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Do you always feel that something is missing in our HR department!

Discussion in 'Off-topic Discussion' started by Shohrat Shankar, Nov 7, 2017.

  1. Shohrat Shankar

    Shohrat Shankar Fapstronaut

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    I am sure most of us on reading the title of the blog will be curious to find out as what is really missing in our HR departments…hold on for a while…as we proceed we will surely uncover what it is.

    Change is inevitable! Every field, no matter which it is, undergoes a series of change as it evolves; it is this change which broadens the scope and applicability of the field. The same goes for the field of Human Resources as well.

    If we trace its development, we can broadly see that the field emerged as the ‘welfare department’ within factories, which then transformed to the ‘personnel department’ and finally to the ‘Human Resource Department’. With every transition, the focus of the field has been redefined.

    If we see HR departments today, there is a considerable shift, where employees are not merely employees; but more of a ‘Resource’ and their ‘Performance’ is not merely performance in quantitative or qualitative terms but ‘Something beyond that’.

    So what is ‘something beyond that’, which organizations crucially consider along with an employee’s performance?

    Give it a guess…it’s not that difficult.

    OK here it goes; it’s an Employee’s Behavior!

    Yes, it is!

    Now if we relate back to the field of Human Resources, we can certainly identify that today, organizations are laying heavy emphasis on ‘Measuring Behavior’ along with one’s performance.

    Organizations are recognizing the importance of mapping behavioral competencies across roles and levels and are also making competencies a part of their Performance Appraisal Systems.

    Organizations are also relying on using ‘psychometric tools’ for ‘n’ number of reasons. Attitude Surveys, Climate Surveys, Engagement Surveys have become a common practice.

    They are striving hard to identify why employees behave in a particular way; what are the factors that motivate positive behavior and so on. Along with that they are also tackling several behavioral as well as psychological concerns of their employees within the workplace, such as low level of satisfaction, motivation, low morale, boredom etc.

    Keeping all this as a background, now the question arises that: Does an organization or the HR department have someone certified, qualified or trained in the Behavioral Sciences.

    Someone who is trained to know, what to look for and how to look for it, within an organization? One who has studied human behavior and the psyche; hence is well equipped within the organizational context to deal with areas pertaining to Behavior.

    May be a few organizations would state that they do have a behavioral specialist to cater to this need. However, I am sure there are many more who will acknowledge that, “This is what is missing in our HR departments.”

    What do you feel?
     
  2. TheLoneDanger

    TheLoneDanger Fapstronaut

    Just curious, do you work in HR? And also, what brought you to this level of interest regarding this issue?
     
  3. I think that's what a good HR is supposed to do! But the fact is I haven't met one HR who studied behavioral sciences! Most of them come off as judgmental retards who want to make you feel that they have some power over you when really, they don't. Looks like they mostly are those who graduated from business school with no specific specialty and had no idea what to do, but thought " hey, I like talking with people, let's do HR!".

    The HRs of the companies/firms I worked at were clueless about what the business actually was, were clueless about how to manage the people, were clueless about how to improve the workplace, weren't able to come up with clear, harmonized procedures, were making decisions impacting most of the employees without warning and without explaining the rationale behind their inexplicably retarded management decisions. They were just BAD. And they were acting like they were the holders of the keys, evaluating how you're supposed to do your damn job that you spent years sitting on a university bench to get, and another several years of training to start understanding.

    #sorryfortherant

    Short answer: yes, I feel like something is definitely missing in the HR dept! :)
     
    Last edited: Nov 7, 2017
  4. Poseidon

    Poseidon Fapstronaut

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    My workplace has an HR department and I really have no idea what they do. I’ve never been summoned to their office and most of my coworkers haven’t either. Sometimes I think they’re just in there playing solitaire on their computers for 8 hours a day. Easy money.
     
    LankyAssBoi likes this.
  5. Shohrat Shankar

    Shohrat Shankar Fapstronaut

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    I am not HR. I am corporate trainer.
     

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