State of HR in Pakistan

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Essay on HR practices in Pakistan - Human Resource Management

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Name: Usman AhmedSubmitted To: Mr. Leon MenezesERP: 06674Submitted On: 23rd February, 2015State of HR in PakistanAll types of organizations, whether single owner/family-owned businesses, local companies or multinational are waking up to the need and possibilities of a functional HR department. Awareness about the potential of HR in organizations increased since 2000s and the need for departments to effect strategy and bottom-line was felt a far cry from the origin of the HR department as a reactionary competitive measure. Multinational companies present in Pakistan like Unilever and P&G have effectively employed good HR practices, setting a standard for other organizations to emulate.One such example is of local companies like Shan Foods have established a proper HR department to overlook talent recruitment, training and development and resource management. The trend will hopefully cascade down to other organizations in that vein i.e. other family-owned or single owner firms. Another healthy development is establishment of HR departments in Advertising and Media agencies like Lane 12 and Mindshare a much needed move which shows that such workplaces are realizing the value of human resource development. However, all these positive developments in the positive sector contrast with the complacency of government organizations. Such organizations do not have lean structures owing to considerations made to reduce unemployment. Besides redundancies, there is a lack of strategy, teams, HR partnerships, trainings and other functions that make human resource efficient. Compensations and benefits are not linked to performance but to personal rapport, age and years spent in the department. This creates a lack of motivation. Reforming government departments does not seem to be a priority and the effort required for said reform seems like a tall order. If such reform is achieved, there would be an increase in public confidence in government institution and help establish good HR practice as de rigueur for Pakistani organizations.The GoodHR departments are now establishing measurable short term goals and working towards improving talent skill set, hiring and overall operational effectiveness through the employee. It is in this way that model organizations in the country are aiding the realization of the organizations long term goals. They are empowering and mobilizing the employee to fulfill the Organization goals and objectives which is increasing retention and job satisfaction. This includes key ancillary functions such as taking measures to improve their learning and skills, giving good work environment and culture, competitive compensation packages etc.One HR success story that I encountered was of K-Electric (formerly KESC) galvanizing the human resource through their AZM initiative where the company organized events and workshops to empower employees. The company went through major right-sizing that resulted in protests and violence. Sensing the decrease in morale, the AZM events involved employees in the new vision and mission of the company, allowed for ownership of the new direction and formalized a new culture. All this was made possible by sensing the issues and taking the right steps at the right time by the K-Electric HR department. In a few years, K-Electric established itself as an employer of choice among graduates from top business and technical institutes.Hopefully, success stories will lead to more organizations adopting good HR practices and encourage young professionals to pursue the field.The BadIt is bothering that a perception lingers about HR jobs being droll or inconsequential. This is discouraging people to take up the discipline professionally and as a career. There needs to be more awareness and business institutes should offer more courses related to HR and allow students to major in it.Another issue with HR today is the rigid nature of HR systems. SAP, Oracle and Microsoft offer solutions that aim to help organizations manage their HR function. However, they are too rigid and force their system upon organizations existing systems. I believe that systems should work for the organizations and not the other way around exception being when such systems improve existing functions.