courseworkhero.co.uk only-Smirky only

See bottom-added other students posts as a guide to use and for a restart next week. Thank you!

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

OMM6

1

8: Human Resources Management (MFG1

3

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

20A)

Professor:

 

Randy H.

Greetings all!
Please cite every sentence in which you use information from sources.

1.  Use “” for quotes and citations with page or paragraph location information
2.  Use block formatting for quotes of 40 or more words (please do avoid lengthy quotes)
3.  Cite sentences in which you use information from sources even as you put those ideas into your own words
4.  Please use the APA manual or APA.org as a resource for how to construct citations and references

Please do review, if you have not done so already, the Academic Research link available at the Student Responsibilities and Policies link.

In short, please do not use newsprint, popular press, other non-academic sources to justify views for initial posts, responses to peers, or papers. 

Please locate and use journal articles, published books, and websites with .edu and .gov trailers.  If you have questions about the quality of a source, if you see citations and references, you are probably using a good source.  If you are using articles free of such attribution, please do not use.

Please let me know if you have questions or concerns about quality of sources we should be using for masters-level work.

Please note that at each

Discussion 1

and Discussion 2 throughout the course, the initial instructions include discussion forum grading rubric links.  Please consider reviewing these rubrics as I use these elements to cue my feedback.

For each Assignment throughout the course, you will find grading rubric links.  Please review these rubrics as well.  I use these elements to cue my feedback.

Please remember to review my Faculty Expectations and weekly Instructor Guidance for additional information on what I look for in discussion and paper assignments.

Please let me know if any of this information is not helpful, begs clarity.

Thanks!

Greetings all!
I wish for my feedback to work for each of you.  While I think I’m being clear in what I write, some of you may differ in how you make sense of what I write!… 🙂
So, please know I use rubrics embedded in the course and highlight scoring by using bold for related earnings.  At the bottom of each rubric for discussion assignments, I will address strengths and opportunities.  Reviewing those opportunities should be helpful for increasing performance and scores, as appropriate.  If what I write in feedback is not helping, please do not hesitate to let me know as I want to ensure the feedback I produce is useful for you.
For papers, please know I will be using the following APA formatting criteria for scoring in the APA/writing sections of rubrics for written assignments:
1.    Please integrate textbook (and, if appropriate, video) into assignment (see the Instructor’s Guidance)
2.    Please write in a circle, offer a thesis and purpose with subsequent elements in the introduction, key elements, and summarize thesis and purpose
3.    Please cite every sentence in which you use information from sources or know that you are technically plagiarizing
4.    Aggressively set and run grammar check, resolve issues prior to submitting paper
5.    Use APA style levels of headings to help with transitioning
6.    Use APA style title page

7

.    Use APA style running head, page numbers
8.    Use Times New Roman 12 font throughout
9.    Double space without special offsets (go to spacing settings in Word, modify to “0” before and after)
10.  Other:  

Course Syllabus

Prerequisites

OMM 618 has no prerequisites.

 

Course Description

This course is a study on managing people in the workplace, focusing on the important policies and processes associated with recruiting, hiring,

training

and evaluating personnel in order to achieve strategic organizational goals.

 

Course Design

This course prepares students for immediate action on the job by providing them with the practical tools and applications, as well as the theoretical principles, of human resource management in contemporary organizations.  The course is designed to include functions that are found in human resource departments.  These functions will be presented in a way so that students will be able to apply them regardless of the size or structure of their organization.

Course topics include an introduction to

human resources

, equal opportunity and diversity, personnel planning and recruitment, testing and selecting employees, training, development of employees, performance management, compensation, ethical issues in human resources, labor relations and safety and health issues.

The class sessions not only present theoretical content, but provide opportunities to apply the content to the student’s personal and organizational life. There are a number of case studies and class discussions.  The Research Project focuses on select topics associated with modern organizational culture and life.

 

Course Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:

1. Delineate the scope of human resource management activities within an organization.

2. Describe the significant role that effective human resource management has in achieving strategic organizational goals.

3. Explain and demonstrate the basic techniques of good HRM practice.

4. Describe contexts that influence HRM practice, including social trends, multi-cultural workplaces, legislative policies, and labor issues.

5. Design an integrated HR information system to support strategic decision making in an organization.

6. Use training models and training structures to measure processes and evaluate performance in the development of a learning organization.

7. Develop policies for dealing effectively with compliance areas such as equal employment, employee grievance procedures, and occupational health and safety.

8. Identify and apply skills that are effective in working with others, analyzing and designing positions, and evaluating performance to achieve continual organizational improvement.

 

Course Map

The course map illustrates the careful design of the course through which each learning objective is supported by one or more specific learning activities in order to create integrity and pedagogical depth in the learning experience.

LEARNING OUTCOME

WEEK

ASSIGNMENT
 

1. Delineate the scope of human resource management activities within an organization.

1

1
1
2
2
2

3

3
3
4
4
4
5
5
5
6
6
6

·

Jack Nelson’s Problem
·

A Question of Discrimination


·

Human Resource Challenges


· Passionate Prospects 
· The Tough Screener
· Testing
· Reinventing the Wheel
· Appraisal 
· Staffing
· Acme Manufacturing
· Ethics and Organizational Culture 
· Incentive Plans
· Contract Negotiations 
· The New Safety Program
· Stress and Burnout
· Expatriation
· Repatriation
· Research Project

1. Describe the significant role that effective human resource management has in achieving strategic organizational goals.

3
3
4
4
4
5
5
6

· Reinventing the Wheel
· Staffing
· Acme Manufacturing
· Ethics and Organizational Culture 
· Incentive Plans
· Contract Negotiations 
· Stress and Burnout
· Research Project

1. Explain and demonstrate the basic techniques of good HRM practice.

1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
4
5
5
6

· Jack Nelson’s Problem
· A Question of Discrimination
· Passionate Prospects
· The Tough Screener
· Staffing
· Reinventing the Wheel
· Acme Manufacturing
· Ethics and Organizational Culture 
· Incentive Plans
· Contract Negotiations 
· The New Safety Program
· Research Project

1. Describe contexts that influence HRM practice, including social trends, multi-cultural workplaces, legislative policies, and labor issues.

1
2
2
2
3
4
4
4
5
5
5
6
6
6

· A Question of Discrimination
· Passionate Prospects 
· The Tough Screener
· Testing
· Appraisal
· Acme Manufacturing
· Ethics and Organizational Culture
· Incentive Plans
· Contract Negotiations 
· The New Safety Program
· Stress and Burnout
· Expatriation
· Repatriation
· Research Project

1. Design an integrated HR information system to support strategic decision making in an organization.

6

· Research Project
 

1. Use training models and training structures to measure processes and evaluate performance in the development of a learning organization.

3
3
6
6

· Staffing
· Reinventing the Wheel
· Repatriation
· Research Project

1. Develop policies for dealing effectively with compliance areas such as equal employment, employee grievance procedures, and occupational health and safety.

4
5
5

· Acme Manufacturing
· The New Safety Program
· Stress and Burnout

1. Identify and apply skills that are effective in working with others, analyzing and designing positions, and evaluating performance to achieve continual organizational improvement.

3
3
3
4
5
6

· Staffing
· Reinventing the Wheel
· Appraisal 
· Incentive Plans
· Stress and Burnout
· Research Project

 

Institutional Outcomes

Graduates of Ashford University:

1. Demonstrate the ability to read and think critically and creatively.

2. Demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively in speech and writing.

3. Demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively through the use of technology.

4. Demonstrate self-worth and respect the diversity in others.   

5. Understand the interdependence of life in all its forms.

6. Demonstrate competence in their major fields of study.

7. Share talents and resources in service to others.

8. Are able to draw information from different fields of study to make informed decisions.

9. Recognize learning as a life-long endeavor.

 

Mission Statement

The mission of Ashford University is to provide accessible, affordable, innovative, high-quality learning opportunities and degree programs that meet the diverse needs of individuals pursuing integrity in their lives, professions, and communities.

 

Required Text

Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN: 9780132556378.

Required Journal Articles

Palmer, T., & Varner, I. (2005). Role of cultural self-knowledge in successful expatriation. Singapore Management Review, 27(1), 1-25. Retreived from the ProQuest database.

Hyder, A., & Lövblad, M. (2007). The repatriation process – a realistic approach. Career Development International, 12(3), 264-278. Retreived from the ProQuest database.

Week One Learning Outcomes
This week students will: 

1. Examine the scope of strategic human resources management.

2. Propose recommendations for continual organizational improvement.

3. Evaluate the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission enforcement process, basic defenses against discrimination allegations, and basic equal opportunity laws.

Overview

Assignment

 

Due Date

Format

Grading Percent

Post your Introduction

 

Day 1

Discussion Forum

1

Jack Nelson’s Problem

Day 3
(1st post)

Discussion Forum

3

A Question of Discrimination

Day 3
(1st post)

Discussion Forum

3

Human Resource Challenges

 

Day 7

Written Assignment

7

Note: The online classroom is designed to time students out after 90 minutes of inactivity. Because of this, we strongly suggest that you compose your work in a word processing program and copy and paste it into the discussion post when you are ready to submit it.

Readings
Read the following chapters in: A Framework for Human Resource Management:

1. Chapter 1: Managing Human Resources Today

2. Chapter 2: Managing Equal Opportunity and Diversity

Post Your Introduction
To post your introduction, go to this week’s Post Your

Introduction

link in the left navigation.

Please post a brief bio on the first day of class. Respond to at least three of your classmates’ bios. Use this forum to get acquainted and for ongoing non-content related discussions.

Discussions

To participate in the following Discussion Forums, go to this week’s Discussion link in the left navigation:

1. Jack Nelson’s Problem

Answer the questions to the case, “Jack Nelson’s Problem,” at the end of Chapter 1. Include at least one outside source supporting your answers. Explain your answers in 200 words. Respond to at least two of your fellow students’ postings.

2. A Question of Discrimination

Answer the questions to the case, “LearnInMotion.com: A Question of Discrimination,” at the end of Chapter 2. Include at least one outside source supporting your answers. Explain your answers in 200 words. Respond to at least two of your fellow students’ postings.

Assignments

To complete this assignment, go to this week’s Assignment link in the left navigation:

Human Resource Challenges

Find at least two articles through ProQuest which discuss at least two of the biggest challenges facing human resource departments today. Summarize your findings in a 3-5 page paper. Be sure to properly cite your resources using APA style.

Week One Guidance

            Greetings and welcome to Human Resources Management!  I look forward to our time together as we explore related theories, models, and applications.  Please let me know if my thoughts or suggestions beg clarity as we proceed through the course.  Please review the Week One Assignments section below for important elements to integrate into discussion and paper assignments.    

Intellectual Elaboration

            Bolman and Deal (1997) offered basic human resource (HR) strategies as:

1.     Develop a long-term HR philosophy – build the philosophy into the corporate structure and incentives; develop measures of HR

2.     Invest in people – hire the right people and reward the well; provide job security; promote from within; train and educate; share the wealth

3.     Empower employees and redesign their work – provide autonomy and participation; focus on job enrichment; emphasize teamwork; ensure egalitarianism and upward influence (p. 123) [adapted, abridged]  

This HR philosophy or framework arrives with a host of assumptions, such as (a) promoting an organizational family, (b) focusing on needs, skills, and relationships, (c) projecting leadership as empowerment, and (d) challenging leaders [and managers] to align organizational and human needs (Bolman & Deal, 1997).    

Personal Experience and Application

            Hiring people is like forming a marriage that could be good – or not good.  When I served in an administrative role for a school district, I routinely suggested for the school board who we should hire, promote, and terminate.  As I sought team players as my first priority in hiring, I used committees, as possible, to develop a collective sense of whom we should hire in hopes of helping the acculturation process for new employees.  This approach captured tapped into Bolman and Deal’s (1997) HR strategies of investing in people, and empowering employees and redesigning work, as I sought collaborative decision making for hiring decisions.  I found offering clarity on respective roles, types of questions we should and should not use, and protocols on processing the results from our interview questions toward consensus to be helpful in managing time and expectations for hiring decision-making.  Overall, I found success with this approach.

