Glossary of
Terms
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360 Survey: An employee feedback program whereby an employee is
rated by surveys distributed to his or her co-workers, customers,
and managers. HR departments may use this feedback to help develop
an individuals skill or they may integrate it into performance management
programs.
401(k) Plan: An employer sponsored retirement plan divided into
two different categories: the defined benefit plan and the defined
contribution plan. In the defined benefit plan, the employer pays
a defined amount to a retiree who meets certain criteria. In a defined
contribution plan, the plan defines the contributions that an employer
can make. 401(k) plans are instrumental in ensuring a companys competitiveness
in attracting and retaining talented employees. It is common for
companies to outsource all or some of their plan including performance
monitoring, investment selection, and administration.
Administrative Services Only
(ASO): The hiring of a firm (usually
a health care vendor) to perform specific administrative services.
The firm would not have to assume any risk. For example, a self-insured
employer would use this arrangement in order to retain financial
responsibility for paying claims without having to perform administrative
functions.
Affirmative Action: To identify problem areas in the employment of protected group members, to set goals and take steps to overcome these problems. To improve work opportunities for women, racial and ethnic minorities, and persons belonging to other protected groups who have been deprived of job opportunities.
Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA): prohibits discrimination in employment against persons age 40 and above. Applies to all conditions of employment. Purpose is to promote equity in employment by removing illegal barriers to employment on account to age.
Alternative Staffing: Another term for "Contingent Staffing," includes
all nontraditional work arrangements other than direct full-time
employment, including: contractors, temporaries, consultants, self-employed,
independent contractors and part-time workers.
Americans With Disability Act 1990 (ADA): Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, which took effect July 26, 1992, prohibits private employers, state and local governments, employment agencies and labor unions from discriminating against qualified individuals with disabilities in job application procedures, hiring, firing, advancement, compensation, job training, and other terms, conditions and privileges of employment.
Assessment Testing: Testing used to assist employers in pre-hire
evaluations. They ensure that organizations place the right people
into the right jobs. These tests can be done via the Internet and
they can provide employees with effective training, assist managers
in becoming more effective, and promote people into appropriate positions.
At Will Employment: California’s labor code specifies that an employment relationship with no specified duration is presumed to be employment At-Will. This means that the terms and conditions of employment may be changed with or without cause and with or without notice, by employee or the employer, including but not limited to termination, demotion, promotion, transfer, compensation, benefits, duties and location of the work.
Background Screening / Pre-employment
Screening: Testing to ensure
employers are hiring qualified and honest employees. The screening
involves criminal background checks as well as validating important
information including Social Security numbers, past addresses, age
or year of birth, corporate affiliations, bankruptcies, liens, and
judgments. If an employer outsources pre-employment screening, the
federal Fair Credit Reporting Act requires that there must be a consent
and disclosure form separate from an employment application.
Base Wage Rate (or base rate): The hourly rate or monthly salary
paid for a job performed. It is solely a base rate and does not include
any benefits, overtime, or incentives.
Benefits Administration: Software that enables HR professionals
(or, brokers, agencies, TPAs or anyone else responsible for managing
a companys employee benefits) to track employee participation in
benefits programs including healthcare, insurance and pension plans.
Benefits administration software automates and streamlines these
tasks.
Bereavement leave: Paid days off following the death of an employee’s
spouse, parent, child grandparent or in-law so that the employee
may attend funeral proceedings, etc.
Cafeteria Plan: A plan in which
an employer offers employees a variety of different benefits. The
employee is able to choose which benefits would fit their individual
needs. Examples of benefits offered in the cafeteria include group-term
life insurance, dental insurance, disability and accident insurance,
and reimbursement of healthcare expenses.
California Family Right s Act (CFRA): California Family Rights Act and Family Medical Leave Act require employers to grant unpaid leaves, to a maximum of 12 weeks, for an employee’s own serious illness, or for the employee to care for certain seriously ill family members or to bond with a newborn child. Both the state and the federal acts have eligibility requirements for employees, posting requirements, health benefit continuation provisions, medical certification provisions and guarantee the employee the right to return to his/her job. An employee must provide a 30 day notice, if possible requesting a leave. They must also submit a health care provider certification of illness.
