18 August 2012

HR As Product _ Be the Brand of Choice
It is time for Human Resources practitioners to rethink their role and that of the HR department, not only for the purposes of contributing to the organization's bottom line, but also for their own survival. 
HR continues to balance the demands of several different roles: business partner, internal consultant, operational and administrative expert and both employee and employer advocate. This may sound like business as usual, roles that aren’t likely to create a mad rush of HR people arming themselves for the future. 
In reality, however, they are new. Although the questions may be the same, the answers most assuredly are not. The ongoing challenge is to establish new deliverables and to sustain strong partnerships with both internal and external customers. The ability to see the big picture—and to deploy the resources to address the big picture—will be more important than ever. 
If you were to ask your employees today, "What does the HR Department do?" would they mutter something unintelligible to you and make a run for it?   If that is the case, your human resources department needs to rethink its role and do some in-house marketing, marketing research and public relations. 
First, you need to ask yourself some important questions: 
  • Do you know what your HR department’s reputation is among the employees? When HR is mentioned, do managers picture savvy strategists, backward bureaucrats, or pleasant, people-pleasers?
  • Do employees understand and appreciate the importance of the HR department in furthering the organization's mission and objectives? 
  • Does the HR department make an effort to market its services to the organization? If it does not, then it has the reputation it deserves. You can, however, easily correct this reputation.  
The key is to open up conversations with all levels of employees, and present yourself in the role of facilitator instead of enforcer. You have to get out of the HR office and into the world of your organization’s employees. Finding these answers requires dialogue, which means that HR must communicate. That communication must consist of equal parts of listening and promotion. First, HR must listen carefully to what its customers need. Then it must promote what it has done and can do. HR staff must educate the organization about its capabilities and potential contributions. No one knows your capabilities as well as you do. 
Employees, for the most part, still see HR as "those people who handle benefits and do interviewing." To position the HR function for the next decade, every HR practitioner need s to take on a public relations role—starting with your own employees. Think of yourself as a product and do some smart marketing.
During the past few years, HR has worked hard at educating senior management about the value it adds to the organization. Managers and employees are less familiar with HR's new role as business partner. Increasingly, these internal constituents will need to embrace the importance of the HR function. It won't be easy, but ongoing communication, and actually meeting the organization’s real and expressed needs, will help HR earn respect throughout the organization. 
The marketing of the HR department requires you to demonstrate your problem-solving skills, so others will know you do much more than simply process papers. The best form of advertising is the actions you take.  By your actions, processes and programs, you can promote the HR department as a flexible, adaptable, solutions-oriented partner, a resource to whom the organization can turn when it needs problems solved. 
According to Shari Caudron in her article Brand HR: Why and How to Market Your Image, "If you want HR to be perceived as more strategic, more valuable, more credible more whatever, you need to start thinking like a business with a product and market your overall brand image."  
As organizations continue to outsource non-value-added activities, HR is facing competition from outside vendors. If HR practitioners do not strive to build up the profession's overall image and reputation, they will lose services to organizations that understand what customer service and accountability are all about. These are Caudron’s eight great tips for building and enhancing the HR department's image and reputation. 
Identify your customer's needs and perceptions.  
The first step in creating or enhancing a brand identity is to determine who your customers are and what they need from the HR function. You will also want to know your customers’ current perceptions of the HR department. Begin this process by identifying your customers. Are your primary customer’s executive managers, line managers or the entire workforce? What products and services do they use from HR? What would they like to receive from HR?  Do they use HR services from outside HR vendors, and if so, why? How do they perceive the internal HR department? 
HR departments could conduct employee attitude surveys to obtain answers to these questions, but to get truthful and more useful information; Cauldron suggests it is worthwhile to hire an outside consultant to conduct the interviews in private. She states, "Employees would more likely state their true feelings about HR if they are guaranteed anonymity." 
It is important to conduct this type of analysis, to understand the difference between what you are providing and think your organization wants from you, and what they say they need. In today's organizations, there are so many perceptions about what role HR should play. HR conducts so many activities...training, recruitment, personal welfare, salary and bonus, and a whole range of other concerns that "HR brand" development is challenging. In order to correct this, HR practitioners must research their current "brand" to figure out where they stand. 
Craft an identity based on customer needs.  
Cauldron says that after you determine the needs and current perceptions of your existing customers, you can decide how you would like your customers to perceive the HR department. It is important to note that the function of the HR department will differ from organization to organization. In one organization, internal customers may want the HR department to provide great service in all of the traditional HR areas. 