Week One Assignments Section

            For question one, please read and cite portions of chapter one from A Framework for Human Resource Management (Dessler, 2011) and the intellectual elaboration from this instructor’s guidance.  For question two, please read and cite portions of chapter two of Dessler’s (2011) textbook, and watch and cite portions from the video, “

How to Handle Harassment and Discrimination Complaints

” (n. d.) (available at

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMDnCqT-KU0

).  Please use at least two academic sources from ProQuest and readings from the textbook for the paper assignment.  In addition to the two discussion forums and paper assignment, please offer a brief biography to help with introductions, including academic and professional experience, and at least two expectations from this course.  Thank you for your consideration.

I PROVIDED SEVERAL articles from ProQuest for Discussion 1 & 2-with APA Cites done.

If you need more give me the subject matter and I will provide. It looks like the two discussions require two cites from ProQuest for each one. I supplied several for that:

Discussions
To participate in the following Discussion Forums, go to this week’s Discussion link in the left navigation:

3. Jack Nelson’s Problem

Answer the questions to the case, “Jack Nelson’s Problem,” at the end of Chapter 1. Include at least one outside source supporting your answers. Explain your answers in 200 words. Respond to at least two of your fellow students’ postings.

4. A Question of Discrimination

Answer the questions to the case, “LearnInMotion.com: A Question of Discrimination,” at the end of Chapter 2. Include at least one outside source supporting your answers. Explain your answers in 200 words. Respond to at least two of your fellow students’ postings.
Assignments
To complete this assignment, go to this week’s Assignment link in the left navigation:
Human Resource Challenges
Find at least two articles through ProQuest which discuss at least two of the biggest challenges facing human resource departments today. Summarize your findings in a 3-5 page paper. Be sure to properly cite your resources using APA style.
Week One Guidance
            Greetings and welcome to Human Resources Management!  I look forward to our time together as we explore related theories, models, and applications.  Please let me know if my thoughts or suggestions beg clarity as we proceed through the course.  Please review the Week One Assignments section below for important elements to integrate into discussion and paper assignments.    
Intellectual Elaboration
            Bolman and Deal (1997) offered basic human resource (HR) strategies as:
1.     Develop a long-term HR philosophy – build the philosophy into the corporate structure and incentives; develop measures of HR
2.     Invest in people – hire the right people and reward the well; provide job security; promote from within; train and educate; share the wealth
3.     Empower employees and redesign their work – provide autonomy and participation; focus on job enrichment; emphasize teamwork; ensure egalitarianism and upward influence (p. 123) [adapted, abridged]  
This HR philosophy or framework arrives with a host of assumptions, such as (a) promoting an organizational family, (b) focusing on needs, skills, and relationships, (c) projecting leadership as empowerment, and (d) challenging leaders [and managers] to align organizational and human needs (Bolman & Deal, 1997).    
Personal Experience and Application
            Hiring people is like forming a marriage that could be good – or not good.  When I served in an administrative role for a school district, I routinely suggested for the school board who we should hire, promote, and terminate.  As I sought team players as my first priority in hiring, I used committees, as possible, to develop a collective sense of whom we should hire in hopes of helping the acculturation process for new employees.  This approach captured tapped into Bolman and Deal’s (1997) HR strategies of investing in people, and empowering employees and redesigning work, as I sought collaborative decision making for hiring decisions.  I found offering clarity on respective roles, types of questions we should and should not use, and protocols on processing the results from our interview questions toward consensus to be helpful in managing time and expectations for hiring decision-making.  Overall, I found success with this approach.

Week One Assignments Section

            For question one, please read and cite portions of chapter one from A Framework for Human Resource Management (Dessler, 2011) and the intellectual elaboration from this instructor’s guidance.  For question two, please read and cite portions of chapter two of Dessler’s (2011) textbook, and watch and cite portions from the video, “How to Handle Harassment and Discrimination Complaints” (n. d.) (available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMDnCqT-KU0
).  Please use at least two academic sources from ProQuest and readings from the textbook for the paper assignment.  In addition to the two discussion forums and paper assignment, please offer a brief biography to help with introductions, including academic and professional experience, and at least two expectations from this course.  Thank you for your consideration.

 

References

Bolman, L. G., & Deal, T. E. (1997).  Reframing organizations: artistry, choice, and leadership (2nd ed.).  San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers.

Dessler, G. (2011).  A framework for human resource management (6th ed.).  Boston, MA: Prentice Hall.   

How to Handle Harassment and Discrimination Complaints (n. d.).  Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMDnCqT-KU0.

ProQuest APA Articles below

Discussion 1

Over the last two decades there has been an unprecedented increase in the number of organizations that have internationalized their operations. The international movement of labour that has been concomitant with such expansion of international business has meant that issues associated with the management of human resources across international borders are increasingly important to international human resource managers and academics. The research presented in this paper examines international human resource management (IHRM) pedagogy and practice in Australia. It reports IHRM academicians’ and practitioners’ understanding of the major issues for teaching and practice in IHRM and elucidates current developments and directions for this field. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

De Cieri, H., Fenwick, M., & Hutchings, K. (2005). The challenge of international human resource management: Balancing the duality of strategy and practice. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 16(4), 584-598. Retrieved from

http://search.proquest.com/docview/218134538?accountid=32521

Personnel administration/human resource management (PA/HRM) has evolved over time by responding to changing issues, concepts, and challenges, rather than following a logical and deductive path. The shift from personnel administration to human resource management signifies a shift from a human relations focus on people to a focus on people as resources in an organization. Other shifts have included: 1. administration to management, 2. human relations to organizational effectiveness, 3. human resources planning to strategy, 4. labor relations to governance, 5. morale to climate to culture, 6. individual job to teamwork, 7. problem focus to accountability focus, and 8. training to development. Much of the shift can be attributed to the integration of organizational sciences (OS). However, the integration of OS into PA/HRM has probably been more in practice than in scholarship.

Mahoney, T. A., & Deckop, J. R. (1986). Evolution of concept and practice in personnel Administration/Human resource management (PA/HRM). Journal of Management, 12(2), 223-223. Retrieved from

http://search.proquest.com/docview/215257610?accountid=32521

Abstract (summary)

Translate Abstract

Knowledge is becoming a critically important resource in contemporary business organizations, a development posing significant issues for

human resource management

(HRM). Various strands of theory, research, and practice is drawn together to develop a better understanding of these issues, with special emphasis on HRM practice in knowledge-intensive organizations. The difficulties of making a transition from traditional forms of HRM to post-industrial approaches are discussed. A review of traditional compensation systems serves as the basis for a series of propositions concerning preferred practice in this critically important area. The major conclusions is that existing compensation structures and routines must be rethought and several suggestions are discussed.

Despres, C., & Hiltrop, J. (1995). Human resource management in the knowledge age: Current practice and perspectives on the future. Employee Relations, 17(1), 9-9. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/235203248?accountid=32521

Full Text

·

Translate Full text

·
Introduction

Employees in developed economies have migrated from agricultural work, to manufacturing, to services-based industries over the last four decades. On average, the services sector now employs about 60 per cent of the active civilian workforce in OECD countries. This migration has been accompanied by two notable developments, both of which carry significant implications for

human resource

management (HRM). The first is an evolution from rational (engineered, fragmented, bureaucratic) to natural (organic, psychosocial, humanistic) to open systems (multiply-connected) frames of meaning in the management and organizational literatures (Perrow, 1973; Scott, 1987). As a consequence of this — and in the ideal — it is commonly observed that organizational designs and managerial practice are bearing more differentiated, less bureaucratic, less reliant on hierarchical authority structures and more psychosocially integrative.

The second development involves the post-industrial revolution (Bell, 1973) which, spurred especially by the information revolution (Postman, 1993), has installed knowledge as a primary factor of production (Drucker, 1992; Handy, 1989, 1994; Peters, 1993). It is now accepted that the productive economic core is being relocated from land, labour, capital and machinery to intellectual resources, and that the management of knowledge and information is increasingly crucial in contemporary business organizations Many analysts surmise that the nature of life and work will thus be fundamentally transformed for this and all subsequent generations. Since the late-1980s, then, various authors have advanced the idea that the knowledge age is breeding knowledge workers who are employed in what might be termed knowledge-intensive organizations.

This article attempts to clarify business-related knowledge phenomena and the resulting tensions that HRM must address to ensure its success in the knowledge age. We begin by examining the dynamics of information and knowledge in contemporary enterprises. Next, the characteristics of knowledge workers are discussed together with a series of issues facing HRM as an applied field of practice. Finally, we conclude by examining the implications for HRM in an area of work that is critical to both the profession and its organizational context, namely, compensation and

reward

systems in the knowledge-intensive organization.

Knowledge and production

Claims made for the information revolution, the knowledge age and the post-industrial society are founded on base assumptions concerning knowledge. Two analytical paradigms are in play and they are sometimes contorted and confused in the literature: knowledge can be treated as an economic variable — something an economic entity has — or it can be thought of as the base condition for human action — hence, something an economic entity is[1]. Expressions of the former view are common in the management literature and familiar to HRM (particularly in relation to the “proper” management of scientific work, engineering projects and other professional activity). Moreover, to consider knowledge a mere variable will keep HRM locked in increasingly obsolete models of organization, to the detriment HRM practitioners and their organizations. The evidence suggests that organizations are fast becoming knowledge communities and HRM must broaden its perspective to keep pace.

Knowledge has been variously described as the stuff of organizational success (Nonaka, 1991), the engine transforming global economies (Bell, 1973, 1978), the fabric stitched together by new forms of work and new types of workers (Blackler et a, 1993), the stuff of governmental controls that herald the demise of private enterprise capitalism (Heilbruner, 1976) and even the “mobile and heterogeneous [resource that will end the] hegemony of financial capital [and allow employees to] seize power” (Sveiby and Lloyd, 1987, p. 39). While only the emphatic state that knowledge work constitutes the sum total of value-added in an enterprise (e.g. Peters, 1993), nearly everyone agrees with De Gues, director of planning at Royal Dutch Shell, that “The ability to learn faster than your competitors may be the only sustainable competitive advantage” (1988, p. 71).

It should be clear, however, that producing knowledge and managing innovation have always been critically important competences (e.g. Simon, 1965), even when these are introduced as today’s significant topics. Frequent announcements of the contemporary knowledge age notwithstanding, it is simply wrong to suggest that business has gone about its affairs independent of knowledge, for the production process has always relied on knowledge to transform capital goods from one state to another. In the case of manufacturing, goods are transformed from one material state to another, which then embodies the mental processes resident in the transformation process. In the case of services, goods are transformed from one state of diffuse or unknown information to another of concentrated relevance which then carries the stamp of those who effected the transformation process.

Furthermore, claims to a present-day knowledge age rest largely on the observation that organizations are increasingly using knowledge to produce, in turn, a new knowledge product. The result of knowledge-intensive activity is again a capital good that is exchanged in the marketplace, but the fundamentals of production are distinctive in terms of process and output. The process of production is largely owned by the employee in a knowledge-intensive environment, not by the organization. Knowledge products depend almost exclusively on the uniquely human ability to manipulate symbols via cognitive processes — to effect the transformation of stimuli into data, data into information, and information into meaningful knowledge. Roles, functions, routines, procedures and machinery are a small — and in some cases even repudiated — part of the process. The distinctive competence of knowledge-intensive firms is thus individuated and transportable, resident in the people on whom the organization depends for transformational processes and product outputs The knowledge carried by the employee becomes a real and controlling resource, perhaps a decisive factor of production, but it remains with the employee and in no real sense is it ever of the firm.

