5-1McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
fundamentals of
Human Resource Management 3rd
edition
by R.A. Noe, J.R. Hollenbeck, B. Gerhart, and P.M. Wright
CHAPTER 5
Planning For and Recruiting
Human Resources
5-2
What Do I Need to Know?
1. Discuss how to plan for human resources
needed to carry out the organization’s
strategy.
2. Determine the labor demand for workers in
various job categories.
3. Summarize the advantages and
disadvantages of ways to eliminate a labor
surplus and avoid a labor shortage.
5-3
What Do I Need to Know? (continued)
4. Describe recruitment policies organizations
use to make job vacancies more attractive.
5. List and compare sources of job applicants.
6. Describe the recruiter’s role in the
recruitment process, including limits and
opportunities.
5-4
The Process of Human Resource Planning
• Organizations should carry out human
resource planning so as to meet business
objectives and gain a competitive advantage
over competitors.
– Human resource planning compares the present
state of the organization with its goals for the
future
– Then identifies what changes it must make in its
human resources to meet those goals
5-5
Figure 5.1: Overview of the Human
Resource Planning Process
5-6
Forecasting
• Forecasting: attempts
to determine the supply
and demand for various
types of human
resources to predict
areas within the
organization where
there will be labor
shortages or surpluses.
There are three major
steps to forecasting:
1. Forecasting the demand
for labor
2. Determining labor
supply
3. Determining labor
surplus or shortage
5-7
Forecasting the Demand for Labor
Trend Analysis
• Constructing and
applying statistical
models that predict
labor demand for the
next year, given
relatively objective
statistics from the
previous year.
Leading Indicators
• Objective measures
that accurately predict
future labor demand.
5-8
Determining Labor Supply
• Transitional matrix: a
chart that lists job
categories held in one
period and shows the
proportion of employees
in each of those job
categories in a future
period.
It answers two questions:
1. “Where did people in
each job category go?”
2. “Where did people now
in each job category
come from?
5-9
Table 5.1: Transitional Matrix – Example
for an Auto Parts Manufacturer
5-10
Determining Labor Surplus or Shortage
• Based on the forecasts for labor demand and
supply, the planner can compare the figures
to determine whether there will be a shortage
or surplus of labor for each job category.
• Determining expected shortages and
surpluses allows the organization to plan how
to address these challenges.
5-11
Goal Setting and Strategic Planning
• The purpose of setting specific numerical goals
is to focus attention on the problem and
provide a basis for measuring the organization’s
success in addressing labor shortages and
surpluses.
• The goals should come directly from the
analysis of supply and demand.
• For each goal, the organization must choose
one or more human resource strategies.
5-12
Options for Reducing a Surplus
5-13
As the average age of many workers in skilled trades grows, the coming
demand for workers in many trades is expected to outstrip supply in the
United States. There is a potential for employers in some areas to
experience a labor shortage because of this.
5-14
Options for Avoiding a Shortage
5-15
Table 5.2: HR Strategies for Addressing a
Labor Shortage or Surplus
5-16
Test Your Knowledge
• A public accounting firm of 250 employees
realizes they have a surplus of 15 support
personnel (not auditors). What should they
do?
A. Hire temporary workers
B. Offer early retirement
C. Downsize people in those positions
D. Wait for attrition and implement a hiring freeze
for those positions
5-17
Implementing and Evaluating the HR Plan
• When implementing the HR strategy, the
organization must hold some individual accountable
for achieving the goals.
• That person must also have the authority and
resources needed to accomplish those goals.
• Regular progress reports should be issued.
• The evaluation of results should not only look at the
actual numbers, but should also identify which parts
of the planning process contributed to success or
failure.
5-18
Applying HR Planning to Affirmative Action
• Workforce Utilization
Review: a comparison of
employees in protected
groups with the
proportion that each
group represents in the
relevant labor market.
• The steps in a workforce
utilization review are
identical to the steps in
the HR planning process.