Carrier: A vendor in the
employee benefits space. More commonly used in reference to health
care. Carriers (e.g., Met Life, Blue Cross, Aetna, etc.) sell their
products through Brokers & Consultants,
but may also sell to an employer directly.
Carve-Out: The elimination
of coverage of a specific category of benefit services (e.g. vision
care, mental health/psychological services, or prescription drugs).
The employer opts out of certain services with one vendor and contracts
another to deliver them.
Child Labor Law: the FLSA child labor provisions are designed to protect the educational opportunities of minors and prohibit their employment in jobs and under conditions detrimental to their health or well being. The provisions include restrictions on hours of work for minors under 16 and list hazardous occupation orders for both farm and non-farm jobs declared by the Secretary of Labor as being too dangerous for minors to perform. Minors must obtain a work permit which is to be signed by a school counselor and the employer designating the hours the minor will work
COBRA: Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act. 1985 Federal law that requires employers to offer continued
health insurance coverage to terminated employees and their beneficiaries.
The coverage may continue for the following cases: termination of
employment, change in working hours, change in dependent status or
age limitation, separation, divorce, or death.
Co-employment: The
employment relationship where two or more legally separated employers
share potential or actual employer responsibilities with a common
employee[s].
Common-law Rules: Defined as "the law of a country or state,
based on custom, usage and the decisions and opinions of law courts." Common-law
rules are traditional tests that are applied to determine an employee
or independent contractor status. A "common-law employer," is
an employer who possesses the right to direct and control an employee
as to the final results and as to the details of when, where, and
how the work is to be done.
Compensation: Pay structures within an organization. It can be linked
to employee appraisal. Compensation is effectively managed if performance
is measured adequately.
Competency Modeling: A set of descriptions that identify the skills,
knowledge, and behaviors needed to effectively perform in an organization.
Competency models assist in clarifying job and work expectations,
maximizing productivity, and aligning behavior with organizational
strategy.
Competitive advantage: ‘People are the source of competitive advantage’.
Other systems in an organization can be copied but not the people
in the organization.
Confidentiality agreement: An agreement restricting an employee
from disclosing confidential or proprietary information.
Constructive dismissal
1. Coercion by threats to act or promises to refrain and includes
a resignation given as an alternative to be dismissed.
2. A breach of duty by the employer leading a worker to resign.
Contingent workers: Employees who may be: casual labor, part-timers,
freelancers, subcontractors, independent professionals and consultants.
Contract for services: An agreement with an independent contractor.
Contract of service: An employment agreement.
Core competencies: The skills, knowledge and abilities which employees
must possess in order to successfully perform job functions which
are essential to business operations.
Cost-Benefit Analysis: The ability
to measure the costs associated with a specific program, project,
or benefit. The cost is then compared to the total benefit or value
derived.
Defined Benefit Plan: A retirement plan that pays
participants a lump-sum amount that has been calculated using formulas
that can include age, earnings and length of service.
Defined Contribution:
A pension plan that clearly defines the amount of contributions,
which is usually a percentage of an employees salary. The benefits
payable at retirement depend on several factors including future
investment return and annuity rate at retirement.
Disability: The
inability to perform all or part of one's occupational duties because
of an accident or illness. This can be due to a sickness, injury
or mental condition and does not necessarily have to have been caused
by the job itself.
Disability Income Insurance: Health insurance that
is paid to a policyholder who experiences a loss of income due to
an injury or an illness. Disability insurance plans pay a portion
of the salary of a disabled worker until his/her retirement age.
Disability Leave: To allow an employee who is injured or ill to stay home without fear of losing his/her job. All disability leaves would fall under CFRA, FMLA, and PDL or any combination. CFRA and FMLA are very similar, one is a California Act and the other is a Federal Act. Both are intended to do the same thing. When one Act conflicts with the other, the most stringent Act should be applied.
Distance Learning: The process of delivering educational
or instructional programs to locations away from a classroom or site
to another location by varying technology such as video or audio-conferencing,
computers, web-based applications or other multimedia communications.
Disciplinary procedure: A procedure carried out in the workplace
in the event of an employee committing some act contrary to terms
of the employment agreement. If the act is regarded as Gross Misconduct
this may lead to Summary Dismissal.
Discrimination: The favoring of one group of people to the detriment
of others.
Distributive bargaining: Related to the process of Negotiation.