Thus, the knowledge age restates the ancient wisdom that it is impossible to separate knowledge from the knower. Because of this, the products developed by a knowledge-age firm are distinctive in several ways from the objects that dotted our industrial age. While the latter relied on producers and consumers, the knowledge age deals in producers and users. The industrial-age consumer transforms an object of production, while the knowledge-age user applies a replication of the producer’s stock of knowledge. The difference between transformation and replication is represented in the difference between frozen pizzas and software programs: the consumer transforms into energy and waste the elements that a frozen pizza was, the user replicates and extends the knowledge that a software program is and remains. Knowledge products, then, do not obey the law of conservation — they are not transformed and consumed — but rather the principles of replication and extension that are native to education. Knowledge is the ultimate generative tool and rather than “saleability”, its core characteristic is “shareability”.

It is also important to note that both producer and user learn from the exchange of a knowledge product and both possess it after delivery. Thus, the knowledge firm has little control over the secondary or tertiary effects of the knowledge transfer. Knowledge, the potentially powerful tool, can be put to many uses, including ones cross-purposes with the future profit aims of a producer. The industrial-bureaucratic model of organizing is familiar in the current business environment but many find it striking an increasingly uneasy balance with these dynamics. The summary statement on knowledge and the productive function, therefore, is that, while industrial-bureaucratic companies were designed to amplify physical ability and transform material resources, post-industrial knowledge organizations must cultivate intellectual ability and manage information resources.

Knowledge and work

What then, is a knowledge worker and how does knowledge work differ from other forms of human activity? To begin with a historical perspective, it is clear that industrialism widened the gap between those who conceptualized, organized and directed tasks and those who carried them out. Knowledge work at the turn of the century was the province of intellectuals and intellectuals, in turn, were largely dissociated from private enterprise. An early work by Cuvillier, for example, stated that:

…knowledge is both the tool and the raw material, and the result is a very special kind of product. Intellectual workers enrich human knowledge both as creators and as researchers; they apply it as practitioners, they spread it as teachers, and they share it with others as experts or advisers They produce judgements, reasonings, theories, findings, conclusions, advice, arguments for and against, and so on (1974, p. 293).

Subsequent attempts to centralize knowledge as a concept in productive enterprises tended to resubmit profession as a sense-making concept — the reproducibility of expertise, the complexity or variety of tasks, the creativity and experience or length of training required (e.g. Scarbrough, 1993), and the literature review by Sumanth et al. (1990) suggests that efforts to do so date from the early- or mid-1980s. More recently, a number of authors have jettisoned existing job-classification schemes in an attempt to describe wholly new employment phenomena. Reich, for example, suggests that the difficulty of specifying with traditional concepts what a symbolic analyst does each day is indicated by the following exercise from Table I: add any term from the first column to any from the second, and then add both terms to any from the third (1991, pp. 182-3).(Table I omitted)

The illustrated issue is that new types of work are now being performed by new types of workers, and that both of these phenomena are poorly understood. By his and other accounts, these individuals identify and broker problems by manipulating symbols, paraphrasing “reality” and then developing images that eventually gain a “new reality” status, or simply drop from consideration.

It is possible, then, to define knowledge work as systematic activity that traffics in data, manipulates information and develops knowledge. The work may be theoretical and directed at no immediate practical purpose, or pragmatic and aimed at devising new applications, devices, products or processes. On an abstract level, however, it is less obvious that the knowledge thus produced becomes an assembled set of specialized information which: responds to needs and problems, frequently defining these by its existence; functions in a context to reduce ambiguity and inject a sense of order, progress or direction; and has the self-referential quality of legitimizing those who claim to hold it, thus making rhetoric and impression management-crucial[2],

To summarize, the nature of knowledge-based work is fundamentally different from that known previously and requires a different order of thinking. Table II compares knowledge work with traditional forms of employment on a variety of dimensions.(Table II omitted) In our view the key differences pertinent to the HRM domain occur in terms of work activities and career expectations. Knowledge workers manipulate and orchestrate symbols and concepts, identify more strongly with their peers and professions than their organizations, have more rapid skill obsolescence and are more critical to the long-term success of the organization.

To what extent is HRM prepared to deal in knowledge-age management and organization? The current state of the profession (Guest, 1990) and a critical reading of its accomplishments since inception (Kerfoot and Knights, 1992) provide a mixed prognosis This is unfortunate: as an applied field of endeavour, HRM draws directly on those disciplines that are most entwined with knowledge-age phenomena — psychology, sociology, economics, the information sciences. Thus, while it has access to the requisite intellectual capital, HRM may well lack the proactive and strategic mindset needed to influence matters in a significant way. The field is also badly positioned inside many organizations, commanding neither the functional power nor the prestige needed to influence strategic action.

The language of HRM infiltrated executive suites and annual reports during the 1980s but some believe that this owes more to line and strategic managers than the concerted actions of HRM practitioners (Hendry and Pettigrew, 1990), others suspect that the rhetoric often fails to match the reality of actual practice (Vaughan, 1994) and two recent cross-border investigations indicate that many HRM units are administrative backwaters that lack integration with the company’s strategic affairs (Derr et al, 1992; Price-Waterhouse, 1991). HRM practitioners are rightly concerned with the phenomenon of devolvement as an increasing number of managers consider that human and social affairs fall within their administrative domain. As one chief executive put it in a recent study, “Human resource management is more important than ever, but I can’t trust my Personnel people to do it”, while on the other side of the functional divide a senior HRM executive reported, “We are traditional, welfare-focused, administrative, the handmaiden of the line. We are the sweeper-up of problems and treat the wounded” (Derr et al, 1992, p. 9).

The current HRM agenda has definition but seems far from achieving a sense of fruition. In contrast, the post-industrial HRM agenda presents an ambiguous and changing set of requirements that complicate matters. Drucker, for example, writes that, “Knowledge workers cannot be supervised effectively. Unless they know more about their speciality than anybody else in the organization, they are basically useless” (1992, p. 101). One wonders how most HRM practitioners would respond to this statement. Clearly, knowledge-intensive organizational forms will place most HRM units on remarkably unfamiliar territory and the implications for the future viability of HRM are serious. Among the more important challenges to consider are:

* how to ensure an adequate supply of knowledge workers, a resource which promises to become scarce resources in the future;

* how to identify, develop and evaluate knowledge workers and the outputs they produce;

* how to motivate and reward knowledge workers to maximize their productivity and the quality of their outputs;

* how to structure the organization — and how to make the transition to new organizational forms — to obtain output and productivity from an increasingly knowledgeable workforce.

The coming of knowledge-age organizations?

What, then, are the indications that organizations are moving steadily towards the knowledge? The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) provides data that track knowledge-generating activity across all productive areas and not simply the service sector. The research and development activity which UNESCO analyses is defined as:

…any creative systematic activity undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge, including knowledge of man, culture and society, and the use of this knowledge to devise new applications. It includes fundamental research…, applied research…, and experimental development work leading to new devices, products or processes (UNESCO, 1993, p. 5-1).

Using this definition as a proxy for knowledge work, the data in Figure 1 show employment by sector and occupation across the USA, Japan and Europe for 1990.(Figure 1 omitted) The percentage of knowledge workers is highest in the US service and manufacturing sectors. Knowledge work accounts for a smaller proportion of total employment in Japan and Europe, and it is interesting to note that the manufacturing sector employs more managers, technicians and professionals than does the services sector in both economies.

Figure 2 indicates that the trend towards knowledge employment has been accelerating since the mid-1970s.(Figure 2 omitted) This trend is most pronounced in the USA where the absolute number of knowledge workers nearly doubled from 1970 to 1990, and considerably more subdued in Europe where the proportion of knowledge workers in the active civilian population has remained rather flat in comparison (right side of the figure). Figure 3 uses these data to provide a trend analysis of the proportion of knowledge workers in these three economies to the year 2000.(Figure 3 omitted) The USA economy towers above the other two in terms of the absolute numbers of knowledge workers. Assuming that the trend continues (right side of the figure), Europe will lag behind the other two major economies at the end of this century[3].

Finally one is given to ask the pragmatic question: does the presence of knowledge workers make a value-adding difference? No claims to causality are made in the following, but Figure 4 does indicate that a greater proportion of knowledge workers in these European economies has accompanied a higher GDP. (Figure 4 omitted)

In summary, macroeconomic data indicate that, as a form of productive activity, knowledge work is increasing at accelerating rates in most areas of the world. HRM managers should therefore conclude that, even if it represents a small proportion of the current employment activity in their firm, the trends indicate that knowledge and information will be increasingly decisive business success factors in the future. In the following section we focus on compensation as a case example of how one might consider adapting to the new social and economic environment.

Compensation and reward systems in the knowledge age

The management of compensation and reward was once relatively straightforward: salary and job level went hand in hand. This is no longer the case. Together with the pressures of post-industrial knowledge work, global competition, slow growth, volatile financial markets and shifting social values have shattered familiar compensation frameworks (Berger, 1991). Empirical evidence indicates that many compensation and reward systems fail to deliver the expected results (Lawler, 1981) and Kanter (1989) has written that “traditional pay systems…are under attack for being neither cost-effective nor motivating people to do more”. A decade-old review of research findings by Beer et al. concluded that:

Despite the enormous amount spent on wages, commissions, cost of living increases, bonuses, and stock options, many studies have shown that in most organizations 50 per cent or more of the employees are dissatisfied with pay, and that this percentage is increasing (1984, p. 116).

The general research finding, then, is that business objectives are often frustrated — not furthered — by compensation programmes which simultaneously displease the employees involved (Gilbert, 1988). Given the fact that employees at all levels still rank compensation as a prime job factor, usually first or second in importance, one is led to conclude that many individuals believe their wages are unfair, their pay increases inequitable, their performance gains unrecognized and their creations or innovations unrewarded.

Wilson et al. (1994), among others, argue that many reward systems are biased towards management’s view and do a poor job of recognizing the individual’s experience, organizational contribution and skill development. It is also true that many compensation programmes focus on hierarchical position and nominal job content as proxies for contribution to the business, even while this is at odds with the realities of knowledge-work where insights from any level can have a profound impact on the business. Third, the demands of knowledge production often place a premium on teamwork and flexibility, while traditional reward systems usually reinforce individualism and functional specialization. Fourth, many firms continue to design structures and functions around fixed positions, although knowledge-generating positions are, to some degree, designed around people and their abilities: individuals and their talents should uniquely define the contours of their work. Finally, many compensation systems fail because of poor communication: employees are frequently left to interpret for themselves the meaning and intent of a compensation and reward system.

Given this state of affairs it is perhaps unsurprising to learn that an increasing number of knowledge workers are leaving corporate positions to start their own firms or seek alternative employment (Gomez-Mejia et al, 1990). Companies faced with the challenge of devising new compensation and reward systems often yield to the impulse to reshuffle existing ones. The axiom of paying for the position rather than the person, for example, is often at odds with knowledge-work reality: knowledge-generating positions need to be designed around people and their talents because the individuals involved uniquely define the contours of their work. This contradicts the bulk of current thinking and argues for new arrangements that reformulate the relationships between an employee’s knowledge, the organizational benefits thus derived, and the employee’s rewards.

Recommendations

Compensation and reward programmes should be viewed as comprehensive systems, integral with other organizational arrangements, which involve more than performance appraisal, non-monetary benefits, incentives, and basic pay. We suggest that, in the knowledge age, effective systems will embrace three major dimensions:

(1) They will be externally competitive in order to attract and retain competent staff, and sensitive to employees’ perceptions of internal equity.

(2) They will be perceived as rational in their organizational context, administered in a consistent way over time, and contributors to the company’s strategic direction.

(3) They will be constituted in a new order of thinking which makes cultural, socio-political and work challenge issues primary, and pay, bonus and incentive schemes secondary.

To illustrate these points consider the research conducted by Balkin (1987) and Coombs and Gomez-Mejia (1991) in a large sample of technology-driven firms. In large part some or all of the components displayed in the following list were found to be in use. Compared with the programmes offered to most other employees, these compensation systems incorporated a greater regard for individual contributions and treated the employee as a more highly valued resource. In addition, the work environments tended to have few written policies or procedures as tools to control behaviour and avoided the use of mechanistic pay approaches (e.g. formal job evaluations). They frequently promoted entrepreneurship through special programmes and incentives (i.e. the availability of company funds to start new projects or ventures with compensation linked to their eventual outcome) and used aggregate rewards to promote co-operation and team cohesiveness.