• The organization must
assess current utilization
patterns, then forecast
how they are likely to
change in the near future.
• If the analyses forecast
underutilization of certain
groups, then goals and a
plan will be established.
5-19
Recruiting Human Resources
• The role of human resource recruitment is to
build a supply of potential new hires that the
organization can draw on if the need arises.
• Recruiting: any activity carried on by the
organization with the primary purpose of
identifying and attracting potential
employees.
5-20
Figure 5.2: Three Aspects of Recruiting
5-21
Personnel
Policies
Several personnel
policies are
especially relevant
to recruitment:
5-22
• Image advertising, such
as in this campaign to
recruit nurses, promotes
a whole profession or
organization as opposed
to a specific job opening.
• This ad is designed to
create a positive
impression of the
profession, which is now
facing a shortage of
workers.
5-23
Recruitment Sources: Internal Sources
• Job Posting: the process of communicating
information about a job vacancy:
– On company bulletin boards
– In employee publications
– On corporate intranets
– Anywhere else the organization communicates
with employees
5-24
Advantages of Internal Sources
1. It generates applicants who are well known to
the organization.
2. These applicants are relatively knowledgeable
about the organization’s vacancies, which
minimizes the possibility of unrealistic job
expectations.
3. Filling vacancies through internal recruiting is
generally cheaper and faster than looking
outside the organization.
5-25
One in Three Positions Are
Filled with Insiders
5-26
Recruitment Sources: External Sources
5-27
Figure 5.3: External Recruiting Sources –
Percentage of Employees Hired
5-28
Evaluating the Quality of a Source
Yield Ratios
• A ratio that expresses the
percentage of applicants who
successfully move from one
stage of the recruitment and
selection process to the next.
• By comparing the yield ratios of
different recruitment sources,
we can determine which source
is the best or most efficient for
the type of vacancy.
Cost Per Hire
• Find the cost of using a
particular recruitment source
for a particular type of vacancy.
• Divide that cost by the number
of people hired to fill that type
of vacancy.
• A low cost per hire means that
the recruitment source is
efficient.
5-29
Table 5.3:
Results of a Hypothetical Recruiting Effort
5-30
Your Experience
• In your last job search, what was your
experience with a recruiter or other point of
contact before you were offered the job?
A. Lousy, I didn’t take the job
B. Lousy, but I took the job anyway
C. Great, but I didn’t take the job
D. Great, I took the job
E. The experience wasn’t memorable.
5-31
Recruiter Traits and Behaviors
5-32
Recruiter Characteristics and Behavior
True = A False = B
• Applicants respond more positively when the recruiter
is an HR specialist than line managers or incumbents.
• Applicants respond positively to recruiters whom are
warm and informative
• Personnel policies are more important than the
recruiter when deciding whether or not to take a job.
• Realistic job previews should highlight the positive
characteristics of the job rather than the negative.
5-33
Figure 5.4:
Recruits Who Were Offended by Recruiters
5-34
Enhancing the Recruiter’s Impact
• Recruiters should provide timely feedback.
• Recruiters should avoid offensive behavior.
• They should avoid behaving in ways that
might convey the wrong impression about the
organization.
• The organization can recruit with teams rather
than individual recruiters.
5-35
Recruiting Exercise (1 of 2)
• You are the regional HR director of the
restaurant chain (e.g., Ruby Tuesday’s or TGI
Fridays) and responsible for recruiting all staff
for the restaurants in your region.
• One of the stores in your region needs to hire
servers.
5-36
Recruiting Exercise (2 of 2)
1. What knowledge, skills, and abilities are
required for the positions you are recruiting?
2. Will your sources of applicants be internal,
external, or both? Explain.
3. What recruiting strategies will you use?
4. What metrics will you use to measure your
success?
5-37
Summary
• The first step in human resource planning is
personnel forecasting. Through trend analysis and
good judgment, the planner tries to determine the
supply and demand for various human resources.
