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Date: February 2010
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Has Ulrich moved HR too far away from the employment relationship?

Dave Ulrich wanted to help HR demonstrate its value to business communities and in many organisations he has certainly achieved this (along with some timely cost reductions!). There is also broad recognition that his ideas have advanced discussions about the role of HR, giving the profession fresh ambition: it’s not just about providing a reactive service for when the employment relationship goes wrong, HR must also take a transformational role to underpin sustainable business performance and it does this by aligning with business strategy.

OK, all sounds good so far, but surely the role HR plays in an organisation should also recognise the needs of the employees – after all, ‘strategic and transformational’ interventions are about improving performance through people, aren’t they?

At The Work Foundation we are examining the employment relationship in detail as our starting point for understanding how to improve the quality of people management. At our principal partner exchange forum this week, we framed a discussion about the way HR is typically structured and how this impacts on key players in the employment relationship: leaders and managers; HR practitioners and employees.

By looking at HR structure through this lens, it became apparent that devising the role of HR with business need and HR reputation as a starting point (as Ulrich suggested) has not delivered the whole package. This may be, in part, due to the misinterpretation of Ulrich’s ideas or the convenient enigma surrounding the employee champion role at the point of implementation.

Our forum delegates highlighted three thought-provoking issues with the way HR has evolved to date:

1. The give-take syndrome - in a bid to become more strategic, HR has given back responsibility for people management to the line which has, in some cases, exposed capability issues in line managers. At the same time, the practitioners want to take more responsibility (in partnership of course) for strategic business decisions. But do they really want to be decision makers or do they just want their advice to be heard? From a leadership and management point of view, this has caused no end of confusion as to where business accountability stops and HR accountability starts.

2. HR career fragmentation - the irony that the design of HR functions has not taken into account clear development paths for practitioners e.g. a lack of transition between a shared service centre role and a business partner.

3. The missing listener - it is arguably appropriate that employee welfare services have been removed from the HR remit but by doing so, has the profession lost a valuable insight into the real culture and temperature of an organisation?

As their last point highlights, there is still a very real ‘disconnect’ between strategic decisions and the views of staff in many organisations and if HR is no longer directly listening to employee needs, who is?

Jennifer Parkin

Job quality matters for the health and wellbeing of the workforce

Evidence shows that work is good for us and illustrates that the quality of work employees have influences their wellbeing.

Robin McGee

All talk, no action, or no talk, all action - striking the balance in next generation HR

No profession enjoys an identity crisis quite like HR.

Laura Blazey

Unemployment up or down?

There is again confusion in the unemployment numbers with the two indicators moving in different directions.

Good work: the key to reducing absence, improving health, and raising performance

Why does somebody join an organisation? Why do they choose to come in to work? And what can organisations do to positively influence the health, wellbeing and ultimately the performance of their employees? These were some of the questions being considered and discussed at The Work Foundation’s Partner workshop on absence management.

‘Who’s Who’ of luminaries from the world of work and wellbeing turn out in force to demand action

Last night The Work Foundation hosted a ‘Health at Work’ Reception to celebrate the high profile and progress which the issue has achieved among employers and policy-makers in recent years.

Stephen Bevan

2010: A year of action

Tonight I am speaking at The Work Foundation’s Health at Work reception, where the focus is on 2010 as a ‘Year of Action’ in the health and well-being arena.....

Dame Carol Black, national director for health and work

Sectors and the city: Debating skills

As one of the main drivers of productivity, the skills of the UK’s workforce will be vital to any sustainable recovery.

Laurence Hopkins

Is 'the deal' almost entirely fuelled on trust?

Is the employment relationship between a person and their line manager almost entirely fuelled on trust? Our second paper on the Future of HR research programme would suggest so. But what is trust?...

Alex Albert

Future Scenarios for a Low Carbon Economy Workshop

This is certainly the topic of the moment. Optimism surrounds the potential for green jobs, or activities which derive their demand from our desire to cut emissions of carbon dioxide, to lead us out of recession.

Charles Levy