establish unions and sign collective contracts with their employees. Under the People’s Republic of China (PRC) Trade Union Law, the employer, not employees, contributes union dues if the company is not unionized. The pressure to unionize through the collection of union dues is likely to continue with the support of ACFTU.79

There were 2,663 labor strikes in 2016, which is more than double the number in 2014.80 Non-payment of wages accounts for most labor disputes in China.81 For instance, a succession of strikes occurred at several factories in Guangdong and China’s coastal regions. Workers at Honda Motor Company factories in several Guangdong cities demanded higher wages and better working conditions. Honda gave in, providing a 24 percent pay increase, which prompted work stoppages at several other facilities.82

Humiliation caused by a series of suicides at Foxconn, a subsidiary of Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, forced the company to give a 30 percent pay increase. The suicides were apparently in response to poor working conditions at the firm.83 The new generation of Chinese factory workers, born during the 1980s and 1990s, are more sensitive to social issues and workplace rights than their parents. Previous generations might have taken any job avail- able, even for low salaries, but, these young workers are seeking jobs that not only pay well but also provide a better life for their families, provide career development, and treat employees with respect.

Globalization for Small to Medium-Sized Businesses International sales have become a vital and growing part of the market for small to medium- sized businesses.84 A recent study found that nearly a quarter of U.S. small firms receive some sales from overseas, and another 6 percent is expected to join their ranks for a combined total of approximately one million small- to medium-sized business owners who engage in international sales in the near future.85 Globalization, the Internet, and e-commerce have made it easier than ever for small businesses to reach the 95 percent of consumers that do not live in the United States. Exporting gives small businesses the opportunities to tap into new markets, increase sales, generate economies of scale, and improve inventory management, as well as help maintain U.S. competitiveness and create jobs.

14.6 Discuss globalization issues for small to medium-sized businesses.

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As noted earlier in an FYI feature, U.S. exports totaled $1.47 trillion in 2016. Small- and medium-size businesses are important contributors to export activity. These firms accounted for 98 percent of exporters and approximately one-third of total export values.86 To achieve this goal, the Small Business Administration (SBA) has programs available to help small businesses expand into exporting. In 2015, SBA supported about 1,500 export loans to small business, totaling more than $1.4 billion.87 Export loan providers include the following:88

$ Export Working Capital Loans are short-term loans of 12 months or less. These loans provide a line of credit for suppliers, inventory, or production of goods. As a result of the Small Business Jobs Act, the SBA guarantee on these loans is 90 percent, with the maxi- mum size of the loan being $4.5 million.

$ Export Express Loans help small businesses that need capital fast to take advantage of a possible overseas sale. They can help cover marketing materials, translation, or travel costs for a trade mission. These loans can get approval by the SBA within 36 hours. The Small Business Jobs Act increased loan sizes up $500,000 and are 90 percent guaranteed up to $350,000. There is also a 75 percent guarantee for loans larger than $350,000.

$ International Trade Loans help businesses invest in real estate and working capital to sup- port exporting over the long term. These loans can be used for expansion, renovation, and modernization of facilities or in some cases refinancing existing loans. Usually, these loans are needed when a few big orders from abroad start to flow in, and the business needs to expand to a larger location or buy equipment to meet demand. International Trade Loans can be for up to $5 million. They carry a 90 percent guarantee, and maturity is usually 10 to 15 years for machinery or 25 years for real estate.89

There are numerous examples where the SBA has been helpful. An Export Working Capital Loan helped Nidek Medical Products, Inc., a manufacturer of medical nebulizers and oxygen concentrators for 25 years with 40 employees. The company was focusing largely on international sales and had established distribution warehouses in South America and Europe. But carrying the receivables for export sales had created a cash crunch and put the company’s finances in jeopardy. With assistance from the SBA, the company received a $1.3 million Export Working Capital Loan that solved its cash flow difficulties.

The move into global markets can be intimidating for leaders of smaller businesses, but HR professionals in these companies can help. They can learn more about the cultural and human capital factors that will have the biggest effect on new international initiatives. They can work with government and business groups to navigate the legal and bureaucratic environments that can make it difficult for businesses to get started in new markets.90

PREPARING FOR EXAMS/QUIZZES

Chapter Summary by Learning Objectives 1. Discuss the evolution of global business and the context

for global human resource management. Most compa- nies initially become global without making substantial investments in foreign countries by exporting, licensing, or franchising. A multinational corporation is a firm that is based in one country (the parent or home country) and produces goods or provides services in one or more for- eign countries (host countries). A global corporation has corporate units in many countries that are integrated to operate as one organization worldwide.

The world is experiencing an increasing global work- force. Global HR problems and opportunities are enor- mous and are expanding. Individuals dealing with global

HR matters face a multitude of challenges beyond that of their domestic counterparts.

HR practice in the United States is influenced by many factors. Some of these factors include country polit- ical and economic structure, the legal system, national cultural norms, and characteristics of the labor force. When practicing HR within any one country, these factors are relatively constant. For example, the United States has many worker protections such as antidiscrimination laws. Global HR practitioners require, at minimum, an appre- ciation of the variation in these four factors to understand how to best structure and implement HR practices in other countries.

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412 PART 6 • OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

Key Terms exporting 394 licensing 394 franchising 394 multinational corporation (MNC) 395 global corporation 395

cultural values 398 expatriate 400 host-country national (HCN) 400 third-country national (TCN) 400 ethnocentric staffing 400

polycentric staffing 401 regiocentric staffing 401 geocentric staffing 401 repatriation 405 balance sheet approach 408

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management to complete the problems marked with this icon .

2. Summarize global staffing practices. Companies must choose from various types of global staff members and may use specific approaches to global staffing. Global staff members may be selected from among three differ- ent types: expatriates, host-country nationals, and third- country nationals. There are four major approaches to global staffing: ethnocentric, polycentric, regiocentric, and geocentric.

3. Describe global performance management and human resource development practices. Some training and devel- opment professionals believe that performance appraisal as well as training and development strategies that work for a U.S. audience can be equally effective abroad. Unfortu- nately, nothing could be further from the truth. Also, global training and development is needed because people, jobs, and organizations are often quite different. The ideal expa- triate preparation and development program includes pre- move orientation and training, continual development, and repatriation orientation and training.

4. Discuss global compensation practices. Globally, the question of what constitutes a fair day’s pay for host- country nationals is not as complicated as it is in the United States; normally, it is slightly above the prevailing

wage rates in the area. The same is often true of benefits and non-financial rewards.

Expatriate compensation provides exceptional chal- lenges compared to home-country employment, such as developing packages that are reasonably cost-effective while still attractive and motivating. For expatriate man- agers and professionals, the situation is more complex than simply paying at or slightly above local host-country compensation rates.

5. Explain global safety, health, and employee and labor relations. U.S.-based global operations are often safer and healthier than host-country operations but frequently not as safe as similar operations in the United States. A govern- ment’s role in defining the circumstances under which an employer may discipline or fire employees, and the strength and nature of unions differ from country to country, with unions ranging from nonexistent to relatively strong.

6. Discuss globalization issues for small and medium-sized businesses. There has been a growing push among busi- ness organizations and the government to help small- and medium-sized businesses increase their exports. The SBA has programs available to help small businesses expand into exporting.

Questions for Review 14-1. How has global business evolved? 14-2. Define the following terms:

(a) exporting (b) licensing (c) franchising (d) multinational corporation (e) global corporations

14-3. What are some global issues confronting women? 14-4. What are the various types of global staff members? 14-5. What is the general process for selecting expatriates? 14-6. Why is pre-move orientation and training of expatriates

so important? 14-7. Why is repatriation orientation and training needed? 14-8. What is the importance of e-learning in the global

environment?

14-9. What difficulties do virtual teams have in the global environment?

14-10. What is meant by the statement regarding compensa- tion for host-country nationals, “Organizations should think globally but act locally”?

14-11. What has been the status of expatriate compensation in recent years?

14-12. What are factors to consider in global health and safety?

14-13. What are factors to consider in global employee and labor relations?

14-14. What are some problems and opportunities related to small- and medium-sized businesses in the global environment?

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E T H I C S D I L E M M A

Meeting Customer Demand at Any Cost Vivid Computers, a manufacturer of desktop

and laptop computers, distinguishes itself from the competition with the most life-like graphics based on proprietary technology. The com- pany outsources manufacturing of the all-important graphics cards to two companies. Pacific Coastal Manufacturing is in California and the other, Atlantic Ridge Manufacturing, is in a small island country where there are virtually no protective labor laws in place.

Demand for Vivid’s computers has been explosive. Pacific Coastal has been operating at full capacity for some time now. Mandating substan- tial overtime or extended workweeks would violate local employment laws, resulting in enormous fines. Thus, Vivid turned its focus on Atlantic Ridge to ramp up production. The components manufacturer extended the workweek from five to seven days, added a third work shift, and instituted mandatory overtime at the regular pay rate, boosting each worker’s weekly hours from 40 to 60. These changes have been in effect for nearly 18 months, which is enabling Vivid to keep up with demand.

Since the rule changes, more than half of the Atlantic Ridge work- force has been exhibiting telltale signs of undue stress. Sometimes,

workers cope by taking time off from work. However, company man- agers routinely threaten to fire workers who take time off. In a three- month period, five workers experienced fatal heart attacks while on the job and three committed suicide at their work stations. There were no such catastrophic events prior to the work rule changes.

Marta O’Leary, Atlantic Ridge’s operations manager, reported the unsustainable pace to Vivid’s corporate office on multiple occasions, and she explained that the tragic events were undoubtedly the result of longer work hours. Bradley Fontaine, Vivid’s vice president of world- wide operations, was not sympathetic to these concerns. Instead, he focused on the Atlantic Ridge plant’s stellar productivity. Bradley also offered Marta a substantial salary increase and generous incentive pay opportunities tied to the plant’s continued high productivity levels. Marta was stunned by Bradley’s response to the situation. 14-15. What would you do? 14-16. What factor(s) in this ethics dilemma might influence a per-

son to make a less than ethical decision?

PREPARING FOR MY CAREER

P I A Personal Inventory Assessment An additional Personal Inventory Assessment can be found on MyLab Management.

Multicultural Awareness Scale This instrument assesses an individual’s awareness of other cultures and cultural contexts. Specifically, how comfortable or aware you are with other cultures.

HRM Is Everyone’s Business Expatriate deployment requires substantial interactions between HR professionals and the managers who wish to staff over- seas jobs with expatriates. There are many issues besides selection that HR professionals and managers must consider before moving forward.

Action checklist for managers and HR—selecting and preparing employees for expatriate assignments HR takes the lead

HR professionals must first understand how a manager’s plan to deploy an expatriate will fulfill business objectives and the necessary qualifications required to meet those objectives. The discussion could reveal that employing a host country national (HCN) makes better sense from a cost perspective and the HCN’s knowledge of idiosyncratic business customs.

Draft a selection procedure to identify the most qualified and willing employees to take overseas assignments. Selection decisions are not limited to an employee’s qualifications. Family considerations addressing overall quality of life are essen- tial—educational resources for children, housing, community, and employment opportunities for a partner or spouse.

Customize preparatory activities, including cultural training and accommodation of family members, well in advance of departure. Language training may be necessary where the host country language differs.

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414 PART 6 • OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

Craft a communication plan for regular interaction with the expatriate throughout the duration of the assignment to help ensure adjustment and connectedness with company developments.

Anticipate the expatriate’s return by identifying suitable job assignments. The assignment should be appropriately challenging and capitalize on the employee’s added value from completing the overseas assignment.

Managers take the lead Managers should communicate their need for making an expatriate assignment. Essential information includes business objectives, costs and benefits to the company, quality of life considerations, expected length of the assignment, necessary skill sets, and working conditions.

Recommend willing qualified candidates for the assignment and review qualifications in the context of established selection criteria.

Explain how the expatriate’s skill development and accomplishments can be fully utilized and identify career-enhancing options in advance of the expatriate’s return to the home country.

HRM by the Numbers An additional HRM by the Numbers exercise can be found on MyLab Management.

Illustrating the Balance Sheet Approach A colleague will be soon departing for a one-year assignment (365 days) in Doha, Qatar. Most companies rely on the balance sheet approach to ensure that the employee does not incur more costs than they do at home because of the location change. For now, you are interested in estimating some of the factors, including your colleague’s annual base pay and some of the various allowances he will receive while on assignment in Doha. Currently, his U.S. annual base pay is $125,000. The company routinely raises base pay 5 percent to reflect added responsibilities. The company also awards a 20 percent annual cost-of-living allow- ance and 10 percent annual hardship allowance (based on the higher annual base pay rate), an annual housing allowance equal to $29,500, and a $50 per diem (daily food allowance).

Questions 14-17. Calculate your colleague’s annual base pay rate while on assignment in Doha. 14-18. Calculate, on an annual basis, the: (a) cost-of-living allowance; (b) hardship allowance; (c) housing allowance; and (d)

per diem. 14-19. Based on your calculations in questions 14-17 and 14-18, how much will the company spend for this one-year assign-

ment in Doha?

I N C I D E N T 1 My Darling Matilda has held several positions at McGill Enterprises in Chicago dur- ing the past 10 years. Most recently, she served as the U.S. call center manager. McGill is planning to open a call center in another country and offered Matilda the top spot. Matilda enthusiastically accepted this assignment and moved to her new location last month. Her first goal is to fill supervisory job vacancies. James Greenwood was the first candidate.

Matilda greeted James enthusiastically, “Welcome, James!” Then, she extended her hand to shake his. James did not do the same.

Instead, he moved closer to Matilda and gave her a hug and a light peck on the cheek. Then, James responded to Matilda’s verbal greeting, “It’s so good to finally meet you, my darling.”

As James sat down, he said, “Tell me about your family.” He added, “Are they well?”

Matilda was shocked because she always took the lead in the interview process. She usually broke the ice by chatting about neutral subjects such as the weather or traffic conditions.

Working Together: Team Exercise In small groups of three or four, come up with specific answers to the following questions. Talk through your perspectives with team members. Be prepared to share your ideas with the class.

Preparing employees for overseas assignments takes careful consideration. Assume that you work for a financial services company that is planning to open an office in Mumbai, India six months from now. A team of five managers will supervise the office opening, and they will be there for six months. Only one manager has previously worked in India. All five managers will work directly with the local management. Your job is to prepare this team for their assignment.

14-20. What are some of the topics appropriate for inclusion in a pre-departure training program? Discuss. 14-21. What are some of the issues you would address in advance of the expatriates’ return? Explain.

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CHAPTER 14 • GLOBAL HuMAN REsOuRCE MANAGEMENT 415

“Thank you, James, for taking the time to meet with me.” Matilda added, “I don’t see a good fit for you in our organization.” Then, she asked James to leave.

Later that day, Matilda contacted Ashley Lamare, McGill’s director of human resources, to discuss her experience. A long pause followed after Matilda relayed her story. Then, Ashley asked, “Matilda, did James do anything inappropriate?”

Surprised by Ashley’s response, Matilda said, “Yes, Ashley. He called me “my darling,” and then asked about my family.” She added, “He hugged me, too!”

Ashley explained that using terms of endearment such as “my darling,” “sweetheart,” and “my love,” are part of the regional dia- lect and typically are not suggestive of sexual interest or disrespect. In fact, both men and women use similar terms when greeting friends or others in the workplace, regardless of gender. Also, a gentle hug is a customary greeting in the workplace, much like the handshake.

“How was I supposed to know that?” Matilda responded defensively.

Ashley stated, “There is a lot of information about business eti- quette and cultural norms on the Internet.” She added, “Matilda, you are a manager and should know to take the initiative to learn local customs.”

Questions 14-22. Do you believe that Matilda overreacted to James? Why or

why not? 14-23. Should Ashley have taken responsibility to educate Matilda

before she left on assignment? Or, was it Matilda’s responsi- bility to educate herself? Explain.

14-24. Now educated about the location’s cultural norms, Matilda decides to call James. What should she say to him? Explain.

I N C I D E N T 2 Was There Enough Preparation? “Hi, Sam. How are the preparations going for your assignment in Japan?”

“Well, Elvis, I really feel prepared for the assignment, and the high level of apprehension I first experienced is gone.”

“What exactly did the preparation program involve, Sam?” “The experience was really exhaustive. First, I spent a good deal

of time in a comprehensive orientation and training program. The program covered training and familiarization in the language, culture, history, living conditions, and local customs of Japan. Then, to make the transition back to home easier and better for my career, I have developed a plan with my boss that includes several trips back here to remain a key part of this operation. Also, my career development training will include the same training as the other managers in the home office. Finally, I was completely briefed on repatriation orienta- tion and training that I would experience when I returned. Also, I was fully briefed on the compensation package, which appears to be fairly generous.”

“That is great, Sam. Have you found a place to live yet?” “Not yet, Elvis, but my wife and children are leaving in three days

to meet with the company’s relocation person to consider the various possibilities.”

“How did the family like the orientation training, Sam?” “Well, my wife ordered some Japanese language tapes, and I think

she read all of the information that was covered in the class. She and the children will be fine because they have time to adapt; they don’t have to hit the ground running like I do.”

Questions 14-25. Do you believe that Sam’s family is adequately prepared for

the move to Japan? Why or why not? 14-26. Should the company’s orientation program have included

training for Sam’s family? Discuss. 14-27. Is repatriation orientation and training necessary for Sam’s

family on their return to the United States?

Endnotes 1 Fortune Global 500, 2016. Accessed April 24,

2017, at beta.fortune.com/global500/. 2 “The 25 Largest Consumer’s Markets . . . . and

the Outlook for 20015,” International Business Guide online. Accessed April 24, 2017, at www. internationalbusinessguide.org/25-largest-con- sumers-markets-outlook-2015/.

3 “Country Comparison: GDP (Purchasing Power Parity),” CIA World Factbook online. Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.cia.gov/library/publica- tions/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2001rank. html.

4 Eric Krell, “Be Global Risk Manager,” HR Magazine 57 (March 2012): 81–84.

5 Jaime Santiago, “Exporting, Anyone?” Carib- bean Business 39 (April 28, 2011): 21.

6 Central Intelligence Agency. “Country Compari- son: Exports,” The World Factbook. Accessed April 28, 2017, at www.cia.gov/library/publica- tions/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2078rank.html.

7 Jose Pagliery, “The Hot Business of Exporting America’s Franchises,” CNN Money (July 12, 2013). Accessed April 1, 2014, at www.money. cnn.com.

8 “Franchising,” Export.gov. Accessed April 10, 2017, at http://2016.export.gov/industry/ franchising/.

9 Kay Marie Ainsley, “How American Fast Food Franchises Expanded Abroad,” The Balance online (June 27, 2016). Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.thebalance.com/how-american- fast-food-franchises-expanded-abroad-1350955.

10 Margaret McEntire, “Best Practices for Inter- national Franchising: Be Aware of Cultural Differences,” Franchising World 43 (March 2011): 29.

MyLab Management If your instructor is using MyLab Management, go to www.pearson.com/mylab/ management for Auto-graded writing questions as well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:

14-28. What are the approaches to global staffing?

14-29. What are some global employee and labor relations problems?

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416 PART 6 • OPERATING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

11 Bachir Mihoubi, “Dealing with the Complexi- ties of International Expansion,” Franchising World 43 (March 2011): 11–14.

12 Procter & Gamble, “Where We Operate.” Accessed April 3, 2017, at www.pg.com/en_US/ downloads/media/Fact_Sheets_Operate.pdf..

13 Procter & Gamble, “2016 P&G Annual Report.” Accessed April 3, 2017, at www.pginvestor.com/.

14 Johnson & Johnson, “About Johnson & John- son.” Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.jnj.com/ about-jnj.

15 Kathryn Tyler, “What Are Global Cultural Competencies?” HR Magazine 56 (May 2011): 44–46.

16 Kaveh Waddell, “Why Google Quite China— and Why It’s Heading Back,” The Atlantic online (January 19, 2016). Accessed April 1, 2017, at www.theatlantic.com; Steven Levy, “Google and Its Ordeal in China,” Fortune 163 (May 2, 2011): 94–100.

17 U.S. Department of Labor, Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor, September 30, 2015.

18 The Hofstede Centre, “National Cultural Dimensions.” Accessed March 31, 2014, at www.geert-hofstede.com.

19 “China’s Working Population Fell Again,” The Wall Street Journal (January 21, 2014). Accessed April 15, 2014, at www.wsj.com.

20 “China Birth Rate Up After One-Child Rule Change,” BBC News online (January 23, 2017). Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.bbc.com.

21 “Japan’s Sexual Apathy Is Endangering the Global Economy,” The Washington Post (April 14, 2014). Accessed April 14, 2014, at www. washingtonpost.com.

22 Raymond Zhong and Saptarishi Dutta, “As Growth Slows in India, Rural Workers Have Fewer Incentives to Move to Cities,” The Wall Street Journal (April 13, 2014). Accessed April 14, 2014, at www.wsj.com.