Known also as Competitive bargaining – The parties are concerned
with their respective shares of the benefits available and compete
and conflict with each other until one side wins an increased share
at the expense of the other.
Drug Fee Work Place Act 1988: Federal law requires most employers doing business with the federal government to submit proof that a plan to create a drug-free workplace is either already in place or in the works. The California Legislature passed a similar law in 1990 to require a drug-free workplace for all employers doing business with the state. The purpose of a drug-free workplace policy should be to help the employee reject the use of drugs and alcohol, especially on the job. Even if you do not do business with the federal or state government you should at a minimum have a drug-free policy that prevents possession or use of illegal drugs on the company property
EAP: An employer-sponsored program that is designed to assist employees
whose job performance is being adversely affected by such personal
stresses as substance abuse, addictions, marital problems, family
troubles, and domestic violence. For every dollar invested in an
EAP, employers save approximately $5 to $16. The average annual cost
for an EAP ranges from $12 to $20 per employee. Source: US Department
of Labor.
E-Recruitment: Web-based software
that handles the various processes included in recruiting and onboarding
job candidates. These may include workforce planning, requisitioning,
candidate acquisition, applicant tracking and reporting (regulatory
or company analytics).
E-Learning: E-learning is a method of education
via the Internet or other computer related resources. It presents
just-in-time information in a flexible learning plan. E-learning
can be combined with face-to-face courses for a blended learning
approach.
Employee Leasing: The term employee leasing for the service industry
has come to mean a business service whereby a firm specializing in
payroll accounting, personnel management, employee benefit, and risk
administration, offers its skills and expertise to the subscribing
business. The long-term, regular dedicated employees of the subscribing
business are transferred to the leasing firm’s payroll and benefits
resources. The leased-employees return to the subscribing business
via the avenue of employee leasing.
Employee Relations: A broad term used to refer to the general management
and planning of activities related to developing, maintaining, and
improving employee relationships by communicating with employees,
processing grievances/disputes, etc.
Employee retention: organizational policies and practices designed
to meet the diverse needs of employees, and create an environment
that encourages employees to remain employed.
Employment Branding: A strategy
designed to make an organization appealing as a good place to work.
This targeted marketing effort utilizes both print and Internet tactics
and attempts to shape the perceptions of potential employees, current
employees and the public / investment community.
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA): To regulate private pension plans in order to assure the employees who put money into pension plans or depend on a pension for retirement funds actually will receive the money when they retire. To keep all pension plans free from discrimination, specifically, discrimination favoring highly compensated individuals, and discrimination against women.
Enterprise Compensation
Management (ECM): The automation of the compensation process to assist
organizations in the acquisition, management and optimization of
its workforce.
ERISA (Employment Retirement
Income Security Act):
A federal law that governs pension and welfare employee benefit plans.
ERISA requires plans to provide participants with plan information
including plan features and funding. It also requires that plans
provide fiduciary responsibilities for those who manage and control
assets. It gives participants the right to sue for benefits and breaches
of fiduciary duty.
ERP: Short for enterprise resource planning, a
business management system that integrates all facets of the business,
including manufacturing, sales, marketing, finance and human resources.
This is slightly different than best-of-breed HRIS applications and
the industry continues to debate the merits of one versus the other.
With the growing popularity of web-based applications (ease of use,
lower costs) ERP seems to be losing out, especially in the mid-market.
Executive Coaching: Executive coaching
is a professional relationship between a Coach and an Executive,
or an Executive Team. The goal is to assist executives with positive
leadership development. It can be provided in one-on-one sessions
or via the Internet.
Executive Search: An agency or organization
used by employers to assist them with the selection and placement
of candidates for senior-level managerial or professional positions.
Exempt Versus Non-Exempt Employees: Employees who
meet one of the FLSA (US Fair Labor Standards Act that governs overtime
compensation.) exemption tests and who are paid on a fixed salary
basis and not entitled to overtime.
Exit Interview: An interview between a member of staff of the organization
that an employee is leaving to ascertain the reasons for the employee
leaving the organization. Should not be carried out by employee’s
immediate superior. Used for possible changes.