Compensation and reward elements typically found in R&D settings

* stock ownership for employees (in some cases, shared ownership);

* a menu of individual, team and organizational compensation factors, tightly integrated with R&D goals;

* longevity incentives that tie employee interests to long-term company progress;

* front-end hiring bonuses;

* special key-contributor awards;

* professional perquisites (e.g. paid sabbaticals);

* customized pay plans;

* a market-driven reward system;

* frequent external equity adjustments.

The compensation and reward elements also make it clear that knowledge-based compensation programmes place a premium on the potential value of an employee’s contributions, individualize compensation and reward practices, and recognize that knowledge workers have unique personality characteristics. We would suggest that several lessons can be learned by using the experience with these R&D professionals used as a proxy for desirable practice in the post-industrial era.

First, studies focusing on scientific breakthroughs indicate that knowledge workers who undertake pioneering research typically dislike bureaucracies, resent administration and work most creatively when satisfying their own curiosity (Root-Bernstein, 1989). In line with this, Rosenbaum (1991) finds that knowledge workers tend to have high needs for autonomy, significant drives for achievement, stronger identity and affiliation with a profession than a company and a greater sense of self-direction, making them likely to resist the authoritarian imposition of views, rules and structures.

Second, needs for autonomy, achievement and personal growth are met when job structures and leadership styles promote empowerment and self-management. Many R&D job designs promote autonomy, and the desirable leadership style is one which is more collegial than supervisory, shares information, delegates responsibility and encourages upward and horizontal communication. Collins and Yeager (1988), as an example, investigated the compensation and reward systems used by behavioural science R&D organizations and found that approximately half employed some form of employee participation in the performance evaluation process Byrne (1993) reports that some knowledge-intensive organizations involve team-mates, peers and even customs in the evaluation of an individual’s performance.

Third, while additional compensation and reward systems pivot on the disbursement of monies, those located in knowledge environments do not. Non-monetary rewards become important factors and rely heavily on symbols of personal and professional excellence. Such arrangements make it a point to recognize achievement, allow researchers to pursue their own projects and offer the praise, acknowledgement and independence which have been found critical to innovation (Freedman, 1988). General Motors, for example, sponsors the Kettering Awards, which recognize outstanding scientific achievement. Phillips Petroleum builds advertising campaigns around its innovative researchers, and knowledge workers at the Batelle Memorial Institute receive 10 per cent of the royalties on their inventions. Knowledge-intensive environments generally embrace the truism voiced by Bandura, “Most people value their self-respect and the self-satisfaction derived from a job well done more highly than they do material rewards” (Bandura, 1991, p. 257). It is possible to conceptualize this literature in terms of hierarchy of factors which form the conceptual armature of compensation systems in a knowledge environment, as given in Table III.(Table III omitted)

Conclusions

Based on the foregoing discussion we offer, below, a set of propositions regarding knowledge compensation programmes The ideal knowledge-age compensation programme should address the full range of factors that affect the individual’s performance, rather than only financial considerations and extrinsic sources of motivation such as cash and cash equivalents In the knowledge age, these monetary incentives will be only a starting-point and the focus will be on ways to encourage intrinsic human achievement motivation.

The evidence indicates that organizational environments leading to intellectual motivation, commitment and achievement involve compensation schemes that “fuzzify the boundary between personal meaning and organizational mission. Nonaka, for example, considers the centrepiece of Japanese business excellence “…tacit and often highly subjective insights, intuitions, and hunches of individual employees…” and that the key to this process is “…personal commitment (1991, p. 97). Traditional models of compensation objectify human activity to such an extent that Nonaka’s insights, intuitions and hunches — which cannot be logically predicted, rationally controlled or objectively specified –would be assigned the status of irrelevances.

Compensation and reward systems must shift from objective and rational, to subjective and “soft” performance measures. The industrial-age relied on a narrow set of business drivers — specialization, control, habituation and the supremacy of a single best way. The experience with knowledge-age business suggests that a new set of factors is coming to the fore: intuition, experimentation, wholism and the challenge of accepted wisdom. Compensation and reward systems must now encourage knowledge and information management in the organization.

Knowledge-age compensation systems should focus on challenges inherent in the work itself. The environment in many knowledge-intensive organizations differs remarkedly from traditional hierarchies: it is flat, collegial, organized around processes and managed in projects. It is most likely that knowledge work will often be focused in cross-functional teams through the temporary clustering of professional employees The organization, then, will require compensation systems that facilitate knowledge processes and team-based outputs and these will rely in part, or totally, on group-based compensation systems. Companies on the cutting edge, such as General Electric, use appraisal methods that involve peers, superiors, subordinates and, increasingly, customers and such practices point the way of the future for compensation and reward systems.

Knowledge is fast becoming a key success factor for many companies. The current employment trends indicate that an important proportion of the workforce will be knowledge workers in the future and it is reasonable to assume that their importance to a firm will exceed that of other types of employees by several orders of magnitude. HRM managers and their organizations will need to develop new ways of attracting, retaining and motivating such employees, and compensation systems will play a critical role in coping with these new realities. HRM managers will need to shift their focus from old organizing models to new ones, together with a change in compensation systems to ones which are more flexible, process-oriented and team-based, as indicated in Table IV.(Table IV omitted) These new compensation systems will be premissed on different forms of leadership, authority and structure from those that now prevail, and will be critically important in determining the environment of a successful knowledge-intensive firm.

Notes

1. As an example consider the noosphere, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin’s hypothetical web of determinate human knowledge which envelopes Earth, enabling us make sense of observable events such as the displacements of matter which constitute architecture. Weick (1979) popularized the noosphere’s organizational analogue with the idea that a priori cognitive structures condition one’s viewing of certain events, hence one’s action. Kuhn (1970), Rorty (1979) and others extended this constructivist argument by arguing that knowledge is little more than belief made legitimate by a community of like-minded peers and, in recursive fashion, at least partially determinate of future states in that community. The organization, in sum, knowledge.

2. This critical, non-functionalist view of knowledge goes beyond dictionary rationalism in an attempt to capture the everyday reality of how knowledge is perceived and experienced.

3. These data include individuals actively working in government, social services or the military, as well as the unemployed and retired

References and further reading

Balkin, D. (17), Compensation strategies for R&D staff”, Topics in Total Compensation, Vol. 2 No. 2, Winter; pp. 207-15.

Bandura, A. (1991), “Social cognitive theory of self-regulation”, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Vol. 50 No. 2, pp. 248-87.

Beer, M., Spector, B., Lawrence, P., Mills D. and Walton, R. (1984), Managing Human Assets, Free Press, New York, NY, p. 116.

Bell, D. (1973), The Coming of Post-Industrial Society, Basic Books, New York, NY.

Bell, D. (1978), The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism, Heinemann, London.

Berger, L. (1991), “Trends and issues for the 1990s: creating a viable framework for compensation designs”, in Rock, M. and Berger, L. (Eds), The Compensation Handbook, McGraw-Hill, New York, NY.

Blackler, F., Reed, M. and Whitaker, A. (1993), “Editorial: knowledge workers and contemporary organizations”, Journal of Management Studies Vol. 30 No. 6, pp. 851-62.

Byrne, J.(1993), “The horizontal corporation”, Business Week, 20 December, pp. 76-81.

Collins, R. and Yeager, J. (1988), “Staff evaluation and incentive practices utilized by behavioral science research organizations: a pilot study”, Journal of the Society of Research Administrators, Vol. 20 No. 1, Summer, pp. 119-34.

Coombs, G. and Gomez-Mejia, L. (1991), “Cross-functional pay strategies in high technology firms”, Journal of Compensation and Benefits Review, Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 40-8.

Cuvillier, R. (1974), “Intellectual workers and their work in social theory and practice, International Labor Review, Vol. 109 No. 4, April, pp. 291-317.

De Gues, A. (1988), “Planning as learning”, Harvard Business Review, March-April, pp. 70-4.

Derr, C., Wood, J., Walter, M. and Despres, C. (1992), The Emerging Role of the HR Manager in Europe, IMD/The European Association of Personnel Management, Lausanne.

Drucker, P. (1992), “The new society of organizations”, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 70 No. 5, September/October, pp. 95-104.

Freedman, G. (1988), “Sparking innovation through personnel initiatives”, Personnel, Vol. 65 No. 6, June, pp. 61-8.

Gilbert, D. (1988), “Flexible compensation ties rewards to performance”, Journal of Compensation & Benefits, Vol. 4 No. 2, September/October, pp. 83-8.

Gomez-Mejia, L., Balkin, D. and Milkovich, G. (1990), “Rethinking rewards for technical employees”, Organizational Dynamics, Vol. 18 No. 4, Spring, pp. 62-75.

Guest, D. (1990), “Human resource management and the American dream”, Journal of Management Studies, Vol. 27 No. 4, pp. 377-97.

Handy, C. (1989), The Age of Unreason, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA.

Handy, C. (1994), The Empty Raincoat, Hutchinson, London.

Heilbruner, R. (1976), Business Civilization in Decline, Norton, New York, NY.

Hendry, C. and Pettigrew, A. (1990), “Human resource management: an agenda for the nineties”, International Journal of Human Resource Management, Vol. 1 No 1, pp. 17-44.

Kanter, R M. (1989), When Giants Learn to Dance, Simon & Schuster, Hemel Hempstead.

Kerfoot, D. and Knights, D. (1992), “Planning for personnel? Human resource management reconsidered”, Journal of Management Studies, Vol. 29 No. 5, pp. 651-68.

Kuhn, T. (1970), The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 2nd ed, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.

Lawler, E. (1981), Pay and Organization Development, Addison-Wesley, Wokingham.

Nonaka, I. (1991), “The knowledge-creating company”, Harvard Business Review, November-December, pp. 96-104.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (1993), Labor Force Statistics. 1971-1991, OECD Publications, Paris

Perrow, C. (1973), Complex Organizations. A Critical Essay, 3rd ed., Random House, New York, NY.

Peters, T. (1993), “Thriving in chaos”, Working Woman, Vol. 18 No 9, September, pp. 42-5.

Postman, N.(1993), Technology: The Surrender of Culture to Technology. Vintage/Random House, New York, NY.

Price-Waterhouse Cranfield Project on International Strategic Human Resource Management, (1991), Cranfield School of Management, Bedford.

Reich, R. (1991), The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for 21st Century Capitalism, Knopf, New York, NY.

Root-Bernstein, R. (1989), “Strategies of research (part 2)”, Research-Technology Management, Vol. 32 No. 3, May/June, pp. 36-41.

Rorty, R. (1979), Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

Rosenbaum, B. (1991), “Leading today’s professional”, Research-Technology Management, Vol. 34 No. 2, March/April, pp. 30-35.

Scarbrough, H. (1993), “Problem-solutions in the management of information systems expertise”, Journal of Management Studies, Vol 30 No. 6, November, pp. 939-55.

Scott, R. (1987), Organizations: Rational Natural and Open Systems, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.

Simon, H. (1965), Administrative Behavior, The Free Press, New York, NY.

Sumanth, D., Omachonu, V. and Beruvides, M. (1990), “A review of the state-of-the-art research on white-collar/knowledge-worker productivity”, International Journal of Technology Management, Vol. 5 No. 3, pp. 337-55.

Sveiby, K. and Lloyd, T.(1987), Managing Know-how: Add Value by Valuing Creativity, Bloomsbury Publishing, London.

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (1993), Statistical Yearbook: 1993. Paris.

Vaughan, E. (1994), “The trial between sense and sentiment: a reflection on the language of HRM”, Journal of General Management, Vol. 19 No 3, Spring, pp. 20-32.

Weick, K. (1969), The Social Psychology of Organizing, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA.

Wilson, D., Mueser, R. and Raelin, J. (1994), “New look at performance appraisal for scientists and engineers, Research-Technology Management, July-August, pp. 51-5.

