While pressure and challenges do exist in the sales profession, modern salesrooms are not veritable pressure cookers — full of…
Browsing: Point Of View
The age when employees used to settle for whatever their employers offered is long past now. Today’s employees are actively…
Pay transparency is a much discussed topic. Some small organisations claim to be practising pay transperancy, but it can be…
People leave their bosses and not organisations,’ goes the familiar saying. If this holds true, then line managers are to…
The age when employees used to settle for whatever their employers offered is long past now. Today’s employees are actively…
Boomerang employees is a popular practice. However, sometimes, great talent may leave the company on a bad note. The reasons…
A Bloomberg report claims that an employee who spent four years delivering packages for Amazon, as a contract driver in…
The Union Government on June 1, decided to cancel the Class 12 board exams for CBSE and ICSE students. It…
An email sent by Shopify CEO, Tobi Lütke, to the mangers of the Company last August created a lot of…
In a recent case at BlackRock, the American global investment company, a memo was shared with the staff asking them…
Looking at the common mindset of people, attrition is a word which has always carried a negative connotation. When you…
Recently Google banned political debates at workplaces to improve their work culture. It said that people should only debate and…
The dynamics of business is changing rapidly, and so is HR. We need leaders with blended capabilities at the top.…
Each individual is important for an organisation— from the base line to the top management— but senior leaders hold the…
Social media profiles are important for people, especially when they are hunting for jobs. People try hard to appear knowledgeable,…
More than half of the 2,000 companies surveyed in the US by the consulting firm, Willis Towers Watson, plan to increase transparency around pay decisions in the next year. Verve, a marketing company, has already listed employees’ salary on an internal document for everyone to see. By 2019, all 1,100 employees at CareHere, a Nashville-based healthcare company, will know the pay ranges for all positions in the company. Another New York-based software company, Fog Creek, ensured the same last year. Employers have long avoided discussing money at work, partly because concealing salary information keeps compensation costs down. But the examples above clearly show that the attitude is starting to change. Can India be transparent when it comes to disclosure of salaries?
Line managers are in key positions with a hold on both business and people. That said, how managers behave, particularly with their teams, can have a huge impact on team morale and overall performance. At times, managers may impose their own insecurities, incompetencies or for that matter, their obsession with how work should be done, on others. In doing so, they may behave in ways that could hurt others and consequently affect organisational effectiveness. Is there a way organisations can keep a check on such subjective yet day-to-day issues?
While it may facilitate an open culture, it may not guarantee one.
With businesses increasingly seeking employees open to change and multitasking, alterations in job roles should not rattle anyone.
A pending or skip level early promotion, an exorbitant salary raise or a new profile — counter-offers may appear in many forms. However, there are hidden disadvantages.
Be it negotiating salaries during hiring, to bring down employee cost for the organisation, or disclosing the management’s decision to let go of people, HR always ends up having to do the dirty job. On the one hand there is the management that requires HR to execute a certain task beneficial to the organisation, and on the other, there are those people whose careers are at stake—a catch 22 situation for HR. It is left to HR to decide whether they should balance out the situation or get their hands dirty, by blindly following the management’s orders.
The decision to hire or not hire someone is a crucial one as it directly or indirectly impacts not only business performance but also the workplace dynamics. While the hiring process is now backed by a lot of reliable data and analysis, human judgement and intuition still play a significant role in making the final decision.
Have the interviewers or recruiters ever had to wonder whether their intuitions or judgements with regard to the candidates will really stand true in the real scenario? What is the real moment of truth in the hiring process? How does it impact the hirer’s decision or how does one deal with it?
Recruitment and talent acquisition are the two most commonly used terms in HR departments across the globe. However similar they may sound or be perceived as being, there is an underlying difference between the two that many professionals tend to ignore. There exists a thin line between the two that creates a big difference in the way organisations manage talent.
In June, the government raised the retirement age of doctors to 65 years. Doctors anyway continue to practice till the last leg of their life but from government’s perspective, it wanted to retain the talent pool in Central Health Service. It’s a growing concern for the government as more than 28 per cent of the central government employees are above 50 years of age. This implies that not only the government will lose experienced high- level personnel but it will even entail unquantifiable costs as new recruits will require training and on-the-job skills.
If professionals such as doctors, lawyers and CAs, can continue to work for post 60, then why can’t other professionals be it an engineer, bureaucrat or a clerk do so. The official retirement age was fixed at a certain 58 years or 60 years because then the life expectancy was low. Now with better medical facilities, people above 60 are quite active and healthy. HRKatha tries to find a rationale.
With the advent of digital platforms and various other disruptive technologies, the focus of organisations seems to be shifting from quantity to quality, which is why some believe the smart workers are expected to be more successful as compared to the hard workers. However, this is a long debatable topic with two ends weighing equal depending on the context.
Millennials are frequently blamed for their lack of duty and discipline at the workplace, and often called the entitled generation. Senior HR professionals share their opinion on this.