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For many years now, both private and public sector organizations
have been dealing with the challenge of how best to improve
corporate performance. HR has not escaped this scrutiny. The very
same businesses that have spent recent years cost cutting,
restructuring and streamlining, are putting the pressure on the HR
'overhead' to prove that it is not just a cost centre but a
function that provides added value through alignment to business
needs and aspirations. The traditional, transaction-based HR
service must, however, still be delivered. Understanding how to
combine a renewed strategic focus with effective delivery of
transactional and administrative services is the key to HR's next
generation of service delivery models. The authors' work with HR
functions includes an established set of service design criteria
and an approach that differentiates between a successful
implementation and what can be a costly backward step that only
serves to alienate the business. They show how any prospective HR
transformation should consider five fundamental issues in the
service design phase to align the HR approach to the business
strategy. These issues are critical to ensuring a fit for purpose
HR function that can measure and demonstrate the value it adds.
About The Gower HR Transformation Series: The Human Resources
function faces a continuing challenge to its role and purpose, in
many organizations it has suffered from serious
under-representation at strategic, board level. Yet, faced with the
challenges of globalism, the need to innovate, manage knowledge,
attract and retain the very best employees, organizations need an
HR function that can lead from the front. The process of
transforming the function is complex and rarely linear. It involves
designing a function that can manage its generalist and specialist
roles with equal skills. The Gower HR Transformation Series will
help; it uses a blend of conceptual frameworks, practical advice
and global case study examples to cover each of the main elements
of the HR transformation process. The books in the series follow a
standard format to make them easy to read and reference. Together,
the titles create a definitive guide from one of the leading
specialist HR transformation consultancies; an organization that
has been involved in HR transformation for clients as diverse as
Bombardier Transportation, Marks & Spencer, Barnardo's, Oxfam,
Schroders, UnitedHealth Group, Nestle, BP, HM Prison Service,
Transport for London and Vodafone.
For many years now, both private and public sector organizations
have been dealing with the challenge of how best to improve
corporate performance. HR has not escaped this scrutiny. The very
same businesses that have spent recent years cost cutting,
restructuring and streamlining, are putting the pressure on the HR
'overhead' to prove that it is not just a cost centre but a
function that provides added value through alignment to business
needs and aspirations. The traditional, transaction-based HR
service must, however, still be delivered. Understanding how to
combine a renewed strategic focus with effective delivery of
transactional and administrative services is the key to HR's next
generation of service delivery models. The authors' work with HR
functions includes an established set of service design criteria
and an approach that differentiates between a successful
implementation and what can be a costly backward step that only
serves to alienate the business. They show how any prospective HR
transformation should consider five fundamental issues in the
service design phase to align the HR approach to the business
strategy. These issues are critical to ensuring a fit for purpose
HR function that can measure and demonstrate the value it adds.
About The Gower HR Transformation Series: The Human Resources
function faces a continuing challenge to its role and purpose, in
many organizations it has suffered from serious
under-representation at strategic, board level. Yet, faced with the
challenges of globalism, the need to innovate, manage knowledge,
attract and retain the very best employees, organizations need an
HR function that can lead from the front. The process of
transforming the function is complex and rarely linear. It involves
designing a function that can manage its generalist and specialist
roles with equal skills. The Gower HR Transformation Series will
help; it uses a blend of conceptual frameworks, practical advice
and global case study examples to
This Orion Partners' report addresses the main considerations for
an organization investigating a large-scale transference of HR
transactional activity to an outsource provider. The report also
provides an overview of the market for HR outsourcing services in
Europe. There are sections profiling each of the main outsourcing
providers in the UK and continental Europe and case studies drawn
from both the public and private sector. Human Resources
Outsourcing agreements, which typically run for seven years or
more, have a critical influence on any organization's ability to
deliver its long-term strategy. The Orion Partners' report is a
valuable contribution to identifying the right model, locating the
right partner and realising the value of one of the most important
elements in the current strategic investment for large
organizations. It also provides helpful advice on how to manage the
impact of outsourcing on the retained HR team.
This book highlights the changes and challenges to the role of the
HR Business Partner, overviewing the emerging service delivery
models for the HR function (in particular the development of shared
services and outsourcing options) and what this means for the HR
Business Partner (HRBP) in the modern enterprise. The purpose of
this book is to provide a conceptual framework and practical
advice, based on real life case studies and recent research, into
how HR Business Partners best add value to the organization. The
authors have extensive experience of working in the area of HR
restructuring (having been HR Directors in blue chip organizations
and senior advisers in leading consultancies) and have consistently
come up against confusion and contradiction about what is the new
role of the HR Manager/Business Partner in supporting business
managers in the delivery of strategic and tactical objectives.
Theory and conceptual models are used to underpin this book but it
has been written as a pragmatic, hands-on guide that will help its
readers think through how best they might fulfil the role of the
HRBP. The book contains checklists, case study examples and
self-assessment tools. It is supported by supplementary material
(updates, further case studies, templates and tools) which are
available via the authors' website.
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