It's Saturday of the May bank holiday weekend and Bob has decided to plan his summer holiday. He and his wife Helen think about dates and start to look on the Internet. They find a package holiday that sound like a good deal and set about agreeing a date. There's two weeks availability starting 6 August, the kids are on holiday and they all get excited. They read the reviews, look at the videos and dream about relaxing in the sun. The only problem is that Bob has to check to see if any of his colleagues are off and then get his holiday forms signed. They can't do anything until Tuesday and even then Bob's not sure if Simon, who manages holiday booking will be in. Helen gets angry and an argument kicks off.
On Tuesday Bob bumps into Simon at the coffee machine. They talk about their weekends and Simon promises to look at the holiday spreadsheet after he gets out of his next meeting. The day goes by and both get involved in their work. It's only that evening that Bob realises Simon didn't get back to him. Helen has another go at Bob - why is organising a holiday always so stressful!
On Wednesday Bob makes a special effort to remember. Simon is at his desk, checks the spreadsheet and no one else has booked that time yet. However he's not too sure if Bob has enough days left to take the two weeks. What a frustrating waste of time! Bob heads back to his desk to find his holiday form which will prove it. After about 5 minutes of searching he finds it and he is right - he has 10 days left. Completing the form, he heads off to see his manager who needs to sign the form. Jane is busy but tells him to leave the form on her desk. She gets it back to him right at the end of the day - quicker than normal. Eventually Bob goes back to Simon on Thursday, form in hand. Simon takes one look at it and snaps that he will need to reconcile the form back to the spreadsheet so he'll get back to Bob - probably early next week!! Bob heads home expecting another ear bashing from Helen.
Aghhhhhh .... There must be a better way! There is .....
Making enterprise HR ideas and tools accessible to smaller businesses.
Saturday, 30 April 2011
Saturday, 19 March 2011
Saturday morning blog post.
It's Saturday morning, the sun is shining and I've just got back from one of my most creative daily events - the dog walk.
The three most common subjects for my dog walking time:
The three most common subjects for my dog walking time:
- People issues
- How to add even more value for our customers
- Nothing - just trying to be aware (probably the most valuable)
Friday, 18 March 2011
5 factors underpinning employee engagement
I recently had lunch with Gary Miles from the Roffey Park Institute (www.roffeypark.com) discussing their work around employee engagemant. Much of this was carried out with very large organisations but I am convinced that it is just as relevant to much smaller companies. Just because a company is small it doesnt mean it's HR issues are any less complex.
Roffey Park carried out a research project last year to explore how key drivers affect employees in their day to day work and what the ultimate outcome is for organisations. The drivers being considered were leadership, management, communications and culture (drivers of engagement) and the more tangible outputs of employee engagement such as discretionary effort, energy, well-being and productivity.
The findings highlight that at the heart of employee engagement is a two-way relationship between the employee and the organisation. Key factors identified were:
Roffey Park carried out a research project last year to explore how key drivers affect employees in their day to day work and what the ultimate outcome is for organisations. The drivers being considered were leadership, management, communications and culture (drivers of engagement) and the more tangible outputs of employee engagement such as discretionary effort, energy, well-being and productivity.
The findings highlight that at the heart of employee engagement is a two-way relationship between the employee and the organisation. Key factors identified were:
- The sense employees have that their relationships with their employers are fair and equitable, including the extent to which employees feel supported in their work.
- How employees relate to their job roles, including the pride they take in their work, their sense of delivering a valuable service and how stimulating their work is.
- Whether employees feel that they are respected and trusted and that their contribution is valued.
- Whether they believe they are communicated to well and trust their leaders.
- The quality of interpersonal relationships between colleagues, in how enjoyable and productive they are.
Friday, 11 March 2011
Time to get an HR system that works for you ....
Institute of Directors article '...... In January, a report by consultancy Mercer found that while 65 per cent of HR professionals across Europe, the Middle East and Africa perceived themselves as strategic partners to the business, just 15 per cent of the activities they carried out related directly to strategy. Despite claiming otherwise, HR professionals were spending most of their time on compliance and auditing, HR services and record-keeping-tasks just about as far from the centre of the organisation as it's possible to imagine. ....'
Read more - Does HR add strategic value?
Read more - Does HR add strategic value?
Thursday, 10 March 2011
By 2012, 20 percent of businesses will own no IT assets
In Jan 2010 Gartner predicted that '...by 2012, 20 percent of businesses will own no IT assets..' http://www.gartner.com/. By this they mean that businesses will adopt cloud computing but they didn't state business size.
One year in - are we are we getting there? Our experience with breatheHR suggeests that many more SMEs see the advantages of joining the cloud revolution with maybe 1 in 5 prospects telling us that they intend to have no office based servers. A long way off 20% of all businesses but a good step in the right direction..
One year in - are we are we getting there? Our experience with breatheHR suggeests that many more SMEs see the advantages of joining the cloud revolution with maybe 1 in 5 prospects telling us that they intend to have no office based servers. A long way off 20% of all businesses but a good step in the right direction..
Labels:
breatheHR,
Cloud Computing,
information management
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