• The next step is to determine the labor demand for
workers in various job categories. Analysis of a
transitional matrix can help the planner identify
which job categories can be filled internally and
where high turnover is likely.
5-38
Summary (continued)
• To reduce a surplus, downsizing, pay reductions, and
demotions deliver fast results but at a high cost in
human suffering that may hurt surviving employees’
motivation and future recruiting.
• To avoid a labor shortage, requiring overtime is the
easiest and fastest strategy.
• Internal recruiting generally makes job vacancies
more attractive because candidates see
opportunities for growth and advancement.
5-39
Summary (continued)
• Lead-the-market pay strategies make jobs
economically desirable.
• Internal sources are usually not sufficient for all of an
organization’s labor needs.
• Through their behavior and other characteristics,
recruiters influence the nature of the job vacancy
and the kinds of applicants generated.

Chap005

  • 1.
    5-1McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright ©2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. fundamentals of Human Resource Management 3rd edition by R.A. Noe, J.R. Hollenbeck, B. Gerhart, and P.M. Wright CHAPTER 5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources
  • 2.
    5-2 What Do INeed to Know? 1. Discuss how to plan for human resources needed to carry out the organization’s strategy. 2. Determine the labor demand for workers in various job categories. 3. Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of ways to eliminate a labor surplus and avoid a labor shortage.
  • 3.
    5-3 What Do INeed to Know? (continued) 4. Describe recruitment policies organizations use to make job vacancies more attractive. 5. List and compare sources of job applicants. 6. Describe the recruiter’s role in the recruitment process, including limits and opportunities.
  • 4.
    5-4 The Process ofHuman Resource Planning • Organizations should carry out human resource planning so as to meet business objectives and gain a competitive advantage over competitors. – Human resource planning compares the present state of the organization with its goals for the future – Then identifies what changes it must make in its human resources to meet those goals
  • 5.
    5-5 Figure 5.1: Overviewof the Human Resource Planning Process
  • 6.
    5-6 Forecasting • Forecasting: attempts todetermine the supply and demand for various types of human resources to predict areas within the organization where there will be labor shortages or surpluses. There are three major steps to forecasting: 1. Forecasting the demand for labor 2. Determining labor supply 3. Determining labor surplus or shortage
  • 7.
    5-7 Forecasting the Demandfor Labor Trend Analysis • Constructing and applying statistical models that predict labor demand for the next year, given relatively objective statistics from the previous year. Leading Indicators • Objective measures that accurately predict future labor demand.
  • 8.
    5-8 Determining Labor Supply •Transitional matrix: a chart that lists job categories held in one period and shows the proportion of employees in each of those job categories in a future period. It answers two questions: 1. “Where did people in each job category go?” 2. “Where did people now in each job category come from?
  • 9.
    5-9 Table 5.1: TransitionalMatrix – Example for an Auto Parts Manufacturer
  • 10.
    5-10 Determining Labor Surplusor Shortage • Based on the forecasts for labor demand and supply, the planner can compare the figures to determine whether there will be a shortage or surplus of labor for each job category. • Determining expected shortages and surpluses allows the organization to plan how to address these challenges.
  • 11.
    5-11 Goal Setting andStrategic Planning • The purpose of setting specific numerical goals is to focus attention on the problem and provide a basis for measuring the organization’s success in addressing labor shortages and surpluses. • The goals should come directly from the analysis of supply and demand. • For each goal, the organization must choose one or more human resource strategies.
  • 12.
  • 13.
    5-13 As the averageage of many workers in skilled trades grows, the coming demand for workers in many trades is expected to outstrip supply in the United States. There is a potential for employers in some areas to experience a labor shortage because of this.
  • 14.
  • 15.
    5-15 Table 5.2: HRStrategies for Addressing a Labor Shortage or Surplus
  • 16.