Fair Labor Standards Act (FSLA): Employers in California are subject to labor laws from many sources, both state and federal. When these laws conflict, there often is no easy answer to the issues which one will prevail. In general, the law that is most restrictive to the employer and most generous to the employee must be followed. FSLA requires that certain employment standards are maintained, that the appropriate records are kept and the employees are classified correctly. The FSLA governs the standard practices of minimum wage, overtime, child labor, and record-keeping requirements.
Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA): Provides a leave of absence to care for a newborn, serious illness of a child, parent, spouse, or an employee who has a serious health condition. Leave time does not have to be taken consecutively. Employee must work 1,250 hours in the 12 months preceding the leave and must be employed for at least 12 months to be eligible for FMLA.
Federal Civil rights act 1964, Title VII (CRA): The federal CRA and the California FEHA prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin/ancestry, sex, religious creed, age (for persons 40 and older), mental or physical disability, including AIDS or HIV –positive status, Veteran status, medical condition, marital status, sexual orientation.
Fixed Term Employment: An employee and an employer may agree that
the employment of the employee will end at the close of a specified
date or period or on the occurrence of a specified event or at the
conclusion of a specified project.
Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA):
FSAs allow employees to set aside a portion of their earnings on
a pre-tax basis into separate spending accounts to fund allowable
health care and/or dependent day care expenses. The funds must be
segregated as per IRS regulations.
Flexible Work Arrangements: Schedules
that allow employees to structure their work hours around their personal
responsibilities. Examples include flextime, job sharing, telecommuting
and a compressed workweek. Home sourcing has become a popular flexible
work concept in recent years. In this arrangement, employees work
full-time from their homes.
Functional job analysis: The preparation
required for the construction of a job description. It is necessary
to collect data on the job to be advertised.
F.U.T.A.: Stands for Federal Unemployment Tax
Act. "F.U.T.A." is
the term used for the payroll tax every employer must pay under this
Act. This tax cannot be withheld from the employee's pay, it is solely
the responsibility of the employer.
General Agents: General agents are middleman for carriers and brokers
and usually focus on the 250 employee market. Usually an individual
appointed by a life or health insurer to administer its business
in a given territory. GAs are important for companies who sell to
small employers or brokers e.g., benefits administration software
providers.
General Employer: In joint employer situations or court cases involving
multiple employers, the general employer is the original employer
who retains the employment agreement with the employee. This is the
employer with broad control. The courts and administrative agencies
identify the general employer as the employer who is maintaining
the employee on the payroll and providing benefits and its responsible
for the long-term employment relationship. The borrowing or short-term
employer is called the special employer.
Grievance: A complaint brought by one party to an employment contract
against another party.
Gross misconduct: An act committed by any personnel likely to lead
to Summary Dismissal.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1990 (HIPAA): To provide group health plan participants with a “certificate of creditable coverage” upon loosing health coverage. If a former participant becomes covered by another group plan that excludes coverage for preexisting conditions, the participant may present the certificate to the new plan to reduce the length of the new plan’s exclusion period by the participant’s period of “creditable coverage” under the former plan.
HR Audit: A method by which human resources effectiveness can be
assessed. Can be carried out internally or HR audit systems are available.
HR Generalist: An individual who
is able to perform more than one diversified human resources function,
rather then specializing in one specific function.
Human Capital Management:
The challenge of recruiting and retaining qualified candidates, and
helping new employees fit into an organization. The goal is to keep
employees contributing to the organizations intellectual capital
by offering competitive salary, benefits and development opportunities.
The major functions of human capital management include Recruitment,
Compensation, Benefits and Training.
Human Resource Information System
(HRIS): Business software systems that assist in the management of
human resource data (e.g. payroll, job title, candidate contact information).
Some of the larger HRIS platforms include SAP and Peoplesoft.
Human
Resource Outsourcing (HRO): A contractual agreement between an employer
and an external third-party provider whereby the employer transfers
responsibility and management for certain HR, benefit or training-related
functions or services to the external provider.
Independent contractor:
A person who works for him/herself but has a contract for services
with another person/organization. An Independent Contractor provides
services to a company, but is not an employee of that company. The
company pays the Independent Contractor without withholding payroll
taxes or paying the employer's share of payroll taxes. An independent
contractor has the right to decide how the work will be done and
may hire others to assist or do the work. Independent contractors
also do not receive wages. Independent Contractors are under intense
scrutiny from the IRS and states because of abuses costing billions
of dollars of taxes.