(Charles Despres is a Research Fellow and Jean-Marie Hiltrop is a Professor, both at the International Institute for Management Development(IMD), Chemin de Belerive 23 CH-1001 Lausanne, Switzerland.)

Word count: 5502

DISCUSSION 2

How to Handle Harassment and Discrimination Complaints

Ms. White’s attorneys contend that both the change in job duties and the suspension were illegal retaliation. Burlington Northern’s attorneys cite other reasons for the reassignment: An internal investigation of her sexual-harassment complaint revealed other employees thought her forklift assignment was unfair and should go to someone with more seniority, they say. Burlington, a unit of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., also defends Ms. White’s suspension, saying it was resolved properly and she suffered no material harm. A federal district court jury in Memphis, Tenn., awarded Ms. White $43,000 in compensatory damages. The company appealed the case to the Supreme Court after a divided federal appeals court in Cincinnati found largely for Ms. White. (Appeals courts across the country have differed over what constitutes retaliation.)

Ms. White’s attorneys and women’s groups contend that Burlington Northern’s actions, if allowed, risk deterring employees from speaking up at all. A Burlington Northern victory “would be tremendously damaging,” both to employees’ security in raising complaints and to the progress of women in traditionally male occupations, where harassment and discrimination risks are high, says Jocelyn Samuels of the National Women’s Law Center, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit.

Shellenbarger, S. (2006, Apr 13). Supreme court takes on how employers handle worker harassment complaints. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved from

http://search.proquest.com/docview/398969525?accountid=32521

FULL TEXT

WHILE BANS on sexual harassment and discrimination are posted in many employers’ policies these days, just how much on-the-job protection is owed workers after they step up to make charges of bad behavior?

A Supreme Court case set for oral arguments Monday will shed new light on that question. The central issue in the case, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway v. Sheila White, will examine how much latitude employers have, after an employee complains about sexual harassment or race, religious or sex discrimination, to make transfers or changes in the employee’s job duties without being subject to charges of retaliation.

The case comes amid a rising tide of retaliation complaints to the Equal

Employment Opportunity

Commission. The decision not only has implications for how such claims may be handled in the future, but also for women’s progress in nontraditional occupations.

Ms. White is a former Burlington Northern

forklift operator

who complained in 1997 that her foreman was sexually harassing her. The foreman was suspended after an investigation. On the same day, however, Ms. White’s job duties were changed. While her classification as a track laborer stayed the same, she was taken off the forklift and assigned to dirtier track work that included working on her knees on the ground. After Ms. White filed charges with the EEOC, a supervisor suspended her from her job for five weeks for insubordination, but the company reinstated her with back pay after she filed a grievance with her union.

Ms. White’s attorneys contend that both the change in job duties and the suspension were illegal retaliation. Burlington Northern’s attorneys cite other reasons for the reassignment: An internal investigation of her sexual-harassment complaint revealed other employees thought her forklift assignment was unfair and should go to someone with more seniority, they say. Burlington, a unit of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., also defends Ms. White’s suspension, saying it was resolved properly and she suffered no material harm. A federal district court jury in Memphis, Tenn., awarded Ms. White $43,000 in compensatory damages. The company appealed the case to the Supreme Court after a divided federal appeals court in Cincinnati found largely for Ms. White. (Appeals courts across the country have differed over what constitutes retaliation.)

Charges to the EEOC that include retaliation complaints have risen 13% since 1999 to 22,278. They now make up a record 30% of allegations filed, up from 27% in 2000, the EEOC says. One reason is that such claims are easier to prove in court than outright discrimination charges, making plaintiffs’ attorneys more willing to take retaliation cases.

Another reason is that more employers in recent years have adopted policies prohibiting discrimination and harassment. More employees have been speaking up about perceived injustices as a result, and this in turn has fostered disputes. “Discrimination is not an attractive thing. People don’t like to be accused of it,” says John Hendrickson, EEOC regional attorney in Chicago. “Staff and employers tend to get real angry, real fast, and some of them react in self-destructive ways.”

The EEOC’s legal standard prohibits employers hit by bias allegations from doing anything to the complaining employee that might have a chilling effect on employees’ willingness to speak up — anything “likely to deter a reasonable person from filing a charge,” says Carolyn Wheeler, an assistant general counsel for the EEOC.

Attorneys for Burlington Northern would like to map out a zone of employer conduct that is off-limits to challenges by individual employees. The railroad says in court filings that classifying Ms. White’s treatment as retaliation stands to “create a federal case out of every management decision to alter the mix of an employee’s duties.”

Ms. White’s attorneys and women’s groups contend that Burlington Northern’s actions, if allowed, risk deterring employees from speaking up at all. A Burlington Northern victory “would be tremendously damaging,” both to employees’ security in raising complaints and to the progress of women in traditionally male occupations, where harassment and discrimination risks are high, says Jocelyn Samuels of the National Women’s Law Center, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit.

The EEOC has settled several cases recently that include far- reaching retaliation claims, ranging from bosses’ cutting work hours of complainants to assigning them back-to-back shifts without rest breaks. A federal district court judge in Chicago entered a $2 million consent decree in February against Cracker Barrel Restaurants after 51 employees charging racial and sexual harassment and retaliation at three Illinois restaurants claimed they were later punished with cuts in hours and undesirable shift changes and table assignments, says EEOC trial attorney Pamela Moore-Gibbs. A spokesman for Cracker Barrel, a unit of CBRL Group Inc., said its general counsel wasn’t available to comment.

While two-thirds of employers provide training for managers on diversity issues, according to a 2005 survey of 400 employers by the Society for Human Resource Management, Alexandria, Va., some training programs give relatively brief treatment to the retaliation issue.

Whatever the outcome of the Supreme Court case, one thing seems clear: More manager training is needed to help bosses respond calmly to discrimination charges. Casting a little more light on these issues through education could go a long way toward keeping workaday tensions from erupting into a federal case.

Email me at sue.shellenbarger@wsj.com. Read responses to your questions in my Work & Family Mailbox column inside this section.

Word count: 887

(c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Reproduced with permission of copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permissio

Executive Update How Your Firm Can Avoid Workplace Litigation You need carefully constructed procedures for investigating and acting on complaints Kathleen DolerIn this era of workplace litigation, do you know what your obligations are when it comes to investigating allegations of sexual harassment or discrimination?

Investor’s Business Daily

[Los Angeles] 27 Mar 1995: A.4.

Turn on hit highlighting for speaking browsers

Hide highlighting

Abstract (summary)
Translate Abstract

At a San Francisco seminar last week, Littler attorneys, including senior partner Garry Mathiason, offered a number of tips on conducting investigations.

First, Mathiason said, investigations are now mandatory in many situations – remedial action must be supported by a thorough probe. For example, employers are required to provide a safe workplace and thus they must investigate allegations of violent employee behavior or other threats to workplace safety. Employers who don’t investigate a potential threat could later be found negligent.

Mathiason suggests employers consider designating an in-house expert to handle investigations of misconduct and that this individual be given specialized training. He also said companies should develop investigation policies and procedures, including making sure prompt action is taken when allegations of misconduct are reported.

APA CITE below!

Executive update how your firm can avoid workplace litigation you need carefully constructed procedures for investigating and acting on complaints kathleen DolerIn this era of workplace litigation, do you know what your obligations are when it comes to investigating allegations of sexual harassment or discrimination? (1995, Mar 27). Investor’s Business Daily. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/250266851?accountid=32521

Leon Valquier

5/14/2013 10:21:39 AM

Jack Nelson’s Problem
Week 1 DB 1
Leon Valquier
After reading the case study, it appears that there are a number of problems that may be occurring at the branch offices. For starters, Ruth did not know the name of her machine, or what it did; she only knew how to operate it after two months on the job. The other issue to discuss is the high turnover rate, and the hiring practices. I believe that the lack of training and the poor hiring practices are leading to the problems faced by the bank.
A Human Resource in the main department could help tremendously with the issues being faced. The department could handle the hiring for all branches, set up proper training, and conduct a study on exiting employees to see why exactly they are leaving employment with the bank (Torrington, 1988). With this information they can develop a plan to address the issues that are making employees leave. The HR unit can assist in answering employee grievances and finding solutions to employee concerns, all things that will increase employee retention rates (Torrington, 1988).
The HR unit has many functions to perform. To start, the HR unit can conduct a job analysis of all positions within the bank; they can reclassify positions according to duties, create job descriptions and minimum qualifications for positions, and set proper wages, pay steps, and benefits packages (Crisp, 2002). The HR unit can also develop yearly appraisals for employees, conduct interviews and select new candidates for open positions. They can also develop promotion policies, disciplinary processes, and put into effect procedures to ensure that all equal employment opportunity laws are followed (Crisp, 2002). The HR unit can also be responsible for developing the culture of the organization. One of the key duties of the HR department would be to train all managers in areas such as employment laws, communication, employee motivation, and management techniques.
Supervisors and line managers also have HR functions to carry out. Their duties will consist of working one on one with employees and developing the abilities of all employees, control labor cost, maintain safety standards, motivate employees, increase employee performance, train employees in new positions, maintain morale, and provide guidance to employees (Dessler, 2011). All of these functions including the functions of the HR unit will help develop an efficient and productive place to work.
References
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle
            River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Crisp, D. (2002). HR must be the model of good leadership or risk being irrelevant. Canadian
            HR Reporter, 15(18), 19-19,23. Retrieved from ABI/INFORM Complete database.
Torrington, D. (1988). How does human resources management change the personnel function?
            Personnel Review, 17(6), 3-3. Retrieved from ProQuest Psychology Journals database.

CASE STUDY 1: JACK NELSON’S PROBLEM

Michelle Muldrow

5/14/2013 6:18:25 PM

In the readings of the case study of Jack Nelson’s Problems he found many problems in the structure of the organization, and decided what was needed to implement change, to better the performance and hiring to avoid high turnover rates.
1.      What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home offices and branches?
The problems in the bank’s home office and branches are being caused by a lack of employee hiring, training and a high turnover rate of employees leaving, if the employees are not properly trained on how to handle and operate the machines, it will cause a delay in production. Employees and employers need to know what they are to be doing, how it operates, and be able to explain the procedures of the operations. A Human Resource Dept should be on site and over the hiring and firing of individuals, and make sure the procedures and guidelines are followed to maintain a successful and productive company.
2. Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
I do agree with setting up a HR unit in the main office would help; employees would be able to settle types of disagreements, and disputes, and also receive the required training that is needed for productivity, to provide the resources to develop their employees.
 3. What specific functions should an HR unit carry out?                                           
The functions for HR should be the recruitment of employees to ensure the selected person is a skillful and competent person for the job with the company under consideration. Help to evaluate the performance levels of employees and those who have exceeded expectations should be compensated for their actions, and to motivate employees.
4. What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?What role should the Internet play in the new HR organization?
The HR functions carried out by supervisors and other line manager would be to monitor the work processes, checking quality, measure operational and level of performance and deal with customers and clients. The team will report directly to them who are responsible,also with the use of the internet service, it can help speed up the work process, obtain new hires, monitor, help in training and documentation of company information, marketing.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.).
Ferguson, K. L. (2006). Human resource management systems and firm performance. 
University of Louisville). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, , 196-196 p. Retrieved
from ProQuest database (document ID 305317100).

