বুধবার, ৪ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১৩

Organizational Behavior


Definitions
 “Organizational behaviour is a field of study that investigates the impact that individuals, groups and organizational structure have on behaviour within the organization, for the purpose of applying such knowledge towards improving an organizational effectiveness”. The above definition has three main elements; first organizational behaviour is an investigative study of individuals and groups, second, the impact of organizational structure on human behaviour and the third, the application of knowledge to achieve organizational effectiveness.
Goals
What are the 4 goals of organizational behavior?
Answer:
  1. to describe systematically how people behave under variety of conditions
  2. To understand why people behave as they do
  3. To predict future employee behavior
  4. to control & develop human activity at work

What are the fundamental concept of organizational behavior?

Answer:
Fundamental Concepts of Organizational Behavior In every field of social science, or even physical  cience, has a philosophical foundation of basic concepts that guide its development. There are some certain philosophical concepts in organizational behavior also. The concepts are-
Individual differences:
Every individual in the world is different from others. This idea is supported by science. Each person is different from all others, probably in million ways, just as each persons DNA profile is different. The idea of individual difference comes originally from psychology. From the day of birth, each person is unique, and individual experiences after birth tend to make people even more different.
Perception:
Peoples perceptions are also differ when they see an object. Two people can differently present a same object. And this is occurring for their experiences. A person always organizes and interprets what he sees according to his lifetime of experience and accumulated value. Employees also see work differently for differ in their personalities, needs, demographics factors, past experiences and social surrounding.
A whole person:
An employee's personal life is not detached from his working life. As an example, A women who attend the office at 8:30 AM is always anxious for her children's school time (if her children able to attend the school or not). As a result, its impact falls on her concentration that means her working life. For this  reason, we cannot separate it. So manager should treat an employee as a whole person.


Motivated behavior:
An employee has so many needs inside him. So, they want to fulfill those needs. That's why; they had to perform well in the organization. Some motivations are needed to enrich the quality of work. A path toward increased need fulfillment is the better way of enriches the quality of work.
Desire for involvement:
Every employee is actively seeking opportunities at work to involve in decision-making problems. They hunger for the chance to share what they know and to learn from the experience. So, organization should provide them a chance to express their opinions, ideas and suggestion for decision-making  problem. A meaningful involvement can bring mutual benefit for both parties.
Value of the person:
An employee wants to be treated separately from other factor of production (land, capital, labor). They refuse to accept the old idea that they are simply treated as economic tools because they are best creation of almighty Allah. For this reason, they want to be treated with carrying respect, dignity and other things from their employers and society.
The nature of organization
There are two assumptions as to nature of organization.
Social Systems:
Organizations are social systems and governed by social and psychological laws. They have social roles and status. Their behavior influenced by their group's individual drives. Organization environment in a social system is dynamic. All parts of the system are interdependent.
Mutual interest:
In order to develop the organization behavior mutually of interest organizations and people is necessary. Organizations need people and people in tern need organizations. People satisfy their needs through organization and organization accomplish their goal through people.
Ethics:In order to attract and retain valuable employees in an era in which good workers are constantly required away, ethical treatment is necessary. To succeed, organization must treat employees in an ethical fashion. Every Company is required to establish codes of ethics, publicized statements of ethical values, provided ethics training, rewarded employees for notable ethical behavior, publicized positive role models, and set up internal procedures to handle misconduct.

Discuss Different Models of Organizational Behaviour?

Autocratic Model
The autocratic model depends on power. Those who are in command must have the power to demand “you do this-or else,” meaning that an employee who does not follow orders will be penalized.
In an autocratic environment the managerial orientation is formal, official authority. This authority is delegated by right of command over the people to it applies.
Under autocratic environment the employee is obedience to a boss, not respect for a manager.
The psychological result for employees is dependence on their boss, whose power to hire, fire, and “perspire” them is almost absolute.

