Workforce Planning Training for Supervisors Presentation Subtitle/Description Presenter’s Name Date.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Alternative Work Schedules: Training for Supervisors.
Advertisements

The future of management: Human resource. introduction.
Speed Bumps on the Road to Workforce Planning. Workforce OSCPM Alan Ross Tripp Workforce Planning Manager Office of Personnel Management Planning.
Core Competencies Training for Supervisors
Employee Recognition Training for Supervisors Presenter’s Name Date.
Succession and talent management
Introduction Performance appraisals, reviews and evaluations are all terms used to describe a process for documenting and communicating employees’ performance.
HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING
1 Introduction to Workforce Planning and Development in State of Alaska Executive Branch Departments.
3-1 CHAPTER THREE Planning Screen graphics created by: Jana F. Kuzmicki, PhD Troy State University-Florida and Western Region McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006.
Strategy and Human Resources Planning
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Copyright © 2005 Thomson Business & Professional Publishing. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter The Future of Training and Development.
Setting SMART Objectives Training
The Mentoring Program of [Company Name] Training for Employees
Telecommuting– How Our Program Works An Employee Communication Presentation.
Setting Goals & Objectives Training
Succession Planning and Management Dr. Rita Martinez-Purson Dean of Continuing Education University of New Mexico.
BASICS OF WORKFORCE PLANNING
Emerging Best Practices and Trends in Succession Planning
Workforce Planning Foundation of a Successful Organisation or the Poor Cousin of Capability Building Presenters: Lucyna MacDermott and Lynne Dalton Positive.
Workforce planning. What is workforce planning? Definitions.
Part 2 Support Activities
9 Closing the Project Teaching Strategies
Contingent Workers Training for Supervisors: Part IV.
5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources What do I Need to Know?
Human Resource Management in Organizations
HR Planning & HRIS. HR Planning The process of systematically reviewing HR requirements to ensure that the required number of employees, with the required.
Software Project Management Introduction to Project Management.
Slide 1 D2.TCS.CL5.04. Subject Elements This unit comprises five Elements: 1.Define the need for tourism product research 2.Develop the research to be.
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Assessing the Value of Training  Training can result in improved profitability for XYC while lowering staffing costs.  Training can result in a higher.
Redirecting the Librarian’s Mindset: Emerging Framework for Managing Human Resources in Libraries “Emerging Landscape, Mindscape and Netscape of the Philippine.
JOB ANALYSIS and HR PLANNING ________________________ Dr
BMHR N300 Diane Evans. Objectives  Define the term ‘strategic hrm’  Identify specific issues of shrm  Apply hr strategies to a case study.
PAD214 INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION
3-1 Human Resources Planning Ir. Rr. HERMIEN TRIDAYANTI, MM.
Chapter 11. Intro  What is Project Management?  Project Manager  Project Failures & Successes Managing Projects  PMBOK  SDLC Core Process 1 – Project.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. This edition is intended for use outside of the U.S. only, with content that may be different from the U.S.
1. Development Planning and Administration MPA – 403 Lecture 14 FACILITATOR Prof. Dr. Mohammad Majid Mahmood Bagram.
Part 2 Support Activities Chapter 03: Planning McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Part 2 Support Activities Chapter 3: Planning McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Aligning HR & Business Strategy. “The long-held notion that HR would become a truly strategic function is finally being realized.”
Delegating Training for Supervisors. ©SHRM Introduction “Delegating work works, provided the one delegating works, too.” Robert Half, American Businessman.
1. 2 Due to the pervasive nature of ICT, the new millennium will require a new breed of ICT knowledge workers with a whole range of new skill sets Training,
Human Resource Management
Succession Planning Program Design. Meeting Purpose 2 Introduce the Leadership Academy class to the succession planning process Describe succession planning.
Info-Tech Research Group1 Manage the IT Portfolio World Class Operations - Impact Workshop.
Continual Service Improvement Methods & Techniques.
The Marketing Plan Chapter 2. Section 2.1: Marketing Planning  Good marketing requires good planning Research your company Study your business environment.
Developing & Implementing Workforce plans. Workforce Planning Objectives: 1.To describe the components of a workforce plan 2.To explain how internal and.
Human Resource Management Gaining a Competitive Advantage
Unifying Talent Management. Harnessing the Power of Workforce Intelligence in Talent Planning to Drive Business Performance.
Chapter 1 Strategic Human Resource Planning
LGS – HR POLICY.  OVERALL POLICY STATEMENT  The most valued assets of the Service are the people who individually and collectively contribute to the.
Talent Management - Its role of retaining employees in times of changing demographics in the workforce.
Succession Planning: Concept and Practice in Nepalese context
Core Competencies Training for Supervisors
Core Competencies Training for Supervisors
Strategic Importance of Human Resource Management
Unit 3 Human Resource Management Aim The aim of this unit is to enable students to appreciate and apply principles of effective Human Resource Management.
Strategic Management of Human Capital Recruitment Strategy
Introduction to Training & Development
Strategy and Human Resources Planning
HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING
PLANNING.
Human Resource Planning (HRP) Dr. Salim AlShukaili
Organizational Transition Planning
Human Resource Development Strategy and Tactics
Setting Goals & Objectives Training
Presentation transcript:

Workforce Planning Training for Supervisors Presentation Subtitle/Description Presenter’s Name Date

©SHRM Introduction This presentation provides an overview of the elements of workforce planning to help supervisors understand what workforce planning is and its importance in maintaining the company’s business plan and ensuring that resources are used effectively and efficiently in meeting the company’s goals and objectives. This is a sample presentation intended for supervisors charged with the responsibility for workforce planning. It should be conducted by an analyst familiar with the dynamics of business plans and workforce planning. This presentation must be customized to reflect a company’s own internal processes.