In others, customers may expect HR to take responsibility for productivity and growth.  You have to decide what "brand" identity works best for your particular culture and then work to create a mission statement and organization that supports that identity. 
As another example, in your organization, it may make sense to outsource routine tasks such as payroll processing so that the remaining HR staff can concentrate on more strategic matters. To achieve a solid brand identity, you cannot be all things to all people.
You can try, but you will fail in the eyes of significant numbers of your customers. 
Develop a mission statement that resonates with meeting customer needs. 
Having determined your identity, Caudron suggests taking the time to design a mission statement that will guide you through the changes and improvements that you need to make. The mission statement should define the HR function, the values and core principles the department will uphold, and the benefit HR expects to provide to the rest of the organization. For example, the Los Angeles County HR Department's mission statement follows:  
                       “To provide a human resources program that carries out Board priorities for a comprehensive and equitable County personnel system;
                       To assist departments in developing and maintaining a high quality workforce, enabling them to provide critical services to the public; 
                       To establish Countywide policies and provide monitoring and oversight necessary to ensure consistent application of human  resource policies, including recruitment, selection, promotions, training, discipline, employee benefits administration, workforce reductions, classification, compensation, employee appeals and disability benefits; and
                       To ensure fair and equitable job and promotional opportunities and services for both current employees and individuals seeking employment with the County of Los Angeles” 
It is important to have a mission statement as it helps define your future goals and direction. The mission should not be empty rhetoric. It is a charter that outlines the HR pledge to the rest of the organization. 
Deliver your promises.  
Supposing, based on your customer input, the HR department needs to improve its customer service and supportiveness. This might require hiring more employees, empowering the receptionist to make decisions, or conducting team-building sessions. Customers want you to be more responsive. Caudron recommends that since forging your new identity means delivering a promise, you must ensure that the staff, practices and systems in your department all work to support the goal of customer service. Staff your department with people who are easy to work with and who are willing go the extra mile for line managers. Deliver what you promise in your mission statement. 
Update your image.  
Few consumer products are packaged without a distinctive logo and type of packaging.  Can you imagine mistaking a can of Pepsi for a can of Coca-Cola? A bottle of Coors for a Bud Light? These companies understand that the look of their products communicates powerful messages to consumers. 
The same applies to HR. If your HR department has made substantial improvements and changes, then you can use the packaging as a means of communicating those improvements to others. Develop a separate logo for your HR department, if you’d like, that expresses your mission, your commitment to customers, and your goals. The most important packaging piece, however, is the HR department itself. 
If you want your HR brand to deliver the message of quality service, ensure that visitors to the department get what they need, with no hassle, friction, or needless hoops to navigate. You can spend millions of dollars redesigning your department and developing a logo, but if the people in HR are impossible to deal with, you have accomplished nothing in the eyes of your organization. 
Spread the word.  
After you have determined your identity, created a system in which you can consistently deliver on your promises, and packaged the HR department in a manner that conveys improvements, Cauldron suggests it is time to "toot your horn."   For example, if you want human resources perceived as a strategic partner, take the time to quantify the strategic impact of a recent HR program or decision. Communicate this impact in board meetings, through your organization's newsletter, your Website or Intranet, or by developing special HR performance reports. The key objective, for positive notoriety, is to back up the overall message with hard data and specific success stories. 
Enhance your visibility.  
Another good marketing technique for HR, not only inside your organization, but also to the human resources world at large, is to publish articles in magazines and speak at HR seminars or conferences. This validates the internal changes you have made and may capture the attention and interest of your management group. You can heighten this visibility within your organization by including the program-specific managers and employees in the article or at the conference podium with you. Professionals love hearing from "real people" and they will spread the good word for you in your organization. 
Continuously improve. Keep on keeping on.  
Just as in the business world, where companies have to continuously review, revisit, and update their brands to meet customers' changing needs, so this advice applies to HR.  In the rapidly changing world of business, the HR profession must regularly be willing to make tough decisions about what it will and will not stand for.  Every HR professional can craft initiatives using the same toolbox. The best will try new things, challenge conventional wisdom, and ask more questions more often.  
With careful attention to forging an identity, your HR department can learn to provide what your internal and external customers expect. Your organization will love you and your HR staff members will take their place as “players,” making a difference in the real world of your organization. 