23 Hays, PLC “The Global Skills Landscape: A Complex Puzzle,” The Hays Global Index (2016). Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.hays- index.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Hays- GSI-Report-2016.pdf.

24 Richard Dobbs, Anu Madgavkar, et al., McKin- sey Global Institute, The World at Work: Jobs, Pay, and Skills for 3.5 Billion People (June 2012).

25 “Progress of the World’s Women 2015-2016,” United Nations. Accessed April 24, 2017, at http://progress.unwomen.org.

26 Sewell Chan, “Let Women Drive, a Prince in Saudi Arabia Urges,” The New York Times online (November 30, 2016). Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.nytimes.com.

27 Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid, “The Battle for Female Talent in Emerging Markets,” Harvard Business Review 88 (May 2010): 101–106.

28 Sewell Chan, “E.U. Legal Opinion Upholds Employer’s Ban on Head Scarves,” The New York Times online (May 31, 2016). Accessed April 25, 2017, at http://nytimes.com.

29 Ann Pace, “Chinese Women Flood the Global Talent Ranks,” T + D 65 (June 2011): 20.

30 “Women in Business: Turning Promise into Practice,” Grant Thornton International Busi- ness Report 2016. Accessed April 25, 2017, at www.grantthornton.am/en/publications/ibr/ reports_2016.

31 Ibid. 32 The World Bank, “Labor Force, Female (% of

Total Labor Force),” Accessed April 28, 2017, at http://worldbank.org.

33 “Rashmi Dalai, “Does Asia Still Need ‘ Traditional’ Western Expats?” The Wall Street Journal online (September 15, 2015). Accessed February 27, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

34 Halliburton, “Corporation Profile.” Accessed April 24, 2017, at www.halliburton.com.

35 Cindy Bigner, “Halliburton Finds the Best Tal- ent in Every Country and Culture,” Profiles in Diversity Journal 13 (May/June 2011): 47.

36 Rich Product Corporation, “About Us.” Accessed April 25, 2017, at www.richs.com/ about/.

37 Fay Hansen, “Looking South,” Workforce Man- agement 87 (April 21, 2008): 21–26.

38 Jeremy Eeskanazi, “When in Rome, Recruit Like the Romans Do: An Environmental Scan of the European Recruiting Landscape,” Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership 5 (June 2010): 3–9.

39 Lorraine Bello and Galen Tinder, “Dual Career Implications on Workforce Mobility: The Evolu- tion of the Relocating Spouse/Partner,” Benefits & Compensation Digest 46 (September 2009): 36–39.

40 Ann Pace, “Training for the Leap Overseas,” T + D 63 (August 2009): 18.

41 “Addressing 5 Gaps in Investigative Screening Programs,” Security Director’s Report 10 (Octo- ber 2010): 4–6.

42 “Security Checks on Foreign Workers in UAE Soon,” Gulf News online (January 10, 2017). Accessed April 25, 2017, at http://gulfnews. com.

43 Pamela Babcock, “Foreign Assignments,” HR Magazine 50 (October 2005): 91–98.

44 Steven H. Appelbaum, Michel Roy, Terry Gillil- and, “Globalization of Performance Appraisals: Theory and Applications,” Management Deci- sion, 49 (2011): 570–585.

45 Hilla Peretz and Yitzhak Fried, “National Cul- tures, Performance Appraisal Practices, and Organizational Absenteeism and Turnover: A Study Across 21 Countries,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 97 (2012): 448–459.

46 Michael Laff, “Offshore Acclimation,” T + D 63 (May 2009): 22–23.

47 Sara Toth Stub, “Coaching Grows as Expats Seek Help Managing Change,” The Wall Street Journal online (August 16, 2017). Accessed April 25, 2017, at www.wsj.com.

48 Ibid. 49 Tim Burgess, “International Assignment Failure

and Tracking Methods,” The Forum for Expa- triate Management online (August 20, 2016). Accessed April 28, 2017, at www.forum-expat- management.com/users/18563-tim-burgess/ posts/11414-international-assignment-failure- and-tracking-methods.

50 Avan R. Jassawalla and Hermant C. Sashittal, “Thinking Strategically about Integrating Repa- triated Managers in MNCs,” Human Resource Management 48 (September/October 2009): 769–792.

51 Michelle V. Rafter, “Return Trip for Expats,” Workforce Management 88 (March 16, 2009): 1–3.

52 Alice Andors, “Happy Returns,” HR Magazine 55 (March 2010): 61–63.

53 Ronald Alsop, “When Expats Return Home, What’s Next?” (January 16, 2014). BBC. Accessed June 2, 2014, at www.bbc.com. O Mishra Jitendra, “Repatriation,” Advances in Management 4 (January 2011): 7–19.

54 “Elearning Market Trends and Forecast 2017- 2021,” Docebo (Web site). Accessed April 25, 2017, at www.docebo.com.

55 Roth, J. “5 Amazing eLearning Trends of 2016,” eLearning Industry (Web site). Accessed April 24, 2017, at https://elearningindustry. com/5-amazing-elearning-trends-2016.

56 Andrea Edmundson, “When Cultural Values Interfere with Globalized E-learning,” MultiLin- gual 21 (June 2010): 28–30.

57 Andrea Edmundson, “Culturally Accessible E-learning: An Overdue Global Business Imper- ative,” T + D 63 (April 2009): 40–45.

58 Deepak Desai, “Globalization and the English Skills Gap,” Chief Learning Officer 7 (June 2008): 62–63.

59 Hanif Sazen, “Keeping It Fresh,” e.learning age (June 2005): 28–29.

60 “Trends in Global Virtual Teams: Virtual Teams Survey Report - 2016,” RW3 Culture Wizard (2016). Accessed May 1, 2017, at http://cdn. culturewizard.com/PDF/Trends_in_VT_ Report_4-17-2016.pdf.

61 Ibid. 62 Lara Schlenkrich and Christopher Upfold, “A

Guideline for Virtual Team Managers: The Key to Effective Social Interaction and Communica- tion,” Electronic Journal of Information Systems Evaluation 12 (2009): 109–118.

63 Marissa Garff, “The Virtual Reality,” T + D 65 (August 2011): 22.

64 “Five Lessons for Global Virtual Teams,” Yale School of Management (Janu- ary 26, 2016). Accessed May 1, 2017, at http://som.yale.edu/news/2016/01/ five-lessons-global-virtual-teams.

65 Darleen DeRosa, “Hello, Is Anybody Out There? Six Steps to High-Impact V-Meetings,” T + D 65 (August 2011): 28–29.

66 “Leading the Virtual Team,” Associations Now (May 2008): 18.

67 Elliott Masie, “A Global Learning Language,” Chief Learning Officer 11 (January 2012): 10.

68 Bill Leonard, “Managing Virtual Teams,” HR Magazine 56 (June 2011): 38–42.

69 Billie Williamson, “Managing Virtually: First, Get Dressed,” BusinessWeek Online (June 17, 2009): 19.

70 Jeff Miller, “The Touchstones of Successful Global Benefits Outsourcing,” Benefits Quar- terly (2011 Second Quarter): 24–27.

71 David Tobenkin, “Learn the Landscape,” HR Magazine 56 (May 2011): 51–54.

72 Vicki Taylor, “Benefits around the World,” Employee Benefits (February 2006): Special Section, 8–9.

73 Yvette Lee, Lesa Albright, and Ruhal Dooley, “Tele-terminating, Terminating Employees Abroad, Recruiting Diversity,” HR Magazine 55 (June 2010): 31–32.

74 Hashi Syedain, “From Expats to Global Citi- zens,” People Management (January 2012): 22–26.

75 Wikipedia, “Bhopal Disaster.” Accessed Febru- ary 14, 2010, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Bhopal_disaster.

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CHAPTER 14 • GLOBAL HuMAN REsOuRCE MANAGEMENT 417

76 Randall Stram, “Globally, Wellness Programs Lead to Healthier Employees,” Benefits Maga- zine 48 (March 2011): 22–25.

77 V. L., “When You Don’t Get to Make the Rules,” Conference Board Review 46 (January/February 2009): 37.

78 Neil B. Krupp, “Global Compensation Plan- ning—Establishing and Maintaining a Competi- tive Edge in the International Marketplace,” Compensation & Benefits Management 18 (Spring 2002): 54–56.

79 Lesli K. Ligorner and Todd Shengqiang Liao, “Unionization and Collective Bargaining: New Tools for Social Harmony,” China Business Review 37 (November/December 2010): 28–31.

80 Hudson Lockett, “China Labour Unrest Spreads to ‘New Economy’,” Financial Times (February 1, 2017). Accessed March 20, 2017, at www.ft.com.

81 Simon Denyer, “Strikes and Workers’ Protests Multiply in China, Testing Party Authority,” The Washington Post online (February 25, 2016).

Accessed April 15, 2017, at www.washington- post.com.

82 Luming Chen and Samuel Estreicher, “A New Labor Era: Higher Costs and Greater Pressures,” China Business Review 38 (April–June 2011): 26–29.

83 “The Next China,” Economist 396 (July 31, 2010): 48–50.

84 Graziella Sicoli, “Evolving Dynamics in the Process of Business Internationalization,” Global Journal of Business Research 6 (2012): 117–124.

85 “International Small Businesses Need Face- book, Twitter,” Channel Insider (June 23, 2011):  1.

86 U.S. Census Bureau, “A Profile of U.S. Import- ing and Exporting Companies, 2013–2014,” (CB16-47, April 5, 2016). Accessed May 1, 2017, at www.census.gov/foreign-trade/Press- Release/edb/2014/edbrel.pdf.

87 U.S. Small Business Association, “Summary of Performance and Financial Information: Fiscal Year–2015.” Accessed May 1, 2017, at www. sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/SBA-SPFI- Report-2015.pdf.

88 U.S. Small Business Association, “SBA Export Loan Programs.” Accessed May 1, 2017, at www.sba.gov/loans-grants/ see-what-sba-offers/sba-loan-programs/ general-small-business-loans-7a.

89 U.S. Small Business Association, “SBA Export Loan Programs.” Accessed May 1, 2017, at www.sba.gov/loans-grants/see-what- sba-offers/sba-loan-programs/general-small- business-loans-7a/special-types-7a-loans/ sba-export-loan-programs.

90 Jennifer Schramm, “Think Globally,” HR Maga- zine 56 (June 2011): 56.

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418

Achievement tests A test of current knowledge and skills.

Active job seekers Individuals committed to finding another job, whether presently employed or not.

Adverse impact Takes place when an employment decision, practice or policy has a disproportionately negative effect on a protected group. Oftentimes, it may be thought of as unin- tentional discrimination.

Affirmative Action Refers to the expectation and program requirements that companies make a positive effort to recruit, hire, train, and promote employees from groups who are underrepresented in the labor force.

Affirmative action program (AAP) Approach developed by organizations with government contracts to demonstrate that workers are employed in proportion to their representation in the firm’s relevant labor market.

Agency shop Labor agreement provision requiring, as a con- dition of employment, that each non-union member of a bargaining unit pay the union the equivalent of membership dues as a service charge in return for the union acting as the bargaining agent.

Alcoholism Medical disease characterized by uncontrolled and compulsive drinking that interferes with normal living patterns.

AllianceQ Group of Fortune 500 companies, along with more than 3,000 small- and medium-sized companies, that have collaborated to create a pool of job candidates.

Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) Procedure whereby the employee and the company agree ahead of time that any problems will be addressed by an agreed-on means.

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) Central trade union federation in the United States.

Applicant pool Number of qualified applicants recruited for a particular job.

Apprenticeship training Training method that combines class- room instruction with on-the-job training.

Aptitude tests A test of how well a person can learn or acquire skills or abilities.

Arbitration Process in which a dispute is submitted to an impartial third party for a binding decision; an arbitrator basically acts as a judge and jury.

Assessment center Selection technique that requires individu- als to perform activities similar to those they might encoun- ter in an actual job.

Attitude survey Survey that seeks input from employees to deter- mine their feelings about topics such as the work they perform, their supervisor, their work environment, flexibility in the workplace, opportunities for advancement, training and devel- opment opportunities, and the firm’s compensation system.

Authorization card Document indicating that an employee wants to be represented by a labor organization in collective bargaining.

Glossary

Availability forecast Determination of whether the firm will be able to secure employees with the necessary skills, and from what sources.

Baby boomers People born just after World War II through the mid-1960s.

Balance sheet approach Provides expatriates the standard of living they normally enjoy in the United States or the expa- triate’s home country.

Bargaining unit Group of employees, not necessarily union members, recognized by an employer or certified by an administrative agency as appropriate for representation by a labor organization for purposes of collective bargaining.

Base pay The monetary compensation employees earn on a regular basis for performing their jobs. Hourly pay and sal- ary are the main forms of base pay.

Beachhead demands Demands that the union does not expect management to meet when they are first made.

Behavior change Change in job-related behaviors or perfor- mance that can be attributed to training.

Behavior modeling Training and development method that permits a person to learn by copying or replicating behav- iors of others to show managers how to handle various situations.

Behavioral encouragement plans Individual incentive pay plans that reward employees for specific such behavioral accomplishments as good attendance.

Behavioral interview Structured interview where applicants are asked to relate actual incidents from their past relevant to the target job.

Behavioral observation scale (BOS) A specific kind of behav- ioral system for evaluating job performance by illustrating positive incidents (or behaviors) of job performance for vari- ous job dimensions.

Behavioral systems Performance appraisal methods that focus on distinguishing between successful and unsuccessful behaviors.

Behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS) method Perfor- mance appraisal method that combines elements of the tra- ditional rating scale and critical incident methods; various performance levels are shown along a scale with each described in terms of an employee’s specific job behavior.

Benchmarking Process of monitoring and measuring a firm’s internal processes, such as operations, and then compar- ing the data with information from companies that excel in those areas.

Bias errors Evaluation errors that occur when the rater eval- uates the employee based on a personal negative or posi- tive opinion of the employee rather than on the employee’s actual performance.

Blended training The use of multiple training methods to deliver training and development.

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GLOSSARY 419

Checkoff of dues Agreement by which a company agrees to withhold union dues from members’ paychecks and to for- ward the money directly to the union.

Classification method Job evaluation method in which classes or grades are defined to describe a group of jobs.

Clawback policy Allows the company to recover compensa- tion if subsequent review indicates that payments were not calculated accurately or performance goals were not met.

Cliff vesting schedule Employers must grant employees 100 percent vesting after no more than three service years. That is, after three years of participation in the retirement plan, an employee has the right to receive all the accrued employer’s contributions made on the employee’s behalf.

Closed shop Arrangement making union membership a pre- requisite for employment.

Coaching Often considered a responsibility of the immediate boss, who provides assistance much like a mentor, but the primary focus is about performance.

Code of ethics Establishes the rules that the organization lives by. The code of ethics helps employees know what to do when there is not a rule for something.

Cognitive ability tests Tests that determine general reasoning ability, memory, vocabulary, verbal fluency, and numerical ability.

Coinsurance The percentage of covered expenses paid by the insured. Most fee-for-service plans stipulate 20 percent coinsurance. This means that the insured will pay 20 percent of covered expenses, whereas the insurance company pays the remaining 80 percent.

Collective bargaining The process in which labor union lead- ership enters into good faith negotiations with management representatives over terms of employment such as work hours, pay, and job security.

Collective bargaining agreements Written documents that describe the terms of employment reached between manage- ment and unions.

Committee on Political Education (COPE) Political arm of the AFL-CIO.

Company stock The total equity or worth of the company.

Company stock shares Equity segments of equal value, which increase with the number of stock shares held.

Comparison systems A type of performance appraisal method; requires that raters (e.g., supervisors) evaluate a given employee’s performance against other employees’ perfor- mance attainments. Employees are ranked from the best per- former to the poorest performer.

Compensation policy Policies that provide general guidelines for making compensation decisions.

Compensation survey A means of obtaining data regarding what other firms are paying for specific jobs or job classes within a given labor market.

Competencies An individual’s capability to orchestrate and apply combinations of knowledge, skills, and abilities consistently

Board interview An interview approach in which several of the firm’s representatives interview a candidate at the same time.

Bottom-up forecast Forecasting method in which each suc- cessive level in the organization, starting with the lowest, forecasts its requirements, ultimately providing an aggregate forecast of employees needed.

Boycott Agreement by union members to refuse to use or buy the firm’s products.

Broadbanding Compensation technique that collapses many pay grades (salary grades) into a few wide bands to improve organizational effectiveness.

Burnout Incapacitating condition in which individuals lose a sense of the basic purpose and fulfillment of their work.

Business games Training and development method that per- mits participants to assume roles such as president, con- troller, or marketing vice-president of two or more similar hypothetical organizations and compete against each other by manipulating selected factors in a particular business situation.

Capital The factors that enable companies to generate income, higher company stock prices, economic value, strong posi- tive brand identity, and reputation. There is a variety of capital that companies use to create value, including finan- cial capital (cash) and capital equipment (state-of-the-art robotics used in manufacturing).

Card check Organizing approach by labor in which employees sign a non-secret card of support if they want unionization, and if 50 percent of the workforce plus one worker sign a card, the union is formed.

Career General course that a person chooses to pursue through- out his or her working life.

Career development Formal approach used by the organiza- tion to ensure that people with the proper qualifications and experiences are available when needed.

Career path A flexible line of movement through which a per- son may travel during his or her work life.

Career planning Ongoing process whereby an individual sets career goals and identifies the means to achieve them.

Caregiver (family responsibility) discrimination Discrimina- tion against employees based on their obligations to care for family members.

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) Common repetitive stress injury caused by pressure on the median nerve that occurs as a result of a narrowing of the passageway that houses the nerve.

Case study Training and development method in which trainees are expected to study the information provided in the case and make decisions based on it.

Cash balance plan Retirement plan with elements of both defined benefit and defined contribution plans.

Change to Win Coalition Union federation consisting of seven unions that broke from the AFL-CIO and formally launched a rival labor federation representing about 6 million workers from seven labor unions.

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420 GLOSSARY

Criterion-related validity Test validation method that com- pares the scores on selection tests to some aspect of job performance determined, for example, by performance appraisal.

Critical incident technique (CIT) Performance appraisal method that requires keeping written records of highly favorable and unfavorable employee work actions.

Cross-training Type of training for educating team members about the other members’ jobs so that they may perform them when a team member is absent, is assigned to another job in the company, or has left the company altogether.

Cultural values The norms for behaviors and beliefs.

Customized benefit plan Benefit plan that permits employees to make yearly selections to largely determine their benefit package by choosing between taxable cash and numerous benefits.

Decertification Reverse of the process that employees must follow to be recognized as an official bargaining unit.

Defined benefit plan Retirement plan that provides the par- ticipant with a fixed benefit upon retirement.

Defined contribution plan Retirement plan that permits employ- ees to contribute to their accounts based on a chosen percent- age of annual pay. At their discretion, the company makes matching contributions.

Demotion Process of moving a worker to a lower level of duties and responsibilities, which typically involves a reduc- tion in pay.

Development Learning that goes beyond today’s job and has a more long-term focus.

Direct financial compensation (monetary compensation) Pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salaries, com- missions, and bonuses.

Disciplinary action Invoking a penalty against an employee who fails to meet established standards.

Disciplinary action without punishment Process in which a worker is given time off with pay to think about whether he or she wants to follow the rules and continue working for the company.

Discipline State of employee self-control and orderly conduct that indicates the extent of genuine teamwork within an organization.

Discretionary benefits Benefit payments made as a result of unilateral management decisions in nonunion firms and from labor/management negotiations in unionized firms.

Disparate treatment Occurs when an employer treats some employees less favorably than others because of race, reli- gion, sex, national origin, or age. It may be thought of as intentional discrimination.

Diversity Any perceived difference among people: age, race, religion, functional specialty, profession, sexual orientation, geographic origin, lifestyle, tenure with the organization or position, and any other perceived difference.

Diversity management Ensuring that factors are in place to provide for and encourage the continued development of a

over time to perform work successfully in the required work situations.

Competency modeling All of the competencies necessary for success in a group of jobs that are set within an industry context.

Competency-based pay Compensation plan that rewards employees for the capabilities they attain.

Compressed workweek Any arrangement of work hours that permits employees to fulfill their work obligation in fewer days than the typical five-day workweek.

Construct validity Test validation method that determines whether a test measures certain constructs, or traits, that job analysis finds to be important in performing a job.

Consumer-driven health care plans Refers to the objective of helping companies maintain control over costs, while also enabling employees to make greater choices about health care.

Content validity Test validation method whereby a person performs certain tasks that are required by the job or com- pletes a paper-and-pencil test that measures relevant job knowledge.

Contingent workers Described as the “disposable American workforce” by a former Secretary of Labor, have a nontradi- tional relationship with the worksite employer, and work as part-timers, temporaries, or independent contractors.

Contrast errors A rating error in which a rater (e.g., a supervi- sor) compares an employee to other employees rather than to specific explicit performance standards.

Copayments The fixed amounts that vary by the service. For example, the copayment to visit the primary care physician tends to be lowest (e.g., $20) and emergency room visits are usually most expensive (e.g., $250).

