There is no single approach to developing a Human Resources Strategy.
The specific approach will vary from one organisation to another. Even
so, an excellent approach towards an HR Strategic Management System is
evident in the model presented below. This approach identifies six
specific steps in developing an HR Strategy:-
1. Setting the strategic direction
2. Designing the Human Resource Management System
3. Planning the total workforce
4. Generating the required human resources
5. Investing in human resource development and performance
6. Assessing and sustaining organisational competence and performance
The six broad interconnected components of this system consist of three planning steps and three execution steps.
The top three components represent the need for planning.
Organizations must determine their strategic direction and the outcomes
they seek. This is usually accomplished with some form of strategic
planning. Classic strategic planning is a formal, top-down, staff-driven
process. When done well, it is workable at a time when external change
occurs at a more measured pace.
However as the pace and magnitude of change increases, the approach to strategic planning changes substantially:
- First, the planning process is more agile; changes in plans are much more frequent and are often driven by events rather than made on a predetermined time schedule.
- Second, the planning process is more proactive. Successful organizations no longer simply respond to changes in their environment, they proactively shape their environment to maximize their own effectiveness.
- Third, the planning process is no longer exclusively top-down; input into the process comes from many different organizational levels and segments. This creates more employee ownership of the plan and capitalises on the fact that often the most valuable business intelligence can come from employees who are at the bottom of the organizational hierarchy.
- Lastly, the strategic planning process less reactive and more driven by line leadership.
Once strategic planning is under way, a process must be undertaken by
the organization to design and align its HRM policies and practices to
provide for organizational success. The remaining step in planning is to
determine the quality and quantity of human resources the organization
needs for its total force.
The rest of the HR strategic system exists for and is guided by these
plans, policies, and practices. These execution components contain
mechanisms that generate the correct skill sets, invest in staff
development and performance, and productively employ them in the
organisation. The last component provides a means to assess and sustain
the competence and performance of the organization and the people in it
with regard to outcomes that the organization seeks.
Analysis
Using the process model discussed earlier, the specific components of
the HR Strategic Plan are discussed in greater detail below.
1. Setting the strategic direction
This process focuses on aligning human resource policies to support
the accomplishment of the Company’s mission, vision, goals and
strategies. The business’ goals sit at the heart of any HR strategy and
in order to align business and HR you need to answer one key question,
“Can your organisation’s internal capability deliver the organisation’s
business goals?”
Many organisations cite their people as their primary source of
competitive advantage. Successful companies continuously identify and
adopt innovative human resource management policies and practices to
sustain that advantage. More importantly, they structure work and design
training, performance management, pay, and reward policies to help
members of the organization succeed in achieving desired organizational
outcomes. In other words, they integrate and align HRM policies and
practices to reinforce employee behaviors that can best realize the
leaders’ strategic intent. In the most successful companies, the set of
policies and practices that collectively make up a company’s HRM system
is the critical management tool for communicating and reinforcing the
leaders’ strategic intent.
Recommended actions:-
- Conduct an external environmental scan and evaluate its impact on the organisation
- Identify the organisation’s vision, mission and guiding principles
- Identify the mission’s outcomes and strategic goals
- Consult all relevant stakeholders
- Evaluate the impact of legislation on the organization
2. Designing the Human Resource Management System
This stage focuses on the selection, design and alignment of HRM
plans, policies and practices. Various options may be open to the
organisation such as drawing on industry best practices.
Emerging HRM policies and practices range from outsourcing certain
non-core functions, adopting flexible work practices (telework, work
from home) and the increased use of information technology. Not every
industry trend may be appropriate for a specific organisation. In
addition, it is essential that a cost-benefit analysis of implementing
new HRM policies and practices be undertaken. For example, the costs
(monetary and in allocation of resources) of implementing a new job
grading system may outweigh the benefit of such an undertaking. There
may be more cost-effective alternatives available to the organisation at
this point in time.
Particular HRM policies and practices may be necessary to support
strategic organisational objectives, such as improving the retention of
women in the organisation or promoting diversity, especially the
representation of designated groups amongst senior management.
A good approach in selecting the appropriate HRM policies, procedures
and practices is to identify the appropriate HRM practices which
support the organisation’s strategic intent as it relates to
recruitment, training, career planning and reward management.
Recommended actions:-
- Identify appropriate human resource plans, policies and practices needed to support organisational objectives
- Identify relevant human resource best practices
- Conduct an employment systems review
3. Planning the total workforce
Determining future business requirements, especially those relating
to manpower requirements, represents one of the most challenging tasks
facing human resource practitioners.
The development of a workforce plan is a critical component of any
human resource strategy and one of the expected outcomes of human
resource practitioners activities. Despite this, manpower or workforce
planning, as well as succession planning, has only recently enjoyed a
resurgence in popularity. To some extent this has been prompted by the
need to develop employment equity and workplace skills plans and set
numerical employment equity targets. The failure of many organisations
to develop and implement workforce planning is rather indicative of the
lack of strategic planning itself.
