Steps In Human Resource Planning
1) Analyze Organizational Strategy
Any successful workforce-management program — including human resource planning — is a direct offshoot of your business’s organizational strategy.
Therefore, you should always start your HRP process by analyzing the goals and plans of your organization. With those strategies in mind, you can then move on to crafting a general human resources mission statement.
From there, you can work your way through the various departments in your business to address issues such as:
· Benefits
· Recruitment
· Employee relations
· Retirement
When you have that information written down, you can craft a human resource plan to help your business reach and maintain its goals.
2) Inventory Current Human Resources
After analyzing your organizational strategy, it’s time to take stock of your business’s current human resources. In the process, it’s beneficial to investigate such variables as:
· Total number of team members you employ
· Who works in what department
· Skills of each employee
· Performance reviews
· Team and individual potential
With that data in hand, you then make sure that your existing workforce is large enough and skilled enough to cover current demands before moving on to the next step in this guide.
3) Forecast The Future Of Your Workforce
Step three is all about planning, prediction, and preparing for the future.
Guided by your organizational strategy and your current employee data, do your best to forecast what the future of your workforce will look like. Be sure to incorporate any goals and plans into your forecast.
Examine variables such as:
· Expansion
· New product offerings
· New services
· A second (or third) location
· Labor costs
· Vendor and supplier relations
· Cost of goods sold
· Inventory
A forecast of this type, coupled with the workforce data from step two, gives you an accurate picture of where your business is right now and where you want it to be five, 10, even 15 years down the road.
4) Estimate Gaps
Armed with the information you’ve produced so far, you can now estimate whether or not there are any gaps in your human resource strategy.
Will you need more employees to get your business from the present to where you want it to be in the future? If so, how many? Will you need fewer employees? If so, how many?
Does your forecast call for a reallocation or redistribution of current team members? If so, how would you go about doing this?
Once you’ve estimated the gaps between your current and future workforce numbers, you can move on to step five, where all the planning and brainstorming comes to fruition.
5) Formulate An Action Plan
Formulating an action plan is where the rubber meets the road, so to speak. Your action plan should take into account all the analysis that came before it — organizational strategies, current HR inventory, HR forecast, and gaps between present and future — to create a step-by-step system for taking your business from point A to point B.
The action plan will be different for every business. Some businesses may need to begin recruiting and training. Other businesses may need to promote or transition their existing workforce.
Still other businesses may need to develop a retirement program or a redeployment process to deal with surplus employees.
When crafting your plan, start with the theoretical — evolve from X to Y — and then move on to actionable steps that your HR department can take — hire and retain two new team members every year, for example — to transform the theory into reality. With these steps in mind, you can implement a successful human resource planning system into your business, no matter how many employees you have.
As you go about implementing your business’s HRP, don’t neglect the foundation of all good employer/employee relations: scheduling and communication.