7 August 2012


Career Module

Although career development has been an important topic in management related courses for the past three decades, some drastic changes have occurred in recent years. Thirty years ago, career development programs were designed to assist employees in advancing their work lives and to provide the information and assessment needed to help realize career goals. Career development was a way for an organization to attract and retain highly talented personnel. Those concerns are all but disappearing in today’s organizations. Downsizing restructuring work process engineering and the like have reshaped the organization’s role in career development. Today the individual not the organization is responsible for an employee’s career. Unfortunately millions of employees have learned this reality the hard way over the past few years. This module has been created to better prepare you to take responsibility for managing your career.
Career: A sequence of work positions that a person has held over his or her life.
The best career is whatever offers the best match between what you want out of life and what you need. Good career choices should result in a series of positions that gives you an opportunity to be a good performer make you want to maintain your commitment to your career lead to highly satisfying work and give you the proper balance between work and personal life. A good career match, then, is one in which you are able to develop positive self concept to do work that you think is important and to lead the kind of life you desire. Creating that balance is referred to a career planning.
Career planning is designed to assist you in becoming more knowledgeable about your needs, values, and personal goals. This knowledge can be achieved through a three step, self assessment process:
Identify and organize your skills, interests, work related needs, and values: The best place to begin is by drawing up a profile of your educational record. List each school attended from high school on. What courses do you remember linking most and least? In what courses did you score highest and lowest? In what extracurricular activities did you participate? Are there any specific skills that you acquired? Are there other skills in which you have gained proficiency? Next, begin to assess your occupational experience. List each job you have held, the organization you worked for, your overall level of satisfaction what you liked most an least about the job and why you left. It’s important to be honest in covering of these points.
Convert this information into general career fields and specific job goals. Step 1 should have provided some insights into your interests and abilities. Now you need to look at how they can be converted in to the kind of organizational setting or field of endeavor with which you will be good match. Then you can become specific and identify distinct job goals. What fields are available? In business? In government? In nonprofit organization? Your answer can be broken down further into areas such as education, financial manufacturing, social services, or health services. Identifying areas of interest is usually far easier than pinpointing specific occupations. When you are able to identify a limited set of occupation that interests you, you can start to align them with your abilities and skills. Will certain jobs require you to move? If so, would the location be compatible with your geographic preferences? Do you have the educational requirements necessary for the job? If not, what additional schooling will be needed? Dies the job offer the status and earning potential to which you aspire? What is the long term outlook for jobs in this field? Does the field suffer from cyclical employment? Because no job is without its drawbacks, have you seriously considered all the negative aspects? When you have fully answered questions such as these, you should have a relatively short list of specific job goals.
Test your career possibilities against the realities of the organization or the job market by talking with knowledgeable people in the fields, organizations, or jobs you desire. These informational interviews should provide reliable feedback as to the accuracy of your self assessment and the opportunities available in the fields and jobs that interest you.–
Top 60 soft skills & Training Subjects
Please find the list of Soft Skill training program as given below:
1.Business Communication
2.Time Management
3.Conflict Management
4.Team Management
5.Leadership
6.Interpersonal Skills
7.Decision Making
8.Dealing with Difficult people
9.Right Attitude
10. Team Work

Top 60 soft skills
The Workforce Profile defined about 60 "soft skills", which employers seek. They are applicable to any field of work, according to the study, and are the "personal traits and skills that employers state are the most important when selecting employees for jobs of any type."

1. Math.
2. Safety.
3. Courtesy.
4. Honesty.
5. Grammar.
6. Reliability.
7. Flexibility.
8. Team skills.
9. Eye contact.
10. Cooperation.
11. Adaptability.
12. Follow rules.
13. Self-directed.
14 Good attitudes.
15. Writing skills.
16. Driver's license.
17. Dependability.
18. Advanced math.
19. Self-supervising.
20. Good references.
21. Being drug free.
22. Good attendance.
23. Personal energy.
24. Work experience.
25. Ability to measure.
26. Personal integrity.
27. Good work history.
28. Positive work ethic.
29. Interpersonal skills.
30. Motivational skills.
31. Valuing education.
32. Personal chemistry.
33. Willingness to learn.
34. Common sense.
35. Critical thinking skills.
36. Knowledge of fractions.
37. Reporting to work on time.
38. Use of rulers and calculators.
39. Good personal appearance.
40. Wanting to do a good job.
41. Basic spelling and grammar.
42. Reading and comprehension.
43. Ability to follow regulations.
44. Willingness to be accountable.
45. Ability to fill out a job application.
46. Ability to make production quotas.
47. Basic manufacturing skills training.
48. Awareness of how business works.
49. Staying on the job until it is finished.
50. Ability to read and follow instructions.
51. Willingness to work second and third shifts.
52. Caring about seeing the company succeed.
53. Understanding what the world is all about.
54. Ability to listen and document what you have heard.
55. Commitment to continued training and learning.
56. Willingness to take instruction and responsibility.
57. Ability to relate to coworkers in a close environment.
58. Not expecting to become a supervisor in the first six months.
59. Willingness to be a good worker and go beyond the traditional eight-hour day.
60. Communication skills with public, fellow employees, supervisors, and customers.

