HRD includes four key areas: individual development, career development, performance management, and organizational development. Individual development focuses on short-term individual growth through training activities. Career development takes a long-term view of individual performance and planning through career mapping and alignment of individual and organizational goals. Performance management connects individual performance to organizational systems and processes to foster continuous improvement. Organizational development focuses on long-term organizational culture, strategy, and performance.
HRD includes four key areas: individual development, career development, performance management, and organizational development. Individual development focuses on short-term individual growth through training activities. Career development takes a long-term view of individual performance and planning through career mapping and alignment of individual and organizational goals. Performance management connects individual performance to organizational systems and processes to foster continuous improvement. Organizational development focuses on long-term organizational culture, strategy, and performance.
HRD includes four key areas: individual development, career development, performance management, and organizational development. Individual development focuses on short-term individual growth through training activities. Career development takes a long-term view of individual performance and planning through career mapping and alignment of individual and organizational goals. Performance management connects individual performance to organizational systems and processes to foster continuous improvement. Organizational development focuses on long-term organizational culture, strategy, and performance.
HRD includes four key areas: individual development, career development, performance management, and organizational development. Individual development focuses on short-term individual growth through training activities. Career development takes a long-term view of individual performance and planning through career mapping and alignment of individual and organizational goals. Performance management connects individual performance to organizational systems and processes to foster continuous improvement. Organizational development focuses on long-term organizational culture, strategy, and performance.
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HRD include individual development, career development,
performance management, and
organizational development.
1.Individual Development (ID)
The primary focus of ID is placed on individual growth and
development through both formal and informal activities (Gilley, Eggland, & Gilley, 2002). Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley state that the purpose of ID is, “to increase employee knowledge, skills, and competencies and/or to improve behaviors in current jobs, at the same time addressing the immediate needs of the organization as well as that of the employee” (p. 30). These types of activities can take place on the job and through formal instructional based learning. In a traditional sense ID is most commonly thought of as training, which is generally linked to learning a specific task or skill. ID goes beyond simple training because it includes all learning activities. Whereas training is most commonly focused at lower level employees,
ID is much broader and encompasses employees at all levels of
an organization.
The evolution of ID has led to creating learning activities that
combine the needs of the organization with those of the individual (Gilley, Eggland, & Gilley 2002). To meet these needs HR professionals need to play several roles within an organization. Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley define the three roles as instructor, instructional designer, and contract training consultant.
In each of the ID roles HR professionals are working to create
what Senge (1990) defines as a learning organization. According to Senge, a learning organization can be identified as having five disciplines:
1. Personal mastery that is the result of an individual gaining
expertise through training, education, and experience. 2. Mental models made up of values, beliefs, attitudes, and assumptions an individual has and uses to make decisions. 3. Shared vision that is a result of employees in an organization who are in working with the mission and direction of the organization. 4. Team learning that is a result of working together and respecting one another. 5. System thinking involving a holistic view of the organization’s culture, mission, strategy, and management practices.
Marquardt (1996) furthered Senge’s thoughts on learning
organizations defining them as a, “company that learns powerfully and collectively, continually transforming itself to more effectively manage knowledge” (p. 229). Marquardt (1999) later defined learning organizations as having four subsystems: 1. Learning at all levels of an organization including individuals, groups and teams, and at an organizational level is the first subsystem. The Evolution of Human Resources 10 2. Organization is the second subsystem consisting of four dimensions that include culture, vision, strategy, and structure. 3. People are the third subsystem, which includes employees, suppliers, customers, and the community. 4. The knowledge system that includes the creation, management, storage, transfer, and utilization of knowledge within an organization makes up the fourth subsystem. Marquardt (1996) best sums up a learning organization as one in which everyone is driven by a desire to produce quality results through continuous improvement in a culture where all activities can be defined by aspirations, reflection, and conceptualization. By investing in creating a learning organization through ID activities the HR professional begins the process of building a strategy for improving organizational performance.
2. Career Development
While ID is focused on individual short-term results, career
development takes a longterm view to individual performance and planning. Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley (2002) define career development as, “an organized, planned effort comprised of structured activities or processes that result in a mutual career plotting effort between employees and the organization” (p. 59). Gutteridge and Otte (1983) suggest that career development is composed of two subsystems that include career planning and career management. Gutteridge and Otte (1983) contend that career planning is the responsibility of the individual and career management that of the organization. Career planning consists of four sub processes that include choices in occupation, organization, job assignment, and career self development.
Career management also contains four sub processes that
include recruiting and selection, HR allocation, appraisal and evaluation, and training and development.
Gutteridge and Otte (1983) describe career planning as a process
an individual uses to become aware of their interests, opportunities, and consequences in identifying career goals, and the programming of work and education activities needed to achieve the goals. They define career management as an ongoing process preparing, implanting, and monitoring individual career plans as they relate to the individual’s career plan and the organization’s career system. The purpose of career development is to help individuals match their interests and needs for growth and development with that of the organization. Walton (1999) contends that career development is a critical tool that organizations can use to increase efficiency and improve employee attitudes related to work, resulting in greater satisfaction.