Induction: The process of introducing a new employee into the organization.
Industrial relations: The study of theories and practices in the
workplace relationship.
Intangible rewards: Non-monetary re-enforcers such as praise given
to an employee in recognition of a job well done, or a particular
achievement.
Immigration Reform and Control Act 1986 (IRCA): The laws require that all individuals pass an employment verification procedure before they are permitted to work. This procedure has been established by the law and requires that every individual provide satisfactory evidence of his/her identity and legal authority to work in the United States.
ISO 9000: Developed by the International organization for Standardization
(ISO), it is a set of standards for quality management systems that
is accepted around the world. Organizations that conform to these
standards can receive ISO 9000 certification. The standard intended
for quality management system assessment and registration is ISO
9001. The standards apply uniformly to organizations of any size
or description.
Job analysis: The preparatory stage for writing job descriptions.
Job Board: An online location that
provides an up-to-date listing of current job vacancies in various
industries. Applicants are able to apply for employment through the
job board itself. Many job boards have a variety of additional services
to help job seekers manage their careers and their ongoing job search
processes.
Job Description: A written description of a job which
includes information regarding the general nature of the work to
be performed, specific responsibilities and duties, and the employee
characteristics required to perform the job.
Job evaluation: Used for compensation planning purposes, it is the
process of comparing a job with other jobs in an organization to
determine an appropriate pay rate for the job.
Labor Market: A geographical or occupational area in which factors
of supply and demand interact.
Labor force participation: A rate at which the number of people
in the labor force is divided by the number of people of working
age x 100.
Leadership Development: Formal and informal training and professional
development programs designed for all management and executive level
employees to assist them in developing the leadership skills and
styles required to deal with a variety of situations.
Legislation: Law emanating from Parliament in the form of Acts.
Liability Insurance: Insurance that covers bodily injury or property
damage to others, to third parties.
Lump sum payment: A fixed negotiated payment which is not typically
included in an employee’s annual salary. Often times given in lieu
of pay increases.
Managed Care: A health care system in which the provider manages
the care of the individual for a fixed fee. The opposite of this
preventive intervention (or, population-based) approach is fee-for-service.
Managed care emphasizes wellness and prevention.
Margin: Dollar amount difference between the
Client Company bill rate and the Contractor salary. For example,
if the hourly bill rate is $30.00 and the hourly salary is $20.00,
the Margin is $10.00. See also "Markup" and "Multiplier."
Markup:
The percentage that the Client Company bill rate is greater than
the Contractor salary. For example, if the hourly bill rate is
$30.00 and the hourly salary is $20.00, the Markup is 50%. See
also "Margin" and "Multiplier."
Matrix organization:
An organizational structure where employees report to more then
one manager or supervisor.
Mediation Services: The process of intervention by a specialist
in an employment dispute. Provided under the Employment Relations
Act 2000.
Mentoring: A one-to-one process between an outside trainer and an
employee, whereby the former will ‘train’ the latter. See also Coaching.
Minimum wages: The lowest level of earnings of employees set by
Government.
Mission Statement: A statement illustrating who the company is,
what the company does, and where the company is headed.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator: A psychological test used to assess
an individuals personality type.
Negligent Hiring: To hold employer responsible for not doing necessary reference checks to verify behavior and character of all employees they hire. The basic concept is that if an employer hires an employee, and the employer knew or should have known about a prior behavior or criminal conviction of the employee, and the employee causes harm to a third party, the third party can sue the employer for damages. A convicted sex offender rapes an employee during an off shift.
Negotiation: The process of discussion with a view to mutual settlement
usually by the means of a conference.
Nepotism: Favoritism shown to relatives by individuals in a position
of authority such as CEO’s, managers or supervisors.
"Non-Traditional" versus "Traditional" Employee
Benefits: Traditional benefits include life, retirement, health,
and disability benefits. Non-traditional benefits include various
types of life management benefits such as EAPs, child and elder care
counseling and referral, etc. (see life management benefits). According
to the US Chamber of Commerce, health insurance is the most expensive
single benefit cost, accounting for about 20% of total benefits,
or about $2,666 per employee on average. (as per a 1999 study.)