2 August 2012

Projecting your work positively to your boss
Effective communication makes life easy and simple.  Take an example from your personal life- smooth communication with your friends and near & dear ones makes life easy. Same is true regarding your professional life. Your professional life could become a lot easier if you communicate effectively with your boss. One of the most common ways to communicate with your boss is by sending reports. Smart employees know how to write effective reports and project their work positively to the boss.
It is strange, but true that almost all employees find sending of reports a very monotonous task and often take it for granted, but on the contrary reporting is one of the most significant ways to communicate effectively to your boss and represent your image positively. Employees find reporting annoying, time-consuming and useless where as for the boss, the report is one of the most important document that provides a clear picture of work, its progress and also helps in assessing the employee’s performance. Regular reporting help authorities in planning better future policies and plans.
A smart employee knows how to communicate effectively with the boss and how to get maximum exposure just by sending a daily report. It is true that work speaks louder than words but, your seniors and boss have number of other liabilities and sending a report is the only means to communicate with the concerned authorities. Your boss will perceive you as you project yourself in your report. Though each office and designation has its own reporting rule, but there are a few common rules that are required to be fulfilled to make a reporting effective and impressive.
While sending report or any kind of mail consider your audience and write accordingly, if you are reporting to a number of departments either write a separate mail or mention each department in a new section. While reporting try to keep your sentences short, but do not forget to mention the main task of your activity.
It is very important to write precise and accurate report. Do not clutter your mail with irrelevant details instead make it crisp and short. Make sure that your mail is grammatically correct and error free.  You can use spell check and grammar checker to make your report error free. No matter how good you are at your job, but if you cannot project it to your boss effectively you will never win your piece of cake. Professional world is very competitive and to remain in the race it is important to show yourself in the correct manner.
One of the best ways to communicate effectively is to provide executive summary at the starting of the report, highlighting the salient features and writing a short paragraph on the main task.
It is very important to proof-read a report before sending it to the concerned authorities; a report which is full of grammatical errors will surely damage your reputation where as an error free report will show your commitment and dedication to the job.
It is common to use acronyms and jargon in day to day conversations, but while sending a report, remember that you are formally communicating with your boss and an informal conversational use of jargon and acronyms should be avoided.
Use simple and easy language in a report. A report is not meant for showing your linguistic skills, but the purpose of a report is to maintain communication between the employee and the boss. Keep it neat, simple and short so that the concerned authorities can easily find the relevant information without getting lost in unnecessary details.
An employee’s future in any company is largely decided by his relation with his boss; open the source of communication with your boss, send your reports regularly, follow the etiquette of sending a report and make your professional life easy.
Communicate smartly and project yourself and your task intelligently it will make your path of professional success easy. This can also lead to Merit Pay or increment if the boss is impressed.
Two more recent adaptations of merit pay plans are popular. One awards merit raises in a lump sum once a year and does not make the raises of the employee’s salary (making them, in effect short term, Bonuses for lower level workers). Traditional merit increases are cumulative but most lump sum merit raises are not. This produces two potential benefits. First, the rise in payroll expenses can be significantly slowed. Lump sum merit increases can also be more dramatic motivation than traditional merit pay rises.
The other adaptation ties merit awards to both individual and organizational performance. In this example, you might measure the company’s performance by, say rate on return, or sales divided by payroll costs. Company performance and the employee’s performance (using his or her performance appraisal) receive equal weight in computing the merit pay.  Here an outstanding performer would receive 70% of his or her maximum lump sum award even if the organization’s performance was marginal. However, employees with marginal or unacceptable performance would get no lump sum awards even in years in which the firm’s performance was outstanding. The bonus plan at discovery communication is an example. Executive assistants can receive bonuses of up to 10% of their salaries. The boss’s evaluation of the assistant’s individual performance accounts for 80% of the potential bonus: 10% is based on how the division is done, and 10% on how the company as a whole does.