HRM Ever Evoloving

HRM - Ever Evoloving

Outline

Thesis Statement: Advances in technology along with shifts in the nations� social structure heavily impact the workplace environment, creating a need for new management models in Human Resources.

I. The Changing Workplace
A. An Historical Perspective of Jobs in America
B. Jobs in the 21st Century

II. Identifying Corporate Needs
A. The Emergence of Human Resource Management as a Component of General Management.
B. Corporate Expectations

III. Developing Human Resource Policy
A. What HRM Professionals Have to Say

IV. Identifying Worker Needs
A. Family VS Work
B. The Working Environment
C. Benefits and Compensation

V. Where to From Here? - HRM Models for Innovation
A. Motivation Theory
B. Alternate Work Systems - a Comparrison Table







This paper is written from the perspective that Human Resource Management (HRM) practices are continually evolving to meet the changes of dynamic work environments. New technologies, increasingly rapid exchanges of information, social paradigm shifts and the restructuring of family systems contribute heavily to the need to find and apply methods of HRM that meet the needs of industry, workers and consumers. To do so effectively, vision and creativity are required in addition to on-going awareness of the bottom line.


The Changing Workplace


At the opening of the 20th century, the majority of jobs in America were held in two areas, agriculture and industry. Population distribution tables for that time demonstrate that most of the nation inhabited rural areas rather than urban areas. This continued to be the trend up until WWII, when men left the country to fight and women left rural America to fill factory jobs as their contribution to the war effort. This movement was the beginning of nationwide workplace and societal changes that have accelerated during the last half of the 20th century.


The move from rural to suburban environments changed the way we did business as a nation. Where extended families resided in and supported each other in culturally defined rural settings, nuclear families found themselves alone in homogenous neighborhoods. (1) This created a demand for goods and services that were formerly provided by extended family and community members, opening up new markets and creating jobs. It also created the need to recognize the management of workers as a separate and formal discipline.


As we move into the 21st century we can trace our nations� business growth over the last 100 years. We moved from an agrarian base to an industrial one. By the mid-50s� the majority of jobs were found in factories. Manufacturing suffered heavy blows during the late 60�s and early seventies and was displaced by the service industry. With the closing of the 20th century those services have become increasingly technological.


Surviving those changes requires adaptation, not only in the retooling of physical plants and...

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