Corporate career Web sites Job sites accessible from a com- pany home page that list available company positions and provide a way for applicants to apply for specific jobs.

Corporate culture System of shared values, beliefs, and habits within an organization that interacts with the formal struc- ture to produce behavioral norms.

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) Implied, enforced, or felt obligation of managers, acting in their official capac- ity, to serve or protect the interests of groups other than themselves.

Corporate sustainability Concerns with possible future impact of an organization on society, including social welfare, the economy, and the environment.

Corporate university Training and development delivery sys- tem provided under the umbrella of the organization.

Cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) Escalator clause in a labor agreement that automatically increases wages as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics cost-of-living index rises.

Country’s culture Set of values, symbols, beliefs, languages, and norms that guide human behavior within the country.

Craft union Bargaining unit, such as the Carpenters and Join- ers Union, which is typically composed of members of a trade or skill in a specific locality.

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GLOSSARY 421

Exempt employees Employees categorized as executive, administrative, professional, or outside salespersons.

Exit interview Means of revealing the real reasons employees leave their jobs; it is conducted before an employee departs the company and provides information on how to correct the causes of discontent and reduce turnover.

Expatriate Employee who is not a citizen of the country in which the firm operations are located but is a citizen of the country in which the organization is headquartered.

Exporting Selling abroad, either directly or indirectly, by retaining foreign agents and distributors.

Factor comparison method Job evaluation method that assumes there are five universal factors consisting of mental require- ments, skills, physical requirements, responsibilities, and working conditions; the evaluator makes decisions on these factors independently.

Fee-for-service plans Provide protection against health care expenses in the form of a cash benefit paid to the insured or directly to the health care provider after the employee has received health care services. These plans pay benefits on a reimbursement basis. Three types of eligible health expenses are hospital expenses, surgical expenses, and physician charges.

Final-offer arbitration An arbitration procedure used in the public sector whereby the arbitrator selects one party’s offer either as a package or issue-by-issue selection.

First-impression effect An initial favorable or unfavorable judgment about an employee’s which is ignored or distorted.

Flextime Practice of permitting employees to choose their own working hours, within certain limitations.

Flooding the community Process of the union inundating communities with organizers to target a business in an orga- nizing attempt.

Forced distribution method Performance appraisal method in which the rater is required to assign individuals in a work group to a limited number of categories, like a normal fre- quency distribution.

Formal assessment The use of established external approaches to facilitate evaluation of an issue at hand.

401(k) plan Defined contribution plan in which employees may defer income up to a maximum amount allowed.

Franchising Option whereby the parent company grants another firm the right to do business in a prescribed manner.

Free agents People who take charge of all or part of their careers by being their own bosses or by working for others in ways that fit their needs or wants.

Gain sharing Plans that describe group incentive systems that reward employees with an incentive payment based on improved company performance for increased productivity, increased customer satisfaction, lower costs, or better safety records.

General duty clause As used by OSHA, employers are required to furnish, to each employee, a place of employ- ment that is free from recognizable hazards that are causing,

diverse workforce by melding actual and perceived differ- ences among workers to achieve maximum productivity.

Downsizing Reverse of a company growing; it suggests a one- time change in the organization and the number of people employed (also known as restructuring or rightsizing).

Dual-career family A situation in which both spouses or part- ners have jobs and family responsibilities.

Dual-career path Career path that recognizes that technical specialists can and should be allowed to contribute their expertise to a company without having to become managers.

E-learning Training and development method for online instruction using technology-based methods such as DVDs, company intranets, and the Internet.

Employee assistance program (EAP) Comprehensive approach that many organizations have taken to deal with burnout, alcohol and drug abuse, and other emotional disturbances.

Employee referral An employee of the company recommends a friend or associate as a possible member of the company; this continues to be the way that top performers are identified.

Employee requisition Document that specifies job title, department, the date the employee is needed for work, and other details.

Employee stock plans The right to purchase shares of com- pany stock.

Employer branding Firm’s corporate image or culture created to attract and retain the type of employees the firm is seeking.

Employment at will Unwritten contract created when an employee agrees to work for an employer but no agreement exists as to how long the parties expect the employment to last.

Employment interview Goal-oriented conversation in which an interviewer and an applicant exchange information.

Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) The set of laws and policies that requires all individuals’ rights to equal opportu- nity in the workplace, regardless of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, or disability.

Ergonomics Process of designing the workplace to support the capabilities of people and job or task demands.

Errors of central tendency Error that occurs when raters (e.g., supervisors) judge all employees as average or close to average.

Ethics Discipline dealing with what is good and bad, or right and wrong, or with moral duty and obligation.

Ethnocentric staffing Staffing approach in which compa- nies primarily hire expatriates to staff higher-level foreign positions.

Event recruiting Recruiters going to events being attended by individuals the company is seeking.

Executive A top-level manager who reports directly to a cor- poration’s CEO or to the head of a major division.

Executive order (EO) Directive issued by the president that has the force and effect of law enacted by Congress as it applies to federal agencies and federal contractors.

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422 GLOSSARY

feature or incident to all aspects of employee performance, resulting in a lower rating.

Host-country national (HCN) Employee who is a citizen of the country where the subsidiary is located.

Hot stove rule An approach to disciplinary action that have four consequences which are analogous to touching a hot stove.

Hourly pay (wage) One type of base pay. Employees earn hourly pay for each hour worked.

HR outsourcing (HRO) Process of hiring external HR pro- fessionals to do the HR work that was previously done internally.

Human capital As defined by economists, refers to sets of collective skills, knowledge, and ability that employees can apply to create economic value for their employers.

Human capital theory A theory premised on the idea that employees’ knowledge and skills generate productive capital known as human capital. Employees can develop knowledge and skills from formal education or on-the-job experiences.

Human resource development (HRD) Major HRM function consisting not only of training and development, but also of individual career planning and development activities, orga- nization development, and performance management and appraisal.

Human resource ethics Application of ethical principles to HR relationships and activities.

Human resource information system (HRIS) Any organized approach for obtaining relevant and timely information on which to base HR decisions.

Human resource management (HRM) Utilization of individu- als to achieve organizational objectives.

Human resource manager or human resource management professional Individual who normally acts in an advisory or staff capacity, working with other managers to help them deal with HR matters.

Human resource planning Systematic process of matching the internal and external supply of people with job openings anticipated in the organization over a specified period.

Illegal discriminatory bias A bias error for which a supervisor rates members of his or her race, gender, nationality, or reli- gion more favorably than members of other classes.

Interindustry wage or compensation differentials Pattern of pay and benefits associated with characteristics of industries.

In-basket training Training and development method in which the participant is asked to establish priorities for and then handle a number of business papers, e-mail messages, mem- oranda, reports, and telephone messages that would typi- cally cross a manager’s desk.

Incentive pay Compensation, other than base wages or sala- ries, that fluctuates according to employees’ attainment of some standard (e.g., a pre-established formula, individual or group goals, or company earnings).

Indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) Refers to extrinsic compensation other than hourly wages or annual salary. This form of compensation includes a wide variety of rewards of monetary value such as such as paid vacation and medical care.

or likely to cause, death or serious physical harm to the employee.

General Schedule Classification of federal government jobs into 15 classifications (GS-1 through GS-15), based on such factors as skill, education, and experience levels. In addi- tion, jobs that require high levels of specialized education (e.g., a physicist), significantly influence public policy (e.g., law judges), or require executive decision making are classi- fied in three additional categories: Senior Level (SL), Scien- tific & Professional (SP) positions, and the Senior Executive Service (SES).

Generalist A person who may be an executive and performs tasks in a variety of HR-related areas.

Generation X Label affixed to the 40 million American work- ers born between the mid-1960s and late 1970s.

Generation Y Comprises people born between the late 1970s and mid-1990s.

Generation Z or Digital Natives Internet-assimilated children born between 1995 and 2009.

Genetic tests Tests given to identify predisposition to inher- ited diseases, including cancer, heart disease, neurological disorders, and congenital diseases.

Geocentric staffing Staffing approach that uses a worldwide integrated business strategy.

Glass ceiling Invisible barrier in organizations that impedes women and minorities from career advancement.

Global corporation Organization that has corporate units in a number of countries that are integrated to operate as one organization worldwide.

Golden parachute contract Perk that protects executives if another company acquires their firm or if the executive is forced to leave the firm for other reasons.

Graphoanalysis Use of handwriting analysis as a selection factor.

Grievance Employee’s dissatisfaction or feeling of personal injustice relating to his or her employment.

Grievance procedure A formal, systematic process that per- mits employees to express complaints without jeopardizing their jobs.

Group interview Meeting in which several job applicants inter- act in the presence of one or more company representatives.

Halo error (positive halo error) Evaluation error that occurs when a manager generalizes one positive performance fea- ture or incident to all aspects of employee performance, resulting in a higher rating.

Health Employees’ freedom from physical or emotional illness.

Health savings accounts (HSAs) Tax-free health spending and savings accounts available to individuals and families who have qualified high-deductible health insurance policies as determined by IRS regulation.

High-deductible health insurance plans (HDHPs) Plans that require substantially higher deductibles compared to man- aged care plans and traditional fee-for-service plans.

Horn error (negative halo error) Evaluation error that occurs when a manager generalizes one negative performance

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GLOSSARY 423

Job specification A document that outlines the minimum acceptable qualifications a person should possess to perform a particular job.

Jobs Network of employment Web sites where any company can list job openings for free.

Just cause A standard for determining whether to terminate an employee and the standard is based on whether an employee violated company policy or work rules and the severity of the violation.

Just-in-time training (on-demand training) Training provided anytime, anywhere in the world when it is needed.

Keyword résumé Résumé that contains an adequate descrip- tion of the job seeker’s characteristics and industry-specific experience presented in keyword terms to accommodate the computer search process.

Keywords Words or phrases that are used to search databases for résumés that match.

Labor market Potential employees located within the geo- graphic area from which employees are recruited.

Labor unions Organizations that exist to represent the interests of employees in the workplace and to ensure fair treatment when conflicts arise between one or more employee and management.

Lateral skill path Career path that allows for lateral moves within the firm, taken to permit an employee to become revi- talized and find new challenges.

Learning The extent to which an employee understands and retains principles, facts, and techniques.

Learning organization Firm that recognizes the critical impor- tance of continuous performance-related training and devel- opment and takes appropriate action.

Leniency error Giving an undeserved high performance appraisal rating to an employee.

Licensing Arrangement whereby an organization grants a for- eign firm the right to use intellectual properties such as pat- ents, copyrights, manufacturing processes, or trade names for a specific period of time.

Likes and dislikes survey Procedure that helps individuals in recognizing restrictions they place on themselves.

Line managers Individuals directly involved in accomplishing the primary purpose of the organization.

Local union Basic element in the structure of the U.S. labor movement.

Lockout Management keeps employees out of the workplace and runs the operation with management personnel or replacements.

Maintenance of membership Employees who are members of the union at the time the labor agreement is signed or who later voluntarily join must continue their memberships until the termination of the agreement as a condition of employment.

Managed care plans Health care delivery that emphasizes cost control by limiting an employee’s choice of doctors and hospitals. These plans also provide protection against health care expenses in the form of prepayment to health care providers.

Industrial union Bargaining unit that generally consists of all the workers in a particular plant or group of plants.

Interest arbitration Arbitration that involves disputes over the terms of proposed collective bargaining agreements.

Interindustry wage or compensation differentials Pattern of pay and benefits associated with characteristics of industries.

Internal employee relations Those HR management activi- ties associated with the movement of employees within the organization.

Internet recruiter Person whose primary responsibility is to use the Internet in the recruitment process (also called cyber recruiter).

Internship Special form of recruitment that involves placing a student in a temporary job with no obligation either by the company to hire the student permanently or by the stu- dent to accept a permanent position with the firm following graduation.

Job Group of tasks that must be performed for an organization to achieve its goals.

Job analysis Systematic process of determining the skills, duties, and knowledge required for performing jobs in an organization.

Job bidding Procedure that permits employees who believe that they possess the required qualifications to apply for a posted position.

Job description Document that provides information regard- ing the essential tasks, duties, and responsibilities of a job.

Job design Process of determining the specific tasks to be per- formed, the methods used in performing these tasks, and how the job relates to other work in an organization.

Job enlargement Increasing the number of tasks a worker per- forms, with all of the tasks at the same level of responsibility.

Job enrichment Changes in the content and level of responsibil- ity of a job so as to provide greater challenges to the worker.

Job evaluation Process that determines the relative value of one job in relation to another.

Job fair Recruiting method engaged in by a single employer or group of employers to attract a large number of applicants to one location for interviews.

Job hazard analysis (JHA) Multi-step process designed to study and analyze a task or job and then break down that task into steps that provide a means of eliminating associ- ated hazards.

Job-based pay Employee compensation for jobs employees currently perform.

Job-knowledge tests Tests designed to measure a candidate’s knowledge of the duties of the job for which he or she is applying.

Job posting Procedure for informing employees that job open- ings exist.

Job rotation (cross-training) Moves employees from one job to another to broaden their experience.

Job sharing Two part-time people split the duties of one job in some agreed-on manner and are paid according to their contributions.

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424 GLOSSARY

Negative halo effect See horn error.

Negligent hiring Liability a company incurs when it fails to conduct a reasonable investigation of an applicant’s back- ground, and then assigns a potentially dangerous person to a position where he or she can inflict harm.

Negligent retention Liability an employer may incur when a company keeps persons on the payroll whose records indi- cate strong potential for wrongdoing and fails to take steps to defuse a possible violent situation.

Network career path Method of career progression that con- tains both a vertical sequence of jobs and a series of horizon- tal opportunities.

Niche sites Web sites that cater to highly specialized job mar- kets such as a particular profession, industry, education, location, or any combination of these specialties.

Nominal hourly compensation The face value of a dollar.

Nonexempt employees Employees not categorized as execu- tive, administrative, professional, or outside salespersons, and required to receive overtime pay for work beyond the completion of standard work hours.

Nonfinancial compensation Derives from within an employee’s self. For example, nonfinancial compensation can come from the satisfaction that a person receives from the job itself or from the psychological or environment in which the person works.

Nonqualified plans Welfare and pension plans that do not meet at least one requirement set forth by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), disal- lowing favorable tax treatment for employee and employer contributions.

Norm Frame of reference for comparing an applicant’s perfor- mance with that of others.

Objectivity Condition that is achieved when everyone scoring a given test obtains the same results.

Offboarding Facilitates employee departure from the com- pany by assisting the completion of exit tasks, including exit interviews, forms completion, the return of company prop- erty, and ensuring that employees receive the appropriate extended benefits.

Ombudsperson Complaint officer with access to top manage- ment who hears employee complaints, investigates, and rec- ommends appropriate action.

Online higher education Educational opportunities includ- ing degree and training programs that are delivered, either entirely or partially, via the Internet.

On-the-job-training (OJT) An informal training and develop- ment method that permits an employee to learn job tasks by performing them.

Open shop Employment on equal terms to union members and non-members alike.

Organization development (OD) Planned and systematic attempts to change the organization, typically to a more behavioral environment.

Organizational analysis Training needs assessment activity, which focuses on the firm’s strategic mission, goals, and

Management development Consists of all learning experi- ences provided by an organization resulting in upgrading skills and knowledge required in current and future manage- rial positions.

Management incentive plans Bonuses to managers who meet or exceed objectives based on sales, profit, production, or other measures for their division, department, or unit.

Management-by-objectives (MBO) Performance appraisal technique. Supervisors and employees determine objectives for employees to meet during the rating period and employ- ees appraise how well they have achieved their objectives. MBO is used mainly for managerial and professional employees and typically evaluates employees’ progress toward strategic planning objectives.

Mandatory bargaining issues Bargaining issues that fall within the definition of wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.

Market lag policies Pay policy that distinguishes companies from the competition by compensating employees less than most competitors. Lagging the market indicates that market levels fall below the market match line.

Market lead policies Pay policy that distinguishes companies from the competition by compensating employees more highly than most competitors. Leading the market denotes market levels above the market match line.

Market match policies Average pay that most employers pro- vide for a similar job in a particular area or industry.

Matching contribution Money the employer deposits into an employee’s defined contribution account contingent on the employee contributing first.

Mediation Neutral third party enters the negotiations and attempts to facilitate a resolution to a labor dispute when a bargaining impasse has occurred.

Mentoring Approach to advising, coaching, and nurturing for creating a practical relationship to enhance individual career, personal, and professional growth and development.

Merit bonuses Lump sum monetary awards based on employ- ees’ past job performances. Employees do not continue to receive nonrecurring merit increases every year. Employees must instead earn them each time.

Merit pay Pay increase added to employees’ base pay based on their level of performance.

Mission Unit’s continuing purpose, or reason for being.

Multinational corporation (MNC) Firm that is based in one coun- try (the parent or home country) and produces goods or pro- vides services in one or more foreign countries (host countries).

Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) Conditions that affect the body’s muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, and nerves.

NACElink Network An alliance among the National Asso- ciation of Colleges and Employers, DirectEmployers Association, and Symplicity Corporation; a national recruit- ing network and suite of Web-based recruiting and career services automation tools serving the needs of colleges, employers, and job candidates.

National union Organization composed of local unions, which it charters.

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GLOSSARY 425

Person analysis A training needs assessment activity that focuses on finding answers to questions such as, “Who needs to be trained? What do they need to do differently from what they’re doing today? What kind of knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) do employees need?”

Personality Individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving.

Personality tests Self-reported measures of traits, tempera- ments, or dispositions.

Person-focused pay Compensation for developing the flex- ibility, knowledge, and skills to perform a number of jobs effectively.

Phased retirement Any arrangement that allows people to move from full-time work to retirement in steps.

Piecework Incentive pay plan in which employees are paid for each unit they produce.

Point method Job evaluation method where the raters assign numerical values to specific job factors, such as knowledge required, and the sum of these values provides a quantitative assessment of a job’s relative worth.

Polycentric staffing Staffing approach in which host-country nationals are used throughout the organization, from top to bottom.

Position Collection of tasks and responsibilities performed by one person.

Positive halo effect See halo error.

Postexit questionnaire Questionnaire sent to former employ- ees several weeks after they leave the organization to deter- mine the real reason they left.

Preliminary screening In employee selection, a review to eliminate those who obviously do not meet the position’s requirements.

Prepaid medical services HMOs are sometimes described as providing prepaid medical services because fixed periodic enrollment fees cover HMO members for all medically nec- essary services only if the services are delivered or approved by the HMO.

Primary care physicians Designated by HMOs to determine whether patients require the care of a medical specialist. This functions to control costs by reducing the number of medically unnecessary visits to expensive specialists.

Profession Vocation characterized by the existence of a com- mon body of knowledge and a procedure for certifying members.

Professional employer organization (PEO) A company that leases employees to other businesses.

Profit sharing Plans that pay a portion of company profits to employees, separate from base pay, cost-of-living adjust- ments, or permanent merit pay increases. These plans award cash to employees, typically on a quarterly or annual basis.

Progressive disciplinary action Approach to disciplinary action designed to ensure that the minimum penalty appro- priate to the offense is imposed.

Prohibited bargaining issues Issues that are statutorily out- lawed from collective bargaining.

corporate plans are studied, along with the results of strate- gic HR planning.

Organizational fit Management’s perception of the degree to which the prospective employee will fit in with the firm’s culture or value system.

Organizational results Typically, training outcomes such as enhanced productivity, lower costs, and higher product or service quality.

Orientation Initial training and development effort for new employees that informs them about the company, the job, and the work group.

Outplacement A procedure whereby laid-off employees are given assistance in finding employment elsewhere.

Outsourcing Process of hiring an external provider to do the work that was previously done internally.

Out-of-pocket maximum The maximum amount an employee pays for health care during a calendar or plan year.

Paid time off (PTO) banks Means of dealing with the problem of unscheduled absences by providing a certain number of days each year that employees can use for any purpose.

Paired comparisons Supervisors compare each employee to every other employee, identifying the better performer in each pair.

Passive job seekers Potential job candidates, who are typi- cally employed, satisfied with their employer, and content in their current role but if the right opportunity came along, they might like to learn more.

Pay compression Occurs whenever a company’s pay spread between newly hired or less qualified employees, and more qualified job incumbents is small. In extreme cases, less experienced employees are paid as much as or more than employees who have been with the organization a long time because of a gradual increase in starting salaries and limited salary adjustments for long-term employees.

Pay grade Grouping of similar jobs to simplify pricing jobs.

Pay mix compensation policies Combination of direct (core compensation) and indirect financial compensation (employee benefits) components that make up an employee’s total com- pensation package.

Pay range Minimum and maximum pay rate with enough vari- ance between the two to allow for a significant pay difference.

Pay structures Pay rate differences for jobs of unequal worth and the framework for recognizing differences in employee contributions.

Performance appraisal (PA) Formal system of review and evaluation of individual or team task performance.

Performance management (PM) Goal-oriented process directed toward ensuring that organizational processes are in place to maximize the productivity of employees, teams, and ulti- mately, the organization.

