Showing posts with label Insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insurance. Show all posts

Monday, September 8, 2008

Skills Management -1

Skills Management is part of process of HRM Management. Skills Management is the practice of understanding, developing and deploying people and their skills. Well-implemented skills management should identify the skills that job roles require, the skills of individual employees, and any gap between the two.
Overview
The skills involved can be defined by the organization concerned, or by third party institutions. They are usually defined in terms of a skills framework, also known as a competency framework or skills matrix. This consists of a list of skills, and a grading system, with a definition of what it means to be at particular level for a given skill. (For an example of a mature skills framework, see the Skills Framework for the Information Age, a technical IT skills framework owned by a British not-for-profit organization.)
To be most useful, skills management needs to be conducted as an ongoing process, with individuals assessing and updating their recorded skill sets regularly. These updates should occur at least as frequently as employees' regular line manager reviews, and certainly when their skill sets have changed.
Skills management systems record the results of this process in a database, and allow analysis of the data.

we talk more about skills management in next post.

Ref: agents website design, insurane crm, wikipedia

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Recruitment

We are talking here HRM and process of HRM. We talked about Workforce planning in our previous post. As a part of Processes of HRM, today we are going to talk about Recruitment.

Recruitment refers to the process of sourcing, screening, and selecting people for a job or vacancy within an organization. Though individuals can undertake individual components of the recruitment process, mid- and large-size organizations generally retain professional recruiters.

The recruitment industry:
The recruitment industry has four main types of agencies. Their recruiters aim to channel candidates into the hiring organisation’s application process. As a general rule, the agencies are paid by the companies, not the candidates. The industries practice of information asymmetry and recruiters' varying capabilities in assessing candidate quality produces the negative economic impacts described by The Market for Lemons.

The Recruitment Process
These are three main recruiting stages. Three main recruiting stages are as under.

  • Sourcing--Sourcing involves 1) advertising and 2) recruiting research.
  • Screening & selection
  • Onboarding

ref: agents website design, insurance software, wikipedia