Respond

Dis1-Wk1-Devin Henry

Devin Henry

5/14/2013 8:35:42 PM

1.      What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home office and branches?
In examining the information that Mr. Nelson gathered from employees in confidence and several site visits Mr. Nelson identified some issues with employee turnover that needed to be addressed. During Mr. Nelson’s visit, he spoke with an employee who did not possess the general knowledge of the bank machine but did have limited knowledge of how to operate it. This is an example of poor employee training, in most organization employees are required to attend some kind of training prior to starting their new position and possibly receive supervised on the job training. This could be the root cause for employee turnover throughout the branches and the home office. Lack of sufficient training and supervision will lead to poor employee output and work ethic which will eventually lead to high employee turnover rate.
2.      Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
I think that instituting a Human Resource unit in the main office would help with identifying the best possible employees for the available positions and be able to set up training prior to full employment but I do not believe that is the final solution
3.  What specific functions should an HR unit carry out? What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?
I think that in addition to better recruiting the bank could also implement onsite training and testing to better place new employees or provide existing employees with potential job opening to promote from within the company. The second reason for setting up an HR unit is to assist in collecting information from employees being terminated to assist the bank in gathering data for what worked and did not work to keep employees on the team. The reasons for their termination can lead to other areas of emphasis. Links can be made between employees’ attendance, job satisfaction, performance and leadership. “The Saratoga Institute studied nearly 20,000 exit interviews between 1999 and 2003. Its findings revealed that employees don’t always leave companies to pursue a bigger paycheck. Four of the top seven reasons why employees leave have to do with company leadership” (Mayhew 2013).
If the HR team performs their functions it would allow the supervisors and line managers to conduct employee on the job training and employee integration in to their respective department. This will also allow supervisors and line managers the ability to conduct their jobs and be able to give guidance and direct operations at their level and be able to influence and motivate employees to perform at their best.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
 

Instructive Leon…
Very thoughtful.  Any drawbacks to centralizing HRM?  How does our instructor’s guidance lend to your view?  Could the problem be less single issue(s), more systems-based in nature? 
Very nice, thanks for sharing…
Randy

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:07:18 AM

P. S.  Please take a peek at Using Quality Sources, consider in the future not using newsprint to justify view… Thanks for your consideration….    

In the readings of the case study of Jack Nelson’s Problems he found many problems in the structure of the organization, and decided what was needed to implement change, to better the performance and hiring to avoid high turnover rates.
1.      What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home offices and branches?
The problems in the bank’s home office and branches are being caused by a lack of employee hiring, training and a high turnover rate of employees leaving, if the employees are not properly trained on how to handle and operate the machines, it will cause a delay in production. Employees and employers need to know what they are to be doing, how it operates, and be able to explain the procedures of the operations. A Human Resource Dept should be on site and over the hiring and firing of individuals, and make sure the procedures and guidelines are followed to maintain a successful and productive company.
2. Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
I do agree with setting up a HR unit in the main office would help; employees would be able to settle types of disagreements, and disputes, and also receive the required training that is needed for productivity, to provide the resources to develop their employees.
 3. What specific functions should an HR unit carry out?                                           
The functions for HR should be the recruitment of employees to ensure the selected person is a skillful and competent person for the job with the company under consideration. Help to evaluate the performance levels of employees and those who have exceeded expectations should be compensated for their actions, and to motivate employees.
4. What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?What role should the Internet play in the new HR organization?
The HR functions carried out by supervisors and other line manager would be to monitor the work processes, checking quality, measure operational and level of performance and deal with customers and clients. The team will report directly to them who are responsible,also with the use of the internet service, it can help speed up the work process, obtain new hires, monitor, help in training and documentation of company information, marketing.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.).
Ferguson, K. L. (2006). Human resource management systems and firm performance. 
University of Louisville). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, , 196-196 p. Retrieved
from ProQuest database (document ID 305317100).

Respond

Michelle Muldrow

5/14/2013 6:18:25 PM

Respond

RE: CASE STUDY 1: JACK NELSON’S PROBLEM

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:09:19 AM

Nice start Michelle…
Please, after reviewing When to Cite and the Instructor’s Guidance, consider citing in text the use of sources and integrating information from the guidance to help with development… 
Looking for a re-write, thanks for your consideration…
Randy

Dis1-Wk1-Devin Henry

Devin Henry

5/14/2013 1:35:42 PM

1.      What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home office and branches?
In examining the information that Mr. Nelson gathered from employees in confidence and several site visits Mr. Nelson identified some issues with employee turnover that needed to be addressed. During Mr. Nelson’s visit, he spoke with an employee who did not possess the general knowledge of the bank machine but did have limited knowledge of how to operate it. This is an example of poor employee training, in most organization employees are required to attend some kind of training prior to starting their new position and possibly receive supervised on the job training. This could be the root cause for employee turnover throughout the branches and the home office. Lack of sufficient training and supervision will lead to poor employee output and work ethic which will eventually lead to high employee turnover rate.
2.      Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
I think that instituting a Human Resource unit in the main office would help with identifying the best possible employees for the available positions and be able to set up training prior to full employment but I do not believe that is the final solution
3.  What specific functions should an HR unit carry out? What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?
I think that in addition to better recruiting the bank could also implement onsite training and testing to better place new employees or provide existing employees with potential job opening to promote from within the company. The second reason for setting up an HR unit is to assist in collecting information from employees being terminated to assist the bank in gathering data for what worked and did not work to keep employees on the team. The reasons for their termination can lead to other areas of emphasis. Links can be made between employees’ attendance, job satisfaction, performance and leadership. “The Saratoga Institute studied nearly 20,000 exit interviews between 1999 and 2003. Its findings revealed that employees don’t always leave companies to pursue a bigger paycheck. Four of the top seven reasons why employees leave have to do with company leadership” (Mayhew 2013).
If the HR team performs their functions it would allow the supervisors and line managers to conduct employee on the job training and employee integration in to their respective department. This will also allow supervisors and line managers the ability to conduct their jobs and be able to give guidance and direct operations at their level and be able to influence and motivate employees to perform at their best.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
 
Mayhew, R. (2013). General Dynamics of Employee Turnover. Houston Chronicle. Retrieved from
http://smallbusiness.chron.com/general-dynamics-employee-turnover-33481.html

Devin Henry

Respond

RE: Dis1-Wk1-Devin Henry

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:11:26 AM

Nice start Devin…
Please review Using Quality Sources and the Instructor’s Guidance, consider extending development of view using quality source(s) and the guidance as sources.  Also, please show use of the textbook by citing (see When to Cite).   
Nice work, looking for a bit more, thanks….
Randy

Looks like he’s wanting thorough info and accurate cites and to use his guidance he gave in the posting…

I added his remarks on discussion 1 and added discussion 2 responses for a couple students.

WEEK 1

Discussion1

Tateana Peddie-Vicks

5/15/2013 7:29:18 PM

· What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home office and branches?
·  Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
· What specific functions should an HR unit carry out? What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?
   I think what is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home office and branches is the lack of expertise and training needed in order to fully transition new employees into their specified job role. The branch managers already have a lot to do within their job description and can not cater to the individual needs of new employees. The fact that none of the branches communicate with each other or the home office spells trouble, their is no uniformed process in hiring new employees or a centralized training program. I think setting up an HR unit in the main office would definitely help because the department would be able to properly allocate jobs to the right individuals and take care of the needs of all employees therefore reducing the turnover rate. The HR unit should carry out the duties of recrutment/hiring and training programs for  new employees, compensation, establishing health/insurance benefits. The HR functions that should be carried out by supervisors and line managers is monitoring and evaluting job performance, as well as further developing employees’ skills and expected perfomance objectives. 
Importance of HRM for Organizational Success
“The practice of HRM must be viewed through the prism of overall strategic goals for the organization instead of a standalone tint that takes a unit based or a micro approach. The idea here is to adopt a holistic perspective towards HRM that ensures that there are no piecemeal strategies and the HRM policy enmeshes itself fully with those of the organizational goals. For instance, if the training needs of the employees are simply met with perfunctory trainings on omnibus topics, the firm stands to lose not only from the time that the employees spend in training but also a loss of direction. Hence, the organization that takes its HRM policies seriously will ensure that training is based on focused and topical methods.
In conclusion, the practice of HRM needs to be integrated with the overall strategy to ensure effective use of people and provide better returns to the organizations in terms of ROI (Return on Investment) for every rupee or dollar spent on them. Unless the HRM practice is designed in this way, the firms stand to lose from not utilizing people fully. And this does not bode well for the success of the organization.” ( Management study guide, 2008-2013).
Management study guide. (2008-2013). Importance of hrm for organizational success. Retrieved from http://www.managementstudyguide.com/importance-of-hrm.htm

Professor Heinrich

5/16/2013 7:46:03 AM

Nice start, Tateana…
Please consider reposting and citing use of the textbook (see When to Cite), integrating the Instructor’s Guidance, avoiding use of .com sources (see Using Quality Sources) to help extend, deepen development of your view.  Thanks’ for your consideration…
Nice potential, thanks… 
Randy

Merilee Aquino

5/15/2013 8:00:50 PM

Communications and training is one of the many issues associated with the bank’s home office. Communicating ongoing problems that have an effect on business should always be addressed, especially when other branches are experiencing the same issues. Leadership is the responsibility of an effective organization and according a survey accomplished by Society For Human Resource(HR) Management (2010) 52% of HR professional, stated that leadership would be one of the greatest challenges in the next 10 years.
A lack of training and personal interest of the employees is also an issue; Ruth knows her job but no one thought enough about Ruth to realize she has a need to know more in depth about what she does daily and what effect she has on the company’s goals. If the concern for her job were greater it would feel more personal; Bolman and Deal (1997) stated, “Individuals have needs, feelings, …and limitations.” An individual can only so do well without certain attainable needs being met.
An HR unit would be of great value as “it is in the best position to give advice about the company’s internal human strengths and weaknesses” (Dessler, 2011, p.20).  Human resources could develop new training to thoroughly train supervisors as well as managers and employees/new trainees in effectively knowing and doing their job so that a since of purpose and accomplishment keeps turnover to a minimum. According to Dessler (2011, p.2) HR is important to managers and supervisors when assisting them via training personnel to keep turnover low, training new employees, placing the right personnel in the correct job, and developing individual abilities.
“Human resource (HR) managers are staff managers” according to Dessler (2011, p.4) with the ability to “assist and advise line-managers in accomplishing their goals”(2011, p.3). Furthermore the HR managers main function is establishing policies and practices to ensure employees have the insight and performance level needed to achieve previously planned goals (Dessler, 2011, p18).
Supervisors and other line mangers have a responsibility to find needed training and then ensure the training of employees were accomplished (Dessler, 2011,p.4); additionally line-managers and line-supervisors ensure such duties as placing of individuals, beginner orientation, specific training needs, performance standards, and on-the-job relationships (Dessler, 2011,p.4).  
Bolman, L. G., & Deal, T. E. (1997).  Reframing organizations: artistry, choice, and leadership (2nd ed.).  San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN: 9780132556378.
Society For Human Management. (2010). Challenges facing HR executives. Retrieved from http://www.shrm.org/Research/SurveyFindings/Articles/Documents/SHRM-Challenge-HR-2022-Spotlight
Merilee Aquino

Respond

RE: Jack Nelson-HR Assistnace

Professor Heinrich

5/16/2013 7:51:36 AM

Strong work Merilee…
Very thoughtful.  Any drawbacks to centralizing HRM?  Could the problem be less single issue(s), more systems-based in nature? 
Very nice, thanks for sharing…
Randy
P. S.  Please consider citing paraphrased use of information in addition to quotes (see When to Cite), thanks…

Leon Valquier

5/14/2013 10:21:39 AM

Jack Nelson’s Problem
Week 1 DB 1
Leon Valquier
After reading the case study, it appears that there are a number of problems that may be occurring at the branch offices. For starters, Ruth did not know the name of her machine, or what it did; she only knew how to operate it after two months on the job. The other issue to discuss is the high turnover rate, and the hiring practices. I believe that the lack of training and the poor hiring practices are leading to the problems faced by the bank.
A Human Resource in the main department could help tremendously with the issues being faced. The department could handle the hiring for all branches, set up proper training, and conduct a study on exiting employees to see why exactly they are leaving employment with the bank (Torrington, 1988). With this information they can develop a plan to address the issues that are making employees leave. The HR unit can assist in answering employee grievances and finding solutions to employee concerns, all things that will increase employee retention rates (Torrington, 1988).
The HR unit has many functions to perform. To start, the HR unit can conduct a job analysis of all positions within the bank; they can reclassify positions according to duties, create job descriptions and minimum qualifications for positions, and set proper wages, pay steps, and benefits packages (Crisp, 2002). The HR unit can also develop yearly appraisals for employees, conduct interviews and select new candidates for open positions. They can also develop promotion policies, disciplinary processes, and put into effect procedures to ensure that all equal employment opportunity laws are followed (Crisp, 2002). The HR unit can also be responsible for developing the culture of the organization. One of the key duties of the HR department would be to train all managers in areas such as employment laws, communication, employee motivation, and management techniques.
Supervisors and line managers also have HR functions to carry out. Their duties will consist of working one on one with employees and developing the abilities of all employees, control labor cost, maintain safety standards, motivate employees, increase employee performance, train employees in new positions, maintain morale, and provide guidance to employees (Dessler, 2011). All of these functions including the functions of the HR unit will help develop an efficient and productive place to work.
References
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle
            River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Crisp, D. (2002). HR must be the model of good leadership or risk being irrelevant. Canadian
            HR Reporter, 15(18), 19-19,23. Retrieved from ABI/INFORM Complete database.
Torrington, D. (1988). How does human resources management change the personnel function?
            Personnel Review, 17(6), 3-3. Retrieved from ProQuest Psychology Journals database.

