A) Empathy
B) Self-awareness
C) Motivation
D) Social skills
A) Staff members may become helpless and even hostile.
B) The staff will develop self-sufficiency and act more autonomously.
C) The team will develop stronger bonds with each other.
D) They will put in increasingly greater effort to reach the goals that have been set for them.
A) Managing expectations of external stakeholders
B) Weighing short- and long-term goals
C) Solving ethical dilemmas between groups
D) Understanding cultural expectations of stakeholders
A) Determinism
B) Parochialism
C) Ethnocentrism
D) Relativism
A) Due process
B) Rule of law
C) Conflict of law
D) Jurisdiction
A) Substitution
B) reference
C) Rivalry
D) Entry
A) A. Permit the increase to go through, but inform the employee and the manager that no further salary increases will be approved for the cycle.
B) B. Request an immediate meeting with the responsible manager to discuss the concerns about this decision and explore options to resolve the problem.
C) C. Inform the affected employee that he is ineligible to receive the authorized increase because his manager violated organizational policy and practice.
D) D. Permit the increase to go through, but request that the manager responsible for creating this issue be more careful next time.
A) A. Share expertise and experiences with HR staff members whenever they ask for support with their daily assignments and tasks.
B) B. Invite HR staff members to attend external networking events for HR professionals to expand their career options.
C) C. Schedule meetings with HR staff members to learn more about their daily assignments and tasks and how they support the HR department’s goals.
D) D. Distribute a summary of the company’s ethics policy to HR staff members and invite their comments and feedback.
A) A. The president could be counseled on the advantages of hiring a local temporary employee who does not require relocation.
B) B. The board of directors and the president could agree to move up the president’s exit date and let an interim president make staffing changes.
C) C. Senior leadership could go ahead and announce the organizational changes.
D) D. A temporary agency could be engaged to manage the search and hire a temporary assistant in spite of the president.
A) A. Ask to meet one-on-one with the division president to openly surface relevant issues to settle the dispute.
B) B. E-mail the map directions to the division president, confirming that they were accurate.
C) C. Ask the division president to summarize the facts supporting the recommendation.
D) D. Respectfully inform the division president that no adverse action will be taken against the HR site manager.
A) A. Recommend that the VP of sales discuss the proposal with the CEO.
B) B. Explore other phased retirement options with the VP of sales and the CEO.
C) C. Rule out the idea immediately and take a strong position against it.
D) D. Concede and proceed with plans for the VP of sales to teach the course.
A) A. Conduct a company survey to see which departments will be the most challenging to gain support from.
B) B. Train employees on the new system.
C) C. Conduct a meeting of all employees to be impacted by the changes to resolve any expressed concerns.
D) D. Send a company-wide e-mail announcing the changes and including a time line that shows when everyone can expect the changes.
C) C. Conduct a meeting of all employees to be impacted by the changes to resolve any expressed concerns.
A) Private, face-to-face conversation
B) E-mail reviewed by someone else for tone and legal liability
C) Phone call witnessed by another person in the manager’s office
D) Brief and specific text message
A) Private, face-to-face conversation
A) Use face-to-face meetings and schedule every other meeting at a different remote facility.
B) Form a task force of headquarters team members to brainstorm ways to improve communication.
C) Make the next meeting a “meeting on meetings” to identify possible issues and solutions.
D) Suspend the meetings and state that all team communications should be sent by e-mail to the entire team.
A) An automated alert can be texted when set tolerances are violated.
B) A relational database can be analyzed to determine functional area performance.
C) Online analytical processing (OLAP) could provide a deeper understanding of contributing factors.
D) A dashboard can highlight progress in these areas with timely data
A) Compare for management the cost of the program with possible avoided costs.
B) Don’t list the program in the HR plan and fund it through other plan areas.
C) Make a management decision to include the program for compliance reasons.
D) Postpone this objective until the next business planning cycle.
A) Review the corporate code of ethics and records of stakeholder satisfaction for each contender and recommend strategic options.
B) Assign top HR executives to conduct thorough reviews of each culture and prepare presentations for diverse stakeholders.
C) Review pivotal talent pools of employees at each organization whose skills are critical to the seed company’s strategy.
D) Estimate payroll and benefits for the entire workforce at each potential location and recommend the lowest-cost option.
C) Review pivotal talent pools of employees at each organization whose skills are critical to the seed company’s strategy.
A) Sharing best practices from other locations
B) Reviewing parts supplier management practices
C) Conducting a needs analysis in this location
D) Delivering quality training to plant supervisors
A) Involve employees in creating the solutions needed.
B) Ensure that the organization’s core values and behaviors remain stable.
C) Require that all managers agree with the company’s value system.
D) Provide the company’s mission statement to all employees.
A) A. Implement the culture change that is needed regardless of conflicting views.
B) B. Develop a strategic plan and outline on how the new culture will be defined.
C) C. Create a cross-organizational task force for redefining the company culture.
D) D. Meet with resistant executive committee members to gain understanding.
A) A. Conduct a full investigation into the HR manager’s work practices to determine if the HR manager should be terminated.
B) B. Inform the VPO that firing the HR manager is unwarranted and that they must learn work out their differences.
C) C. Discuss the situation with other executives and make a decision about the HR manager’s termination based on their feedback.
D) D. Mediate a face-to-face discussion between the HR manager and the VPO to discuss the situation.
A) A. Coordinate with the staffing organization recruiters to refer the hiring managers to the staffing organization team when requisitions are being submitted.
B) B. Advise the hiring managers to submit all requisitions directly to the staffing organization team.
C) C. Suggest that the HR director call the hiring managers on behalf of the staffing organization manager.
D) D. Develop a dashboard of recruiting metrics that can be used to provide routine updates for the hiring managers of the staffing organization team’s results.
A) A. Show leadership by moving forward with her approach and focus on providing her direct reports with evidence of the merits of an engagement strategy.
B) B. Educate HR leadership on how engagement influences outcomes and work with her direct reports to develop a business case for an HR-focused engagement strategy.
C) C. Wait four to six months before she makes any recommendations so that she does not appear to be autocratic or too aggressive.
D) D. Give in to the HR team and their suggestions as a show of confidence and to establish her role as a mediator.
A) Conduct a regression analysis of the sales incentive system.
B) Research and recommend local collection agencies.
C) Arrange cross training between the sales and accounting functions.
D) Arrange financial basics workshops for all sales personnel.
A) Conduct a regression analysis of the sales incentive system.