    5-16 Test Your Knowledge •A public accounting firm of 250 employees realizes they have a surplus of 15 support personnel (not auditors). What should they do? A. Hire temporary workers B. Offer early retirement C. Downsize people in those positions D. Wait for attrition and implement a hiring freeze for those positions
  • 17.
    5-17 Implementing and Evaluatingthe HR Plan • When implementing the HR strategy, the organization must hold some individual accountable for achieving the goals. • That person must also have the authority and resources needed to accomplish those goals. • Regular progress reports should be issued. • The evaluation of results should not only look at the actual numbers, but should also identify which parts of the planning process contributed to success or failure.
  • 18.
    5-18 Applying HR Planningto Affirmative Action • Workforce Utilization Review: a comparison of employees in protected groups with the proportion that each group represents in the relevant labor market. • The steps in a workforce utilization review are identical to the steps in the HR planning process. • The organization must assess current utilization patterns, then forecast how they are likely to change in the near future. • If the analyses forecast underutilization of certain groups, then goals and a plan will be established.
  • 19.
    5-19 Recruiting Human Resources •The role of human resource recruitment is to build a supply of potential new hires that the organization can draw on if the need arises. • Recruiting: any activity carried on by the organization with the primary purpose of identifying and attracting potential employees.
  • 20.
    5-20 Figure 5.2: ThreeAspects of Recruiting
  • 21.
  • 22.
    5-22 • Image advertising,such as in this campaign to recruit nurses, promotes a whole profession or organization as opposed to a specific job opening. • This ad is designed to create a positive impression of the profession, which is now facing a shortage of workers.
  • 23.
    5-23 Recruitment Sources: InternalSources • Job Posting: the process of communicating information about a job vacancy: – On company bulletin boards – In employee publications – On corporate intranets – Anywhere else the organization communicates with employees
  • 24.
    5-24 Advantages of InternalSources 1. It generates applicants who are well known to the organization. 2. These applicants are relatively knowledgeable about the organization’s vacancies, which minimizes the possibility of unrealistic job expectations. 3. Filling vacancies through internal recruiting is generally cheaper and faster than looking outside the organization.
  • 25.
    5-25 One in ThreePositions Are Filled with Insiders
  • 26.
  • 27.
    5-27 Figure 5.3: ExternalRecruiting Sources – Percentage of Employees Hired
  • 28.
    5-28 Evaluating the Qualityof a Source Yield Ratios • A ratio that expresses the percentage of applicants who successfully move from one stage of the recruitment and selection process to the next. • By comparing the yield ratios of different recruitment sources, we can determine which source is the best or most efficient for the type of vacancy. Cost Per Hire • Find the cost of using a particular recruitment source for a particular type of vacancy. • Divide that cost by the number of people hired to fill that type of vacancy. • A low cost per hire means that the recruitment source is efficient.
  • 29.
    5-29 Table 5.3: Results ofa Hypothetical Recruiting Effort
  • 30.
    5-30 Your Experience • Inyour last job search, what was your experience with a recruiter or other point of contact before you were offered the job? A. Lousy, I didn’t take the job B. Lousy, but I took the job anyway C. Great, but I didn’t take the job D. Great, I took the job E. The experience wasn’t memorable.
  • 31.
  • 32.
    5-32 Recruiter Characteristics andBehavior True = A False = B • Applicants respond more positively when the recruiter is an HR specialist than line managers or incumbents. • Applicants respond positively to recruiters whom are warm and informative • Personnel policies are more important than the recruiter when deciding whether or not to take a job. • Realistic job previews should highlight the positive characteristics of the job rather than the negative.
  • 33.
    5-33 Figure 5.4: Recruits WhoWere Offended by Recruiters
  • 34.
    5-34 Enhancing the Recruiter’sImpact • Recruiters should provide timely feedback. • Recruiters should avoid offensive behavior. • They should avoid behaving in ways that might convey the wrong impression about the organization. • The organization can recruit with teams rather than individual recruiters.
  • 35.