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:06:16 AM

Instructive Leon…
Very thoughtful.  Any drawbacks to centralizing HRM?  How does our instructor’s guidance lend to your view?  Could the problem be less single issue(s), more systems-based in nature? 
Very nice, thanks for sharing…
Randy

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:07:18 AM

P. S.  Please take a peek at Using Quality Sources, consider in the future not using newsprint to justify view… Thanks for your consideration….    

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Leon Valquier

5/15/2013 9:02:09 PM

Professor Heinrich,
There are some drawbacks to a centralized HR unit. Drawbacks can increase when the amount of small offices begins to increase, and their sizes begin to increase. When multiple offices exist, it could be hard for the centralized office to give the attention to each office that it needs. The centralized HR unit may not be able to make enough of a presence in the smaller offices to make a difference or establish practices. They may take longer to investigate issues at the smaller business offices as well, and may not be aware of what is going on in each office. Depending on the amount of employees, a HR representative may need to be placed in each office so they can report back to the centralized HR unit. This representative can handle some of the HR duties to include employee issues, training, and job postings, while the main HR unit can still do investigations, hiring, promotions, contract negotiations and promotions. This could be done to establish a presence in each office, while still maintaining cost down due to each office not having to have a full staff of HR representatives. It would be important though to make sure that all smaller offices communicate all information to the main HR unit.
The instructor guidance was very informative. Sometimes the person in charge or in an administrative role knows best who should be promoted because they work with them daily, they tend to know more about the positions that need filled than HR representatives. I think that it may help to have an administrator present during interviews for new hires and promotions to offer insight and assist with picking out the most qualified person. The problem could be more system based; I think that they could look at the whole operation of the bank and do an overall evaluation.
Leon

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Professor Heinrich

5/16/2013 7:35:27 AM

I thought, Leon, the guidance focused on HRM mission, vision?
I agree, centralization leads to standardization, but can also promote indifference, inability to adapt to circumstance.  For people used to doing things on their own, there could also be resistance to change.
Given these thoughts, what could HR do?  Why?
Thanks for sharing, helpful…
Randy 

Respond

Michelle Muldrow

5/14/2013 6:18:25 PM

In the readings of the case study of Jack Nelson’s Problems he found many problems in the structure of the organization, and decided what was needed to implement change, to better the performance and hiring to avoid high turnover rates.
1.      What do you think is causing some of the problems in the bank’s home offices and branches?
The problems in the bank’s home office and branches are being caused by a lack of employee hiring, training and a high turnover rate of employees leaving, if the employees are not properly trained on how to handle and operate the machines, it will cause a delay in production. Employees and employers need to know what they are to be doing, how it operates, and be able to explain the procedures of the operations. A Human Resource Dept should be on site and over the hiring and firing of individuals, and make sure the procedures and guidelines are followed to maintain a successful and productive company.
2. Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office would help?
I do agree with setting up a HR unit in the main office would help; employees would be able to settle types of disagreements, and disputes, and also receive the required training that is needed for productivity, to provide the resources to develop their employees.
 3. What specific functions should an HR unit carry out?                                           
The functions for HR should be the recruitment of employees to ensure the selected person is a skillful and competent person for the job with the company under consideration. Help to evaluate the performance levels of employees and those who have exceeded expectations should be compensated for their actions, and to motivate employees.
4. What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?What role should the Internet play in the new HR organization?
The HR functions carried out by supervisors and other line manager would be to monitor the work processes, checking quality, measure operational and level of performance and deal with customers and clients. The team will report directly to them who are responsible,also with the use of the internet service, it can help speed up the work process, obtain new hires, monitor, help in training and documentation of company information, marketing.
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.).
Ferguson, K. L. (2006). Human resource management systems and firm performance. 
University of Louisville). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, , 196-196 p. Retrieved
from ProQuest database (document ID 305317100).

Respond

RE: Week 1 DB 1

Leon Valquier

5/16/2013 1:08:19 PM

Professor Heinrich,
I’m sorry about the mix up, I was commenting on your guidance when you were referring to your role as an administrator. Anytime there is change, there will be employees that resist change, especially if it threatens their job, pay or work hours. It would be beneficial for human resources to have someone at each office that could act as a change agent, this could be a current manager or administrative level employee. This agent could work with employees, answering questions, showing the benefits and reasons that changes need to reoccur. The agent could also help implement the changes and oversee the whole process, while reporting back to the main office. For those that are used to doing everything on their own HR could slowly take away tasks and reassign new duties to them, they could seek input from them to make them part of the process. As far as the guidance, the mission and vision HRM are what helped lay the ground work to their tasks and what exactly the duties are for HR units.
thanks,
Leon

Respond

RE: CASE STUDY 1: JACK NELSON’S PROBLEM

Professor Heinrich

5/15/2013 7:09:19 AM

Nice start Michelle…
Please, after reviewing When to Cite and the Instructor’s Guidance, consider citing in text the use of sources and integrating information from the guidance to help with development… 
Looking for a re-write, thanks for your consideration…
Randy

Maria Quijalvo

5/15/2013 2:34:09 PM

Jack Nelson’s Problem

Mr. Nelson has a number of issues that affect this company and its employees.  For example, there is high employee turnover, job descriptions appear to be vague, employee training is a low priority, and no one specializes in human resources (recruiting, policies, and employee training).
1.  What do you think was causing some of the problems in the savings and loan home office and branches?  
There does not appear to be any consistent practices, policies, or procedures for the organization.  This might be why the supervisor and Mr. Nelson both had the feeling that “…something was wrong…”  (Dessler, 2011).
The supervisors and employees have a “this is my job only” attitude; they are there to do one task and that is it.  This is shown by the employee who states, “…did not know what the machine was called or what it did…”  (Dessler, 2011, p.26).  This contributes to employee’s lack of commitment to the job.  I would think that it makes them feel like a “cog” instead of part of the whole.
Another problem is that people appear to be specialized in their particular function and/or office.  This means that they only see their micro-area rather than the macro-organization.  As Matejka (1991) states, “…this expertise is often gained at the expense of having any vision with regard to the rest of the organization” (p. 118).
 2.  Do you think setting up a HR unit in the main office would help?   
Yes, an HR unit would definitely help by unifying and organizing the home office and the branches.  The employees would no longer feel that the left hand does not know what the right hand is doing.  There would be boundaries, consistency, and coordination in policies, procedures, training, hiring, etc.
3.  What specific functions should it carry out?  What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line managers?  
The HR Unit should focus on employee orientation, employee refresher/training policies, benefits, salary administration, performance appraisals, dependable company-wide communications, and reliable, consistent policies for areas that affect all employees.
The supervisors and other line managers should be in charge of day-to-day and annual training and development of employees, appraising employee performance, departmental communications.
Maria Q.
 
Dessler, G. (2011). A framework for human resource management (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Prentice Hall.
Matejka, K. (1991). Why this horse won’t drink: How to win–and keep–employee commitment. Amacom. Available from: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), Ipswich, MA.

Professor Heinrich

5/16/2013 7:39:42 AM

Instructive Maria…
Very thoughtful.  Any drawbacks to centralizing HRM?  How does our instructor’s guidance lend to your view?  Could the problem be less single issue(s), more systems-based in nature? 
Very nice, thanks for sharing…
Randy
P. S. Please review When to Cite for citing paraphrased use of information from sources, instead of just quotes… Thanks… 

A Question of Discrimination

Answer the questions to the case, “LearnInMotion.com: A Question of Discrimination,” at the end of Chapter 2. Include at least one outside source supporting your answers. Explain your answers in 200 words. Respond to at least two of your fellow students’ postings.

Respond  

This section lists options that can be used to view responses.

Collapse All   

Print View   

Show Options  

Responses

Responses are listed below in the following order: response, author and the date and time the response is posted.

Response

Author

Date/Time*

Discussion2

Tateana Peddie-Vicks

5/15/2013 8:17:39 PM

QUESTIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
1. Our company is in New York City. We now have only about five employees and are only planning on hiring about three or four more. Is our company covered by equal rights legislation? (Hint: Does the government’s Web site provide any clues?)
2. Were we within our legal rights to ask the possibly age-related and substance abuse–related questions? Why or why not?
3. Did Dan and Alex create a hostile environment for Ruth? Why or why not? How should we have handled this matter?
4. What have we been doing wrong up to now with respect to EEO-related matters, and how do you suggest we rectify the situation in the future?
“The laws cover all private employers, state and local government employers, and educational institutions that employ 15 or more individuals, except for ADEA which covers employers with 20 or more employees. These laws also cover private and public employment agencies, labor organizations, and joint labor management committees controlling apprenticeship and training.” (EEOC, 2010). It is not explicitly illegal to ask age-related and substance abuse-related questions as it adheres to a candidates job performance or job description. It should be understood that answering the questions does not discriminate or that the company can prove a necessity for asking those questions.I think that Dan and Alex have created a hostile environment for Ruth because she obviously does not feel that the communication is appropriate and it offends her emotionally. If it continues without reproach it can cause her emotional distress, continue to make her uncomfortable and cause her to quit her job. They should train the employees in maintaining work environment conditions as well as inform them of the legalities of what they are doing and tell them that it is no longer appropriate or acceptable in the work place. The EEO-related matters of the company have not been appropriately addressed and the employees are not properly informed on legal EEO policy of the company. It should have been explicitly stated before hiring the employee as well as been made a part of their job trainging for maximum compliance. They should hire an EEO officer to come into the company and begin training the employees on policy especially before they hire more, that way they can prevent further incidents in the future.
U.S. Equal Opportunity Commission. (2010, April 6). Get the facts series: Small business information. Retrieved from http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/smallbusiness.html

Respond

RE: Discussion2

Professor Heinrich

5/16/2013 7:55:43 AM

Nice start, Tateana…
How does our textbook, video listed in the instructor’s guidance lend to your view? 
Looking for a bit more, thanks…
Randy

Respond

discussion 2

Delvecchio Hunter

5/16/2013 9:05:55 AM

Our company is in New York City. We now have only about five employees and are only planning on hiring about three or four more. Is our company covered by equal right legislation? (Hint: Does the government’s web site provide any clues?)
The law covers all private employers that employ more than fifteen employers. From my understanding this company does not quite have enough employees to be covered. It also depends on what type of company it is because in some cases the law covers certain types of business.
 