Permissive bargaining issues Issues may be raised, but nei- ther side may insist that they be bargained over.

Perquisites (perks) Special benefits provided by a firm to a small group of key executives and designed to give the exec- utives something extra.

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426 GLOSSARY

Requirements forecast Determining the number, skill, and location of employees the organization will need at future dates in order to meet its goals.

Results-based performance appraisal Performance appraisal method in which the manager and subordinate jointly agree on objectives for the next appraisal period; in the past, a form of management by objectives.

Résumé Goal-directed summary of a person’s experience, edu- cation, and training developed for use in the selection process.

Reverse mentoring A process in which older employees learn from younger ones.

Right-to-work laws Laws that prohibit management and unions from entering into agreements requiring union membership as a condition of employment.

Rights arbitration Arbitration involving disputes over the inter- pretation and application of the various provisions of an exist- ing contract.

Role-playing Training and development method in which participants are required to respond to specific problems they may encounter in their jobs by acting out real-world situations.

Sabbaticals Temporary leaves of absence from an organiza- tion, usually at reduced pay.

Safety Protection of employees from injuries caused by work- related accidents.

Salary One type of base pay. Employees earn salaries for per- forming their jobs, regardless of the actual number of hours worked. Companies generally measure salary on an annual basis.

Say on pay Provision that gives shareholders in all but the small- est companies an advisory vote on executive pay.

Scanlon plan Gain sharing plan that provides a financial reward to employees for savings in labor costs resulting from their suggestions.

Secondary boycott Union attempt to encourage third parties (such as suppliers and customers) to stop doing business with a firm; declared illegal by the Taft-Hartley Act.

Selection Process of choosing from a group of applicants the indi- vidual best suited for a particular position and the organization.

Self-assessment Process of learning about oneself.

Seniority Length of time an employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job.

Seniority pay Pay program in which pay increases are based on length of service.

Severance packages Refer to pay and benefits awarded to employees for a period of time after they leave the company. Oftentimes, buyouts include bonus payments that vary in amount based on salary and years of service.

Severance pay Compensation designed to assist laid-off employ- ees as they search for new employment.

Shared service center (SSC) A center that takes routine, trans- action-based activities dispersed throughout the organiza- tion and consolidates them in one place (also known as a center of expertise).

Shareholders Owners of a corporation.

Promotion Movement of a person to a higher-level position in an organization.

Promotion from within (PFW) Policy of filling vacancies above entry-level positions with current employees.

Public awareness campaigns Labor maneuvers that do not coincide with a strike or organizing campaign to pressure an employer for better wages, benefits, and the like.

Qualified plans Welfare and pension plans that meet various requirements set forth by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974; these plans entitle employees and employers to favorable tax treatment by deducting the con- tributions from taxable income. Qualified plans do not dis- proportionately favor highly compensated employees.

Quality circles Groups of employees who voluntarily meet regularly with their supervisors to discuss problems, inves- tigate causes, recommend solutions, and take corrective action when authorized to do so.

Rating errors In performance appraisals, differences between human judgment processes versus objective, accurate assessments uncolored by bias, prejudice, or other subjec- tive, extraneous influences.

Reactions Training evaluation criterion focused on the extent to which trainees liked the training program related to its usefulness, and quality of conduct.

Real hourly compensation Measure of the purchasing power of a dollar.

Realistic job preview (RJP) Method of conveying both positive and negative job information to the applicant in an unbiased manner.

Recruitment Process of attracting individuals on a timely basis, in sufficient numbers, and with appropriate qualifica- tions to apply for jobs with an organization.

Recruitment methods Specific means used to attract potential employees to the firm.

Recruitment sources Where qualified candidates are located.

Reengineering Fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical, contemporary measures of performance such as cost, quality, service, and speed.

Reference checks Validations from individuals who know the applicant that provide additional insight into the informa- tion furnished by the applicant and allow verification of its accuracy.

Referral plans Individual incentive pay plans for rewarding the referral of new customers or recruiting successful job applicants.

Regiocentric staffing Staffing approach that is similar to the polycentric staffing approach, but regional groups of sub- sidiaries reflecting the organization’s strategy and structure work as a unit.

Reliability Extent to which a selection test provides consistent results.

Relocation benefits Company-paid shipment of household goods and temporary living expenses, covering all or a por- tion of the real estate costs associated with buying a new home and selling the previously occupied home.

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GLOSSARY 427

Succession planning Process of ensuring that qualified per- sons are available to assume key managerial positions once the positions are vacant.

Survey feedback Organization development method of bas- ing change efforts on the systematic collection and mea- surement of subordinate’s attitudes through anonymous questionnaires.

Task analysis A training needs assessment activity, which focuses on the tasks required to achieve the firm’s purposes.

Team building Conscious effort to develop effective work groups and cooperative skills throughout the organization.

Team coordination training Team training focused on educat- ing team members how to orchestrate the individual work that they do to complete the task.

Team training Training focused on teaching knowledge and skills to individuals who are expected to work collectively toward meeting a common objective.

Telecommuting Work arrangement whereby employees, called “teleworkers” or “telecommuters,” are able to remain at home (or otherwise away from the office) and perform their work using computers and other electronic devices that connect them with their offices.

Term life insurance Protection for providing monetary pay- ments to an employee’s beneficiaries upon the employee’s death, and offered only during a limited period based on a specified number of years or maximum age.

Termination Most severe penalty that an organization can impose on an employee.

Third-country national (TCN) Citizen of one country, working in a second country, and employed by an organization head- quartered in a third country.

360-degree feedback evaluation method Popular perfor- mance appraisal method that involves evaluation input from multiple levels within the firm as well as external sources.

Total compensation Represents both the intrinsic and extrin- sic rewards employees receive for performing their jobs.

Traditional career path Employee progresses vertically upward in the organization from one specific job to the next.

Training Activities designed to provide learners with the knowledge and skills needed for their present jobs.

Training and development (T&D) Heart of a continuous effort designed to improve employee competency and organiza- tional performance.

Training and development needs assessment Helps com- panies determine whether training is necessary. It may be determined by conducting analyses on three levels, which include organization, task, and person.

Trait systems Type of performance appraisal method, requir- ing raters (e.g., supervisors or customers) to evaluate each employee’s traits or characteristics (e.g., quality of work and leadership).

Transfer Lateral movement of a worker within an organization.

Transfer of training Training evaluation method focusing on the extent to which an employee generalizes knowledge and skill learned in training to the work place, as well as

Similar-to-me effect The tendency on the part of raters to judge favorably employees whom they perceive as like themselves.

Simulators Training and development delivery system comprised of devices or programs that replicate actual job demands.

Situational interview Gives interviewers better insight into how candidates would perform in the work environment by creating hypothetical situations candidates would be likely to encounter on the job and asking them how they would handle them.

6-year graduated schedule Allows workers to become 20 percent vested after two years and to vest at a rate of 20 percent each year thereafter until they are 100 percent vested after six years of service.

Skill-based pay System that compensates employees for their job-related skills and knowledge, not for their job titles.

Social audit Systematic assessment of a company’s activities in terms of its social impact.

Specialist Individual who may be an HR executive, an HR man- ager, or a non-manager, and who is typically concerned with only one of the five functional areas of HR management.

Spillover effect Non-union companies’ offer of similar com- pensation unionized companies with the goal of is reduc- ing the likelihood that nonunion workforces will seek union representation.

Spot bonus Relatively small monetary gift provided employ- ees for outstanding work or effort during a reasonably short period of time.

Staffing Process through which an organization ensures that it always has the proper number of employees with the appro- priate skills in the right jobs, at the right time, to achieve organizational objectives.

Standardization Uniformity of the procedures and conditions related to administering tests.

Stock options Incentive plan in which employees can buy a specified amount of stock in their company in the future at or below the current market price.

Strategic planning Process by which top management deter- mines overall organizational purposes and objectives and how they are achieved.

Strength/weakness balance sheet A self-evaluation pro- cedure, developed originally by Benjamin Franklin, that assists people in becoming aware of their strengths and weaknesses.

Stress Body’s non-specific reaction to any demand made on it.

Stress interview Form of interview in which the interviewer intentionally creates anxiety.

Strictness errors Being unduly critical of an employee’s work performance.

Strike Action by union members who refuse to work in order to exert pressure on management in negotiations.

Structured interview Interview in which the interviewer asks each applicant for a particular job the same series of job- related questions.

Substance abuse Use of illegal substances or the misuse of controlled substances such as alcohol and drugs.

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428 GLOSSARY

Vesting An employee’s acquired non-forfeitable rights to pen- sion benefits.

Virtual job fair Online recruiting method engaged in by a sin- gle employer or group of employers to attract a large num- ber of applicants.

Volunteerism Time allotted to support a meaningful cause.

Wage See hourly pay.

Wage curve Fitting of plotted points to create a smooth pro- gression between pay grades (also known as the pay curve).

Wellness programs Designed to promote the mental and phys- ical well-being of employees and family members.

Whole life insurance A type of life insurance that provides protection to employees’ beneficiaries during employees’ employment and into the retirement years.

Workers’ compensation Provides a degree of financial protec- tion for employees who incur expenses resulting from job- related accidents or illnesses.

Work standards method Performance appraisal method that compares each employee’s performance to a predetermined standard or expected level of output.

Workplace bullying Acts of continual hostile conduct that deliberately hurt another person emotionally, verbally, or physically.

Workplace violence Physical assault, threatening behavior, ver- bal abuse, hostility, or harassment directed toward employees at work or on duty.

Work-sample tests Tests that require an applicant to perform a task or set of tasks representative of the job.

Zero-base forecast Forecasting method that uses the organiza- tion’s current level of employment as the starting point for determining future staffing needs.

maintains the level of skill proficiency or knowledge learned in training.

Two-tier wage system A wage structure where newly hired workers are paid less than current employees for performing the same or similar jobs.

Unemployment insurance Provides workers whose jobs have been terminated through no fault of their own monetary pay- ments for up to 26 weeks or until they find a new job.

Uniform Guidelines Provide a single set of principles that were designed to assist employers, labor organizations, employment agencies, and licensing and certification boards in complying with federal prohibitions against employment practices that discriminate on the basis of race, color, reli- gion, sex, and national origin.

Union Consists of employees who have joined together for the purpose of negotiating terms of employment, such as wages and work hours.

Union salting Process of training union organizers to apply for jobs at a company and, once hired, working to unionize employees.

Union shop Requirement that all employees become members of the union after a specified period of employment (the legal minimum is 30 days) or after a union shop provision has been negotiated.

Unstructured interview Interview in which the job applicant is asked probing, open-ended questions.

Validity Extent to which a test measures what it claims to measure.

Vestibule system Training and development delivery system that takes place away from the production area on equip- ment that closely resembles equipment actually used on the job.

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429

Peluso, Michelle, 296 Pirkle, Rodney, 197 Preston, Angela, 130

Q, R Reza, Robert, 374 Rice, Steven, 149 Richter, Helene, 150 Richter, Marty, 211 Rickover, Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, 164 Rivera, Lauren, 150 Rocco, Julie 295 Roosevelt, President Franklin D., 328 Rosenberg, Marc, 217 Rozenberg, Eric, 20 Ruthen, Lindsey, 289

S Saab, Maria, 399 Scanlon, Joseph, 258 Schultz, Howard, 40 Schwartz, Marcee Harris, 294 Seaman, Jeff, 218 Seidman, Dov, 35 Semper, Janice, 201 Short, Joanna, 286 Skye, Ann, 284 Slater, Steven, 377 Smisek, Jeff, 30, 269 Snabe, Jim Hagemann, 295 Snell, Roy, 38 St. Amour, Jeffrey, 17 Stann, Brian, 129 Stapleton Barnes, Melissa, 36 Steinberg, Allen, 354 Stiglitz, Julia, 213 Sullivan, John, 128 Sussman, Harris, 75

T Tamayo, William R., 74 Tchen, Tina, 293 Thomadakis, Stavros, 35 Thompson, Chad, 406 Thompson, Mike, 78 Treher, Elizabeth, 215 Trudelle, Andrea, 293 Trumka, Richard, 314 Trump, President Donald J., 100 Twain, Mark, 34

U, V Valdez, Bill, 100

W Wagner, Kevin, 287 Walker, Governor Scott, 310 Walsh, James 250, 312–13 Warbelow, Sara, 293 Ward, Jim, 35 Williams, Owen, 130 Williams, Sandra, 8 Willis, Angi, 213 Wilson, Jeremy, 38 Winterkorn, Martin, 34

X, Y, Z Zuckerberg, Mark, 269, 290

H Hall, Barry, 382 Handal, Peter, 102 Hayley, Kathryn, 295 Hellerman, Myrna, 254 Hendrickson, Phil, 132 Herzberg, Frederick, 113 Hesse, Dan, 254 Hicks, Jack, 197 Hinrichs, Joe, 266 Holm, Hanno, 128 Hsieh, Tony, 101 Hunt, Rachael, 313

I Immelt, Jeff, 30, 40

J James, Jerry 46, 297 James Sr., Charles E., 154 Jansen, Julie, 228 Johnson, Donna, 75 Johnson, Gordon, 214 Johnson, Renee M., 100 Johnson, Robert Wood, 41 Johnson III, Fisk, 41 Joyce, Leslie, 220

K Kaplowitz, Marla, 290 Kaye, Beverly, 230 King Jr, Martin Luther, 31 Kittling, Nesheba, 187

L Lampley, Judith A., 374 Lawler III, Edward E., 92 Leipziger, Deborah, 40 Leutner, John, 223 Levine, Julie, 295 Levitt, Arthur, 32 Lilly, Eli, 36 Lincoln, President Abraham, 33 Link, Jim, 349

M Mandes, Steve, 216 Mansfield, Marianne, 294 Markopolos, Harry, 33 Mathiason, Garry, 133 McCabe, Andrew, 30 McCardle, Stewart, 394 McCarthy, Pattie, 404 McDermott, Bill, 295 McGraw, Doug, 221 McReynolds, George, 54 Meyer, Marissa, 26, 296 Michaels, Dr. David, 366 Millstein, Sarah, 214 Musk, Elon, 309

N Nish, David, 233 Nixon, President Richard M., 68

O, P Pao, Ellen, 58 Park, Anna, 73

A Adele, Adeola, 372 Albrecht, Henry, 384 Allen, Michael, 220 Alstyne, Van, 128 Argyris, Chris, 234 Avery, Christopher, 258

B Baird, Mark, 129 Barra, Barbara, 349 Barrios, Melissa, 71 Barton, Katherine, 404 Basichis, Gordon, 375 Beeghly, Brian, 36 Bell, Ella, 77 Belliveau, Paul, 8 Bennis, Warren, 234 Berner, Samuel, 19 Bezanson, Phillip, 48 Bower, Joseph L., 102 Boyson, Brad, 407 Branham, Leigh, 353 Brito, Carlos, 19 Brody, Nina, 150 Brooks, Martin, 18 Brown, Nate, 402 Brownlee, Dana, 81 Buffett, Warren, 38 Bunch, Charles E., 44

C Cabral, Joseph, 354 Caldwell, Max, 16 Cameron, Melissa, 350 Campbell, Chris, 39 Canale, Steve, 137 Carlson, Kevin C., 81 Cartwright, Bob, 267 Castro, Fidel, 79 Chevalier, Roger, 224 Christakis, Dr. Nicholas, 383 Clifford, Daniel P., 324 Coats, Brandon, 381 Coppola, Louis D., 43 Crispin, Gerry, 150 Curtis, Jamie, 383

D Daniel, Teresa, 372 Daugherty, Carroll R., 345 Davis, Shirley A., 81 Doyle, Alison, 296 Duggan, Kris, 201 Dutta, Ranjan, 80

E Eshet, Mary, 37 Evans, Paul C., 168

F Foshe, Greg, 313 Foster, Dean, 19 Franklin, Benjamin, 227 Fraser, Margo, 371 Freeland, Carol, 221 Freeman, Joshua, 312

G Grote, Teresa, 354

Name Index

Z02_MART9724_15_SE_NIDX.indd 429 9/27/17 5:23 PM

430

H Hackett Group, 7 Hale-Halsell Company, 349 Halliburton, 400 Hamburger University, 217 Hartmann Studios, 167 Harvard Business School Publishing, 214 Harvard Medical School, 383 Hautelook, 139, 201 Herman Miller, 371 Hewitt Associates, 354 Hewlett-Packard, 102, 125 Hilton, 405–6 Hilton Herbs, 18 Hilton University, 406 HireRight, 402 Home Depot, 44, 168, 220 Honda Motor Company, 410 Honeywell, 287, 326 Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, 410 Human Resource Certification Institute (HRCI), 10 Hyundai, 325

I Ikea, 99–100 Institute for Corporate Productivity, 101, 133 Integris Health, 383 Intel Corporation, 126, 202

J JetBlue Airways, 221, 377 Johnson & Johnson, 40–41, 43, 395 Johnson Controls, 36, 312 J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., 129

K Kellogg, 125 KFC, 395 Kraft Foods Inc., 373

L Lakeland Eye Clinic, 55 Learning Key Inc., 215 Lee Hecht Harrison, 349 Lee Memorial, 354 Lehman Brothers, 29, 32 Leipziger, Deborah, 40 LensCrafters, 213 Levi Strauss & Company, 8 LG Electronics, 114 Limeade Inc., 384 Lincoln Electric, 101 Lincoln Plating, 383 LinkedIn, 5, 15, 93–94, 122, 125, 130–31, 167,

226, 289 Littler Mendelson, 133 L.L. Bean, 94 L’Oréal, 17, 19 Luxottica, 213 Lyft, 169

M Macys Inc., 130 ManpowerGroup Solutions, 150 Mansfield, Marianne, 294 Marsh’s FINPRO group, 372 Massachusetts General Hospital, 287 Mayo Clinic, 262 McCormick & Co., Inc., 40 McDonald’s, 42, 44, 79, 215, 217, 340, 394 McKinsey Global Institute, 123, 399 Mercer LLC, 383

Calvin Klein, 168 Capterra, 290 CareerBuilder.com, 131 Caterpillar, 222 CBS, 39 CH2MHILL, 395 Challenger, Gray & Christmas, 217, 347, 377 Charles Schwab, 291 Chipotle Mexican Grill, 176 Chrysler Corporation, 19, 95 Chuck E. Cheese, 168 Cianbro Corporation, 221 CIGNA Behavioral Health, 408 Cisco Systems, 38, 40, 137, 231, 295 Claiborne, Liz, 150 Cliff Bar and Company, 290 Coca-Cola, 12, 44, 287, 394 Corra Group, 375 Coursera, 213 Credit Suisse AG, 20

D DaimlerChrysler Corporation, 19, 159, 295 Deloitte LLP, 217, 296 Delta Air Lines, 293 Denver Hotel Management Company, 74 Dish Network LLC, 381 Disney, 125, 132 Dollar General, 96 Domino’s Pizza, 375 Dow Chemical, 39, 41, 44 Duane Reade, 72

E eBay, 39 Edw. C. Levy Co., 325 Ellen Pao, 58 Elm City Market, 297–98 Emcore, 374 Enron, 29 Ernst & Young, 132, 292 E-Verify, 167 Expertus, 214 Export Express Loans, 411 Export Working Capital Loans, 411 Exxon, 42

F Facebook, 15, 81, 93, 125, 131, 167–68, 232, 269,

290, 383, 406 Family Dollar, 114 Fidelity International, 36 Fisher & Phillips, 187 Food Lion, 168 Ford Motor Company, 159, 217, 231, 266, 295 Foxconn, 410 Franciscan Health Systems, 292 Frito-Lay, 13, 44

G Gannett Publishing, 285 GE (General Electric), 30, 40, 102, 111, 129, 187,

201, 217 General Mills, 93 General Motors, 95, 139, 259, 312, 395 Georgetown University, 35 Glassdoor, 131, 227 Goodyear Tire, 58 Google, 93, 131–32, 136–37, 163, 397 Gordon Law Group, 351 Greyhound, 61 Grubhub, 289

3M, 39, 287 84 Lumber Company, 134 100 Best Companies to Work For, 17, 76, 236,

290–91 100 Best Companies to Work for in America, 236 100 Best Corporate Citizens, 17 100 Fastest-Growing Companies in the United

States, 18 100 Most Sustainable Corporations, 40, 42 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World, 40 360-degree feedback approach, 187 401(k), 287–88, 300, 354 100,000 Opportunities Hiring Initiative, 41

A Abbott Laboratories, 291 About.com, 296 Accenture, 8 Adobe Systems, 201 Aetna, 217 AIG, 32 Ajax Manufacturing, 8 Alamo Rent A Car, 288 Alaska Airlines, 285 Albertsons, 102 Alcoa Mill Products Inc, 69 Allergan, 40 AllianceQ, 132 Amazon, 248, 290, 348 American Baptist Homes, 326 American Express Company, 76, 286 American Red Cross, 13 Amtrak, 366 Anheuser-Busch, 19 Aon Hewitt, 406 Arizona State University, 292 AT&T, 129, 211–12, 220 Avance Human Capital Management, 8

