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Introduction to Human Resource Development

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Title: Introduction to Human Resource Development


1
Introduction to Human Resource Development
  • Strategic Issues in Training and Development
  • Ch. 1-2

2
What is Human Resource Development?
  • Set of activities designed by organization to
    provide its members with opportunities to learn
    skills and competencies to meet current and
    future job demands
  • Includes technical and interpersonal skills
    training, managerial development, career
    development, and organizational development and
    learning

3
Your Experiences with Training
  • What are your experiences with training and
    development in your organization?
  • Types?
  • Amount?
  • Toward whom is it geared?
  • Training delivery systems?
  • Evaluated for effectiveness?

4
Training Design Process
Needs Assessment
Readiness For Training
Create Learning Environment
Ensure Transfer Of Training
Develop Evaluation Plan
Select Training Methods
Monitor and Evaluate Program
5
Why is human resource development important?
  • Competing in a global economy
  • Wide skills gap between what employees possess
    and what they will need
  • Increasing number of knowledge workers
  • Attracting and retaining talent
  • Focus on customer service and quality

6
Why is human resource development important?
  • Changing workforce demographics and cultural
    diversity
  • Technological changes
  • Use of high performance work practices
  • Need and desire for lifelong learning to adapt to
    changing workplace

7
Training in U.S. Industry
  • 70 of all employees receive training
  • Average U.S. company spends 5 billion on formal
    training (about 2 of payroll)
  • Most training is for nonexempt employees and most
    is on technical and interpersonal skills
    training
  • Most training is done in the classroom and most
    organizations are NOT using new learning
    technologies
  • FIRE, transportation and public utilities, and
    high tech spend MOST on training
  • Durable manufacturing, health care, agriculture,
    mining, and construction spend LEAST on training

8
Training in U.S. Industry
  • Typical training expenditures in 2002 per
    employee 734
  • Health care industry trains the most employees,
    but spends the least on training
  • Training Investment Leaders
  • Train almost all employees (lt 90)
  • Spend double the amount on training (2 vs. 4,
    1647 per employee)
  • Use more learning technologies and use less
    classroom training

9
Major Trends in TD
  • Increasing pressure to show that training has
    ROImore rigorous evaluation
  • Training must be designed and delivered in a
    shorter time frame
  • Strategic partnering with outside vendors
  • E-learning strategies growing
  • Learning is focus, not training (Chief Learning
    Officers at Vice President level)

10
Major Trends in TD
  • Performance management process, rather than
    programmatic training events (continuous
    learning)
  • Focus on enhancing intellectual capital (know
    what, know how, know why, and care why) and tacit
    knowledge (knowledge that is personal and hard to
    explain)
  • Focus on organizational development and
    effectiveness
  • Training has link to strategic goals (high
    leverage training)

11
Business Strategy and Training
  • A plan that integrates the companys goals,
    policies, and actions
  • The strategy influences how the company uses
  • physical capital (plants, technology, and
    equipment)
  • financial capital (assets and cash reserves)
  • human capital (employees)
  • The business strategy helps direct the companys
    activities to reach specific goals

12
Strategic Issues in TD
  • Training and development strategy must fit with
    human resource strategy and firm strategy
  • TD professionals as partners with line managers
    to assess and address firm needs
  • Examples internal growth, focus, external
    growth through acquisitions, downsizing or
    dis-investment strategies

13
Strategic Considerations
  • Type, level and mix of skills determine amount
    and types of training
  • Focus on individual employees vs. teams, units,
    departments
  • Open to all levels vs. restricted to certain ones
  • Planned and systematic vs. reactive
  • Importance relative to other HRM processes

Strategy and goals help us develop answers to
these questions
14
The Strategic Training and Development Process
Business Strategy
Strategic TD Initiatives
Training and Development Activities
Metrics
  • Learning
  • Performance Improvement
  • Reduced Customer Complaints
  • Reduced Turnover
  • Employee Satisfaction
  • Balanced scorecard
  • Use Web-Based Training
  • Mandatory Development Planning
  • Develop Websites for Knowledge Sharing
  • Increase Amount of Customer Service Training
  • Diversify the Learning Portfolio
  • Improve Customer Service
  • Accelerate Pace of Employee Learning
  • Capture and Share Knowledge
  • Mission
  • Values
  • Goals

15
Implications of Business Strategy for Training
16
Implications of Business Strategy for Training
17
Model of Building Learning Capability
Step 1 Recognize and appreciate existing
learning
Step 2 Establish the Gap between existing
learning and strategic learning needs
Step 3 Identify actions to build desired
learning capability
From A. J. DiBella (2001) Learning practices
Assessment and action for organizational
improvement. Upper Saddle River, NJ
Prentice-Hall
18
Learning Orientations
  • Presents a continuum of approaches regarding how
    a particular unit or organization learns
  • Describes current methods or practices by which
    knowledge is acquired, disseminated, or used
  • Can use this to determine if these approaches
    serve the strategic needs of the organization
    (I.e., meeting performance pressures and demands
    of the business environment)

19
Facilitating Factors
  • Processes or practices that promote learning
  • The more these factors are present, the easier it
    is for teams/units to learn
  • Learning potential is indicated
  • Group can focus on building these facilitating
    conditions in order to promote the appropriate
    kinds of learning

20
Action based on Assessment
  • Are there learning orientations that the team
    needs to develop to better meet strategic needs?
  • Are there facilitating factors that are currently
    lacking that can be enhanced to improve learning?
  • Match learning activities to desired learning
    orientations
  • Match facilitating conditions to desired learning
    orientations

21
Example
  • If unit desires to expand its learning scope (5)
    from incremental (improvement of existing
    products, services, etc) to transformative
    (development of new products, services, etc.)
  • Dont punish employees for innovative ventures
    that fail
  • More pilot studies, brainstorming, scenario
    planning, incubator projects
  • Facilitating factors encourage organizational
    curiosity, more scanning, more systems perspective
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