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BA HONS IN BUSINESS STUDIES

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BA (HONS) IN BUSINESS STUDIES. HUMAN ... By the end of this session you will, ... 4. Bullock Committee of Enquiry (1977) 5 Individualist Employee Involvement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BA HONS IN BUSINESS STUDIES


1
BA (HONS) IN BUSINESS STUDIES
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT BMG346J1 Lecture Six
Employee Involvement and Participation Norman
Crawford Room 1K11
School of Business Organisation and Management
Email NG.Crawford_at_ulster.ac.uk
2
LEARNING OUTCOMES
  • By the end of this session you will,
  • understand the background to changing forms of
    employee involvement and participation
  • have examined the relationship of employee
    involvement and empowerment
  • be able to articulate the differences between
    various forms of involvement and participation,
    in particular, their methods and strategic
    influence

3
EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT
  • 1. Profit sharing
  • 2. Whitely Councils (1917)
  • 3. Joint Production and Advisory Committees
    (during World War II)
  • 4. Bullock Committee of Enquiry (1977)
  • 5 Individualist Employee Involvement

4
DEFINING EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT AND PARTICIPATION
  • Participation refers to state initiatives which
    promote the collective rights of employees to be
    represented in organisational decision making or
    to the efforts of employees themselves to
    establish collective representation in corporate
    decisions this definition would include
    collective bargaining over terms and conditions
    of employment.
  • Involvement refers to practices and policies
    which emanate from management and sympathizers of
    free market commercial activity and which purport
    to provide employees with the opportunity to
    influence and where appropriate take part in the
    decision making on matters which affect them.
  • (Hyman and Mason, 1995)

5
Some Types, Levels and Degrees of Employee
Involvement
6
Four Categories of EI Schemes (Marchington et al,
1992)
  • Downward communications (top down) eg. from
    managers to other employees
  • Upwards, problem-solving forms, designed to tap
    into employees knowledge and opinion at
    individual and group level
  • Financial participation, schemes attempting to
    link rewards of individuals to performance of
    unit or enterprise as a whole
  • Representative participation, employees involved
    through representatives drawn from among their
    number sometimes on basis of union membership

7
MOST WIDELY USED EI SCHEMES
  • Downward communications
  • company magazine or newspaper
  • team briefings
  • Upward problem solving schemes
  • attitude surveys
  • quality circles
  • teamworking
  • Financial participation
  • profit-sharing schemes
  • save-as-you-earn schemes
  • Representative participation
  • joint consultative committees
  • - non-union model
  • - marginal model
  • - complementary model
  • Note also, European Works Council Directive
  • - aimed at multi-national companies, employing
    1,000 or more workers with at least 150 employees
    in 2 or more EU states

8
DEFINING EMPOWERMENT
  • a change management tool which helps
    organisations create an environment where every
    individual can use his or her abilities and
    energies to satisfy the customer.
  • (Cook Macaulay, 1977)
  • Unlike industrial democracy there is no notion
    of workers having a right to a say it is
    employers who decide whether and how to empower
    employees. While there is a wide range of
    programmes and initiatives which are titled
    empowerment and they vary as to the extent of
    power which employees actually exercise, most are
    purposefully designed not to give workers a very
    significant role in decision making but rather to
    secure an enhanced employee contribution to the
    organisation. Empowerment takes place within the
    context of a strict management agenda. (W
    ilkinson, 1998)

9
Benefits of Empowerment for Organisations
(Holden, 2001)
  • Greater awareness of business needs among
    employees
  • Cost reduction from delayering and employee ideas
  • Improved quality, profitability and productivity
    measures
  • Enhanced loyalty and commitment
  • Decrease in staff turnover
  • More effective communication

10
Benefits of Empowerment for Employees
  • Increase in job satisfaction
  • Increase in day-to-day control over tasks
  • Ownership of work
  • Increase in self-confidence
  • Creation of teamwork
  • Acquisition of new knowledge and skills

11
Criticisms of Empowerment
  • Practical reasons for failure, including lack of
    training and inadequate communication
  • Failure to recognise that empowerment usually
    means wholesale culture change
  • Ideological criticism that empowerment is
    exploitation
  • Empowerment may undermine trade union influence

12
REFERENCES
  • Cook, S. Macauley, S. (1997) Empowered
    customer service, Empowerment in Organisations,
    Vol.5, No1, pp54-60.
  • Holden, L. (2001) Employee involvement and
    empowerment, in Beardwell, I. Holden, L. (eds)
    Human Resource Management A Contemporary
    Perspective, FT/Prentice Hall.
  • Hyman, J. Mason, B. (1995) Managing Employee
    Involvement and Participation, Sage.
  • Marchington et al (1992) New Developments in
    Employee Involvement, Employment Department
    Research Series No 2, Manchester Manchester
    School of Management.
  • Wilkinson, A. (1998) Empowerment theory and
    practice, Personnel Review, Vol27, No1, pp40-56.
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