Building an HR Department within a new or established company is going to take some work, but with a solid plan and the great advice we’re dishing out here, you can do it. We don’t know your industry so some of what you’ll need may not be on this list but chances are everything in this article will be at least helpful, if not necessary.
How to Establish your company culture?
It’s important for every company to take steps to actively create a positive work environment. If it’s ignored, incomplete or even negative company culture can form on its own. Culture includes both the intangible feeling of the workplace and the perks and policies that make your company a great place to work.
How to make your new hires feel comfortable?
Are your new hires ready for their first day? Beyond their immediate job responsibilities, do they know what your company’s policies and employee expectations are? Most importantly, have you done everything possible to make them feel comfortable and welcome? Too many companies neglect to properly onboard new hires.
How your employees represent the company?
Most professionals know how to act at work. But in the unlikely occurrence, someone misbehaves or represents your company in a negative light, it’s important to have an official policy in place that includes specific consequences.
What is the right apparel for the job?
People are generally allowed to wear what they want in most modern offices. But a dress code policy can be necessary if your employees interact with customers or do jobs with safety considerations.
How to brand as an employer?
Most companies care what potential customers think of their company but not enough care about what potential employees think. A favorable employer brand sums up what it’s like to work for your company and attracts the right candidates.
Some of the KEY HR ELEMENTS and TASK are as follows;
1. Create job profiles
Create a profile for each role within your company and the person who fills it. You can include as much or as little information as you’d like but keep in mind if you choose to include more information (like what makes the current employee successful in that role) you will be able to use it for multiple projects (like building outsourcing profiles for future hiring)
2. Use the profiles to create a hierarchal structure of your company
In many startups, this is a bit antithetical to the way they work so you may face a little resistance. But there’s nothing like a great company structure document to help with future tasks like workforce planning, succession structure and what to outsource, when. You can also use a structure like this to determine reporting and salary grading in the future.
3. Create a business staffing plan
When your company is hiring just a few key positions, this almost seems like a moot point but having a plan you can refer to is crucial as the business scales. Who do you need to speak with? Sales, operations, product development, and marketing. These people or teams should have a solid idea of how many widgets they want to make or how many contracts they want to sign and the people that you need to hire are part of that plan. So make sure you get a sketch of what they’re doing over the next 12 months to figure out what you need to be hiring for.
4. You need a System
Most smaller companies start with an Excel spreadsheet and some scattered emails but with the software available to you now, that just makes no sense. We suggest starting with a solid and scalable system that’s built for SMBs. Having your staffing plan will help you evaluate new products to ensure they meet your needs. Keeping track and contact with various candidates will soon become a big part of your routine, so find an HRMS application that can help you and your team do that.
5. Devise a salary structure document
This is by far the most neglected document in a small to medium business. Don’t let that happen to you. Discover salaries for various functions within the company and compare and contrast those with fair market value for similar positions. Revise every six months to ensure that you stay competitive. If your company offers other forms of compensation like benefits, stock options, profit sharing or a work-flex environment; make note of them but keep them separate from the salary structure document.
6. Create a compensation and benefits document
Newer companies may not offer the same sort of traditional benefits that many employees are used to receiving, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have as much to offer. Get creative. Find out what your managers might be able to swing in their departments. Can employees work from home? Can you purchase equipment or offer discounted rates from benefits companies?
7. When do your employees get time off?
Which holidays does your company observe? All of these are unique to your company, industry, and occasionally location. But be clear about your leave policy, sick policy, time off policy, and holiday policy. Include things like permissions, notices, time off that is job-specific, and when it’s okay to trade schedules with another worker. Don’t forget to include some sort of recording system to help you keep track. Your employees will ask.
8. A way to measure performance
In the beginning, this usually falls to the department head or hiring manager but that’s not always the best person for the job. When creating your job profiles, find out how each person measures their success, and write those measurements down. Sure, those will change as the company grows but knowing how the team defines “doing well” and sets their goals will only help new hires get acclimated. In addition, it helps you create the dreaded performance evaluation. Not all companies have or enforce these, but I believe they are important, especially given the influx of millennials in today’s workforce. The key is constant and measurable feedback, rather than the typical year review.
9. Travel and Expenses Tracking
How will your organization handle this? You need a policy and a simple and easy to use application that allows you to track these expenses and travel. Luckily there are lots of consumer-based apps that fit well into a small or medium-sized business.
10. Time and Attendance is as important as you make it
Today’s modern HR department is far less “clock in/clock out” than it was, but there are still many workplaces that have staff that needs to track their attendance. Whether you use an application to implement this or an old-fashioned Outlook add-on, make sure your policies are clear before employee’s Day 1. If you are in an industry that frequently uses overtime structure, keep that in mind as well.
11. Handling off boarding
At some point, you will have to fire someone or someone will quit. Turnover is a part of life and must be addressed (preferably before it happens on your watch). So how are you going to handle it? Are you going to conduct an exit interview? Will you have a sit-down with the exiting employee’s supervisor or manager. Is there a formal process (like written and verbal warnings) that precedes terminating an employee. Do you request two week’s notice? Are you an at-will employee. Figuring out all these answers ahead of time will save an unpleasant task far less messy.
12. Training and Development
Like many smaller businesses, you may not yet have set up a training and development process, which is okay (for now). But start thinking about what the employees get out of working for you. You may not be able to bring in big-name speakers to train your crew but you can build a mentoring program, support professional initiatives or leverage your vendors for useful training opportunities (like webinars and white papers series). The important thing is to have a plan in place, whether the budget exists or not, but even more, important is getting buy-in from the managers in your company. They know what sort of learning opportunities their people need and how to ferret them out. But social, leadership, and creating employee ambassadors are all topics that transcend job title.