Observation
interview: The process of observing employees while performing their
respective jobs or tasks used to collect data regarding specific
jobs or tasks.
Offshoring: The act of moving work
to an overseas location to take advantage of lower labor costs. Offshoring
usually involves manufacturing; information technology and back-office
services like call centers and bill processing. Companies can build
its own work center abroad, establish a foreign division, or create
a subsidiary in remote locations.
Onboarding: The process of moving
a new hire from applicant to employee status ensuring that paperwork
is done, benefits administration is underway, and orientation is
completed.
Organizational Culture: A pattern that emerges from
the interlocking system of the beliefs, values and Behavioral expectations
of all the members of an organization.
Organizational Development: A planned organization-wide effort to
improve and increase the organizations effectiveness, productivity,
return on investment and overall employee job satisfaction through
planned interventions in the organization's processes.
Orientation: The introduction of employees to their jobs, co-workers,
and the organization by providing them with information regarding
such items as policies, procedures, company history, goals, culture,
and work rules. Similar to Induction.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA): Employer shall provide a safe and healthful workplace and both employers and employees shall comply with health and safety standards issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Outplacement: A benefit offered by the employer to displaced employees
which may consist of such services as job counseling, training, and
job-finding assistance.
Outsourcing: A contractual agreement between an employer and an
external third party provider whereby the employer transfers responsibility
and management for certain HR, benefit or training related functions
or services to the external provider.
Payroll: Documentation created and maintained by
the employer containing such information as hours worked, salaries,
wages, commissions, bonuses, vacation/sick pay, contributions to
qualified health and pension plans, net pay and deductions.
Payroll
Taxes: Employers are appointed, as agents of the government, to withhold
federal, state and local income tax from employee’s wages. These
obligations are severely regulated and carry heavy penalties if they
are not done correctly.
Peer appraisal: A performance appraisal strategy whereby an employee
is reviewed by his/her peers who have sufficient opportunity to examine
the individual’s job performance.
Performance Appraisals: Performance evaluations are an important part of the company’s personnel policies. They provide an objective, consistent, and fair way to gauge each employee’s on-the-job effectiveness. The evaluation process should inform employees of their standing in the company and communicate expected standards of performance. It is also used to discuss work standards and areas where improvement is needed. This method will provide each employee with an opportunity to note major accomplishments and progress, as well as performance problems.
Performance
Improvement:
Performance Improvement Plan when you have identified
a performance problem and are looking for ways to improve the performance
of an employee. The Performance Improvement Plan plays an integral
role in correcting performance discrepancies. It is a tool to monitor
and measure the deficient work products, processes and/or behaviors
of a particular employee in an effort to improve performance or modify
behavior.
Performance Management: The process of maintaining or improving
employee job performance through the use of performance assessment
tools, coaching and counselling. Continuous feedback is a large part
of performance management.
Performance planning: A total approach to managing people and performance.
Involving setting performance aims and expectations for the organization,
departments and individuals employees.
Personal grievance: A complaint brought by one party to an employment
contract against another party. See Part 9 of the Employment Relations
Act 2000.
Plan Sponsor: An entity that has adopted and has
maintained an employee-benefit plan. The plan sponsor is often an
employer, but may be a union or a professional association. The Plan
Sponsor is responsible for determining employee participation and
the amount of benefits involved.
Pregnancy Disability Leave: Allows employees disabled by pregnancy to take unpaid disability leave of absence due to birth of a child. It can be combined with the Family medical Leave Act (FMLA). Employees cannot be terminated when on disability leave unless the person’s job has been eliminated. It is recommended that you wait until the employee returns to work before you lay them off.
Probationary Arrangements: Where
the parties to an employment agreement agree as part of the agreement
that an employee will serve a period of probation or trial after
the commencement of the employment. See Section 66 Employment Relations
Act 2000.
Professional Employer Organization
(PEO): A staffing
service that is contracted to assume the employers responsibilities
and risk for his/her workforce. Employees are legally co-employed
by the PEO. The PEO is responsible for such actions as the preparation
of accurate payroll checks, the remittance of payroll taxes to federal
and state jurisdictions and the preparation of various tax information.
Quality management: The process or system of ensuring
that a product or service should do what the user needs or wants
and has a right to expect. There are five dimensions to quality,
design, conformance, availability, safety and field use.