By implementing a career development program focused on
long term results organizations encourage employee commitment, improve morale and motivation, and reduce turnover (Gilley, Eggland, & Gilley 2002). In addition to reducing turnover, Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley contend that the primary reason organizations implement career development programs is to develop and promote employees from within the organization, both of which help maintain a positive recruiting image.
One key tool HR professionals can use in the career planning
process is the individual performance appraisal. In the traditional sense performance appraisals are used to assess past performance and little emphasis is placed on development activities. Gilley, Boughton, and Maycunich (1999) suggest that instead of referring to these activities as appraisals they should be transformed into development evaluations. Using this approach helps motivate the employee to discuss their career interests and understand how they align with the future direction of the organization. By taking this approach to career development, organizations begin to build a culture of growth, which can lead to improved results (Kotter & Heskett, 1992). The career development process requires a partnership between employees and the organization.
By establishing an open communication process employees
can better understand how the needs of the organization fit their career goals, and organizations can better understand how they can work with employees to ensure they achieve personal success, while simultaneously achieving the objectives of the organization.
3.Performance Management
Both ID and career management have a focus on the individual
short and long term results, respectively. The other side of HRD, performance management and organizational development (OD) also have a focus on short and long term results, respectively, but from an organizational perspective.
The importance of performance management is a relatively new
development in HRD (Gilley, Eggland, & Gilley 2002). Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley contend that performance management is strongly connected to human performance technology (HPT).
Fuller andFarrington (1999) describe HPT as a way of
identifying barriers to success faced by employees, and the process of removing them to allow improvement, and the full realization of employee potential. Rothwell (1996) describes HPT as a systematic process of identifying gaps in human performance, planning for future improvements in performance, designing, developing and implementing solutions to close the gaps, and evaluating both financial and non-financial results of the implemented solutions.
To be effective at performance management, HR professionals
need to be able to define, study, and evaluate systems within an organization.
This requires a basic understanding that all systems are
comprised of inputs, processes, and outputs that are linked to one another. Fuller and Farrington (1999) describe the human performance system where organizational inputs along with people and their behavior, result in performance, consequences, and feedback that travels back through the system in a continuous cycle.
By understanding systems within an organization the HR
professional can begin to implement performance management systems that foster an environment conducive to continuous problem solving. Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley (2002) suggest that HR professionals are responsible for creating and implementing systems that encourage employee participation in identifying and solving problems leading to increased employee and customer satisfaction. They also suggest that HR professionals are responsible for identifying the competencies needed for each job role within an organization, creating goals and objectives for the organization, and identifying the key outputs for each job function. Additional requirements include developing competency maps, defining performance standards for each job classification, and creating performance measures. A final set of responsibilities include the creation of performance evaluation systems that compare actual results to expectations, identifying training opportunities to minimize the gaps between actual performance and expected performance, and developing incentive and reward systems that support improved performance.
HR professionals have the opportunity to change the future by
making a significant contribution to organizational performance through the development of systems that are needed to create a culture of continuous improvement. To do this they will need to step out of the traditional role they are accustomed to. By doing so they will begin to be viewed as a strategic partner in organizational development, further enhancing their contribution to the success of organizations.
4.Organizational Development :
The final component in HRD is organizational development
(OD). There are several definitions of OD, but most share common characteristics and only differ in scope and the intention of change (Dunn, 2006).
OD requires involvement from all employees to be effective
and the support of top management (Conner, 1992; Kotter, 1996), views organizations from a system-wide perspective and includes planned initiatives directed by third party change agents that are ongoing (Burke, 1992; French & Bell, 1995), and focuses on measurable results that are strategically based (French & Bell, 1995; Kotter, 1996; Nadler, 1998). The primary goal of OD is to improve the performance of organizations (Burke, 1992; Nadler, 1998). OD provides organizational leaders the data they need to establish performance enhancing activities related to business culture, the competitive environment, and performance systems (Gilley, Eggland, & Gilley 2002). Kotter (1996) suggests that OD helps business leaders make strategic decisions based on an evaluation of the current state and helps determine a path to the desired results. OD is perhaps the greatest opportunity for HR professionals to contribute to the overall direction of an organization. Gilley, Eggland, and Gilley (2002) believe that many HR professionals fail to see the link between individual development, the “micro” perspective, and OD, the “macro” viewpoint.
They contend that the micro view, development of
individual’s knowledge, abilities, and attitudes, plays a significant part in achieving the macro objective of OD. They conclude that organizations cannot improve unless the respective individuals who make up the organizational contributors and leaders improve.
The evolution from HR to HRD has put the professionals in
these roles, once thought of as simply administrative overhead, into a position in which they can make a significant contribution to organizational performance through the development of individuals, creating career planning systems that combine the interests of employees with the needs of the organization, establishing performance management systems that foster an environment of continuous improvement and reward positive behavior, and tie all of it together through the strategic development of the organization that is faced with a constantly changing environment challenged to meet the demands of the competitive market place, along with employee and community needs. Never have the opportunities and challenges for HR professionals been greater.