HR Jargons |
1.
Balanced Score Cards: A
method of measuring and managing business performance, presenting a
balanced view of financial and operational perspectives to accelerate the
management process.
2. Competency Based Management: Competency-based management refers to the functional knowledge and behavioral skills essential for sound managerial performance. Competency-based management appeals to a wide variety of people including: organizational members assuming greater work responsibilities, supervisors advancing to higher managerial positions, team leaders dealing with a broader range of leadership roles and responsibilities, and professionals who want to become more proficient in supervising and managing functions and processes. Conflict Resolution Strategies: There are 5 strategies to resolving conflict. The appropriate style may fall somewhere in between any of these extremes such as assertiveness and cooperation and can actually change at different moments in the process. Strategies such as competing, accommodating, avoiding, compromising and collaborating are used to solve. 3. 360 Degree Feedback: In human resources, 360-degree feedback is employee development feedback that comes from all around the employee. The feedback would come from subordinates, peers and super ordinates in the organizational hierarchy, as well as a self-assessment. 4. Corporate Governance: Corporate governance is a field in economics that investigates how to secure/motivate efficient management of corporations by the use of incentive mechanisms, such as contracts, organizational designs and legislation. This is often limited to the question of improving financial performance, for example, how the corporate owners can secure/motivate that the corporate managers will deliver a competitive rate of return. 5. P-CMM: The People Capability Maturity Model (People CMM) is a framework that helps organizations successfully address their critical people issues. The People CMM helps organizations characterize the maturity of their workforce practices, establish a program of continuous workforce development, set priorities for improvement actions, integrate workforce development with process improvement, and establish a culture of excellence. 6.Exit Management: The term exit management is defined as anticipating the needs of people in the organization. 7. Managerial Grid: A nine-by-nine matrix outlining 81 different leadership styles. MBWA: (Management By Walking Around) Managers getting away from their desks and starting to talk to individual employees. The idea is that they should learn about problems and concerns at first hand. At the same time they should teach employees new methods to manage particular problems. The communication goes both ways. McGregor’s Hot Stove Approach: McGregor’s rule for corrective action. Corrective action should be immediate, impartial, and consistent with a warn¬ing like the results of touching a red hot stove. Micro Manpower Planning: 8.Ambiguity Tolerance: Extent to which individual are threatened by or have difficulty coping with situations that are ambiguous; changing rapidly or unpredictably; information is inadequate; or where complexity exits. Assessment Centers: A set of performance simulation tests designed to evaluate a candidate’s managerial potential. 9. Brain Storming: An idea generation process that specifically encourages any and all alternatives, while withholding any criticism of those alternatives. Business Excellence Models: The Business Excellence Model is a nine-box model, originally developed by the European Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM). Its purpose is to "support the management of Western European organizations in accelerating the process of making quality a decisive influence for achieving global competitive advantage. 10. Attrition: The gradual reduction of the size of a work force that occurs when personnel lost through retirement or resignation are not replaced Baby Boomers: A baby boomer is someone who was born during the period of increased birth rates when economic prosperity arose in many countries following World War II. In the United States, the term is commonly used to refer to the generation which demographic popularizers have identified with birth years from the span 1946 to 1964.Bargaining Zone: In any negotiation, the maximum amount that a buyer will pay for a good, service, or other legal entitlement is called his "reservation point" or, if the deal being negotiated is a monetary transaction, his "reservation price" (RP). The minimum amount that a seller would accept for that item is her RP If the buyer's RP is higher than the seller's, the distance between the two points is called the "bargaining zone. 11. Barriers of Communication : (1) Wrong choice of medium, (2) Physical barriers: (a) noise,(b) time and distance, (3) Semantic barriers: (a) Interpretation of words,(b) Bypassed instructions,(c) denotations and connotations, (4) Different comprehension of reality: (a) abstracting,(b) slanting,(c)inferring,(5) Socio-Psychological barriers: (a) attitudes and opinions,(b) emotions,(c) closed mind, (d) status-consciousness,(e) the source of communication,(f) inattentiveness,(g) faulty transmission,(h) poor retention,(i) unsolicited communication. 