Thursday, February 23, 2012

The six competencies to inspire HR professionals for 2012

This material was passed on to my by a colleague of mine.


http://www.hrmagazine.co.uk/hr/features/1020649/exclusive-the-competencies-inspire-hr-professionals-2012


It's an interesting piece on the six key competencies needed for HR Professionals. 


  1. Strategic Positioner
  2. Credible Activist
  3. Capability Builder
  4. Change Champion
  5. Human Resource Innovator and Integrator
  6. Technology Proponent
These are the themes driving the above competencies. They are intended with to align with the above competencies - the Strategic positioner for example needs to think and act form the outside/in in order to coordinate strategic solutions.


  1. outside/in: HR must turn outside business trends and stakeholder expectations into internal actions
  2. business/people: HR should focus on both business results and human capital improvement
  3. individual/organisational: HR should target both individual ability and organisation capabilities
  4. event/sustainability: HR is not about an isolated activity (a training, communication, staffing, or compensation programme) but sustainable and integrated solutions
  5. past/future: respect HR's heritage, but shape a future
  6. administrative/strategic: HR must attend to both day-to-day administrative processes and long-term strategic practices.
I may discuss this in more detail in further posts. In the mean time, the above link should give you plenty to think about.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

I'm back!

Well it's been a long time since posts...

I'm excited to say however that this blog will be resurrected! I will be making posts fortnightly to begin with and we will see how we go from there.

The topics will be related to HR in some way and over the coming weeks I will begin to make edits to the blog and side documents as it searches for a new identity.

Jack

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Thoughts about recruitment

I'd like to discuss some points raised during a discussion about recruitment during a group HR meeting.

There were interesting comments made about things to consider when changing recruitment strategies or simply engaging in large scale acquisitions. For instance:

1. When acquiring a new business unit always take into account the culture of the business. This point seems obvious in retrospect however the culture of a business or even micro cultures within a business can come secondary when discussions of market share and profitability are on the table. Will a new acquisition align with your processes? procedures? Is it a culture based around a small office environment? A culture may share the same values but work strikingly different in achieving those values through day to day processes.

2. A positive of centralised recruitment is if the recruitment team is familiar with a ride range of business areas with in the organisation they are more likely to cross recruit throughout the organisation. When recruitment is decentralised it will be more specialised however each recruitment team will be less familiar with the needs of each other team.

3. Are business units seeking quality or simply trying to fill a quantity? Businesses in high turn over environments may be doing the latter. That being said high turnover environments may not have the resources to invest in quality recruitment or it may simply not be cost effective because of the fact.

4. At the end of the day the psychological contract is between the manager and the employee not HR and the employee. What this means is what is easier for HR in terms of recruitment may not nessecarily be easier for the mangers dealing with the employee on a daily basis. That being said recruitment processes and procedures should be in the best interests of the managers as they hold the psychological contract and will hold a stronger influence on the employee's experience.