Random Testing: Drug and alcohol tests administered by an employer
which selects employees to be tested on a random basis.
Recruitment Process Outsourcing
(RPO): The outsourcing of the recruiting
process to a third party.
Redundancy: The act of dismissing an employee when that employee
is surplus to the requirements of the organization.
Replacement charts: A summarization in visual form the numbers of
incumbents in each job or family of jobs, the number of current vacancies
per job and the projected future vacancies. See Succession planning.
Request for proposal (RFP): A document an organization sends to
a vendor inviting the vendor to submit a bid for a product or, service.
Restrictive covenant: A contract clause requiring executives or
other highly skilled employees to refrain from seeking and obtaining
employment with competitor organizations in a specific geographical
region and for a specified period of time.
Return on investment (ROI): A ratio of the benefit or profit derived
from a specific investment compared to the cost of the investment
itself.
Right to manage: The ‘right’ of management to make decisions and
to run an organization without interference from external or internal
forces.
Risk Management: The use of insurance
and other strategies to minimize an organizations exposure to liability
in the event a loss or injury occurs.
Sexual and Unlawful Harassment: To provide a work environment free of unlawful harassment. To prohibit sexual harassment and harassment because of race, religious creed, color, national origin or ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, marital status, age, sexual orientation or any other basis protected by federal, state, or local law or ordinance or regulation. The company must have guidelines in place which prohibit unlawful harassment and have procedures in place to encourage reporting of unlawful harassment.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization):
The process of optimizing a web site (e.g., identifying and placing
targeted keywords on web pages) to ensure the site places well when
queried on search engines. It is important for corporate web sites
to optimize their visibility on search engines. See http://hrmarketer.blogspot.com/2005/04/seo-industry-gold-rush-or-fools-gold.html
Self-Funded (Self-Insured) Plan: A health care insurance program
in which employers (usually larger companies) pay the specified health
care costs of their employees rather than insuring them. Self-funded
plans may be self-administered, or the employer may contract a third
party administrator (TPA) for administrative services only (ASO).
Sic Code: The Standard Industrial Classification (abbreviated 'SIC')
is a United States government system for classifying industries by
a four-digit code. Established in the 1930s, it is being supplanted
by the six-digit North American Industry Classification System, which
was released in 1997; however certain government departments and
agencies, such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),
still use the SIC codes.
Sole-Source: One "source" or means
of acquiring all of your staffing needs. Commonly referred to as
Sole-Source Supplier which allows a Client Company to go to one
recruiter (firm) for all their staffing needs. (Permanent, Temp-to-Perm,
Contract, Payrolling, Etc.)
Sourcing: The developing of lists of potential candidates. Also
relates to the task of requisitioning, or creating job descriptions,
approval workflows and actual job postings. Most e-recruitment software
providers include modules for requisitioning.
Special Employer: This term is used in general and special employment.
A special employer is a person or organization that is deemed to
share an employer-employee relationship with the general employer.
It applies more accurately where the general employer momentarily
relinquishes control over their employee[s] to another employer.
Staffing: A method of finding, evaluating, and establishing a working
relationship with future employees. They may be current employees
or future employees.
Strategic HRM: The process of aligning human resources more closely
to the strategic and operating objectives of the organization.
Strategic Planning: The process of identifying an organization's
long-term goals and objectives and then determining the best approach
for achieving those goals and objectives.
Succession Planning: The process of identifying long-range needs
and cultivating a supply of internal talent to meet those future
needs. Used to anticipate the future needs of the organization and
assist in finding, assessing and developing the human capital necessary
to the strategy of the organization.
S.U.I.: Stands for State Unemployment Insurance. Each state imposes
a payroll tax on the employer for unemployment benefits. The tax
ranges from 1% to over 5% of each dollar of payroll. The employer
is entirely responsible for paying the tax, it cannot be deducted
from the employee's pay.
Summary dismissal: The act of dismissing personnel immediately,
usually because the person has committed some act of Gross Misconduct.
Suspension: A form of disciplinary action resulting in an employee
being sent home without pay for a specified period of time.
Talent Management: The automation
of various recruitment tasks including selection, training, promotion
and internal movement of employees. Critics claim talent management
is too complex to automate.