    5-35 Recruiting Exercise (1of 2) • You are the regional HR director of the restaurant chain (e.g., Ruby Tuesday’s or TGI Fridays) and responsible for recruiting all staff for the restaurants in your region. • One of the stores in your region needs to hire servers.
  • 36.
    5-36 Recruiting Exercise (2of 2) 1. What knowledge, skills, and abilities are required for the positions you are recruiting? 2. Will your sources of applicants be internal, external, or both? Explain. 3. What recruiting strategies will you use? 4. What metrics will you use to measure your success?
  • 37.
    5-37 Summary • The firststep in human resource planning is personnel forecasting. Through trend analysis and good judgment, the planner tries to determine the supply and demand for various human resources. • The next step is to determine the labor demand for workers in various job categories. Analysis of a transitional matrix can help the planner identify which job categories can be filled internally and where high turnover is likely.
  • 38.
    5-38 Summary (continued) • Toreduce a surplus, downsizing, pay reductions, and demotions deliver fast results but at a high cost in human suffering that may hurt surviving employees’ motivation and future recruiting. • To avoid a labor shortage, requiring overtime is the easiest and fastest strategy. • Internal recruiting generally makes job vacancies more attractive because candidates see opportunities for growth and advancement.
  • 39.
    5-39 Summary (continued) • Lead-the-marketpay strategies make jobs economically desirable. • Internal sources are usually not sufficient for all of an organization’s labor needs. • Through their behavior and other characteristics, recruiters influence the nature of the job vacancy and the kinds of applicants generated.

Editor's Notes

  • #2 This chapter describes how organizations carry out human resource planning. In addition, it discusses the process of recruiting and role of recruiters.
  • #3 After reading and discussing this chapter, you should be able to:
  • #4 After reading and discussing this chapter, you should be able to:
  • #5 Trends and events that affect the economy also create opportunities and problems in obtaining human resources. To prepare for and respond to these challenges, organizations engage in human resource planning – defined in Chapter 1 as identifying the numbers and types of employees the organization will require to meet its objectives.
  • #6 Figure 5.1 shows the human resource planning process. The process consists of three stages: Forecasting Goal setting and strategic planning Program implementation and evaluation
  • #7 The first step in human resource planning is forecasting. The primary goal is to predict which areas of the organization will experience labor shortages or surpluses.
  • #8 Usually an organization forecasts demand for specific job categories or skill areas. After identifying the relevant job categories or skills, the planner investigates the likely demand for each. The planner must forecast whether the need for people with the necessary skills and experience will increase or decrease. There are several ways of making such forecasts.
  • #9 Once a company has forecast the demand for labor, it needs an indication of the firm’s labor supply.
  • #10 Table 5.1 is an example of a transitional matrix. Matrices such as this one are extremely useful for charting historical trends in the company’s labor supply.
  • #11 Issues related to a labor surplus or shortage can pose serious challenges for the organization.
  • #12 This is the second step in human resource planning as shown in the middle of Figure 5.1.
  • #14 Ask students: “How can HR prepare itself for this reality?” “What should be done now to avoid the shortage?”
  • #17 A public accounting firm realizes they have a surplus of support personnel (not auditors). What should they do? Hire temporary workers Offer early retirement Downsize people in those positions Wait for attrition and implement a hiring freeze for those positions There may be more than one good answer depending on the student’s rationale. D would have the least negative impact but may take a long time. “B” Early retirement would likely entice more than just support personnel and perhaps more than just 15 people which could cause a labor shortage. Downsizing would be fast but could create morale problems and a poor public image although with the small numbers this may not be much of a problem. “A” is not appropriate until the surplus is managed.
  • #18 For whatever HR strategies are selected, the final stage of human resource planning involves implementing the strategies and evaluating the outcomes. This stage is represented by the bottom part of Figure 5.1.
  • #19 Meeting affirmative action goals requires that employers carry out an additional level of human resource planning aimed at those goals. The organization looks at the representation of subgroups in its labor force.