The Custodial Model
A successful custodial approach depends on economic resources. The resulting managerial orientation is toward money to pay wages and benefits. Since employees’ physical needs are already reasonably met, the employer looks to security needs as a motivating force. If an organization does not have the wealth to provide pensions and pay other benefits, it cannot follow a custodial approach. The custodial  approach leads to employee dependence on the organization. Rather than being dependence on their boss for their weekly bread, employees now depend on organizations for their security and welfare.
Employees working in a custodial environment become psychologically preoccupied with their economic rewards and benefits.
As a result of their treatment, they are well maintained and contended. However, contentment does not necessarily produce strong motivation; it may produce only passive cooperation. The result tends to be those employees do not perform much more effectively than under the old autocratic approach.

The Supportive Model
The supportive model depends on leadership instead of power or money. Through leadership, management provides a climate to help employees grow and accomplish in the interests of the organization the things of which they are capable.
The leader assumes that workers are not by nature passive and resistant to organizational needs, but that they are made so by an inadequately supportive climate at work. They will take responsibility, develop a drive to contribute, and improve themselves if management will give them a chance. Management orientation, therefore, is to support the employee’s job performance rather than to simply support employee benefit payments as in the custodial approach.
Since management supports employees in their work, the psychological result is a feeling of participation and task involvement in the organization. Employee may say “we” instead of “they” when referring to their organization.
Employees are more strongly motivated than by earlier models because of their status and recognition needs are better met. Thus they have awakened drives for work.

The Collegial Model
A useful extension of the supportive model is the collegial model. The term “collegial” relates to a body of people working together cooperatively.
The collegial model depends on management’s building a feeling of partnership with employees. The result is that employees feel needed and useful. They feel that managers are contributing also, so it is easy to accept and respect their roles in their organization. Managers are seen as joint contributors rather than as bosses.
The managerial orientation is toward teamwork. Management is the coach that builds a better team
The employee’s response to this situation is responsibility. For example employees produce quality work not because management tells them to do so or because the inspector will catch them if they do not, but because they feel inside themselves an obligation to provide others with high quality. They also feel an obligation to uphold quality standards that will bring credit to their jobs and company.
The psychological result of the collegial approach for the employee is self-discipline. Feeling responsible, employees discipline themselves for performance on the team in the same way that the members of a football team discipline themselves to training standards and the rules of the game.
In this kind of environment employees normally feel some degree of fulfillment, worthwhile contribution, and self-actualization, even though the amount may be modest in some situation. This self-actualization will lead to moderate enthusiasm in performance.

The System Model
managers must increasingly demonstrate a sense of caring and compassion, being sensitive to the needs of a diverse workforce with rapidly changing needs and complex personal and family needs.
In response, many employees embrace the goal of organizational effectiveness, and reorganize the mutuality of company-employee obligations in a system viewpoint. They experience a sense of psychological ownership for the organization and its product and services.

1.       Social equilibrium
2.       Motivation and theory

শনিবার, ২২ জুন, ২০১৩

আমাদের দেশের প্রধানমন্ত্রীর আশংকা তত্তাবধায়ক সরকার এইবার আসলে আর কিয়ামত পর্যন্ত   নির্বাচন   দেবে না। দেশের সাধারণ মানুষ  দেশে আর নির্বাচন 

বুধবার, ৬ মার্চ, ২০১৩

HR ROLE AS A STRATEGIC PARTNER

HR ROLE AS A STRATEGIC PARTNER


Personnel/HR’s long history as a staff or advisory function has left it with a some-what impoverished reputation: Some still tend to view it as less than it is. For example, one view is that HR is strictly operational and that HR activities are not strategic at all. According to this line of reasoning, HR activities simply” ... involve putting out small fires - ensuring that people are paid on the right day; the job advertisement meets the newspaper deadline; and the same manager remembers to observe due process before sacking the new rep who didn’t work out.