Were we within our legal rights to ask the possibility age-related and substance abuse – related questions? Why or Why not?
Through my work as a recruiter I interview many people for many positions. Although age could be a factor in a person getting a job, for example railroad construction, it is always illegal to discriminate because of age. I just know that a person over a certain age could not consistently perform the job but I cannot in no way discriminate. Substance abuse is another thing. If I have a driving job available and I do a background check and the person has two or three driving under the influence charges then it is my right as an employer not to hire based on requirements. If I have stated in the job description that Driving under the Influence is not acceptable that alone gives me the right to deny.
Did Dan and Alex create a hostile environment for Ruth? Why or Why not? How should we have handled this matter?
According to Boatright,” The term “discrimination” describes a large number of wrongful acts in employment, housing, education, medical care, and other important areas of public life (Boatright, 2009).” The definition is quite clear and while Dan and Alex not committed a large number of wrongful acts yet this problem has to addressed. The company should have implemented a code of conduct that every employee has to sign and adhere to from the beginning of employment. Therefore if there is none at the time the company has to sit down and develop one have every employee understand the certain conduct will not be tolerated and could result in punishment or dismissal.
What have we been doing wrong up to now with respect to EEO – related matters, and how do you suggest we rectify the situation in the future?
First of all you should have a code of conduct that clearly defines the rules of the office. Second you should get your recruiters and interviewers to become familiar with the Equal Opportunity concept by enrolling in some type of training class. If you continue to ask the wrong questions in an interview it could be misinterpreted as discrimination which leads to lawsuits.
Boatright, J. R. (2009). Ethics and the Conduct of Business: Sixth Edition. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.

Respond

Week 1 DB 2

Leon Valquier

5/16/2013 11:25:39 AM

A Question of Discrimination
Week 1 DB 2
Leon Valquier
After reading the case study, there are a lot of issues at hand that need to be addressed. The first question to be addressed is whether or not the company falls under the jurisdiction of the Federal Equal Opportunity Commission. To fall under the Guidelines of the Federal EEO Laws, an employer must have a minimum of 15 employees (Dessler, 2011). This however does not mean that the company is not governed by any laws and regulations. The company is currently located in New York and therefore is governed by local state and city regulations. Currently the company would fall under the under the New York Human Rights Law. This law provides protection similar to federal protection. The main differences between federal and state coverage are, that an employer only has to have four employees to fall under Title VII versus 15 at the federal level (Equal Employment Practice Commission, 2013).
The next issue at hand is the age related questions. The New York Human Rights Law as well as the Federal EEO prohibits discrimination related to age. Employers have a lot of leeway in deciding whom to hire for an open position. They are even free to disqualify someone on the basis of not liking them. If a candidate appears to be very young, the employer is allowed to ask if he or she is over 18. What employers are not allowed to ask is the candidate’s age or even indirect age related questions, such as date of birth or high school or college graduation dates (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 2013). Now in regards to Mel asking the candidate questions he did not ask younger candidates, this could be grounds for discrimination. He could ask questions about past employment, experience in internet sales, and even his willingness and ability to work overtime, but these questions should be asked to all candidates, not just the older ones.
The questions regarding the candidate with a past substance abuse incarceration are also a problem. An employer may ask a job applicant if he or she currently uses illegal drugs. Someone who currently uses illegal drugs isn’t protected by the American with Disability Act (McMahon et al., 2008). Asking questions about a candidate’s prior illegal drug use needs to be treated carefully because you cannot ask questions that are likely to bring out information about past addiction to illegal drugs or controlled substances, because past addiction is considered a disability (McMahon et al., 2008). A prospective employer cannot ask questions that would reveal whether the applicant was ever addicted to drugs, questions regarding treatment, addiction, or extent of past drug use are considered a violation of the Disability Act (McMahon et al., 2008).
In reference to the question of Dan and Alex creating a hostile work environment? I would have to say that there are definitely some issues occurring. Hostile environment may depend on whether or not the comments were sexual in nature, and to what extent it affected the work habits and everyday function of Ruth. There is no doubt that the comments were inappropriate, and the fact that a manager heard the comments and stated “boys will be boys” holds the company liable for any litigation brought forth by Ruth. There are many things that can be done to address this issue. There should be a company policy on harassment and code of conduct, the policy should include ways to report incidents to more than one person, an explanation of harassment, prohibited conduct, and reassurance that there will be no retaliation for reporting an incident (Barnes, n.d.). All employees should be given a copy of the policy and a signed acceptance form should be kept in all employee files (Barnes, n.d.).
There are many things that have been done wrong, employees doing the hiring are not informed of or trained in common employment laws and therefore are opening themselves up to law suits. There is no code of conduct for employees or policies for harassment. To fix this I suggest all managers receive training on employment practices, current state and local laws for discrimination and hiring. Policies should be developed and put into place for employee code of conduct, hiring practices, and reporting of harassment incidents. It is imperative that the company becomes compliant quickly or they could face possible litigation from applicants and current employees.  
References
Barnes, B. (n.d.) How to Handle Harassment and Discrimination Complaints. Retrieved from:
            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMDnCqT-KU0
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle
            River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (2013). Federal Laws Prohibiting Discrimination.
            Retrieved from: http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/qanda.html
Equal Employment Practices Commission (2013) Equal Employment Practices: EEO Laws.
            Retrieved from: http://www.nyc.gov/html/eepc/html/laws/laws.shtml
McMahon, B. T., Hurley, J. E., West, S. L., Chan, F., Rosslea, R., & Rum rill, P. D. (2008). A
            comparison of EEOC closures involving hiring versus other prevalent discrimination
            issues under the Americans with disabilities act. Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation,
            18(2), 106-11. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10926-008-9135-2

Respond

Discrimination: Learn In Motion

Paul Hlabse

5/16/2013 11:28:21 AM

            Even though your company only has a small number of employees, all employees are covered under Title 8 of the Human Rights Laws of New York City (Discrimination, 2013).  These laws are meant to protect the individuals from any discrimination associated with employment.  The company cannot hold their age, race, creed, color, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, and/or marital status (Discrimination, 2013).  To answer your question, yes, you are most certainly covered under any legislation associated with the equal rights of individuals.  There is no minimum amount of people that are needed to qualify for this, because every single person is entitled to receiving equal and fair treatment.            You were not in your legal right to ask age-related or substance abuse-related questions to potential applicants.  These types of questions violate Title 8 of the New York City Equal Rights Laws.  Furthermore, the United States of America passed the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 to make it illegal to discriminate against applicants who are 40 years or older (Dessler, 2011).  The questions regarding the applicant’s ability to learn internet selling and long hours should not have occurred.              Dan and Alex did not provide a hostile work environment for Ruth.  A hostile work environment is achieved when the swearing is directed at Ruth, or remarks are made towards her to make her feel uncomfortable (Shea, 2010).  Although Ruth did not care for the swearing, there is no liability on the company due to a hostile work environment.  If the language included sexual comments or remarks, then your company could be in violation of certain laws (Shea, 2010).  In this instance, swearing in excess should be discouraged while your company is trying to maintain a professional work environment.  People perceive swearing as something that is taboo, and this image creates a feeling of unrest within them.  In the future, limit the amount of cussing to a minimum and instruct them to never cuss at or about someone.            As a new company, you are not making any mistakes that others haven’t before you.  The key is to educate yourselves in the laws of being an EOE.  You had mentioned that you already knew you weren’t allowed to ask certain questions in an interview.  Instead of sticking to this plan, you went ahead and asked them anyhow.  In the future, I suggest that you have a formal set of questions that you ask all of the candidates.  This technique will keep you from venturing off topic to other questions that violate the candidate’s rights.  With the limited information that you provided me, I would say that you are doing the right things by asking for help.  I would highly suggest hiring someone who is well versed in HRM and the law so that you can continue to operate your business in a legal and successful manner.  Best of luck to you. Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN: 9780132556378.Discrimination is Illegal in New York City. (2013). Commission on Human Rights. Retrieved from http://www.nyc.gov/html/cchr/.Shea, R. (2010). Does cussing create a “hostile work environment”? Retrieved from http://www.employmentandlaborinsider.com/discrimination/does-cussing-create-a-hostile-work-environment/. 
 

Respond

RE: Discrimination: Learn In Motion

Paul Hlabse

5/16/2013 11:39:19 AM

   I reposted!!!  For some reason, it looks like garbage in that format, and I don’t want that to deminish the quality of the response.
            Even though your company only has a small number of employees, all employees are covered under Title 8 of the Human Rights Laws of New York City (Discrimination, 2013).  These laws are meant to protect the individuals from any discrimination associated with employment.  The company cannot hold their age, race, creed, color, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, and/or marital status (Discrimination, 2013).  To answer your question, yes, you are most certainly covered under any legislation associated with the equal rights of individuals.  There is no minimum amount of people that are needed to qualify for this, because every single person is entitled to receiving equal and fair treatment.
            You were not in your legal right to ask age-related or substance abuse-related questions to potential applicants.  These types of questions violate Title 8 of the New York City Equal Rights Laws.  Furthermore, the United States of America passed the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 to make it illegal to discriminate against applicants who are 40 years or older (Dessler, 2011).  The questions regarding the applicant’s ability to learn internet selling and long hours should not have occurred. 
            Dan and Alex did not provide a hostile work environment for Ruth.  A hostile work environment is achieved when the swearing is directed at Ruth, or remarks are made towards her to make her feel uncomfortable (Shea, 2010).  Although Ruth did not care for the swearing, there is no liability on the company due to a hostile work environment.  If the language included sexual comments or remarks, then your company could be in violation of certain laws (Shea, 2010).  In this instance, swearing in excess should be discouraged while your company is trying to maintain a professional work environment.  People perceive swearing as something that is taboo, and this image creates a feeling of unrest within them.  In the future, limit the amount of cussing to a minimum and instruct them to never cuss at or about someone.
            As a new company, you are not making any mistakes that others haven’t before you.  The key is to educate yourselves in the laws of being an EOE.  You had mentioned that you already knew you weren’t allowed to ask certain questions in an interview.  Instead of sticking to this plan, you went ahead and asked them anyhow.  In the future, I suggest that you have a formal set of questions that you ask all of the candidates.  This technique will keep you from venturing off topic to other questions that violate the candidate’s rights.  With the limited information that you provided me, I would say that you are doing the right things by asking for help.  I would highly suggest hiring someone who is well versed in HRM and the law so that you can continue to operate your business in a legal and successful manner.  Best of luck to you.
 
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN: 9780132556378.
Discrimination is Illegal in New York City. (2013). Commission on Human Rights. Retrieved from http://www.nyc.gov/html/cchr/.
 Shea, R. (2010). Does cussing create a “hostile work environment”? Retrieved from http://www.employmentandlaborinsider.com/discrimination/does-cussing-create-a-hostile-work-environment/.
 

Respond

A Question of Discrimination

Michelle Muldrow

5/16/2013 5:12:22 PM

Answer the questions to the case, “LearnInMotion.com: A Question of Discrimination,” at the end of Chapter 2.
  Our company is in New York.  We now have only about five employees and are only planning on hiring about three or four more. Is our company covered by equal rights legislation? 
The company is covered under the EEOC, but the HR information received was inadequate and not implemented, they did not provide any information on practices, polices or procedures.
 Were we within our legal rights to ask the age-related and substance abuse–related questions? Why or why not?
We are not allowed to discriminate and ask of anyone age, but can rephrase the question, to verify if the individual is able to: Do you think you’ll be able to handle the speed of selling products, also we will be working very long hours are you able to do so, these question are not really asking of the age, but the interviewer would want to know if the individual is able to perform at these levels (Dressler, 2011).
 
Did Dan and Alex create a hostile environment for Ruth? Why or why not? How should we have handled this matter?
No I do not think they created a hostile environment, but they could have showed more work ethics in communicating the proper way, in a the work place.  Polices should be posted and training provided on ethical behavior expected and if not followed fines or a cause for termination should be implemented.
What have we been doing wrong up to now with respect to EEO-related matters, and how do you suggest we rectify the situation in the future? 
EEO related matters were not presented and the employees were not provided information on these policy and procedures. The way to rectify this is to implement this information when an individual is hired, in training and also in the company’s handbook. These policies and procedures can help to avoid in mis-interpretations in communication and actions in the future.       
Dessler, G. (2011). A Framework for Human Resource Management (6th ed.).
                                                                                                            
Feld, L. G. (1982). Avoiding charges of discrimination begins when you write a want ad. American Bankers Association.ABA Banking Journal, 74(10), 223-223. Retrieved from ProQuest database (Document ID 218418231)                                                                   

Still stressed with your coursework?
Get quality coursework help from an expert!