B Babson Survey Research Group, 218 Bancorp, 36 Bank of America, 287 Bank of New York Mellon Corp, 48 Barclays Bank, 78 Bauer, Eddie, 248 Bayer Corporation, 350 Baylor University, 294 BDO USA, 294 B/E Aerospace, 123 Bear Stearns, 29, 32 Benchmarking Exchange, 220 Better-Works, 201 Blackbird Guitars, 112 Blackstone Group LP, 290 Blue Grass Energy, 371 BMW, 125, 168 BNY Mellon, 48 Boeing, 287, 310 Booz Allen, 224 Boston Consulting Group, 245 BP, 42 Bracewell & Giuliani Law LLP, 48 Brighter Planet, 42 Brill Street + Company, 81 Buck Consultants LLC, 382 Burger King, 25, 40 Burlington Industries, 71

C Cake for You, 378 California Health Foundation, 185

Company Index

Z03_MART9724_15_SE_CIDX.indd 430 9/27/17 5:24 PM

COMPANY INDEX 431

R Randstad, 349 Reddit, 58 Renault, 44 Research in Motion, 295 Rich Products Corporation, 400 Ritz-Carlton, 94, 125 ROI Institute, 220 Root Capital, 403 Royal Caribbean Cruises, 139, 188, 225 Rubino Consulting Services, 254 Rudi’s Bakery, 128, 157, 323

S Scanlon Leadership Network, 258 Schnuck Markets Inc., 326 SC Johnson Company, 41 Siemens, 39 Southwest Airlines, 125, 188, 235, 366 Spectrum Health Systems, 383 Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, 270 Spun Steak, 73 Standard Life, 233 Starbucks Coffee, 40, 78, 129, 223, 248, 292 Stonyfield Farm, 290 Stop & Shop Supermarket, 324 Styron LLC, 44 Sunfield Inc., 366 Sunglass Hut, 213 SunTrust Bank, 297

T Take Care Health Systems, 150 Target, 44, 56, 248 Tesla, 309 Texas-based Intelligent Compensation

LLC, 267 Texas Instruments, 380, 394 Towers Watson, 16, 408 Toyota, 234–35, 257, 310, 394 Tulane University, 16 Turner Broadcasting, 285 Twitter, 15, 125, 132, 214, 232, 383

Mercy Health, 354 Merrill Lynch, 32, 54, 217 Microsoft, 13, 125, 168, 290 ManpowerGroup, 150 Mittal Steel Company, 325 MNC, 395 Monster Worldwide, 131 Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP, 168

N NACElink Network, 132 NAPA, 11 Netflix, 289–90 Nike, 214 Nintendo, 215 North Shore-LIJ Health System, 217, 354 Northwestern Mutual, 292 Northwestern University, 150

O OptumHealth, 382

P Packer Industries, 315 Patagonia, 18, 171 PATCO (Professional Air Traffic Controllers

Organization), 328 Pearle Vision, 213 PepsiCo, 12, 132, 285 P. F. Chang’s China Bistro, 295 Pfizer, 217 PFW, 139 P&G, 40 PPG Industries, 44, 327 PricewaterhouseCoopers, 17 Procter & Gamble, 40, 394–95 Prologis Inc., 40 Prudential Financial, 8 Pump It Up, 235 PwC Saratoga, 80

Q Quality Stores Inc., 350 Quintiles Transnational Corporation, 284

U UAW, 312, 314 Uber, 169 UC Berkeley, 213 UCIL (Union Carbide India, Limited), 409 Uniformed Services Employment, 63 Union Carbide, 409 Union Pacific, 214, 285 United Airlines, 232, 269 United Architect, 402 University of Phoenix, 218 UPS, 96, 132, 218, 248, 314, 331

V Verizon, 211, 225, 293, 325 Virgin Group, 289 Volkswagen, 29–30, 34, 310, 314, 395

W Walgreens, 74 Watson Wyatt Worldwide, 287 Weichert Relocation Resources Inc., 394 Weight Watchers, 383 Wells Fargo, 37–38, 268, 272 Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment, 366 Western Electric Company, Inc., 199 Westinghouse, 222 Weyco, 285 Whirlpool, 125, 132 Whole Foods, 168

X Xerox, 217, 223, 290

Y Yahoo, 26, 190, 296 Young Persons, 79 YouTube, 15

Z Zappos, 94, 101 Z Foods, Inc., 71 Zipcar, 164

Z03_MART9724_15_SE_CIDX.indd 431 9/27/17 5:24 PM

432

dependent-care, 74 given, 349 global employees, 404 student loan repayment, 293

Association for Talent Development (ATD), 10, 221 Association of Canadian Ergonomists, 371 Association of Information Technology

Professionals, 138 ATD. See Association for Talent Development ATSs (applicant-tracking systems), 150, 153, 159 Attitudes, 7, 54, 69, 128, 150, 169, 185, 228, 259,

290, 309–10, 343, 347, 353–54, 368 Audits, 32, 36, 44–45, 85, 167 Automated reference checking (ARC), 169 Availability, 70, 96–98, 100, 116, 214

forecasting, 98 Awards, 33, 37, 44, 91, 100, 190, 195, 246,

248–49, 254–57, 259, 263, 269, 292, 324–25 annual financial, 254 equity, 254 review stock, 248

B Baby boomers, 78, 80–81, 216, 222, 286 Background Investigations, 149, 167–69, 375, 402

continuous, 167 Back pay, 65, 69, 199, 349, 366 Bankruptcy, 168, 348 Ban the Box laws, 129 Bargaining issues, 318–19, 326

mandatory, 319 permissive, 319–20 prohibited, 320

BARS (behaviorally anchored rating scales), 82, 191–92, 285

Base pay, 38, 248, 252–55, 259, 263, 267 Behaviorally anchored rating scales. See BARS Benchmarks, 41, 62, 220–21, 353, 407

drug testing, 382 Benefits

accrued, 286 additional, 280, 288 appropriate extended, 354 basic, 281 choice, 280 civil union, 292 company-sponsored volunteer, 291 core, 297 denial of, 367 disability, 59 discretionary, 280, 285 educational, 100, 280 educational assistance, 292 enhanced voluntary severance, 101 equal, 54 exclusive, 331 expensive, 279 expensive medical, 282 federal government, 280 flexible, 294 global, 293 greatest, 250 higher premium, 285 important, 294 key, 135 likely, 272 long-term, 6, 40 major, 215, 394 mandatory, 407 monthly, 288 personal, 233

Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act. See ADAAA

Annual pay, 254, 281, 287 Annual salaries, 11, 121, 246, 254, 287 Anxiety, 100, 154, 157, 159, 163, 198–99, 215,

224, 266, 345, 408 Appearance, 36, 67, 161, 185, 188, 292, 380 Applicants, 7–8, 56, 58–60, 62–63, 67–68, 70,

73–74, 121–26, 128–29, 131, 134–39, 147–54, 156, 158–72, 375

active, 15 actual, 150 best-qualified, 37, 125, 148 college, 192 group of, 5, 147 inform, 150 managerial, 152 pools, 67, 124, 126, 149 prospective, 150 rejected, 154, 170 selecting, 68 successful, 148 unqualified, 134, 151 unsolicited, 122, 137 women, 165 younger, 60

Applicant-tracking systems. See ATSs Applications

additional, 15 applicant’s, 160 candidate’s, 159 complete, 151 completed, 151 firm’s, 148 initial, 18 innovative, 263 novel, 405 proper, 341 soliciting, 125 uniform, 328

Appraisals, 5, 183, 185–88, 191, 196–200, 403 accurate, 193, 200 first, 188 performance management and performance,

181 quarterly health-risk, 383 traditional top-down, 187 year’s, 185

Appraisal systems, 37, 182–83, 186–87, 189, 195–96, 199

effective, 182, 195 firm’s performance, 231 good, 196 well-designed, 183

Apprenticeships, 58, 68, 78, 159, 215–16 Arbitration, 324–25, 328–30, 345, 351

binding, 351 final-offer, 328 procedure, 328 process, 329

Asia, 19, 78, 93, 394–95, 399–400, 405, 407 Assessments, 16, 92, 151, 184–85, 191, 211–13,

220, 256, 383 accurate, 186, 197 formal, 228 formal career, 229 health-risk, 383 quantitative, 261 systematic, 44

Assistance, 9, 11, 61, 65, 74, 233, 235, 291–93, 322, 324, 349–50, 380–84, 404, 408, 411

A AAA (American Arbitration Association), 324 AAP (affirmative action program), 68–70 Abilities, 13, 21, 40–42, 104, 106, 110–11,

155–57, 159–61, 184, 192, 211–12, 223–24, 230–31, 247–48, 258–60

decision-making, 188 employer’s, 285, 339, 351 speaking, 161 supervisory, 210

Absenteeism, 6, 114, 155, 157, 256, 284, 291, 295, 372, 375, 377, 380, 382–84

Accidents, 6, 170, 220, 254, 282, 288, 363–64, 368–70, 377, 379, 384, 409

investigations, 370 job-related, 282, 288 prevention, 370 rates, 17, 256, 368 reporting, 370 work-related, 6, 363

Accommodations, 73, 78, 159–60, 164, 171, 231 reasonable, 62–63, 74, 105, 159–60, 164, 381, 399 religious, 73

ACFTU (All-China Federation of Trade Unions), 410 Acquisitions, 12, 17, 19, 63, 92–93, 170, 259,

269, 405, 407 Action plans, 193–94, 234

affirmative, 12 written affirmative, 61

ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act), 8, 59, 62, 74–75, 85, 105, 108, 158–59, 164, 170, 250, 381

ADAAA (Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act), 62, 105

Addiction, 379 ADEA (Age Discrimination in Employment

Act), 13, 54, 59–61, 63, 78, 84–85, 199, 250, 284, 316

ADR (Alternative dispute resolution), 345, 350–51

Advancement, 54, 59, 62, 76, 139, 227–28, 232, 290–91, 349, 354

Adverse impact, 65 Advertising, 62, 68, 70, 101, 126, 134–35, 137,

171, 313 Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of

America, 312 Affirmative action, 53–54, 57, 61, 63, 65–66,

68–70, 75, 86 written, 68

Affirmative action program. See AAP Affordable Care Act, 8, 10, 282, 284, 298, 382 AFL-CIO, 310–13 African American employees, 57, 67, 77, 159 Age discrimination, 13, 54, 59–60, 84, 199, 250,

284, 316, 351 Age Discrimination in Employment Act. See ADEA Agriculture, 307, 309, 403 AIDS, 61, 105, 382 Albemarle Paper v. Moody, 199 Alcohol abuse, 157, 374, 379 All-China Federation of Trade Unions

(ACFTU), 410 Alternative dispute resolution. See ADR American Arbitration Association (AAA), 324 American Business Act, 43 American Institute for Managing Diversity, 75 American Management Association, 217, 231 American Medical Association, 379 American Psychological Association, 156 Americans with Disabilities Act. See ADA

Subject Index

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 432 10/3/17 3:13 PM

SUBJECT INDEX 433

determining, 407 direct, 255, 279 direct and indirect, 246 employee’s, 270 expatriate, 408 extrinsic, 246 fair and equitable, 308 financial, 246, 248, 252 foreign, 407 incentive, 263, 407 increased, 198 indirect, 280 indirectfinancial, 279 monetary, 247 recover, 268–69 total, 245, 247, 263 unemployment, 281

Compensation packages, 32, 148, 223, 262–63, 267–68

basic, 267 employee’s, 262–63 executive’s, 268 total, 262–63

Compensation plans, 37, 247, 259–60, 265 companies structure monetary, 247 executive, 269 new, 37 total, 245

Compensation policies, 247, 261 competitive, 245, 247

Compensation practices, 245, 247, 250 direct financial, 252 executive, 32 general, 267 influenced, 249 nonfinancial, 246

Compensation systems, 37, 43, 198, 248, 265 equitable, 105 firm’s, 6, 354 well-thought-out, 5

Competencies, 10, 110–12, 152, 183–85, 197, 260 core, 15, 111 determining, 92 developing required, 231 expert, 10 five, 10, 37 foundational, 112 HR professionals, 111 job-related, 260 organizational, 93 personal effectiveness, 112 technical, 112 term, 110

Competition, 3, 10, 13, 15, 128, 132, 137, 231–32, 234–36, 247, 249, 262, 292, 294, 409–10

foreign, 249 global, 15 international programming, 137

Confidence, 20, 35, 81, 85, 155, 169, 198, 233, 347, 366

Confidentiality, 45, 187 Conflicts, 29, 32, 35–36, 38, 130, 196, 214, 260,

289, 291, 307, 323, 340, 351 Congress, 33, 58–60, 62, 68, 79, 100, 168, 251,

282, 308, 311, 315, 396 Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act.

See COBRA Consulting, 8, 17, 31, 111, 150, 245, 254, 295,

349, 353, 408 Consumer Price Index. See CPI Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, 367 Consumer Protection Act, 32, 252, 269 Contingent workers, 132–34, 267–68

use of, 133–34, 268

public awareness, 313 public relations, 41–42

Campuses, 135–36, 218 Canada, 42, 311, 394, 397–98, 401 Candidate relationship management. See CRM Card-check approach, 314 Career development, 5, 17, 184, 209, 225,

230–31, 410 effective, 230 methods of, 230 individual sets, 5, 184, 227

Career paths, 3, 17, 20–21, 76, 225–26, 230–32, 247 changing, 21 clear, 405 established, 225 network, 225–26 nontraditional, 230 traditional, 225

Career planning, 5, 184, 225, 227, 230–31, 404–5 dual-career paths, 226 effective, 185 individual, 5, 230 lateral skill path, 226 lateral skill paths, 226 network path, 225 traditional, 225

Carpal tunnel syndrome. See CTS Carpenters and Joiners Union, 310 Carroll’s Pyramid of Corporate Social

Responsibility, 40 CCF (Customer Care Framework), 215 Center for Economic and Policy Research, 289 Centers for Disease Control, 285 Challenger, John, 217, 347, 377 Change to Win Coalition, 310–11 Children, 60, 73–74, 76–77, 80–81, 93, 165,

169, 198, 281, 284, 286, 291–93, 296, 398, 401

China, 19, 44, 394–400, 403, 407, 409–10 The Chronicle of Higher Education, 132 Circuit City v. Adams, 351 CIT. See critical incident technique Civil Rights Act, 54–56, 58–60, 64, 66–67, 69,

71–72, 74, 76, 85, 105, 250, 310, 373 clawback policy, 268–69 coaching, 188, 196, 232–33, 404

practices, 209 COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus Budget

Reconciliation Act), 283, 346, 348, 354 Code Jam, 137 Collective bargaining, 5, 249, 307, 311, 314–22,

324–25, 327–28, 410 labor organization for purposes of, 316 mandatory, 249 negotiating phase of, 322 process of, 319

Commercial Workers International Union, 311 Committee on Political Education (COPE), 312 Communication, 20, 35, 136, 196, 216, 222, 227,

322, 324, 406 continuous, 196 face-to-face, 296, 406 nonverbal, 166 channels, 348 skills, 20, 219 good, 295 strong, 402, 406

Communism, 397 Company policies, 47, 85, 200, 341

establishing, 85 strong, 368 violated, 345

Company stock shares, 259, 270 Compensation

additional, 289, 407

positive, 151, 347 potential, 295 reemployment, 63 relatively new, 293 relocation, 291–92 required, 280–81 retirement plan, 286 same-sex spouses, 293 service, 293 short-term, 288 special, 269 strategic, 209 survivor, 280 transgender-inclusive, 292 unemployment, 374, 410 unused, 290

Benefits package, 249, 297 company’s, 279 generous, 328 reported changing, 279

Benefits plans, 60, 285, 287, 297 customized, 297 discretionary employee, 286 manages, 285 standard defined, 287

Biases, 63, 74, 165, 187, 191, 197–98, 219, 324, 353, 399

cultural, 198 halo, 165 illegal discriminatory, 197–98 interview illusion, 165 interview illusion, 165 negative horn, 165 premature judgment, 165 religious, 399

Bible, 30 Biculturalism, 77 Blacklisted, 33, 367 Board of directors, 12, 31–32, 34, 36, 268–69,

313, 347 Body language, 166, 200 Bona fide occupational qualifications. See BFOQ Bonuses, 5, 13, 38, 44, 100, 126, 137, 184,

200–201, 230, 246, 254–56, 263, 267–69, 407

companies award, 256 management incentive plans award, 256 merit, 254 monetary, 256 performance-based, 184 sign-on, 137, 256 spot, 254–55

Boycotts, 316, 325–26 secondary, 326

BPO (Business process outsourcing), 8 Branding, 12, 15–17, 150, 164, 254, 395

robust employment, 17 Bribery, 36, 48 Budgets, 6, 84, 97, 101, 137, 198, 213, 219, 254,

267, 282–83, 348 Bullying, 372–73

physical, 372 psychological, 372

Burden of proof, 56, 59, 168 Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, 71 Burnout, 376–78, 382, 384 Business ethics, 17, 20–21, 29–30, 40, 43 Business process outsourcing (BPO), 8 Buyouts, 101

C Campaigns, 41, 61, 96, 100, 311, 313–14, 318

based recruiting, 130 cost-effective recruitment, 99 national recruiting, 134

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 433 10/3/17 3:13 PM

434 SUBJECT INDEX

E-learning, 213–14, 218, 405–6 E-mentoring, 232 Emotions, 166, 200, 223, 346–47 Employee assistance programs. See EAPs Employee benefits, 5, 9, 101, 245–47, 250, 262,

264, 279–81, 283, 285, 287, 289, 291, 293–95, 297

cost of, 246, 279–80 Employee Retirement Income Security Act. See

ERISA Employee Value Proposition (EVP), 17 Employment interviews, 148, 160, 163–64, 166

effective, 160 short, 149

English-only policies, 73 EO. See executive order EPA. See Equal Pay Act Equal Employment Act, 54 Equal Employment Advisory Council, 374 Equal employment opportunity (EEO), 7, 10, 31,

53–57, 63–64, 75, 104–5, 124, 127, 158, 197, 213, 223, 372

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. See EEOC

Equal Pay Act (EPA), 54, 57–58, 64, 66, 104, 250–51, 266–67, 316

ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act), 286–87, 298, 348

Ethics, 10, 14, 21, 29–39, 41, 47, 223 audit, 34 chief, 36 code of, 30–32, 34–36 company’s code of, 47 human resource, 36 personal, 33

Evaluations, 5, 7, 65, 74, 153, 163, 182–83, 185–88, 192, 195–99, 202, 212, 219, 228, 370

360-Degree, 187 EVP (Employee Value Proposition), 17 Examinations, 74–75, 149, 170, 375 Executives, 9, 12, 29, 31–33, 38, 41, 91, 132,

135, 219–22, 232–33, 235, 267–69, 295–96, 347

escort, 409 high-level, 190 local, 401 terminated, 347 terminating, 347

Expatriates, 400–405, 408 evacuating, 409 first-time, 404 ineffective, 403 inform, 404 new, 404 outstanding, 402 seasoned, 404 selecting, 401

Exporting, 394, 410–11

F Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), 130, 168 Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 4, 14, 47, 57,

104, 223, 250–52, 291, 396 Fairness, 35, 74, 197, 329 Families, 77, 81–82, 280, 283, 285, 288, 290–91,

293, 295, 312, 398–99, 401, 403–4, 407, 409–10

dual-career, 77 started, 297 unpaid, 14 woman’s, 59

Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), 8, 14, 82, 290

Family Violence Prevention and Services Act, 374 Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 71 Fathers, 164, 290

long-term, 288 permanent, 369

Disabilities Act, 59, 62, 108, 250, 381 Disabilities Act Amendments Act, 62, 75 Disaster, 13, 16, 25, 42, 184, 295, 409

worst industrial, 409 Discharging, 366–67, 409 Disciplinary action, 37, 67, 183, 214–15, 320,

329–30, 339–45, 347, 409–10 addressing, 409 administered, 340–41 administration of, 342, 344 approaches to, 342 appropriate, 342 employees resent, 344 progressive, 342–43 proper, 342 taking, 8, 342, 344 taking appropriate, 342

Discrimination, 13, 54–56, 58–74, 82, 84–85, 104–5, 108, 164–65, 199, 250–51, 293, 316, 344–45, 348, 351

allegations of, 63, 104 ban, 82 bar, 64 caregiver, 74 claiming, 199 exceptions to, 55 illegal, 13, 56, 58, 64, 66–67, 85, 199, 316 illegal workplace, 66 intentional, 59, 67 LGBT, 55 potential, 69 prohibiting, 63 religious, 73, 399 unintentional, 67 unlawful, 63 weight, 62

