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CASE STUDY : 1
A policy is a
plan of action. It is a statement of
intention committing the management to a general course of action. When the management drafts a policy statement
to cover some features of its personnel programmes, the statement may often
contain an expression of philosophy and principle as well. Although it is perfectly legitimate for an
organization to include its philosophy, principles and policy in one policy
expression.
Q1) Why organizations adopt personnel policies
explain the benefits?
Q2) What are the sources and content of personnel
policies?
Q3) Explain few personnel policies?
Q4) Explain principles of personnel policies?
CASE STUDY : 2
Recruitment is
understood as the process of searching for and obtaining applicants for jobs,
from among whom the rights people can be selected. Theoretically, recruitment process is said to
end with the receipt of applications, in practice the activity extends to the
screening of applications so as to eliminate those who are not qualified for
the job.
Recruitment
refers to the process of receipt of applications from job seekers. In reality, the term is used to describe the
entire process of employee hiring. These
are recruitment boards for railways, banks and other organization.
Q1) Explain in detail the general purpose of
recruitment?
Q2) Explain factors governing Recruitment?
Q3) Explain the Recruitment process with diagram?
Q4) Explain Recruitment planning?
CASE STUDY : 3
Navin AGM
materials, is fuming and fretting. He
bumped into Kiran, GM Materials, threw the resignation letter on his table,
shouted and walked out of the room swiftly.
Navin has reason
for his sudden outburst. He has been
driven to the wall. Perhaps details of
the story will tell the reasons for Navin’s bile and why he put in his papers,
barely four months after he took up his assignment.
The year was
2005 when Navin quit the prestigious Sail plant at Mumbai. As a manager material Navin enjoyed the
power. He could even place an order for
materials worth Rs 25 lakh. He needed nobody’s prior approval.
Navin joined a
pulp making plant located at Pune as AGM Materials. The plant is owned by a prestigious business
house in India. Obviously perks,
designation and reputation of the conglomerate lured Navin away from the public
sector.
When he joined
the pulp making company, little did Navin realize that he needed prior approval
to place an order for materials worth Rs 12 lakhs. He had presumed that he had the authority to
place an order by himself worth half the amount of what he used to do at the
mega steel maker. He placed the order
material arrived, were recived, accepted and used up in the plant.
Trouble started
when the bill for Rs 12 lakh came from vendor.
The accounts department withheld payment for the reason that the bill
was not endorsed by Kiran. Kiran rused
to sign the bill as his approval was not taken by Navin before placing the order.
Navin felt
fumigated and cheated. A brief encounter
with Kiran only aggrarated the problem.
Navin was curtly told that he should have known company rules before
venturing. Navin decided to quit the
company.
Q1) Does the company have an orientation
programme?
Q2) If yes how effective is it?
Q3) How is formal Orientation programme
conducted?
Q4) If you were Navin what would have you done?
CASE STUDY : 4
Bitter it may
taste, shrill it may sound, and sleepless nights it may cause, but it is
true. In a major shake up Airbus. The European aircraft manufacturers has
thrown a big shock to its employees.
Before coming to the details of the shock, a peep into the company’s
resume.
Name
|
Airbus
|
Created
|
1970
|
President
|
CEO : Vijay M.
|
Employees
|
57000
|
Turnover
|
26 Bn (Euro)
|
Total Aircraft
sold (Feb 2007)
|
7187
|
Delivered
|
4598
|
Headquarters
|
Paris (France)
|
Facilities
|
16
|
Rival
|
Boeing
|
Airbus announced
on February 27, 2007 that it would shed 10,000 jobs across four European
contries and sell six of its unit. On
the same day the helpless workers did what was expected of them – downed tools
and staged protests. The protesting
workers at Airbus’s factory at Meaulte, northern France, were seen picketing
outside the factory gate after holding up production a day earlier. To be fair to Airbus, its management entered
talks with unions before the job loss and sale was formally announced. But the talks did not mollify the agitated
workers.
Job sheating and
hiring of units are a part of Power and restructuring plan unleashed by Airbus
to save itself from increasing loss of its ground to the arch rival, Boeing Co.
Airbus Power
& Strategy was first mooted in October 2006 but sparkled a split between
France & Germany over the distribution of job losses and the placement of
future ones. Later the two countries
agreed to share both job losses and new technology.
The power and
plan, if finalized, would mean a 3 per cent reduction to Airbus’s 55000
employee strength.
Q1) Why should Power and focus on shedding jobs
to save on cost?
Q2) Are there no alternative strategies?
Q3) Will the proposed shedding of jobs and scale
of six units help airbus survive the intense competition from Boeing?
Q4) Comment on
the whole issue?
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