©SHRM Objectives At the close of this session, you will be able to: Explain the basics of workforce planning. State why workforce planning is important. Cite steps involved in workforce planning. Describe workforce planning implementation issues and the importance of continuous refinement of the plan.

©SHRM What is Workforce Planning? Workforce planning is: A tool to establish staffing levels and support company budgets which enables the company to meet its business objectives. A systematic process for identification of required human capital resources and the development of strategies necessary to meet these requirements.

©SHRM What is Workforce Planning? (cont’d) Workforce planning: Provides the required numbers and requisite skills of employees when and where they will be required and the strategies by which the requisite skills will be met through recruitment, retention, and other means. Serves as a baseline in succession planning.

©SHRM Why is Workforce Planning Important? A company is dynamic, not static. Workforce changes occur constantly and workforce planning serves to mitigate these changes. Changes in age, skills and diversity – additions and departures. Shifts to higher skilled “knowledge workers”. Increasing competition for and scarcity of “knowledge workers”. Changes in workforce values and expectations. Impact of external competitive forces. Companies which are not prepared to meet these challenges and their impact on meeting business objectives may fail in attracting, developing and retaining employees with the requisite skills and the ability to harness new technologies to meet business objectives.

©SHRM Why is Workforce Planning Important? (cont’d) Employers obtain the following benefits from workforce planning: More efficient and effective use of staff. Replacement staff available when needed. Realistic staffing projections for budgeting purposes. Rationale for linking costs of training, development, and recruitment. A baseline for re-engineering or re-organizing of related allocations of the workforce.

©SHRM Steps Involved in Workforce Planning Step 1. Preparation: Recognize that workforce planning is a company-wide effort. Create measurement models specific to the company’s business objectives. Identify the planned objectives and allocation of resources for workforce planning. Focus on the quantity and types of skills needed and how these needs will be met.

©SHRM Steps Involved in Workforce Planning (cont’d) Step 2. Supply analysis - Conduct a supply analysis focusing on current workforce demographics and trends to include: Number of employees/contractors/contingent staffing arrangements. Skills assessments for each of these categories. Current budgets for human capital expenditures. Recruitment times, vacancy analysis, optimal methods for filling vacancies. Analysis of departures who possess critical skills and/or critical company knowledge. Review of contractor agreements and related contingent staffing arrangements.

©SHRM Steps Involved in Workforce Planning (cont’d) Step 3. Demand analysis: Demand analysis focuses on the totality of required skills to meet company needs today and in the future. Demand analysis views company needs from both internal and external perspectives.  Internal focus is on objectives, processes and capabilities on the work to be performed and how it is performed.  External focus is on the environment in which the company operates – economic, social technological, legal and political trends and their impact on the company’s ability to operate.

©SHRM Steps Involved in Workforce Planning (cont’d) Step 4. Gap analysis: Gap analysis integrates the supply and demand steps to determine gaps and surpluses at the current time and in the future. A gap exists when supply is inadequate to meet demand which present opportunities for the company to develop strategies to eradicate shortages via recruitment, contract workers, internal staff development, outsourcing and/or succession planning. A surplus exists when supply is greater than demand which present opportunities for the company to develop strategies for re-organization, re-deployment, internal skill development and cross-skill training, outsourcing, succession planning, and/or redundancy planning.

©SHRM Implementation & Refinement The workforce plan links to the company’s business and succession plans to ensure senior management endorsement also includes: Allocation of resources to analyze workforce needs and strategies to meet needs. Delegation of authority for plan responsibilities and the implementation of recommended strategies. Creation of reasonable timelines for completion. Development of definitive performance measures and planned deliverables. Communication of detailed action plans to all audiences.

©SHRM Implementation & Refinement (cont’d) Accomplishments vs. plan goals need to be measured at appropriate intervals – milestones markers. Annually, defined performance measurements need to be reviewed for strategy changes and/or adjustments. Emerging company issues must always be addressed in the workforce plan. To succeed, any plan recognizes that it is measuring a moving target and must be continually monitored, evaluated and re- calibrated.

©SHRM Summary Workforce planning is a tool to establish staffing levels and support company budgets and a systematic process for identification of required human capital resources and the development of strategies necessary to meet these requirements. Workforce planning is important because it establishes staffing levels and supports company budgets and identifies required human capital resources and the development of strategies necessary to meet those requirements.

©SHRM Summary (cont’d) The steps involved in workforce planning are preparation, supply analysis, demand analysis and gap analysis. Workforce planning must link to the company’s business and succession plans to ensure senior management endorsement. Accomplishments versus plan goals need to be measured at appropriate intervals. Emerging company issues must always be addressed in the workforce plan.

©SHRM Questions? Comments?

©SHRM Course Evaluation Please be sure to complete and leave the evaluation sheet you received with your handouts. Thank you for your attention and interest !