Disparate treatment, 66 Disputes, 7, 168, 311–12, 324, 328–29, 350, 375, 410

union management, 324 Diversity, 17, 20, 53–54, 74–76, 78, 81, 84, 126,

222–23, 230, 297, 307, 395, 397, 400 multi-generational, 81 TLM-Workforce, 55

Documentation, 160, 187, 192–93, 196, 293, 348 Dodd-Frank Act, 252, 268–70, 366 DOJ. See Department of Justice DOL. See Department of Labor Dow Jones World Sustainability Index (DJSI), 42 Downsizing, 80, 91, 96, 100, 114, 153, 227, 339,

347–49 negative aspects of, 349

Drug-Free Workplace Act, 379–80, 384 Drugs, 74–75, 169–70, 325, 363, 371, 374, 377–82

abuse, 379–84 illegal, 75, 170, 379–81 prescription, 379 systematic, 170 testing, 64, 170, 379–82

E EAPs (Employee assistance programs), 380,

382–84, 404, 408 eBay, 39 EEO (equal employment opportunity), 7, 10,

53–54, 57, 63–65, 75, 105, 127, 223 EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity

Commission), 31, 55–56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66–68, 71–74, 85, 105, 124, 158–59, 168, 399

EEOC v. Daimler Chrysler Corp., 159 EEOC v. Dial Corp., 159 EEOC v. Ford Motor Co. and United Automobile

Workers of America, 159 effectiveness, 12, 20, 122, 142, 150–51, 159, 169–72,

182, 186, 195, 202, 212–13, 216, 219, 265

Contractors, 31–32, 61–62, 65, 68–70, 250, 380 federal, 61, 65, 68–69, 379–80 independent, 132, 227, 268 monitors, 65

Convictions, 30–31, 129, 151, 167 criminal, 168 religious, 55

Cooperation, 162, 184, 188, 195, 235 management-labor, 258

COPE. See Committee on Political Education Corporate and Auditing Accountability,

Responsibility and Transparency Act, 32 Corporate culture

ethical, 37 inclusive, 16, 75 positive, 16 unique, 289

Corporate environmental responsibility, 44 Corporate Executive Board in Arlington, 34 Corporate ladder, 225, 233, 405 Corporate social responsibility (CSR), 10, 14, 21,

29, 39–43, 291 Cost-of-living differentials, 250 CPI (Consumer Price Index), 249, 252 Creativity, 19, 139, 188, 219, 222, 231, 247 Crime, 168, 373, 375

white-collar, 31 Criminal records, 129–30, 167–68, 402 Critical incident technique (CIT), 191 Criticism, 41, 82, 126, 197–200, 270 CRM (candidate relationship management),

150–51 CSR. See Corporate social responsibility C-suite, 76, 102 CTS (carpal tunnel syndrome), 370–71, 385 Culture, 3, 16–20, 34–37, 43, 75, 77–80, 149–50,

185–86, 224, 234–36, 256–57, 373, 394–95, 398, 400–405

collectivist, 403 company’s, 29, 163 differences, 17–20, 77, 84, 405, 408 distinct, 19 dominant, 77 ethnic, 77 feminine, 398 individualistic, 256, 398, 403 making, 19 new, 404 organizational, 157 shaping, 398 supportive, 75 unique, 80, 395 U.S., 78 weaker, 34

Customer Care Framework (CCF), 215 Cyberbullying, 372–73

D Data, 5–6, 20–21, 96, 103–6, 109–10, 124–25,

155, 157–58, 160–61, 169–70, 183–87, 220–21, 234, 247–49, 263–65

accurate labor market, 249 internal, 6 objective job performance, 189

Defense of Marriage Act, 82 Democrats, 14, 396 Demotion, 5, 37, 66, 68, 104, 184, 187, 225–26,

339, 345, 347–48 Department of Justice (DOJ), 66, 374 Department of Labor (DOL), 61, 63, 65–66, 68,

110–12, 216, 223, 250–51, 281, 287, 317, 366, 379–80, 397

DirectEmployers Association, 132 Disabilities, 8, 53, 59–64, 69–70, 74–75, 78,

81, 105, 108, 151, 158–59, 164, 280, 284–85, 381

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 434 10/3/17 3:13 PM

SUBJECT INDEX 435

procedures, 10, 65–66, 68, 97–98, 106, 124, 156, 196–97, 220, 226–28, 321, 328–29, 343, 347–49, 351

professionals, 3–4, 6–13, 15–17, 20, 36–37, 84–85, 92–96, 109–11, 141–42, 201–2, 212, 246–48, 259–60, 363, 373–74

requirements, 61, 63, 68–69, 96–98, 100, 105–6, 112, 157, 162, 169–70, 251, 256, 326, 328, 380–81

specialists, 9, 11–12, 109, 214, 218, 226, 232, 273, 283, 322

Human capital, 13, 21, 91, 147, 181, 209, 253, 363

I I-9, 167 Illnesses, 60, 189, 282, 284–85, 288, 290, 363–64,

367, 370 emotional, 6, 363 work-related, 371

Immigrants, 78–79 Immigration Reform and Control Act. See IRCA Incentives, 38, 95, 100, 126, 139, 182, 194, 245,

247, 253–57, 259, 263, 265, 269, 382–83 additional, 382 applying, 255 company-wide, 254 extra, 383 individual, 254, 256 institute, 255 long-term, 254, 269 monetary, 100 nonfinancial, 105 pay, 194, 245, 247, 253–57, 259, 263, 269 piecework, 194 positive, 265 proper, 253 real, 268 real mainstay, 383 short-term, 254

Initiatives, 37, 43–44, 75, 77, 81, 94, 216, 223, 263, 382, 411

Injury, 281–82, 340, 364, 368–69, 409 Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), 270 Insurance, 5, 11, 13, 59–60, 63, 69, 170, 279–85,

288, 297, 326–27, 350, 368–69, 372, 382–83

hospital, 281 life, 288, 407 medical, 5, 297 personal accident, 369 premiums, 63, 170, 369, 383 social, 280 term life, 288 whole life, 288

Internal Revenue Service (IRS), 9 Interns, 132, 136–37 Internships, 48, 77, 136 Interviews, 7–8, 11, 58, 106, 135–36, 149–51,

153–54, 160–66, 170, 172, 176, 196, 199–201, 221, 349

agenda, 161 analyst, 106 anonymous, 353 anxiety-provoking, 200 behavioral, 162–63 casual, 66, 164 face-to-face, 130 firm’s representatives, 163 first, 158 friend, 161 general types of, 162 mock, 158, 161 multiple, 149, 163 real, 162 schedule, 136 situational, 163

protected, 59, 66–67, 70, 85, 154–55, 168, 199, 344, 348

racial, 67, 77 regional, 401 small, 20, 191, 235, 269, 313 stakeholder, 45 under-represented, 68

H H-1B employment visa, 79 Hackers, 99, 248 Halo effect, 197 Harassment, 7, 38, 55, 59, 64–65, 70–73, 344,

347, 372–73 abusive work environment, 72 physical, 72 same-sex, 72 status-blind, 372 verbal, 72

Hay Plan, 260–61 Hazards, 19, 104, 232, 261, 321, 364, 366, 369

associated, 369 Health, 4, 6, 279–80, 282, 284–85, 308, 310, 328,

363–64, 368–69, 371–72, 374, 377, 382–83, 408–9

behavioral, 408 better, 294 deploy, 382 employee’s, 290 enforcing, 366 financial, 284 good, 6, 383 improving, 383 mental, 384 occupational, 367 poor, 284, 377 regarding, 366

Health care, 11, 60, 137, 167, 227, 280, 282–84, 312, 383

consumer driven, 283 costs, 283–84, 374, 377, 379 employer-sponsored, 281, 382 inconsistent, 409 benefits, 279

Health insurance, 11, 13, 59, 63, 158, 279, 283–84, 326

Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. See HIPAA

HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act), 284

Hire Heroes USA, 129 Hiring, 6, 8, 11–12, 18, 61–62, 66–67, 121, 126,

128–29, 133, 135, 137, 148–49, 154, 167–69 avoided, 60 campus, 93 improved, 209 negligent, 166, 169, 374 seasonal, 96

Hiring freezes, 100, 254, 267 Hispanics, 67, 69, 73, 77, 79 Hostility, 63, 71–72, 79, 199, 372–73, 375 HR

activities, 7, 9, 12, 93, 102 departments, 6–7, 15, 19, 153, 171, 211, 260,

353, 394, 400–401 executives, 9, 12–13, 32–34, 53–54, 68–69,

100–102, 135, 148–49, 216–17, 219, 250–53, 268–70, 295–96, 316, 347

functions, 6–9, 16, 18, 21, 95, 104, 148, 396, 408

management, 10, 103, 105, 148, 168, 328, 341, 344, 352–53, 368, 393, 396, 405

planning, 21, 91, 95–97, 104, 116, 138, 141, 211 practices, 34–40, 56, 68, 72–74, 94, 124, 195,

199, 209, 245–46, 249–52, 313–14, 316–18, 403, 407

Federal Contract Compliance Programs, 61, 124, 154

Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA), 281, 350 Federal Labor Relations Act, 328 Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. See

FMCS Feedback, 4, 182, 186–88, 196, 199, 201, 219,

223, 228, 234, 319, 340, 342, 403, 406 360-degree, 187 developmental, 201 frequent, 201

Firing, 32, 54, 62, 149, 198–99, 345–47, 366–67, 374

FJA (Functional job analysis), 106 Flexibility, 14, 18, 74, 76, 213, 216, 218, 259–60,

266, 268, 270, 293–95, 297, 310, 354 employer’s, 74 family, 402 workers permit maximum, 133

Flextime, 76, 280, 294 Forecasting, 96–98 Forecasts, 97–98

aggregate, 98 bottom-up, 98 zero-base, 97

Fortune 500 companies, 82, 95, 132, 187, 232–33, 292, 379

Fortune magazine, 17–18, 291 Fourteenth Amendment, 54, 82 Fraud, 30, 32–33, 169, 366 Freezes

federal government’s hiring, 100 soft, 100 soft hiring, 100

FSGO (Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizations), 31, 38

G Games, 184, 215

assessment simulator training, 215 Gamification, 405 Garcia v. Spun Steak, 73 Gender, 54, 56, 63, 69–71, 74–75, 81, 124, 151,

165, 198, 351, 399 General Electric v. Gilbert, 59 Genetic information, 53, 63, 158

protected, 13 use of, 63

Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act. See GINA

Germany, 42, 44, 394–95, 398, 400, 410 Gifts, 30, 36, 201, 350

relatively small monetary, 255 GINA (Genetic Information Nondiscrimination

Act), 63, 158 Government & Accountability Institute, 43 Great Depression, 32, 80, 258, 281, 308 Great Recession, 91, 129 Grievances, 6, 33, 196, 214, 307–8, 311, 321, 324,

328–29, 339, 345, 348, 351, 407 procedures, 307, 321, 324, 328–29, 407

Griggs v. Duke Power Company, 59, 105, 168 Groups

assembled, 318 best-achieving, 67 community, 313 cultural, 77 disadvantaged, 310 diverse, 247, 395 ethnic, 67, 79 experimental, 220 large, 191 national, 72 neglected, 347 peer, 219 professional, 137

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 435 10/3/17 3:13 PM

436 SUBJECT INDEX

right-to-work, 310, 316, 320 sick, 290 significant, 250 state and local, 63, 316 state drug, 129 termination, 407 wage, 250

Layoffs, 37, 62, 68–69, 96, 100–101, 114, 184, 283, 321, 348–50, 355, 374, 377, 407

alternatives to, 100 mass, 345, 349

Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Inc., 58 Leonel v. American Airlines, 75 LGBT employees, 82, 293 Licensing, 66, 394 Life insurance, 60, 280, 284, 288, 297

whole, 288 Lifestyles, 53, 75, 168, 229, 285, 383, 397,

408–9 Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, 58

M Males, 58, 66–67, 72, 397 Management

higher-level, 234 line, 350 local, 400–401 open-book, 258 participative, 258 succession, 102 upper-level, 344 witness, 309

Management development, 183, 209, 219, 231–32

Management position description questionnaire (MPDQ), 106

Management practices, 11, 168, 211, 317, 353–54, 396

responsible, 36 scientific, 308

Management systems, 114, 150 candidate relationship, 150 firm’s, 353 single safety, 409

Marketing, 4, 94, 137, 214, 222, 226, 257, 260 Marriages, 72, 76 Massachusetts’ Pay Equity Act, 58 Massage Advocacy Group Project, 313 MBO process, 193–94 MBTI (Myers-Briggs Type Indicator), 229 Media, 15, 26, 70, 81, 122, 128, 130–32, 134,

137, 161, 167–68, 218–19, 227, 322, 372–73

women’s interest, 70 Medicare, 30, 281, 350 Men, 31, 55, 57–59, 67, 72, 76, 79, 85, 230,

251–52, 290, 293–94, 372, 374, 399 Mentoring, 209, 232–33

open, 232 Mentors, 224, 232–33, 291

female, 233 Mergers, 12, 15, 19, 93, 269, 347, 405, 407 Merit, 139, 184, 200, 202, 253–56, 259

pay, 199, 253–56, 259 systems, 55, 58, 251

Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson, 72 Metrics, 38, 44, 150, 155, 169–70, 219–21, 231,

370, 385 developing quality-of-hire, 150 environmental, 44

Mexico, 42, 114, 394–95, 401, 409 Michigan, 325, 395 Middle East, 61, 394–95, 407 Military, 31, 41, 63, 69, 100, 129, 132, 136, 151,

184, 291 Minimum wage, 14, 250–51

active, 123 passive, 123

Job specifications, 103, 105, 107–9, 116 Job structures, 245, 247, 260, 273

consistent, 260 organizational, 226

Job tasks, 105–6, 215 Job titles, 69, 107, 121, 153, 169, 229, 259

K Keywords, 150, 152–53 KSAs, 211–12

L Labor, 63, 65, 128, 132, 246, 248–51, 285, 311,

313–16, 318–19, 322–24, 326–28, 348, 397, 399

child, 250 firm’s top, 329 organized, 310–12 regarding, 315 securing skilled, 215 temporary, 133

Labor costs, 217, 258, 323, 354, 410 higher, 266, 397 lower, 133, 266 lower per-unit, 262

Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, 309

Labor disputes, 324, 410 Labor force, 53, 60, 76–78, 127, 133–34, 396,

398–99, 402 Labor laws, 18, 187

federal, 351 restrictive, 310

Labor-Management Relations Act, 315 Labor market, 13, 15, 68, 98, 116, 122, 126, 128,

134, 149, 248, 261–62, 296 appropriate, 163 competitive, 245, 248–49 given, 263 global, 248 local, 98, 127 organization’s, 122

Labor movement, 310, 312–14 Labor organizations, 58, 66, 314, 316–17 Labor pools, 70, 77, 122

shrinking, 398 Labor relations, 4–5, 7, 21, 104, 308, 312, 314,

324, 328, 352, 364, 374, 380, 399, 408 improved, 329

Labor statistics, 5, 10–11, 62, 77–78, 95, 109, 129, 132, 249, 252, 309, 313, 364, 370, 373–74

Labor unions blue-collar, 312 international, 311 large, 14 role of, 307

Landrum-Griffin Act, 320 Law enforcement, 30, 33, 157 Laws, 31–33, 53–56, 58–64, 66, 68, 157, 167–68,

250, 284, 288–90, 314, 316, 397, 401–2, 409–10

anti-discrimination, 130, 293, 310 box, 129 city, 64 creating new federal criminal, 374 data-protection, 397 encounter, 397 first national, 250 instituted, 290 paid sick, 290 passed fair employment practice, 63 primary, 316 protective, 169

Interviews (Continued) structured, 162 successful, 165 telephone, 131 traditional, 162 unstructured, 162, 164

Intimidation, 310, 367, 372 Investigations, 7, 65, 149–50, 166–67, 169–70, 402 Investments, 12, 42, 60, 76, 211, 219–20, 288,

292, 297, 310, 371, 384, 394 Isenhour v. Outsourcing of Millersburg, 373

J Japan, 16, 19, 215, 234, 394–95, 398, 401, 403, 409 Job analysis, 4, 21, 91, 95, 102–8, 110, 156–57,

195, 247, 261 companies use, 104 conducts, 106 guidelines-oriented, 106 interviews, 106 observation method, 105 other methods, 106 prepared, 104 process and methods, 102 professionals use, 247 questionnaires, 105

Job applicants, 63, 74, 153, 158, 160, 162–63, 167, 402

Job candidates, 7, 15, 132, 148, 151, 163, 169, 378 hired, 130 internal, 139 potential, 123 prospective, 131 qualified, 116 screen, 167

Job descriptions, 37, 103–7, 109–10, 121, 124, 141, 150–52, 160–62, 211, 231, 247, 259, 261, 307

Job duties, 11, 105, 109, 116, 141, 153, 296, 354 complex, 260 individual’s, 153 less-complex, 260

Job evaluation, 105, 247, 260–61 professionals use, 260

Job hazard analysis, 369 job market, 80, 123, 135–36, 160, 171,

226–27 job openings, 5, 96, 99, 122–24, 129, 132,

149–50, 256 full-time, 123

Job performance, 55–56, 68, 112–13, 154–56, 158, 161, 181, 184–85, 187, 189, 192–93, 195, 197, 254, 256

actual, 56 demonstrated exceptional, 340 direct employee, 252 effective, 192 employee’s, 155, 181, 186, 195, 197, 199, 230 evaluating, 193 exemplary, 3 inadequate, 182 outstanding, 184 poor, 308, 377 positive, 256 student’s, 136 successful, 110, 163, 260 total, 257 well-above-average, 190

Job postings, 124–25, 131–32, 150, 153 Job requirements, 104, 116, 170

basic, 104 changing, 110 major, 162

Job security, 80, 226, 266, 307–9, 321, 323, 340 Job seekers, 17, 40, 64, 110, 123–24, 130–31,

135, 150, 152, 161

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 436 10/3/17 3:13 PM

SUBJECT INDEX 437

Orientation programs, 224 effective, 403 good, 224 new-hire, 224

OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Act), 105, 282, 284, 341, 364, 366–70, 373–74

Outsourcing, 7–8, 80, 97, 213, 222, 311, 325, 353, 373, 384

business process, 8 Overtime, 4, 47, 104, 139, 223, 251, 321

denial of, 367 OWBPA (Older Workers Benefit Protection Act),

60, 284

P PA, See performance appraisal Paid family leave, 245, 264, 290 Paid time off (PTO), 40, 285, 288–89, 291–92,

407 PAQ (position analysis questionnaire), 106 Parental leave policy, 26 Parents, 30, 77, 184, 284, 291, 395, 410

working, 76 PATCO (Professional Air Traffic Controllers

Organization), 328 Paternity leave, 290 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

(PPACA), 282, 284, 298, 382 Paychecks, 58, 246, 254, 281, 321, 346, 407

employee’s, 246 Pay

differentials, 249, 251, 260, 265 gap, 57–58 grades, 247, 264–66, 273 increases, 100, 105, 182–84, 186, 190, 195,

198–200, 252–54, 256, 259, 265, 267, 273, 328, 410

policies, 247, 261, 329 practices, 38, 259, 264 raise, 7, 63, 71, 201–2, 259, 273, 323 raises, 38, 198, 230, 249, 251, 254–55, 260 range, 247, 264–66 rates, 6, 47, 194, 250, 260, 263, 265–66,

323, 397 Payroll, 8–9, 11, 147, 199, 254, 258, 374 Pay structures, 245, 247, 260, 263–64, 272–73

two tier, 266 PBGC, 287–88 PDA. See Pregnancy Discrimination Act Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation, 287 Pension plans, 11, 286–87, 298, 354

disqualifies, 286 qualify, 286

Pension Protection Act. See PPA PEO (professional employer organization), 7, 9 Performance appraisal (PA), 5, 7, 21, 155,

181–85, 188, 194–98, 228, 340, 403 annual, 344 bias error, 197 bias errors, 197 conducting, 197 contrast errors, 197 errors of central tendency, 197–98 errors of leniency or strictness, 197 evaluation errors, 197 expatriate’s, 403 first-impression effect, 197 halo effect, 197 horn error, 197 overview of, 183 results of, 183, 254 results-based, 193 undeserved high, 198

Performance management, 4–5, 181–83, 185–88, 190–91, 194, 196–98, 200–201, 210, 212, 216, 218, 224, 226, 228, 232

NIMS (National Institute for Metalworking Skills), 216

NRLB. See National Labor Relations Board, 313

O O*NET, 110, 211–12 OASDI (Old Age, Survivors, and Disability

Insurance), 281, 350 ObamaCare, 284 Obergefell v. Hodges, 82, 293 Obesity, 62–63, 377, 383 Occupational groups, 99–100, 267, 308, 345

major, 99 Occupational Information Network, 110, 211 Occupational safety, 105, 282, 313, 317, 341, 364,

367, 369, 374 Occupational Safety and Health Act. See OSHA OD (Organization development), 5, 17, 210, 234, 341 OFCCP (Office of Federal Contract Compliance

Programs), 61–62, 64–65, 68–69, 71, 124, 150, 154, 223

Offboarding, 354 Office of Contract Compliance Programs, 61 Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs.

