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Week 8

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Today: Global competitiveness efficiencies=layoffs. 1-4. BA 385 - Business Environment ... 2 Starbucks. 3 Toyota. 4 Berkshire Hathaway. 5 Southwest Airlines ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 8


1
Week 8
  • Chapter 8
  • Employee Relations

2
Psychological Contract
  • The beliefs, perceptions, expectations, and
    obligations that make up the agreement between
    individuals and employers.
  • Largely unwritten.
  • Details develop through interactions with
    managers and coworkers and corporate culture.
  • Breach means loss of loyalty, focus and trust.

3
Employee-Employer Contract
  • Up to early 1900s Master-Servant
  • 20s/30s More balanced
  • 50s Keep happy to avoid problems
  • 60s Participatory Management
  • 70s Freedom and democracy at work
  • 80s Attention to employee welfare
  • 90s Empowerment and teamwork
  • Today Global competitiveness
    efficiencieslayoffs

4
Workforce Reduction
  • Result of pressure to increase efficiencies
  • Signal to end of old contract
  • Involve reducing the number of employees,
    simplifying products and processes, and
    decreasing quality and/or services.
  • Converts private issue into public issue
  • Outsourcing offshoring
  • Key employer considerations
  • Take into account the financial implications and
    qualitative and emotional toll of the reduction
    strategy.
  • Commit to assisting employees who must make a
    career transition.

5
What can Employees do?
  • Understand how skills and competencies affect and
    align with business performance.
  • Strive for cost-cutting and conservation
    strategies regardless of the employers current
    financial condition.
  • Be willing to fulfill diverse and varying roles.
  • More cross training
  • Be flexible
  • Learn the whole business

6
Employment at will
  • This common-law doctrine allows the employer or
    employee to terminate the relationship at any
    time as long as it does not violate any
    employment contract.
  • Many states still use the employment at will
    philosophy, but laws and statutes may limit total
    discretion (see http//www.oregon.gov/BOLI/)

7
Wages and Benefits
  • Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 prescribed the
    first minimum wage (current 5.45/hr or 11,
    336/yr.) and overtime pay, record keeping, and
    child labor standards.
  • Employee Retirement Income Security Act (1974)
    set uniform minimum standards to ensure that
    employee benefits plans are fair and sound .

8
Labor Unions
  • National Labor Relations Act (1935) legitimized
    the rights of employees to engage in collective
    bargaining and to strike.
  • To protect employee rights and restore the
    balance of power.
  • In 2006, 12 of wage and salary workers were
    union members (down from 20.1 in 1983).
  • About 36 of government workers were union
    members in 2004, compared with about 8 of
    workers in private-sector industries.
  • http//www.bls.gov/news.release/union2.nr0.htm

9
Health and Safety
  • Occupational Safety and Health Act sought to
    ensure safe and healthy working conditions for
    all employees.
  • Recent issue ergonomics, the design,
    arrangement, and use of equipment to maximize
    productivity and minimize strain.
  • Emerging issue Violence by strangers,
    non-employees and coworkers.

10
Equal Opportunity Employment
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employment
    discrimination on the basis of race, national
    origin, color, religion, and gender.
  • Later laws added pregnanacy, disabilities and
    age.
  • Affirmative action programs allow companies to
    build balanced workforces.
  • Equal Employment Opportunity Commission monitors
    compliance with the law.

11
Sexual Harassment
  • Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual
    favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a
    sexual nature.
  • When submission to or rejection of this conduct
    explicitly or implicitly affects an individuals
    employment unreasonably interferes with an
    individuals work performance or creates an
    intimidating, hostile, or offensive work
    environment.

12
Sexual Harassment (cont.)
  • Quid pro quo
  • Exchange of job benefits for sexual favors.
  • Explicitly illeagal, one incident may justify
    legal claim
  • Hostile work environment
  • Epithets, slurs, negative stereotyping,
    intimidating acts, and/or graphic materials that
    show hostility toward an individual or group.
  • Conduct that a reasonable person would
    determine as intolerable to the work environment.

13
Whistle-Blowing
  • A whistle-blower is one who reports individual or
    corporate wrong-doing to either internal or
    external sources.
  • The focus is usually on issues or behaviors that
    need corrective action.
  • Legal protections vary according to the subject
    matter of the whistleblowing, and sometimes the
    state in which the case arises.
  • http//www.ethicspoint.com

14
Whistle-Blowing (cont.)
  • Managers and other employees may not appreciate
    reports that expose company weaknesses, raise
    embarrassing questions, or otherwise detract from
    organizational tasks.
  • Historically, whistle-blowers have been
    retaliated against, demoted, fired, and even
    worse as a result of their action.
  • Sarbanes-Oxley provides solid protection and
    penalties for retaliation from reporting
    corporate fraud.

15
Ethical Responsibilities to Employees
  • Ongoing training and development
  • Benefits include stronger recruitment and
    retention, employee commitment, job satisfaction,
    and productivity.
  • Embracing diversity
  • Utilize the unique skills and contributions of
    all types of people.
  • Reflect customers characteristics.

16
Generation Profiles
17
Ethical Responsibilities to Employees (cont.)
  • Allow for work/life balance
  • Assist employees in balancing work
    responsibilities with personal and family
    responsibilities.
  • Provide flexibility
  • Flextime/Telecommuting
  • Job sharing
  • Child care/Elder care
  • Health clubs
  • Design jobs around workers abilities

18
Philanthropic Responsibilities
  • Even though directed outside, corporate giving
    affects employee attitudes toward the
    organization.
  • Attracts good employee candidates
  • More productive employees
  • Employees benefit from participating in
    volunteerism programs and other philanthropic
    projects.
  • Builds teamwork skills.
  • Educates employees.

19
Strategic Considerations
  • Strong employee initiatives lead to a company
    being viewed as the employer of choice.
  • Value the human component of business, not just
    financial considerations, ensure that employees
    are engaged in meaningful work, and a stimulated
    intellectual curiosity.
  • This allows an organization to attract, optimize,
    and retain the best employee talent over the long
    term.

20
Best Practices of Employers of Choice, Table 7.6
  • FOSTER
  • Openness
  • Community
  • Creativity
  • Loyalty
  • Responsibility
  • Individuality
  • Teamwork

21
Fortunes Most Admired Companies
  • 1 General Electric
  • 2 Starbucks
  • 3 Toyota
  • 4 Berkshire Hathaway
  • 5 Southwest Airlines
  • 6 FedEx
  • 7 Apple
  • 8 Google
  • 9 Johnson Johnson
  • 10 Procter Gamble

http//money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/mostadmired
/
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