A more sophisticated (but perhaps no more accurate) view of HR is that its role is simply to “fit” the company’s strategy. In this view HR’s strategic role is to adapt individual HR practices (recruiting, rewarding, and so on) to fit specific corporate and competitive strategies. By this view, top management crafts a corporate strategy – such as to buy Lotus – and then HR is told to create the HR program required to successfully implement that corporate strategy. As two strategic planning experts have argued, “the human resources management system must be tailored to the demands of business strategy.” The idea here is that for any particular organizational strategy, there is purportedly a matching human resource strategy.”

The third view of HR management is that it is an equal partner in the strategic planning process. By this view HR management’s role is not just to tailor its activities to the demands of business strategy, nor, certainly, just to carry out operational day-to-day tasks like ensuring that employees are paid. Instead, by this third view, the need to forge a company’s work force into a competitive advantage means that human resource management must be an equal partner in both the formulation and the implementation of the company’s organization wide and competitive strategies.

HR’S ROLE IN FORMULATING STRATEGY
Formulating a Company’s overall strategic plan requires identifying, analyzing, and balancing two sets of forces: the company’s external opportunities and threats on the one hand, and its internal strengths and weaknesses on the other.

This is where strategic HR management comes in. First, HR management can play a role in what strategic planners call environmental scanning, in other words, identifying and analyzing external opportunities and threats that may be crucial to the company’s success. For example, in 1995 both United Airlines and American Airlines considered and then rejected the opportunity to acquire US Air, a smaller and relatively weak airline. While both American and United had several reasons for rejecting a bid, HR considerations loomed large. Specifically, both American and United had doubts about their abilities to successfully negotiate new labor agreements with US Air’s employees, and both felt the problems of assimilating them might be too great.

Similarly, HR management is in a unique position to supply competitive intelligence that may be useful in the strategic planning process. Details regarding advanced incentive plan being used by competitors, opinion survey data from employees that elicit information about customer complaints and information about pending legislation like labor laws or mandatory health insurance are some examples.
HR also participates in the strategy formulation process by supplying information regarding the company’s internal strengths and weaknesses. For example, IBM’s decision to buy Lotus was probably promoted in part by IBM’s conclusion that its own human resources were inadequate to enable the firm to reposition itself as an industry leader in networking systems, or at least to do so quickly enough.

The strengths and weaknesses of a company’s human resources can have a determining effect on the viability of the firm’s strategic options. For example, “situations were human resource capabilities serve as a driving force in strategy formulation occur where there are unique (human) capabilities……”. Here we often find a company building its new strategy around an HR-based competitive advantage. For example, in the process of automating its factories, farm equipment manufacturer John Deere developed a work force that was exceptionally talented and expert in factory automation. This in turn prompted the firm to establish a new-technology division to offer automation services to other companies. As another example, the accounting and consulting firm Arthur Andersen developed unique human resource capabilities in training. The firm’s Illinois training facility is so sophisticated that it provides the firm with a competitive advantage, enabling it to provide fast, uniform training in house and so” ... react quickly to the changing demands of its clients.”

HR’S ROLE IN EXECUTING STRATEGY
We’ve also seen that HR management can play a pivotal role in the successful execution or implementation of a company’s strategic plan. For example, Federal Express’s competitive strategy is to differentiate itself from its competitors by offering superior customer service and guaranteed on-time deliveries. Since basically the same technologies are available to UPS, DHI, and FedEx’s other competitors, it’s Fed Ex’s work force – its human resource – who necessarily provides Fed Ex with a crucial competitive advantage. This puts a premium on the firm’s HR processes, as discussed earlier, and on the firm’s ability to create a highly committed, competent, and customer-oriented work force.

HR management supports strategic implementation in numerous other ways. For example, HR is today heavily involved in the execution of most firms downsizing and restructuring strategies, through out placing employees, instituting pay-for-performance plans, reducing health care costs, and retraining employees. And in an increasingly competitive global marketplace, instituting HR practices that build employee commitment can help improve a firm’s responsiveness, as explained earlier.