See OFCCP Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs

Web site, 223 Office of Management and Budget, 282 Office of Personnel Management Web site on

performance management, 181 Offshoring, 310 Old Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance

(OASDI), 281, 350 Older workers, 13, 60, 78, 84, 102, 226, 284, 295,

309–10, 348, 354–55 terminating, 309

Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA), 60, 284

Onboarding, 223, 354 programs, 116

Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, 72 On-the-job training, 123, 215

required, 95 Opportunities Hiring Initiative, 41 O’Reilly Radar Report, 214 Organization development. See OD Organization for Economic Co-Operation and

Development, 282 Organization of Training and Development, 210 Organizations

charitable, 73 client, 135 competing, 353 complex, 95 exemplary, 211 governmental, 149 high-performing, 133 hypothetical, 215 informal, 219, 224 large, 15, 106, 196, 394 legitimate, 41 major, 228 nonprofit, 324 not-for-profit, 13, 41, 71, 149, 291 parent, 311 political, 310 private, 54 productive, 6 professional, 109, 232 referral, 70 small, 3 surveyed, 167 transnational, 30 union-free, 347 unionized, 348

Organization’s culture, 16–17, 34, 147

federal, 250–51, 397 laws, 310 requirements, 251

Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), 157

Minorities, 30–31, 40, 53, 64, 67–68, 70, 76–77, 108, 155, 168, 233, 310, 399

groups, 67, 70, 77 racial, 67 women, 40, 68, 70, 76–77

Mistretta v. Sandia Corporation, 199 MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality

Inventory), 157 MNC, 395 Montes v. Vail Clinic, Inc., 73 Morale, 53, 100, 102, 139, 147, 150, 198, 209,

216, 235, 292, 323, 354, 363, 371 Mothers, 17, 76–77, 294 MPDQ (management position description

questionnaire), 106 MSDs. See Musculoskeletal disorders, 385 Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), 229

N National Association of Colleges and Employers,

35, 132 National Association of Manufacturers, 215 National Basketball Association, 326 National Career Day, 176 National Council on Alcoholism & Drug

Dependence, 379 National Education Association, 312 National Employment Law Project, 129 National Football League Players Association

(NFLPA), 331 National Guard, 63, 291 National Hockey League, 326 National Institute for Metalworking Skills

(NIMS), 216 National Institute for Occupational Safety and

Health, 372, 377 National Institute of Drug Abuse, 379 Nationalities, 20, 198, 400 National Labor Relations Act. See NLRA National Labor Relations Board. See NLRB National origin, 53–55, 59, 63–64, 66, 68–70, 72,

151, 165, 339, 352 National Railroad Passenger Corp., 366 National Training Laboratories, 215 National unions, 311, 313, 322

fastest-growing, 311 knit organization of, 311

Negotiations, 20, 58, 249, 311, 316, 318–20, 322–27

breakdowns in, 318, 322–27 good faith, 307 heat of, 322, 324 labor-management, 280 preparation for, 321–22 process of, 307, 316 progress of, 322, 327 prohibiting salary, 58 resume, 324 successful, 318 union, 323 wage/salary, 349

Networks, 75, 81, 99, 110, 122, 126, 130–32, 211, 225–26, 232–33, 248, 381, 383, 404, 408

national recruiting, 132 professional, 131, 232 social, 81, 130

New America Foundation, 399 New hires, 63, 100, 116, 125–26, 130, 142, 150,

167, 171, 222, 224 Newspapers, 101, 131, 134, 138, 311

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 437 10/3/17 3:13 PM

438 SUBJECT INDEX

successful, 126, 256 Regulations, 32, 56, 61–62, 64, 69, 157, 214, 216,

282–83, 292, 393, 395, 397, 407, 410 EEOC, 64 European, 399 local civil rights, 64 procedural, 56 significant, 56 tax, 286

Rehabilitation Act, 59, 61–62, 68, 250 Relationships, 5, 31, 36, 80–81, 98, 101, 103,

150, 152, 155–56, 167–68, 232, 316, 318, 339–40

close, 127, 155, 182 contractual, 395 cross-functional workplace, 163 damage, 200 demonstrable, 56 employee-manager, 199 favorable, 322 human resource, 36 interdependent working, 406 internal, 201 interpersonal, 229 job’s, 264 nontraditional, 132 positive, 166 solid, 395 strong, 68 successful partnership, 364 union/management, 327

Religion, 53–55, 59, 63–64, 66, 68–70, 73, 75, 82, 151, 165, 168, 198, 339, 352, 398–99

Relocation, 9, 171, 291–92, 394, 404, 408 Reorganizations, 93, 352, 405

major, 95 Replacements, 46, 99, 102, 171, 325–26

hiring, 325 permanent partial income, 282

Republican parties, 396 Reputation, 13, 30, 35, 40–41, 46, 137, 148, 162,

167–68, 250, 256, 347, 349, 369, 372 Resignations, 5, 37, 101, 295, 339, 351–52, 407 Restaurants, 217, 285, 312

fast-food, 42, 164, 371 Résumés, 30, 77, 122–24, 130–32, 135, 146, 148,

150–53, 160, 166, 172, 229 electronic, 125 keyword, 153 one-page, 152 printed, 152 recruiters prescreen, 131 screens, 137 sorting, 150 systems flag, 153 systems scan, 153 traditional, 152–53 unsolicited, 135

Retail, 8, 94, 130, 157, 249–50, 325–26, 348, 368, 395

Retaliation, 33, 38, 54, 64–66, 71, 366–67 Retention, 9, 17, 170–71, 199, 209, 213, 215, 227,

230–31, 235, 264, 272, 279, 291–93, 374 negligent, 374 new-hire, 170–71

Retirement, 10–11, 58, 61, 78, 101–2, 227, 230, 233, 268, 279–81, 285–88, 293, 295–97, 351, 354–55

early, 96, 101, 355 Retirement plans, 10, 268, 280, 286–87

adopted, 286 benefits, 268, 286, 288 company-sponsored, 288 employer-sponsored, 286 formal, 286 instituted, 286

person’s, 136 professional, 168 proper, 5, 184, 230, 348 required, 124

Questionnaires, 105–6, 157, 234 131, 169, 353

management position description, 106 position analysis, 106 post-exit, 352 structured, 105 structured job analysis, 106

R Race, 53–56, 59, 63–64, 66–69, 74–75, 77, 81,

124, 151, 168, 198, 339, 352 Raises, 38, 181, 187, 198, 201, 230, 249, 251,

254–55, 260, 267 Ranking, 150, 155, 188–90, 197, 201, 226, 233,

260, 272 automated résumé, 150 high, 197

Ranks, 38, 139, 153, 226, 230, 246, 410 Realistic job preview. See RJP Recognition, 35, 44, 109, 113, 184, 228, 320, 328,

405, 407 obtaining union, 331

Recruiters, 77, 122, 126, 130–31, 135–38, 150, 152–53, 161, 165, 169–71, 401

bad, 135 contingency, 135 cyber, 130 qualities, 349 scare, 77

Recruiting, 7, 11, 123–24, 126–28, 130, 134, 137, 139, 142, 230, 245–46, 256, 259, 291, 294

agencies, 93, 137 alternatives to, 138 avoiding, 139 company’s, 17 efforts, 67, 93, 122, 137 environment of, 122 external sources of, 128 external, 125 external, 97, 122, 126–27 firm’s, 122 global, 137, 401 included, 8 innovative, 99–100 internal, 124, 139 major, 17 maximize, 151 methods, 121–23, 136, 138, 172 mobile, 130 on-campus, 127 overview of, 122 process, 121–22, 124–27, 130–31, 135, 147 school, 70 special form of, 136 success of, 122, 136 word-of-mouth, 126

Recruitment sources, 122, 138, 142, 172 applying, 141 cost effectiveness, 142 external, 126 good, 138 major, 127 productive, 121

Reemployment Rights Act, 63 References, 54, 135, 148, 151, 153, 168–70, 353,

370 bad employment, 272 checking, 148, 153, 168, 170 frame of, 154 personal, 169

Referrals, 61, 66, 124–26, 138, 171, 256, 381, 384 job candidate, 126

Performance management (Continued) company’s, 197 defensible, 199 effective, 182 effectiveness of, 195 online retailer Hautelook’s, 201 reliable, 184 performance reviews, 37–38, 188, 196, 200,

214, 254, 295 frequent, 201 next annual, 407 standardize employee, 196 traditional, 187

Personality, 130, 150, 153, 155–57, 169, 213, 229, 234, 260, 398

Person-focused pay, 252, 259 Piecework pay plans, 195, 256 Poaching, 128 Political parties, 13–14, 396

major, 14 Politics, 75, 224, 296, 312, 396–98, 401, 404 Polycentric staffing, 400–401 Post-exit interviews, 353 PPA (Pension Protection Act), 287–88, 354 PPACA. See Patient Protection and Affordable

Care Act Pregnancy, 58–59, 72, 352 Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA), 58–59, 316 Prima facie case, 67, 168 Private sector, 136, 157, 159, 222, 280, 286,

309–10, 324, 328 Productivity, 4–6, 75, 78, 182, 220, 253–55,

257–60, 290–93, 295–96, 344, 347–48, 363–64, 368–70, 378–79, 383–84

boosting, 234 decreased, 100 employee’s, 344, 348 enhanced, 220 improving, 114 increased, 258, 292, 295 lost, 368–70, 374, 379 lower, 267 maximum, 75 peak, 404 reduced, 372, 378 returned, 291 worker’s, 363

Professional employer organization. See PEO Promoting, 15, 17, 34, 36, 43, 53–54, 63, 65–67,

71, 102, 139, 184, 199, 311–12, 352, 363–64, 404

decisions, 201, 321, 352 opportunities for, 198, 352 promotion from within (PFW), 139

Prospects, 10, 122, 134, 137–38, 170, 201, 367, 395 Protégés, 232–33 Psychological climate, 5, 16, 72, 156, 246, 308,

342, 349, 368, 372–73, 384 PTO. See paid time off Publicly traded companies, 32–33, 252, 269 Punishment, 54, 326, 342–44, 409 Purchasing power parity (PPP), 394

Q Qualifications

acceptable, 103 applicant’s, 150–51, 160 appropriate, 5, 108, 121 basic, 124 candidate’s, 165 employee’s, 226 higher, 260 ideal, 108 job-related, 130 lower, 260 necessary, 76

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 438 10/3/17 3:13 PM

SUBJECT INDEX 439

nonverbal, 20 occupational, 127 physical, 105 proper, 339 required, 98, 149 right, 131 special, 126 specialized, 250 strengthened, 405 transferrable, 80 upgrade, 404 upgrading, 231 verbal, 105 work-related, 259

Slavery, 54 Small Business Administration. See SBA Small businesses, 3, 18, 102, 131, 166, 218, 227,

367, 382, 394, 403, 410–11 new, 18

Smokers, 284–85 SOC (Standard Occupational Classification), 109 Socially responsible companies, 29, 40–42 Social media, 6, 15, 81, 122, 128, 130–32, 150,

167–68, 218–19, 372–73, 384 Social networking, 15, 93, 122, 167, 214,

217–19, 383 Social responsibility, 10, 14, 20–21, 29, 39–41,

43–45, 291, 369, 407 Social Security, 78, 167, 281, 349 Society for Human Resource Management

(SHRM), 10, 15, 35, 37, 137, 167, 231–32, 245, 279, 354

Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics (SCCE), 38

Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM), 245

Society of Manufacturing Engineers, 221 S&P, 44, 268–69 Spanish, 73, 405 SSC. See shared service center Staffing, 4–5, 10, 92, 94, 96–98, 102, 104, 106,

112, 114, 122, 124, 128, 140–42, 403 ethnocentric, 400 firm’s, 401 geocentric, 400–401 global, 400 polycentric, 401 regiocentric, 401

Stakeholders, 30, 35, 40–41 Stalking, 71, 374 Standard Occupational Classification. See SOC Standard of living, 139, 245, 249, 252, 268, 308,

326, 393, 408 Steamfitters Local Union, 313 Stereotypes, 55, 63, 74, 399 Stock exchanges, 32, 44 Stock option plans, 258, 268–69, 280 Stress, 77, 114, 139, 163, 215, 226, 232, 288, 293,

376–77, 379, 383–84, 404, 408 amount of, 377 bicultural, 77 emotional, 363 excessive, 376–77, 379, 383 extreme, 377 increased, 379 prolonged, 377 studied, 377

Strikes, 30, 296, 312–13, 316, 323–28, 410 economic, 325–26 legitimize, 328 national, 328

Subcontractors, 32, 61, 65, 68, 124, 167, 250 Subsidiaries, 42, 199, 211, 222, 366,

400–401, 410 Substance abuse, 157, 375, 378–79, 383, 408 Suicides, 377, 410

initial, 105 issue-by-issue, 328 package, 328 process, 121, 124, 147–53, 155, 157, 159, 164,

166, 168, 170–71, 215, 375, 401 tools, 149, 153, 155, 160–61

Selection tests designed, 154 necessary, 166 use of, 153 validating, 155–56

Selection4–5, 7–8, 67–68, 96–97, 105, 124, 147–49, 151, 153–55, 157, 159, 163, 165, 169, 171, 401–2

Self-appraisal, 186–87, 199, 349 Self-assessment, 20, 227, 401

formal, 228 Senate, 33, 314, 396 Seniority, 55, 252–55, 288–89, 321, 348 Service Employees International Union (SEIU),

311–12 Service members

former, 129 showcase, 41 wounded military, 41

Severance packages, 30, 101, 268–69, 350 Severance pay, 117, 321, 345–46, 350, 407 Severe Violator Enforcement Program, 366 Sex, 53–56, 58–59, 63–64, 66–68, 71–72, 168,

251, 293, 339, 352 Sexual harassment, 7, 70–72, 347, 372–73

EEOC definition of, 71 Sexual orientation, 53, 55, 64, 68, 75, 81–82,

293, 339 Shared service center (SSC), 7–9 Shareholders, 12–15, 30, 32, 40–44, 92, 252,

268–70, 291 SHRM. See Society for Human Resource

Management Shutdowns, 407 Sick leave, 5, 59, 280, 289–90, 346 Sick pay, 288–89, 291 Silicon Valley, 137, 222, 291 Simulations, 158, 218, 392 Single-parent households, 76, 81, 293 Skill-based pay, 226, 259–60 Skilled workers, 215, 222, 354

new, 216 shortage of, 221

Skills, 3–5, 20–21, 79–81, 101–4, 109–10, 122–23, 125–26, 156, 182–84, 211–14, 218–20, 226, 253, 259–63, 310–11

additional, 222 appropriate, 4 behavioral, 105 collective, 13, 253 complementary, 295 complex, 221 computing, 20–21 cooperative, 235 critical, 21, 222 current, 225 cutting-edge, 79 essential, 3, 20 global, 404 important, 20, 184 job-related, 154, 222, 259 language, 402 lateral, 225 leading-edge, 222 lesser, 108 managerial, 162 manual, 105 marketable, 80, 127 mental, 105 necessary, 96–98

phased, 354 Retirement programs, 102, 286

phased, 354 Retirement savings plans, 280, 293 Rewards, 5, 17, 33, 184, 194, 198, 216, 226,

245–46, 253–60, 266, 279, 310, 352, 406–7 equitable, 5 organization bases, 257 piecework plans base, 256

Rewards employees, 4, 194, 253, 255–56, 258, 260 extrinsic, 245 incentive plan, 257

Risk, 61, 95, 108, 123, 169, 284–85, 287–88, 293, 295, 344, 352, 369, 375, 379–80, 409

RJP (realistic job preview), 164, 171, 352 Role-playing, 214–15 ROWE (results-only work environment), 290

S Sabbaticals, 288, 290–91 Safety, 6–7, 17, 21, 216, 308–9, 312, 314, 321, 324,

363–64, 366–68, 370–72, 374–75, 380–81, 408 employee’s, 366 environmental, 382 firm’s, 148, 223 global, 408 identifying, 104 nature and role of, 363 product, 367 public, 100, 380 railroad, 366 work-place, 381

Salaries, 5, 9, 11, 13, 15, 58, 135, 137, 246–47, 252, 255, 265, 267–68, 291, 296–97

current, 58 eliminated, 282 excessive, 268 executive’s, 268 fixed, 255, 267 full-time, 295 good, 17 high, 31, 254 HR professionals, 11 low, 410 straight, 267 white-collar, 101

Same-sex marriages, 82, 291–92 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, 32, 366, 397 Schedules, 209, 214, 219, 253, 286, 290,

293–94, 331 cliff vesting, 286 flexible, 73, 355 graduated, 286 real-time, 218

Scholarships, 291–92 Screening, 130–31, 147–48, 150–51, 159–60,

166–67, 379, 383, 402 conduct employee, 402 pre-employment, 148, 166 pre-employment drug, 379

Screening process, 379 initial, 151

Search firms, 135, 138 contingency, 135 executive, 135

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), 32, 48, 269

Security, 39, 101, 245, 279, 321, 364, 372, 380–81

individual’s employment, 224 SEIU (Service Employees International Union),

311–12 Selection, 4–5, 7–8, 67–68, 96–97, 105, 147–49,

151, 153–55, 157, 159, 163, 165, 169, 171, 401–2

final, 170

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 439 10/3/17 3:13 PM

440 SUBJECT INDEX

Unions craft, 310 crippling, 314 decertify, 307 demands, 322 government-recognized, 410 industrial, 311 member, 311 optimum conditions, 322 outlawed, 310 police, 330 prevalence of, 309–10 registered civil, 292–93 role of, 310 single, 316 strength and nature of, 410 strong, 311 weak, 326

United Auto Workers, 14, 309, 311 United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of

America, 311 United Farm Workers of America, 311 United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), 324 United Food and Commercial Workers

International Union, 311 United Kingdom, 18–19, 42, 394–95, 397, 401–2 University of New York Graduate Center, 312 U.S. Army Corps, 69, 100 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 5, 10–11, 62,

76–78, 95, 109, 129, 132, 149, 216, 249, 252, 364, 370, 373–74

U.S. Bureau of the Census, 76 USCG (U.S. Coast Guard), 216 U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, 129 U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, 72 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, 79, 167 U.S. Code, 328 U.S. defense industry, 249 U.S Department of Homeland Security, 79, 375 U.S. Department of Labor, 61, 63, 110–12, 216,

223, 250–51, 281, 287, 317, 366, 379–80, 397 U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and

Training Administration, 110–11 U.S. Department of State, 408 U.S. Department of State Indexes of Living Costs

Abroad, 408 U.S. General Accountability Office, 134 U.S. Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor

Statistics, 309 U.S. Labor of Bureau of Statistics, 99 U.S. Marine Corps, 215 U.S. Navy, 164 U.S. Occupational Safety and Health

Administration, 317 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, 11 U.S. Postal Service, 328 U.S. savings bonds, 69 U.S. SBA (Small Business Administration), 18, 411 U.S. Secretary of Labor, 250 U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 366

V Vacancies, 67, 125, 151, 162 Vacation benefits, 5, 13, 157, 246, 285, 288–91,

321, 346, 407 Veterans, 19, 61–63, 69, 129, 132, 136

categories of, 61 covered, 61 recruited, 129

Veterans’ Employment and Training Service (VETS), 61

Veterans Opportunity to Work (VOW), 63 Veteran’s Readjustment Assistance Act, 61 Vietnam War, 41 Violence Against Women Act, 374

additional, 148, 182–83, 194, 201, 223, 369 apprenticeship, 215 basic, 100 best, 37 blended, 213, 223 classroom method, 213 company-sponsored, 69 corporate, 81, 213 cross-cultural, 404 determining, 230 distance, 216 effective, 35, 221 empathy, 231 ergonomics, 371 essential, 221 face-to-face, 214 firms conduct, 222 foreign, 72 frequent, 214 global, 9, 403 identifying, 104 improved, 159 in-basket, 215 instructor-led, 213–14, 405 just-in-time, 223–24 lack of, 165 mandatory, 75 minimal, 148 on-demand, 223 on-the job, 215 predeparture, 404 pre-employment, 95 programs, 4, 12–13, 35, 65, 100, 114, 127,

212–13, 217, 219, 221, 225, 235, 405 remedial, 183 sexual harassment prevention, 64 supervisor, 380 team, 216 transfer of, 220 video-based, 405 vocational, 217

Transfers, 8, 37, 68–69, 102, 104, 184, 195, 225, 284, 339, 351–52, 355

Transgender, 82 Transsexuals, 82 Travel, 218, 225, 228, 291, 296, 383, 404–5, 411 Trust, 19, 44, 81, 126, 199, 258, 289, 295, 297,

372, 406 Tuition reimbursement, 211, 285 Turnover rates

calculating, 357 high, 164, 214, 405 higher, 6 low, 80 lower, 78 voluntary, 201

TWA v. Hardison, 73 Twitter, 15, 125, 132, 214, 232, 383 Two-in-a-box approach, 295 Two-tier wage structures, 266