12.BARS : (Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale)An appraisal method that aims at combining the benefits of narrative critical incidents and quantified ratings by anchoring a quantified scale with specific narrative examples of good and poor performance. Behavior Modeling : A training technique in which trainees are first shown good management techniques in a film and then asked to play roles in a simulated situation, and are then given feedback and praise by their supervisor. Behavior Modification: The change in the knowledge, skills, or attitude of an individual which occurs as the result of a planned set and schedule of reinforcements Bench Marking: A job that is used to anchor the employer’s pay scale and around which other jobs are arranged in order of relative worth. Big 5 Personality Dimensions: (a) Extroversion (b) Agreeableness (c) Conscientiousness (d) Emotional stability (e) Openness to experience. Blue Mooning: The term blue mooning is defined as having an alternative for your job when you are working in the current organization. 13. Career Anchors: Pivots around which a person’s career swings; require self-awareness of talents and abilities, motives and needs, and attitudes and values. A concern or value that you will not give up if a (career) choice has to be made. Carrot & Stick Approach: Reward or punishment offered in order to get people to do a certain task. 14. Delphi Technique: Delphi technique is to elicit information and judgments from participants to facilitate problem-solving, planning, and decision-making. It does so without physically assembling the contributors. 15.Eustress: Eustress can be defined as a pleasant or curative stress. Eustress is the amount of positive energy that motivates, excites and moves you to achieve something. It's the opposite of distress. 16. Empowerment: Putting employees in charge of what they do. 17. Flexi – Time working : Employees work during a common core time period each day but have discretion in forming their total workday from a flexible set of hours outside the core. 18.Gain sharing Plans: An incentive plan that engages employees in a common effort to achieve productivity objectives and share the gains. Generation X: The term Generation X is now popularly associated with the people born between the early to mid-1960s and the early 1980s, although this is disputed. Generation X has also been described as a generation consisting of those people whose teen years were touched by the 1980s, although many who are considered part of this genration had their teenage years stretching into the 1990s. Generation Y: Generation Y is generally considered to be the last generation of Americans wholly born in the 20th century, whose birth years have now concluded. Using the broadest definition commonly cited, Generation Y currently includes Americans in their mid and early 20s, teenagers, and children over the age of 5 Glass Ceiling Effect: Glass ceiling effects implies that gender (or other) disadvantages are stronger at the top of the hierarchy than at lower levels and that these disadvantages become worse later in a person's career. 19. Grapevine: The organization’s informal communication network. Graphology Test: Testing a person’s personality trait by analyzing his handwriting. Grievance : A complaint of one or more workers with respect to wages and allowances, conditions of work and interpretations of service stipulations, covering such areas as overtime, leave, transfer, promotion, seniority, job assignment and termination of services. 20. Halo Effect: Drawing a general impression about an individual on the basis of a single characteristics. 21. Hiring Freeze: Freezing all classified, administrative and bargaining units refers to employment actions. All current openings are frozen except those where an offer has been tendered. 22. In basket: The term in basket can be defined as the decision making technique in which the real time situations are given to analyse, the ability to take decisions according to the given situation. 23. Informal Organisation: The term informal organization refers to the unplanned, informal set of groups, friendships, and attachments that inevitably develop when people are placed in regular proximity to one other. These relationships, which grow out of the personal needs of members, are not fully accounted for by the formal organization; in fact, they are sometimes designed to protect the members from the demands of the formal organizations. The behaviors and sentiments that constitute the informal aspects of organization have no place in the formal plan Intrinsic Motivation: This can be described as a motivation to engage in activities that enhance or maintain a person’s self-concept. Intrinsic motivation is when a person is motivated by internal factors, as opposed to the external drivers of extrinsic motivation. Intrinsic motivation drives a person to do things just for the fun of it or because he believes it is good or right thing to do. Job Enrichment: Redesigning jobs in a way that increases the opportunities for the worker to experience feelings of responsibility, achievement, growth, and recognition. Knowledge Management: A process of organizing and distributing an organization’s collective wisdom so the right information gets to the right people at the right time. 24. Layoff: A situation in which there is a temporary shortage of work and employees are told there is no work for them but that management intends to recall them but when work is again available. 