Application
Case
Jack Nelson's Problem
As a new member of the board of directors for a local bank,
Jack Nelson was being introduced to all the employees in the home office. When
he was introduced to Ruth Johnson, he was curious about her work and asked her
what the machine she was using did. Johnson replied that she really did not
know what the machine was called or what it did. She explained that she had
only been working there for 2 months. However, she did know precisely how to
operate the machine. According to her supervisor, she was an excellent
employee.
At one of the branch offices, the supervisor in charge spoke
to Nelson confidentially, telling him that "something was wrong," but
she didn't know what. For one thing, she explained, employee turnover was too
high, and no sooner had one employee been put on the job than another one
resigned. With customers to see and loans to be made, she continued, she had
little time to work with the new employees as they came and went.
All branch supervisors hired their own employees without
communication with the home office or other branches. When an opening
developed, the supervisor tried to find a suitable employee to replace the
worker who had quit.
After touring the 22 branches and finding similar problems in
many of them, Nelson wondered what the home office should do or what action he
should take. The banking firm generally was regarded as being a well-run
institution that had grown from 27 to 191 employees during the past 8 years.
The more he thought about the matter, the more puzzled Nelson became. He
couldn't quite put his finger on the problem, and he didn't know whether to
report his findings to the president.
Questions
1-20. What do you think is causing some of the problems in
the bank's home office and branches?
1-21. Do you think setting up an HR unit in the main office
would help?
1-22. What specific functions should an HR unit carry out?
What HR functions would then be carried out by supervisors and other line
managers? What role should the Internet play in the new HR organization?
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