Temp-to-Perm: A contractor (employee)
is placed on an assignment with a client company based on the assumption
that if the client likes the employee, the employee may be permitted
to be hired by the client as a direct hire. A "try before you
hire" practice.
Third-Party Administrator (TPA):
An organization that is responsible for the administration of insurance
for a self-insured group. It does not have any responsibility for
paying claims. The self-insured group is financially responsible.
(See self-insured group).
Trade Secrets: Whether an employee may be prohibited from using information gained from an employer in future employment is essentially dependent on whether that information may be classified as a trade secret. Under the law, it is a crime to steal any trade secrets, including customer lists and other proprietary information falling within the definition of a trade secret.
Traditional Employment: New term
for permanent employment. Non-traditional jobs are the contingency
positions.
Training & Development: The process of obtaining knowledge,
attitudes and skills needed to carry out a specific activity or task.
Training Needs Analysis: A method of analyzing how employee skill
deficits can be addressed through current or future training and
professional development programs, as well as determining the types
of training/development programs required, and how to prioritize
training/development.
Triangular Employment: Relationship between contractor, staffing
company, and client company in which the contractor is the employee
of the staffing company but performs services for the client company.
Turnover: Describes changes in the work force resulting from voluntary
or involuntary resignations.
Underwriter: A person or organization
that ensures money will be available to pay for losses that are insured.
An insurance company can be considered an underwriter.
Unemployment
Insurance: Government sponsored protection to assist workers who
have been laid off or even quit their jobs through no fault of their
own. The unemployment income lasts only a few months. This insurance
represents a significant contribution on the part of an employer
as a percentage of employees’ gross wages.
Unions: Groups of workers who have formed incorporated associations
relating to the type of work that they perform.
Unjustifiable dismissal: The act of terminating an employee’s employment
agreement for a reason that the Employment Relations Authority or
Employment Court regards as unjustifiable.
Vendor on Premises: Outsourcing arrangement where a full-time staffing
coordinator administers the entire outsourcing process for the client:
interviewing, testing and screening applicants, filling job assignments,
issuing payrolls, providing on-site management of the department.
Virtual Corporation: New term for maintaining a minimum staff of
core employees, surrounded by a ring of contingent staff.
Virtual HR: The use of various types of technology to provide employees
with self-serve options. Voice response systems, employee kiosks
are common methods.
Voluntary Benefits: Benefits that are paid for by the employee through
payroll deductions. The employer pays for administration. Examples
of these benefits include life insurance, dental, vision, disability
income, auto insurance, long-term care coverage, medical supplement
plans and homeowners insurance.
W-2 vs. 1099MISC: At the end of each year, workers either receive
a Form W-2 or a Form 1099MISC. An employee receives a W-2 and has
all required payroll taxes withheld throughout the year. An Independent
contractor receives a 1099 and has no payroll taxes withheld.
Wage curve: Depicts pay rates currently being paid for each job
within a pay grade in relation with the rankings awarded to each
job during the job evaluation process.
Wage drift: The gap between the Collective Agreement rate and the
rate actually paid. Evidence of geographical variations in wage levels.
Whistle blower: Whistle blower protection is contained in the Protected
Disclosures Act 2000. The Act provides protection to employees against
retaliation for reporting illegal acts of employers. An employer
may not rightfully retaliate in any way, such as discharging, demoting,
suspending or harassing the whistle blower. Employer retaliation
of any kind may result in the whistle blower bringing a personal
grievance against the employer.
Work/Life Employee Benefits: Work/Life benefits
are "non-traditional" employee
benefits that assist employees in managing their lives. Employers
purchase these services from vendors and they are offered to employees
as benefits. These services can make the difference in attracting
and retaining employees. Common life management benefits include:
child and elder care referral services, employee assistance program
(EAP), concierge, legal assistance, and emergency back up childcare.
Workers’ Compensation: Businesses are required by law to obtain
workers’ compensation insurance for their employees. The purpose
of this insurance is to provide medical and other benefit coverage
for employees who suffer a job-related injury or illness. Generally
speaking, the staffing firm must maintain workers’ compensation for
their employees, or coordinate coverage through the subscriber.
Workforce Planning: The assessment of the current workforce in order
to predict future needs. This can consist of both demand planning
and supply planning. Many e-recruitment software providers include
modules for workforce planning. |