25. Learning Organisation: An Organisation that has developed the continuous capacity to adapt and change. 26. Lockout: A refusal by the employer to provide opportunities to work. 27. Macro Manpower Planning: Manpower Planning- a conceptual Framework; Macro and Micro Manpower Planning; Method of Measuring General and Special Abilities and Aptitude; Evaluating Transfer of Learning to the job; Follow up of Evaluation Corporate Planning and Manpower Planning; Technological changes and Manpower Planning; Redeployment; Manpower Planning Practices; Manpower Planning Models; Career and succession Planning; Personal Inventory and Audit; Controlling Manpower Costs; Manpower Information System; Use of computer in Manpower Planning; Linking training with Manpower Planning; Competency Mapping; Manpower Redeployment. 28. OSHA: (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) the agency created within the department of labor to set safety and health standards for almost all workers in the country (United States). 29. Outplacement Counseling: A systematic process by which a terminated person is trained and counseled in the techniques of self-appraisal and securing a new position. Performance management: Managing all elements of the organizational process that affect how well employees perform. 30. Pooled Interdependence: Interdependence that results when organizational subunits operate independently of each other in fulfilling their usual work. Presenteeism: Employees, who are at the worksite regularly, but for a variety of reasons, are not producing as they should. 31. Quality of Work Life (QWL): is a comprehensive, department-wide program designed to enhance HHS' service to the public by improving employee satisfaction, strengthening workplace learning and helping employees better manage change and transition. For more information on the history of the QWL Initiative Reality shock: Results of a period that may occur at the initial career entry when the new employee’s high job expectations confront the reality of a boring, unchallenging job. 32. Rogerian Counseling: Rogerian" or "non-directive" counseling, known as "client-centered therapy", is a therapeutic method of interviewing that begins with a client's (patient's) own verbal constructions. 33. Role play: A training technique in which trainees act out parts in a realistic management situation. 34.Sabbatical: Leave granted to an employee (university teacher) for study and travel. Sexual Harassment: Unwelcome advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature. 35. Shorter/ Compressed Work Week: Compressed Work Weeks allows employees to shorten their work week by one or more days. Employees work their "regular" number of hours in a shorter-than-normal number of days per week or per pay period. For instance, 40 hours in four days (4/40) or 80 hours in 9 days (9/80). Situational Leadership: A contingency theory that focuses on followers’ readiness. 36. Social Security : Federal program that provides three types of benefits: retirement income at the age of 62 and thereafter; survivor’s or death benefits payable to the employee’s dependents regardless of age at time of death; and disability benefits payable to disabled employees and their dependents. These benefits are payable only if the employee is insured under the Social Security Act. 37. Stereotype: Judging someone on the basis of one’s perception of the group to which that person belongs. 38. Succession Planning: The process through which senior-level openings are planned for and eventually filled. 39. Theory X: The assumption that employees dislike work, are lazy, dislike responsibility, and must be corrected to perform. 40. Theory Y: The assumption that employees like work, are creative, seek responsibility, and can exercise self-direction. 41. Type A behavior: Aggressive involvement in a chronic, incessant struggle to achieve more and more in less and less time and, if necessary, against the opposing efforts of other things or other people. 42. Type B behavior: Rarely harried by the desire to obtain a wildly increasing number of things or participate in endless growing series of events in an ever-decreasing amount of time. 43. Whistle Blowing: Individuals who report unethical practices by their employer to outsiders. Wild Cat Strike: An unauthorized strike occurring during the term of a contact.
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