Contemporary Approaches to HR Evaluation
Last updated on 10/12/2020Some of the benefits are:
- Providing feedback more regularly improves communication and employee engagement.
- Potential problems are addressed sooner.
- The time to address performance issues and get them corrected is lessened.
Proactive Approach
HR managers must anticipate the challenges or problems before they arise. Prevention is better than cure.
The proactive approach will save companies considerable time and money in the short and long run. P. F. Drucker (1997) highlighted the importance of a proactive approach very rightly.
He argues,” In a perfect world every startup would take the proactive approach and build their company from the beginning by identifying not only the mission, vision, values, goals, objectives, etc., but will determine where they want to go in the short and long-term and build a holistic, aligned organization beginning at the founder level where they can attract, hire, and retain the top talent to get them where they want to go.”
Human Resource Approach
People are human beings with a lot of potentials and intellectual abilities. It is important to treat people with respect and dignity.
Commodity Approach
People are a commodity. They are viewed as a cog of a machine. People can be hired and fired through money. It is money that matters most. There is a saying, “money is sweeter than honey.” This approach views people as an economic man.
Strategic Approach
People are the strategic asset of an organization. People have core competencies, the basis of competitive advantage.
Human resources are the combination of talent and skills; some of them are inborn and other skills they have acquired through learning and education. The strategic HRM approach focuses on people management programs and long-term solutions.
It stresses organizational development interventions, achieving employee organizational fit, and other aspects that ensure employees add value to the organization.
Management Approach
HRM is a part of general management. Management is nothing but managing people in the workplace. Managers at all levels are responsible for managing their employees or subordinates.
Reactive Approach
It occurs when decision-makers respond to problems. If efforts are reactive only, problems may be compounded, and opportunities may be missed, and organizations may suffer loss.
Companies may lose time and money if they take a reactive approach.
System Approach
A system is a set of interrelated but separate elements or parts working together for a common goal.
For example, HRM is a system that may have parts such as procurement, training, performance appraisal and reward, etc. One part affects and is affected by the other.