HR PLANNING

WHAT IS HR PLANNING?
§  HR planning is one of the most important elements in a successful human resource management program because it is a process by which an organization ensures that it has the right number and kinds of people, at the right time, capable of effectively and efficiently completing those tasks that will help the organization to achieve its overall strategic objectives.
§  HR planning ultimately translates the organization's overall goals into number and types of employees needed to meet those goals.
§  HR planning cannot exist in isolation. It must be linked to the organization’s overall strategy, i.e. there is a clear linkage between the Organizational strategy and the HR planning. Therefore, senior HR managers need to understand the overall business strategy as the HR planning is linked with it.



LINKING ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY TO HR PLANNING

Mission
Spells out who the company is, what it does, and where it’s headed.




Objectives
and Goals

Setting goals and objective.




Strategy

Determining how the goals and objectives will be achieved.





Structure

Determining what job need to be done and by whom.





People
Matching skills, knowledge and abilities to require the job,
IMPORTANCE OF HR PLANNING
·         Achieve goals and objectives
·         Plan staffing and development activities
·         Achieve economies in hiring
·         Make major labour market demands
·         Anticipate and avoid staff shortages/surpluses
·         Control/reduce labour costs
·         Utilize employee capabilities effectively

Like any good plans, HR plans are built on premises-basic assumptions about the future. The purpose of forecasting is to develop these basic premises. If you are planning for HR requirements, you’ll usually need three sets of forecasts:
·         One for HR Needs;
·         One for the supply of Inside Candidates; and
·         One for the supply of Outside Candidates;


THE HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING PROCESS



STRATEGIC PLANNING






HR PLANNING




FORECASTING DEMAND FOR HUMAN RESOURCES

COMPARISON OF
REQUIREMENTS AND
AVAILABILITY

FORECASTING SUPPLY OF           HUMAN RESOURCES


DEMAND =SUPPLY

SURPLUS OF WORKERS


SHORTAGE OF WORKERS



NO
ACTION


RESTRICTED HIRING, EARLY RETIREMENT, RETRENCHMENT
RECRUITMENT & SELECTION

FACTORS IN FORECASTING HR NEEDS


Managers should consider several factors when forecasting personnel needs. From a practical point of view, the demand for your product or service is paramount. Thus, in a manufacturing firm, sales are projected first. Then the volume of production required to meet these sales requirements is determined. Finally, the staff needed to meet this volume of output is estimated. In addition, the following factors should also be considered:
  • Projected Turnover (as a result of resignations or terminations).
  • Quality and the nature of your employees in relation to what you see as the changing needs of your organization.
  • Decisions to upgrade the quality of products or services or enter into new markets.
  • Technological changes resulting in increased productivity.
  • The financial resources available to your department.






TECHNIQUES FOR DETERMINING HR REQUIREMENTS
Trend Analysis
Trend analysis means study of a firm’s past employment needs over a period of years to predict future needs.
Ratio Analysis
A forecasting technique for determining future staff needs by using ratios between sales volume and number of employees needed.
Regression Analysis
Statistical relationship between business activity and employees.

Managerial Judgment
It’s rare that any historical trend, ratio, or relationship will continue unchanged into the future. Judgment is thus needed to modify the forecast based on factors you believe will change in the future.


TECHNIQUES FOR FORECASTING THE SUPPLY OF INSIDE CANDIDATES
Markov Analysis

A method for tracking the pattern of employee movements through various jobs.
Qualifications Inventories

Manual or computerized systematic records listing employees’ performance records, educational background, promotability, interests, special skills, and so on to be used in forecasting inside candidates for promotion.
Personnel Replacement Charts
Company records showing present performance and promotability of inside candidates for the most important positions.
Succession Planning

A process of ensuring suitable supply of successors for current and future senior or key jobs arising from business strategy, so that the careers of individuals can be planned and managed to optimize the organization’s needs and individuals’ aspirations.