Difference between revisions of "Human resource management"

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Human resource personnel work as a team with line managers to anticipate personnel needs and recruit to ensure sufficient staffing of knowledgeable and skilled personnel. An example on how the HRD Department of an NPP operating organization works together with line managers to anticipate plant staffing needs is given in Appendix XXVII of [1]. In this reference, further examples on human resource and succession planning in nuclear operating facilities can be found in the appendices.
 
Human resource personnel work as a team with line managers to anticipate personnel needs and recruit to ensure sufficient staffing of knowledgeable and skilled personnel. An example on how the HRD Department of an NPP operating organization works together with line managers to anticipate plant staffing needs is given in Appendix XXVII of [1]. In this reference, further examples on human resource and succession planning in nuclear operating facilities can be found in the appendices.
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Competitive companies recognize knowledge and thereby the [[Knowledge worker|knowledge worker]] as an asset to be valued and managed. Ensuring that adequate numbers of qualified knowledge workers are available at the right time and in the right place, effective human resource processes and policies are necessary to meet current and future human resource needs, which may include
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* Comprehensive [[Workforce planning|workforce planning]];
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* [[Succession planning]];
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* [[Risk assessment process and tools|Risk assessments]] to identify potential knowledge loss;
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* Exit or elicitation [[Interview|interviews]] to [[Capture|capture knowledge]]; and
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* Talent management ([[Recruitment|recruiting]] and [[Human resource development|employee development programmes]]).
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==

Revision as of 14:32, 17 January 2014

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Definition

Human resource management is The management of an organization's workforce. It is responsible for the attraction, selection, training, assessment, and rewarding of employees, while also overseeing organizational leadership and culture and ensuring compliance with employment and labor laws

Summary

Human resource management (HRM, or simply HR) is the management process of an organization's workforce, or human resources. It is responsible for the attraction, selection, training, assessment, and rewarding of employees, while also overseeing organizational leadership and culture and ensuring compliance with employment and labor laws. Human resource personnel work as a team with line managers to anticipate personnel needs and recruit to ensure sufficient staffing of knowledgeable and skilled personnel.

Description

Human resource management (HRM, or simply HR) is the management process of an organization's workforce, or human resources. It is responsible for the attraction, selection, training, assessment, and rewarding of employees, while also overseeing organizational leadership and culture and ensuring compliance with employment and labor laws. In circumstances where employees desire and are legally authorized to hold a collective bargaining agreement, HR will also serve as the company's primary liaison with the employees' (from the comprehensive article in Wikipedia).

Human resource personnel work as a team with line managers to anticipate personnel needs and recruit to ensure sufficient staffing of knowledgeable and skilled personnel. An example on how the HRD Department of an NPP operating organization works together with line managers to anticipate plant staffing needs is given in Appendix XXVII of [1]. In this reference, further examples on human resource and succession planning in nuclear operating facilities can be found in the appendices.

Competitive companies recognize knowledge and thereby the knowledge worker as an asset to be valued and managed. Ensuring that adequate numbers of qualified knowledge workers are available at the right time and in the right place, effective human resource processes and policies are necessary to meet current and future human resource needs, which may include

References

[1] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Knowledge Management for Nuclear Industry Operating Organizations, IAEA TECDOC Series No.1510, October 2006,

Related articles

Workforce planning

Human resource development

Human performance improvement

Training

Position disposition

Ageing workforce

Competency management