Showing posts with label promotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label promotion. Show all posts

Monday 8 April 2019

HOW TO GET PROMOTED


Promotion’ is one of the few words that make people work that little bit harder in their job. The reasons are not far.
Promotion is when an individual is moved from one position to a higher one. For example, from salesman to sales manager, or accountant to head of finance.
Promotion normally brings higher pay, more privileges and better status. These are generally what the word is about. Does it need explaining? The question is, how does one put their hands on that promotion?
There are many ways to get elevated. Some of the things you can do to get your promotion include:
·        Putting your best in your work. Work professionally and present to your supervisors the best that you can achieve. This is perhaps one of the two most important rules.

·        Being trustworthy. Cultivate confidence in those around you that you can be trusted – with all forms of organisational assets including money, equipment and information. This certainly has to be the second of the two cardinal rules (the other being the above, of course).

·        Pointing out serious mistakes or omissions – even if it is your boss who has made it. This is a sensitive area. Some supervisors, if they are insecure, may not take it well. However, it might be more damaging in the long run for you not to say anything when you see something wrong than to do so. All supervisors secretly appreciate sub-ordinates who act as their third eye (it insulates them from being in trouble themselves). Only, choose the right moment and right way to do it.

·        Being brave. If called upon in a large meeting to share with others what you know about a particular subject, rise and speak. The plenty eyes around you will not swallow you. If anything, you will establish yourself as a leader and solution-provider. 

  Self-improvement. Formal education, reading and listening to people with more experience are powerful ways of moving from one level of knowledge and competence to a higher one. Self-improvement must be an ongoing process.

Drawing a line between business and pleasure. Leave business for business time and pleasure for pleasure time. They rarely move together. Many careers of otherwise capable women and men have been wrecked or slowed down because of not observing this rule. If you have not been, be smart about it - starting today! Finally,

·        Sacrificing a bit of your private time to get important tasks done. All managers do this. So, you will be marking yourself as one, by missing one beer to complete one vital job. Thirty minutes or so will be a valuable investment in your career progression.
This is it for now. Get your career on fast track by observing these rules. They may not be the only important principles. Nevertheless, they are among the highest-ranking.

Bye!!

Saturday 19 November 2016

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT - THE BASICS



People are the most central asset of an organisation. The value people embody are primarily labour, knowledge and intellect which, normally, are applied simultaneously.

The importance of the human element in production (both for profit and not-for-profit) calls for specialist attention, and hence the presence of a human resource manager in many organisations.

Human resource management can be split into three main areas, namely, employee supply, employee maintenance and administration. We shall examine each in turn, even though these passages will hardly do justice to the wide field of human resource management, and so are better treated as guidelines. They do, nevertheless, present key areas of the job of superintending over the human segment of production.

Some Basic Components of Human Resource Management
                               
EMPLOYEE SUPPLY

It is the process of finding and hiring the people to make the organisation operate efficiently and effectively. It includes:

Planning.The future requirements of an organisation need to be forecast. It necessitates job analysis, centred on job specification and job description.

Job analysis is the determination of the task content of a particular post, the qualifications the position requires and its importance relative to others. 

A job description is a list of the duties a person has to perform in a given post. 

A job specification is a list of the qualifications – in terms of education and experience, and as a person –that an individual has to have to fill a vacancy.

Recruitment and selection. It is the activity of soliciting for possible candidates to fill a position and finally contracting the most suitable-looking. An interview of applicants is normally conducted. Vacancies can be filled through other avenues such as head-hunting and promotion of an existing employee. In head-hunting, there may not always be an interview:a pre-identified top-performer is merely coaxed into joining the organisation.

Orientation and Culturalisation. Orientation means making a new employee familiar with the operations of the new employer. Some of the components of the orientation process are:

-       -   Understanding the practices of the organisation.
-       -   Meeting old members of staff and getting to know different departments.
-       -   Appreciating the mission and vision of the employer.

Culturalisation involves introducing a new person to the norms, values and customs of the workplace. It includes explaining how employees interact with each other and with their employer, and what they hold dear, like marking the birthday of everyone with a celebration.

Placement. This takes place after hiring, orientation and culturalisation. The new employee is finally put in thejob that suits their qualifications.


EMPLOYEE MAINTENANCE

Employee maintenance includes all activities of basically a motivational nature that, ultimately, have the effect of making valuable employees stay with the organisation as long as possible. The employee maintenance responsibilities given below are just some.

Remuneration. It is the compensation in various forms,direct and indirect, financial and non-financial, given to employees in exchange for their services.

Training and development. Training is schooling given to enable one perform better in their existing job. Development is education designed to enable an employee work satisfactorily in a higher position in the future.

Fringe benefits. This is remuneration in addition to the normal salary or wage, such as company accommodation.

Job redesign. It is action taken to keep employees stimulated and working at their best. It commonly takes the form of job enrichment, job specialisation, job enlargement or job rotation.

In job enrichment, an employee may be assigned to do work normally done by someone or others in a higher position.

Job specialisation meansreducing the number of tasks one does.
Job enlargement is expansion of the range of duties performed by an individual, and job rotation involves enabling employees to switch from one job to another, performing each temporarily.

Appraisal. These are reviews, usually annual, of employment performance. They can result in such decisions as recommendation of additional training, development programmes, or promotion.

Appraisal can indeed lead to moving an employee to a position of a lower level that is seen as less demanding but more appropriate, action referred to as demoting. It should really be the last direction to look in, as human resource management should seek to help everyone reach the expected standard of performance. Demotion can also be effected as a disciplinary measure.

By and large, demotion, especially today, remains a route requiring delicate treading.

Labour relations. Human resource management has to do the balancing act of meeting the interests of both management and workers, which do not always coincide.


ADMINISTRATION

Administrative tasks of human resource management are basically those not exactly falling under either employee supply or employee maintenance. They embrace, but are not limited to, updating files, devising employee-employer-friendly leave plans (normally done hand-in-hand with employees and their supervisors), and ensuring that everyone operates within organisational policy.

From time to time, human resource managers find themselves in the unenviable situation of performing the formalities of severing ties between employee and employer.



Rupert Chimfwembe

 8 November, 2016