  • #20 The goals of recruiting (encouraging qualified people to apply for jobs) and selection (deciding which candidates would be the best fit) are different enough that they are most effective when performed separately, rather than combined as in a job interview that also involves selling candidates on the company.
  • #21 All companies have to make decisions in three areas of recruiting: Personnel policies Recruitment sources Characteristics and behavior of the recruiter These aspects of recruiting have different effects on whom the organization ultimately hires. This is shown in Figure 5.2.
  • #22 An organization’s personnel policies are its decisions about how it will carry out human resource management, including how it will fill job vacancies.
  • #24 Another critical element of an organization’s recruitment strategy is its decisions about where to look for applicants. The total labor market is enormous and spread over the entire globe.
  • #25 For the employer, relying on internal sources offers several advantages:
  • #26 In a survey of large, well-known businesses, respondents said about one-third of positions are filled with people who already work for the company and accept a promotion or transfer.
  • #27 Despite the advantages of internal recruitment, organizations often have good reasons to recruit externally. For entry-level positions and perhaps for specialized upper-level positions, the organization has no internal recruits from which to draw. Also, bringing in outsiders may expose the organization to new ideas or new ways of doing business.
  • #28 Figure 5.3 shows which of the external sources of recruiting are used most among large companies surveyed. According to the survey results shown in Figure 5.3, the largest share (about one-fourth) of new employees hired by large companies came from referrals, and the next largest share (almost 21 percent) came from direct applications made at the employer’s Web site.
  • #29 There are few rules that say what recruitment source is best for a given job vacancy. Therefore, it is wise for employers to monitor the quality of all their recruitment sources.
  • #30 Table 5.3 shows how the yield ratio and cost per hire measures are used by HR professionals.
  • #31 In your last job search, what was your experience with a recruiter or other point of contact before you were offered the job? Lousy, I didn’t take the job Lousy, but I took the job anyway Great, but I didn’t take the job Great, I took the job The experience wasn’t memorable. Use this question as a starting point to discuss the factors that contributed to taking the job or not and to what extent the recruiter or point of contact had on that decision. Follow-up with a series of “why” questions for those who responded to each option.
  • #32 The third influence on recruitment outcomes is the recruiter – including this person’s characteristics and the way he or she behaves. The recruiter affects the nature of both the job vacancy and the applicants generated.
  • #33 The recruiter affects the nature of both the job vacancy and the applicants generated. True=A; False=B Applicants respond more positively when the recruiter is an HR specialist than line managers or incumbents. False – applicants tend to respond more positively to someone who is currently in the job or a manager. Applicants respond positively to recruiters whom are warm and informative True - In general, applicants respond more positively to recruiters whom they perceive as warm and informative. Personnel policies are more important than the recruiter when deciding whether or not to take a job. True - For affecting whether people choose to take a job, the recruiter seems less important than an organization’s personnel policies that directly affect the job’s features. Realistic job previews should highlight the positive characteristics of the job rather than the negative. False - Realistic job previews provide background information about job’s positive and negative qualities.
  • #34 Figure 5.4 quotes applicants who felt they had extremely bad experiences with recruiters. Their statements provide examples of behaviors to avoid.
  • #35 Researchers have tried to find the conditions in which recruiters do make a difference. Such research suggests that an organization can take several steps to increase the positive impact that recruiters have on job candidates. Through such positive behavior, recruiters can give organizations a better chance of competing for talented human resources.
  • #36 Questions for discussion are on the next slide.
  • #37 Have them think about this as individuals for a couple of minutes and then work together with a partner to develop an approach. 1. This job should be familiar to them so they should have a good list of KSAs 2. Consider the right source based on the necessary qualifications of the employee. Also, consider promoting hosts to be a server if possible? Costs should be a consideration as well as reach in terms of diversity. What will they want to keep track of to measure their success? Job performance, time to hire, cost per hire, yield ratios, etc.