U UFCW (United Food and Commercial

Workers), 324 Unemployment, 64, 79, 96, 122, 128–29, 248,

272, 281, 308, 400 Unionization, 17, 249, 252, 308–10, 312, 314–15 Union membership, 34–35, 59–60, 67, 77, 79–80,

137, 198–99, 257, 307–12, 316, 320–22, 324–27, 330–31, 344–45, 398–99

agreement by, 326 employment on equal terms to, 320 individual, 310 informed regarding, 321 located, 312

Super Bowl, 134 Superfund Amendments Reauthorization Act

(SARA), 369 Supervisors, 71, 103, 105–6, 181–82, 186–201,

224, 234, 318, 327, 329, 340, 342–44, 353–54, 369–70, 380–81

employee’s, 194 first-line, 183, 211, 232, 327–28, 341, 347 line, 370 new, 224 selected five, 84 small organizations line, 106 training, 71, 214 well-performing, 84

Supreme Court, 32, 54, 58–59, 62, 66–67, 70–73, 75, 82, 167–68, 293, 325–26, 350–51, 381, 399

SWOT analysis, 93

T Taft-Hartley Act, 315–16, 320–21, 324, 326, 330 Tardiness, 296, 330, 343, 379 Taxes, 9, 100, 286, 292, 408, 410 TCN. See third-country national TCT. See Team Coordination Training T&D, 183, 209–13, 219, 221, 223, 236

apprenticeship training, 215 behavior modeling, 214 business games, 215 case study, 214 continuous performance-related, 210 in-basket training, 215 methods needs assessment, 211 on-the-job training, 215 overview of, 210 programs, 211–12, 219–21, 223, 232 role-playing, 214 simulators, 218 specialists, 218, 232

Team building, 153, 234–35 incentives, 257–58

Team members, 162, 186–87, 216, 223, 235, 257, 406

educating, 216 high-performing, 258 selecting virtual, 406 virtual, 406

Teamsters, 311 Teamwork, 19, 103, 147, 157, 184, 186, 189, 258,

340, 407 Telecommuting, 26, 76, 100, 280, 294–96 Television, 91, 134–35 Termination, 67–68, 101, 104, 182, 184, 187, 320,

327, 330, 339–40, 343–48, 350, 380–81, 407, 409–10

justifying, 347 warrant, 347

Terrorism, 81, 376 Testing, 55–56, 64, 148, 153–54, 156–59, 170,

379–82 Thirteenth Amendment, 54 Threats, 72, 92–94, 154, 200, 223, 249, 324, 367,

372, 374–75, 383 Time frames, 58, 116, 176, 209, 218 Title VII, 54–56, 58–60, 64, 66–67, 71–74, 155,

310, 328 violated, 159 violating, 373 violation of, 71–72, 74

Tobacco, 284, 342, 377 Training, 5–8, 10–13, 35–39, 62–63, 70–72,

104–6, 182–83, 186–88, 190, 196, 198–201, 209–24, 232–33, 354–55, 403–5

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 440 10/3/17 3:13 PM

SUBJECT INDEX 441

Work conditions, 14, 103–4, 247, 251, 261, 311, 317,

322, 324, 328, 407, 410 environments, 72, 234 experience, 11, 95, 105, 124, 130, 152, 161 flexible, 294 group, 75, 103, 156, 186, 189, 224, 341 history, 129, 151, 153, 166, 252 hours, 5, 14, 102, 291, 294, 307, 373, 381, 407 lost, 296 standard, 251

Work Legal Defense Foundation, 314 Work/life balance, 218, 246, 289, 293,

296, 408 World Commission on Environment and

Sustainability, 42 World War II, 80–81, 285–86 Wounded Warrior Project, 41 Wrongful termination, 32

avoiding, 340

taxable, 281 unpaid, 346

Wagner Act, 314–15 Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,

32, 252, 269 Walsh-Healy Act, 250 Wealth, 41, 80, 397, 407, 409 Welfare, 11, 21, 39, 279, 285–86, 308, 363, 398 Whistle-blowers, 33, 366 Women, 53, 57–59, 67–70, 74, 76–77, 159,

230, 233, 251–52, 291, 293–95, 353, 372, 374, 399

black, 77 educated, 77 regarding, 399 paying, 57 professional, 76 qualified, 126 top-performing, 353 The Worker Adjustment and Retraining

Notification (WARN) Act, 349 Workers’ compensation, 9, 280–82, 285, 288, 340,

368–69, 379, 384

Volunteerism, 44, 288, 291 VOW (Veterans Opportunity to Work), 63

W Wages, 5, 10–11, 14, 101, 246, 249–50, 252, 279,

285–86, 308–9, 316–17, 319, 322, 324, 366 better, 313 curve, 264–65 definition of, 319 differentials, 248–49 discrimination claims, 58 gap, 308 good, 311 gross, 9 hourly, 13, 246, 248, 250, 254 increase, 286, 322–23 lost, 60, 65 lucrative, 249 new, 319 premium, 73 raising, 323 rate, 251, 308, 321 regarding, 320

Z04_MART9724_15_SE_SIDX.indd 441 10/3/17 3:13 PM

  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Part One Setting the Stage
    • Chapter 1 Human Resource Management: An Overview
      • Human Resource Management: What It is and Why It is Important
        • Why Study HRM?
        • Human Resource Management Functions
      • Who Performs Human Resource Management Activities?
        • Human Resource Management Professional
        • Line Managers
        • Human Resources Outsourcing
        • Human Resources Shared Service Centers
        • Professional Employer Organizations
        • More about HR Professionals
        • HR BLOOPERS: Staffing Stone Consulting
      • Human Resources as a Strategic Business Partner in a Dynamic Environment
        • Capital and Human Capital
        • Dynamic Human Resource Management Environment
      • The Role of HRM in Building Corporate Culture and Employer Branding
        • Corporate Culture
        • Employer Branding
      • Human Resource Management in Small Businesses
      • Country Culture and Global Business
      • Developing Skills for Your Career
        • Communication
        • Critical Thinking
        • Collaboration
        • Knowledge Application and Analysis
        • Business Ethics and Social Responsibility
        • Information Technology Application and Computing Skills
        • Data Literacy
        • Scope of This Book
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Broken Promises
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: HR After a Disaster
      • INCIDENT 2: Parental Leave at Yahoo
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 2 Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability
      • Defining Ethics and the Sources of Ethical Guidance
        • Business Ethics
        • Sources of Ethical Guidance
        • Legislating Ethics
      • Creating an Ethical Culture and a Code of Ethics
        • Ethical Culture
        • Code of Ethics
      • Human Resource Ethics
        • Linking Pay to Ethical Behavior
        • Ethics Training
        • HR BLOOPERS: Sales Incentives at Pinser Pharmaceuticals
      • Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability
        • Corporate Social Responsibility
        • Corporate Sustainability
      • Conducting a Social Audit
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: A Selection Quandary
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: An Ethical Flaw
      • INCIDENT 2: Illegal Hiring
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 3 Equal Employment Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Workforce Diversity
      • Equal Employment Opportunity and the Federal Laws Affecting Eeo
        • Constitutional Amendments and the Civil Rights Act of 1866
        • Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Amended in 1972
        • Equal Pay Act of 1963, Amended in 1972
        • Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009
        • Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978
        • Civil Rights Act of 1991
        • Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, Amended in 1978, 1986, and 1990
        • Age Can Actually Be a Bona Fide Occupational Qualification
        • Rehabilitation Act of 1973
        • Vietnam Era Veteran’s Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974
        • Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as Amended
        • Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
        • Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act of 2008
        • Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
        • Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994
        • Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008
        • State and Local Laws
      • Who’s Responsible for Ensuring Equal Employment Opportunity?
        • Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
        • Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
        • Employers
      • Illegal Discrimination and Affirmative Action
        • Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures
        • Types of Unlawful Employment Discrimination
        • Affirmative Action
      • Uniform Guidelines on Preventing Specific Illegal Employment Discrimination
        • Guidelines on Sexual Harassment
        • Guidelines on Discrimination Because of National Origin
        • Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion
        • Guidelines on Caregiver (Family Responsibility) Discrimination
        • Discrimination Because of Disability
      • Diversity and Diversity Management
      • Elements of the Diverse Workforce
        • Single Parents and Working Mothers
        • Women in Business
        • Mothers Returning to the Workforce (on Ramping)
        • Dual‐Career Families
        • Ethnicity and Race
        • Older Workers
        • People with Disabilities
        • Immigrants
        • Foreign Workers
        • Young Persons, Some with Limited Education or Skills
        • Baby Boomers, Gen X, Gen Y, and Gen Z
        • HR BLOOPERS: Affirmative Action and Workforce Diversity
        • Multi‐generational Diversity
        • Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Employees
      • Preparing for Exam/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: How About Me?
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: You’re Not a Good Employee
      • INCIDENT 2: So, What’s Affirmative Action?
      • Endnotes
  • Part Two Staffing
    • Chapter 4 Strategic Planning, Human Resource Planning, and Job Analysis
      • HR Strategic Planning Process
        • Mission Determination
      • Human Resource Planning
        • Forecasting Human Resource Requirements
        • HR BLOOPERS: Workforce Planning at Master Cleaners
        • Forecasting Human Resource Availability
        • Shortage or Surplus of Workers Forecasted
        • Succession Planning: A Component of Strategic Planning
      • Job Analysis: Process and Methods
        • Reasons for Conducting Job Analysis
        • Job Analysis Methods
      • Job Descriptions
        • Job Identification
        • Date of the Job Analysis
        • Job Summary
        • Duties Performed
        • Job Specification
        • Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)
        • The Occupational Information Network (O*NET)
      • Competencies and Competency Modeling
      • Job Design Concepts
      • Preparing For Exam/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing For My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Which “Thinker” Should Go?
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Competitive Strategy at Buddy Dog Foods
      • INCIDENT 2: Who’s Flying the Plane?
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 5 Recruitment
      • Recruitment and the Recruitment Process
      • Environment of Recruitment
        • Labor Market Conditions
        • Active or Passive Job Seekers
        • Legal Considerations
      • Internal Recruitment Methods
        • Human Resource Databases
        • Job Posting and Job Bidding
        • HR BLOOPERS: Recruiting Skilled Machinists
        • Employee Referrals
      • External Recruitment Sources
        • High Schools and Vocational Schools
        • Community Colleges
        • Colleges and Universities
        • Competitors in the Labor Market
        • Former Employees
        • Unemployed
        • Military Personnel
        • Self‐Employed Workers
        • Ex‐Offenders
      • External Recruitment Methods
        • Online and Mobile Recruiting
        • Traditional Methods
        • Tailoring Recruitment Methods to Sources
      • Alternatives to Recruitment
        • Promotion Policies
        • Overtime
      • Preparing for Exam/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Unfair Advantage?
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: A Problem Ad?
      • INCIDENT 2: I Am Qualified, Why Not Me?
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 6 Selection
      • Selection and Environmental Factors Affecting the Selection Process
        • The Selection Process
        • The Environment of Selection
      • Preliminary Screening and Review of Applications and Résumés
      • Selection Tests
        • Preliminary Considerations
        • Advantages and Disadvantages of Selection Tests
        • Characteristics of Properly Designed Selection Tests
        • Test Validation Approaches
        • Employment Tests
        • Unique Forms of Testing
        • Legal Considerations
      • Employment Interview
        • Interview Planning
        • HR BLOOPERS: The First Interview
        • Content of the Interview
        • Candidate’s Role and Expectations
        • General Types of Interviews
        • Methods of Interviewing
        • Potential Interviewing Problems
        • Concluding the Interview
      • Pre‐Employment Screening and Background Checks
        • Employment Eligibility Verification (Form I‐9)
        • Continuous Background Investigation
        • Background Investigation with Social Media
        • Remembering Hiring Standards to Avoid
      • Selection Decision and Evaluating the Effectiveness of Selection Decisions
        • Making the Selection Decision
        • Evaluating Selection Decisions
      • Preparing for Exam/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Hiring with Incomplete Information
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: A Matter of Priorities
      • INCIDENT 2: National Career Day
      • Endnotes
  • Part Three Performance Management and Training
    • Chapter 7 Performance Management and Appraisal
      • Performance Management, Performance Appraisal, and the Performance Appraisal Process
        • Performance Management
        • Performance Appraisal
        • Performance Appraisal Process
      • The Uses of Performance Appraisal and Performance Criteria
        • Uses of Performance Appraisal
        • Performance Criteria
        • Responsibility for Performance Appraisal
        • Performance Appraisal Period
      • Choosing a Performance Appraisal Method
        • Trait Systems
        • Comparison Systems
        • Behavioral Systems
        • Results‐Based Systems
        • HR BLOOPERS: Appraising Performance at Global Insurance
      • Assessing the Effectiveness and Limitations of Performance Appraisal Practices
        • Characteristics of an Effective Appraisal System
        • Limitations of Performance Appraisal
        • Legal Considerations
      • Performance Appraisal Interview
        • Scheduling the Interview
        • Interview Structure
        • Use of Praise and Criticism
        • Employees’ Role
        • Concluding the Interview
      • Trends in Performance Appraisal Practice
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Abdication of Responsibility
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: These Things Are a Pain
      • INCIDENT 2: Good Job!
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 8 Training and Development
      • Training and Development and Related Practices
      • Training and Development Process
        • Determine Specific Training and Development Needs
        • Establish Training and Development Program Objectives
        • Training Methods
        • Training and Development Delivery Systems
        • Implementing Training and Development Programs
        • Metrics for Evaluating Training and Development
        • Factors Influencing Training and Development
      • Human Resource Management Training Initiatives
      • Careers and Career Planning Approaches and Methods
        • Traditional Career Path
        • Network Career Path
        • Lateral Skill Path
        • Dual‐Career Path
        • Adding Value to Your Career
        • Demotion
        • Free Agents (Being Your Own Boss)
        • Career Planning Approaches
        • Career Development Methods
      • Management Development
        • Mentoring and Coaching
        • Reverse Mentoring
        • HR BLOOPERS: Management Development at Trends Apparel
      • Organization Development and the Learning Organization
        • OD Interventions
        • Learning Organization
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Consequences of Inadequate Training Design
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Career Development at Meyers and Brown
      • INCIDENT 2: There’s No Future Here!
      • Endnotes
  • Part Four Compensation
    • Chapter 9 Direct Financial Compensation (Monetary Compensation)
      • Total Compensation and the Environment of Compensation Practice
        • Direct and Indirect Financial Compensation
        • Structure of Direct Financial Compensation Plans
        • Contextual Influences
      • Direct Financial Compensation Components
        • Base Pay
        • Cost‐of‐Living Adjustments
        • Seniority Pay
        • Performance‐Based Pay
        • HR BLOOPERS: Motivating Software Development Teams
        • Person‐Focused Pay
      • Building Job Structures
        • Ranking Method
        • Classification Method
        • Factor Comparison Method
        • Point Method
      • Establishing Competitive Compensation Policies
        • Pay Level Compensation Policies
        • Pay Mix
      • Building Pay Structures
        • Pay Grades
        • Pay Ranges
        • Broadbanding
        • Two‐Tier Wage System
        • Adjusting Pay Rates
        • Pay Compression
      • Exceptions to the Rules: Sales Professionals, Contingent Workers, and Executives
        • Sales Professionals
        • Contingent Workers
        • Executive Compensation
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Sales Tactics at Wells Fargo Bank
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: The Pay Gap at Barker Enterprise
      • INCIDENT 2: The Controversial Job
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 10 Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits)
      • Indirect Financial Compensation (Employee Benefits)
      • Legally Required Benefits
        • Social Security
        • Unemployment Insurance
        • Workers’ Compensation
        • Health Care
      • Discretionary Benefits
        • Retirement Plans
        • Life Insurance and Disability Insurance
        • Paid Time‐Off
        • Employee Services
      • Workplace Flexibility (Work–Life Balance)
        • Flextime
        • Compressed Workweek
        • Job Sharing
        • Two‐in‐a‐Box
        • Telecommuting
        • Part‐Time Work
        • HR BLOOPERS: The Job‐Sharing Problem at SunTrust Bank
      • Customized Benefit Plans
      • Communicating Information about the Benefits Package
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: A Poor Bid
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Flextime
      • INCIDENT 2: Communicating Benefits at Seaview Property Management Company
      • Endnotes
  • Part Five Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Safety, and Health
    • Chapter 11 Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining
      • The Role of Labor Unions
        • Why Employees Join Unions
        • Prevalence of Unions
      • Union Structure and Labor Strategies
        • Structure of Unions
        • Organized Labor’s Strategies for Promoting a Stronger Labor Movement
      • Laws Affecting Collective Bargaining
        • National Labor Relations Act
        • HR BLOOPERS: Stopping Unionization at Packer Industries
        • Labor‐Management Relations Act
        • Antidiscrimination Laws and Executive Orders
      • Bargaining Unit Formation and the Collective Bargaining Process
        • Forming a Bargaining Unit
        • Collective Bargaining Process
        • Bargaining Issues
        • Preparation for Negotiations
        • Negotiating the Agreement
        • Overcoming Breakdowns in Negotiations
        • Reaching the Labor‐Management Agreement
        • Ratifying the Labor‐Management Agreement
        • Administration of the Labor‐Management Agreement
        • Public Sector Collective Bargaining
      • Grievance Procedure in a Union Environment
      • Union Decertification
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: A Strategic Move
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Break Down the Barrier
      • INCIDENT 2: We’re Listening
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 12 Internal Employee Relations
      • Employment at Will
      • Discipline and Disciplinary Action
        • Disciplinary Action Process
        • Approaches to Disciplinary Action
        • Problems in the Administration of Disciplinary Action
      • Employment Termination
        • “Just Cause” as a Standard for Choosing to Terminate Employment
        • Considerations in Communicating the Termination Decision
        • Termination of Employees at Various Levels
        • HR BLOOPERS: Effective Discipline at Berries Groceries
        • Demotion as an Alternative to Termination
        • Downsizing
      • Ombudspersons and Alternative Dispute Resolution
        • Ombudspersons
        • Alternative Dispute Resolution
      • More Considerations for Internal Employee Relations
        • Transfers
        • Promotions
        • Resignations
        • Retirements
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: To Fire or Not to Fire
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Employment at Will
      • INCIDENT 2: To Heck with Them!
      • Endnotes
    • Chapter 13 Employee Safety, Health, and Wellness
      • Nature and Role of Safety, Health, and Wellness
        • Occupational Safety and Health Administration
        • OSHA and Whistle‐Blowers
        • OSHA and the Small Business
        • HR BLOOPERS: Health and Safety Problems at XIF Chemicals
        • The Economic Impact of Safety
      • Workplace Safety Programs
        • Unsafe Employee Actions
        • Unsafe Working Conditions
        • Developing Safety Programs
        • Accident Investigation
        • Evaluation of Safety Programs
        • Musculoskeletal Disorders
        • Ergonomics
      • Workplace Bullying and Violence
        • Workplace Bullying
        • Workplace Violence
        • Legal Consequences of Workplace Violence
      • Employee Stress and Burnout
        • Potential Consequences of Stress
        • Stressful Jobs
        • Burnout
      • Substance Abuse, Substance‐Abuse‐Free Workplaces, and Drug‐Testing Programs
        • Alcohol Abuse
        • Drug Abuse
        • Substance‐Abuse‐Free Workplace and Drug Testing
      • Employee Wellness and Employee Assistance Programs
        • Wellness Programs
        • Social Networking and Wellness
        • Employee Assistance Programs
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: In Confidence
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: Something Isn’t Quite Right
      • INCIDENT 2: A Commitment to Safety?
      • Endnotes
  • Part Six Operating in a Global Environment
    • Chapter 14 Global Human Resource Management
      • Evolution and Context of Global Business and Human Resource Management
        • Evolution of Global Business
        • Context of Global Business
      • Global Staffing
        • Expatriate
        • Host‐Country National
        • Third‐Country National
        • Approaches to Global Staffing
        • Recruiting Host‐Country Nationals
        • Selecting Expatriates
        • Background Investigation
        • HR BLOOPERS: United Architect’s Expatriate Problems
      • Global Performance Management and Human Resource Development
        • Performance Management
        • Expatriate Human Resource Development
        • Pre‐Move Orientation and Training
        • Continual Development: Online Assistance and Training
        • Repatriation Orientation and Training
        • Global E‐learning
        • Virtual Teams in a Global Environment
      • Global Compensation
        • Compensation for Host‐Country Nationals
        • Expatriate Compensation
      • Global Safety, Health, and Employee and Labor Relations
        • Safety and Health
        • Global Employee Relations
        • Global Labor Relations
      • Globalization for Small to Medium‐Sized Businesses
      • Preparing for Exams/Quizzes
      • Key Terms
      • Questions for Review
      • Preparing for My Career
        • Ethics Dilemma: Meeting Customer Demand at Any Cost
      • HRM Is Everyone’s Business
      • HRM by the Numbers
      • Working Together: Team Exercise
      • INCIDENT 1: My Darling
      • INCIDENT 2: Was There Enough Preparation?
      • Endnotes
  • Glossary
  • Name Index
  • Company Index
  • Subject Index