Business
The Inclusive Workplace
In the modern business world employees expect more and have more rights than ever. To accompany this, employees are seen as core contributors to an organization. The workplace has changed from one where employees blindly follow the guidelines of the company to complete tasks, to one where employees are central to the organization. Employees are also more educated than ever before.
In recent decades, issues like employee empowerment, collaboration, teamwork, self-managed teams and cooperation have all become important. Each of these issues have the idea of giving more and getting more at their basis. In Ideas that will shape the future of management practice (Bohl 1996, 8), human resources is described as being the way of the future, "We will see a more mature articulation of the importance of people as a firm's only sustainable competitive advantage." The change is described as giving high reward for high performance with the focus on a partnership. Other management trends also show the same focus. Three of these worth looking at are total quality management (TQM), the balanced scorecard, and best practice, all of which have been recent popular management ideas.
Cherkasky (1992, 23) describes the TQM approach as:
Involving everyone in the company, from the boardroom to the mailroom, in a daily search for incremental improvements. Everyone is trained to identify and fix problems, to set performance standards and measure results, and to focus the company's strategic vision on the needs of its customers."
Clearly, this approach has the employees of the company as central to it.
The balanced scorecard was first described by Kaplan as a set of measures that gives an overall picture of an organization, "the balanced scorecard is like the dials in an airplane cockpit: it gives managers complex information at a glance" (Kaplan & Norton 1992, 73). Rather than just measuring financial characteristics, it extends to covering other key areas. Kaplan and Norton (1992, 76) divide the scorecard into four different perspectives: financial perspective; internal business perspective; customer perspective; and innovation and learning perspective. The important thing is that both the internal business perspective and the innovation and learning perspective are based on the employees of the business. Again this shows that the employees are becoming a major focus.
Finally, it is worth looking at best practice. A report by the National Institute of Standards and Technology titled Ten years of business excellence for America (1999), looks at the Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Award as a representation of what makes a company the best. Seven categories make up the criteria for the award, with one of these being human resource focus. Again, this shows that the employees of an organization are a major consideration.
The next consideration is what it means for an organization that employees expect more as well as expect to give more. The major result is that organizations can no longer create a workplace and expect employees to adapt to it. Instead, they have to create the right environment for employees.
This is true because of the business environment and also because of the legal environment. Organizations have to create inclusive workplaces where sexual harassment, cultural biases and other forms of inequality do not exist. The remainder of the report will look at these specific components that make up an inclusive workplace, namely gender and cultural equality. Firstly, these issues will be looked at in detail. It will then be considered how an organization can create such an environment for employees.
Findings and Results
Cultural Equality multicultural organization is one with employees from different backgrounds and with different attitudes, beliefs and abilities. A successful organization needs to recognize the diversity and provide an environment that ensures that every employee is valued for what they bring to the organization.
The reality is that organizations are not in a position to be biased against different cultures. This is a legal necessity based on equal opportunity and discrimination laws. However, looking at cultural equality as something necessary because of the legal ramifications fails to recognize the benefits of cultural diversity. Looking at the benefits for an organization is a better way of looking at the issue.
Firstly, as business becomes more international, organizations need to consider other countries and cultures. This could be to serve customers in other countries, to purchase supplies from other countries or to set up operations in other countries. A multicultural workforce means that employees are available that may represent the other culture. One article argues that cultural barriers are a major reason that companies do not pursue opportunities in other countries....
Change in itself is a challenge in the workplace, as this results in a significant amount of uncertainty and stress among workers. The first thing a manager should therefore do is ensure that workers are involved and informed regarding the ensuing changes. In terms of nondiscrimination, the appointment of new workers should also be handled in an inclusive and informative way. Secondly, it is also important that no person be
It is through best practices by offering CRM Industry-based templates that is a set of synergistic, preconfigured work products that assists in quicker implementation, lower installation risk and potential ROI. Customer Relationship Management as a management style has been amply used by the Fortune 500 companies since the 1990s along with the concepts of organizational competence, knowledge and learning. In a lot of industries, featured by speedier technological development and
Workplace Diversity Cultural diversification is a term that has become very popular in the recent years, especially among the people working in various organizations. A lot of concerns have arisen due to the flow of the immigrants into the major cities of the United States. Due to the arrival of the immigrants and the varying concerns of the people, a lot of human and civil rights organizations have started to ask
A good advertisement will demand candidates with a "demonstrated ability to work effectively in a diverse work environment," and there must be an effort to recruit a diverse applicant pool from a wide range of sources, universities, and regions of the country and world (Chapter 12, University of California at Berkley, 2007). Using a panel interview format with a diverse human resources team that is representative of the company
Workplace discrimination can be understood as an inappropriate, unjustifiable treatment towards a person or a set of people at the workplace. Such undesirable treatment is based more often on people's race, ethnicity, age, marital status, sex or other describing characteristics (Australian Human Rights Commission, n.d). Workplace discrimination can give the impression of a repudiation of particular civil liberties, neglectful treatment, deliberate undervaluing of an employee's character or work outcomes and
Managing Diversity in the Workplace The modern business environment is marked by numerous people-oriented variables brought to organizations. These variables include gender, race, age, and religion, and socioeconomic background, regional and national origin. All these factors form the current workforce in the market place. Diversity is widely recognized as one of the world's greatest strengths. Diversity continues to affect the society and the organizational workforce in the process of shaping the
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