Workforce planning is a systematic process of
identifying the workforce competencies required to meet the company’s
strategic goals and for developing the strategies to meet these
requirements. It is a methodical process that provides managers with a
framework for making human resource decisions based on the
organization’s mission, strategic plan, budgetary resources, and a set
of desired workforce competencies. Workforce planning is a systematic
process that is integrated, methodical, and ongoing. It identifies the
human capital required to meet organisational goals, which consists of
determining the number and skills of the workers required and where and
when they will be needed. Finally workforce planning entails developing
the strategies to meet these requirements, which involves identifying
actions that must be taken to attract (and retain) the number and types
of workers the organisation needs.
A workforce plan can be as simple or as complex as the organisational
requires. Workforce planning can be conducted for a department,
division or for the organisation as a whole. Whatever the level or
approach being adopted, it must nevertheless be integrated with
broad-based management strategies.
In addition to workforce planning, ensure that organisational
structure and jobs ensure the efficient delivery of services and
effective management of the organisation as a whole.
Recommended actions:-
- Determine the appropriate organisational structure to support the strategic objectives
- Structure jobs (competencies, tasks and activities) around key activities
- Develop a workforce plan designed to support the organisations strategic objectives
- Compile workforce profiles, identifying designated groups, an inventory of current workforce competencies, competencies required in the future and identified gaps in competencies
4. Generating the required human resources
This process focuses on recruiting, hiring, classifying, training and
assigning employees based on the strategic imperatives of the
organisation’s workforce plan.
A comprehensive workplace skills plan will identify appropriate
training priorities based on the organisations workforce needs now and
in the future. New recruitment practices may need to be adopted to
increase the representation of designated groups, or securing essential
skills in the organisation. A comprehensive “learnership strategy” may
assist in developing future workforce needs, identified either in terms
of the organisations workforce plan or required in terms of industry
black economic empowerment charters.
Recommended actions:-
- Evaluate recruitment and selection practices in light of the organisation’s strategic objectives
- Develop and implement a comprehensive workplace skills plan (with a thorough training needs analysis)
- Implement a learnership strategy
- Adopt or clarify occupational levels and category classifications
5. Investing in human resource development and performance
Traditional approaches to career planning, performance appraisals,
reward management and employee development must be re-appraised in light
of the vision, characteristics and mission outcomes as reflected in the
HRM plans, policies, and practices.
Development responses will aim to increase business skills, the
application of business skills (sometimes called competencies) and the
behavioural elements – all of which contribute to an organisation’s
effective performance. In many ways, the Skills Development legislation
have required organisations to re-engineer their developmental methods
and practices. New concepts such as lifelong learning and recognising
prior learning should form an integral component of the process of
investing in employees.
Clearly, where a workforce planning exercise reveals that there is
little projected growth in the workforce or that promotional or career
development opportunities are limited, strategies aimed at employee
retention will be very different from organisations which are
experiencing considerable growth and expansion.
Investment initiatives for the individual, team and organisation are
all geared to achieve high levels of organisational performance. It is
important that at an individual level, particularly for senior staff,
that they feel their development needs are agreed and that they are
provided with the skills to do their jobs. At a team level, it defines
the individuals’ ability to work flexibly with others and align
individual and team skills and activities to business goals – all of
which ensures that the organisation is equipped to achieve its goals.
Reward strategies aim to align the performance of the organisation
with the way it rewards its people, providing the necessary incentives
and motivation to staff. Its components can be a combination of base
pay, bonuses, profit sharing, share options, and a range of appropriate
benefits, usually based on market or competitor norms and the
organisation’s ability to pay.
Recommended actions:-
Identify appropriate policies, procedures and practices in respect of
- Career pathing
- Performance appraisals
- Employee development and learning
- Reward Management (compensation and benefits)
- Promotions and job assignments
- Separation
6. Assessing and sustaining organisational competence and performance
Finally, few organizations effectively measure how well their
different inputs affect performance. In particular, no measures may be
in place for quantifying the contribution people make to organizational
outcomes or, more important, for estimating how changes in policies and
practices, systems, or processes will affect that contribution.
Implementing clear quantifiable measures, identifying milestones in the
achievement of specific organisational goals, and using concepts such as
a “balanced scorecard” will articulate the results of the HR Strategic
Plan in measurable terms. Regular evaluation of the plan will also
assist in fine-tuning the HR strategic plan itself.
Recommended actions:-
- Evaluate organisation culture and climate
- Implement succession planning
- Evaluate HR strategy using quantifiable measures, e.g. balanced scorecard
- Revise and adapt HR strategy
5. Conclusion
While HR strategies must be developed to support the achievement of
the organisation’s objectives, it is a two-way process. HR strategies
can themselves be critical inputs in determining the strategic
initiatives for the organisation. A fatal error, however, is to develop
and implement HR strategies without having regard for the goals and
objectives which the organisation has explicitly or implicitly
identified. A common mistake is the development of workplace skills
plans which are not linked to any strategic goals or objectives or which
have no affirmative action components.
Similarly, the isolated identification of affirmative action
numerical targets without first conducting a workforce and succession
planning exercise is in most instances, simply meaningless
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