You are on page 1of 81

lOMoARcPSD|39810965

“ Study OF HR Policies Practices IN TATA Steel”

Masters of Business Administration (Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Technical University)

Scan to open on Studocu

Studocu is not sponsored or endorsed by any college or university


Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)
lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Dissertation
On
“STUDY OF HR POLICIES PRACTICES IN
TATA STEEL”
SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE
REQUIREMENT FOR THE AWARD OF THE DEGREE

Master of Business Administration


Submitted By: ZAINAB
SHAKEEL
Roll No.
1901750700090

Under the supervision of


Mr. Asad Ali
(Sr. Assistant Professor)

AL-BARKAAT INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES,


ALIGARH
(Affiliated to AKTU Lucknow)
2021

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

DECLARATION

I solemnly declare that the report titled “Study of HR Policies Practices in Tata

Steel” is a bonafide record of work carried by me, submitted to partial

fulfillment of requirement for the award of degree Master of Business

Administration under the guidance of MR. ASAD ALI , ( ASSISTANT PROFESSOR)

Al-Barkaat Institute of Management Studies , Aligarh

This project report is solely the work of me based upon analysis, printed

material given in bibliography. The matter embodied in this report has not

been submitted for the award of any other degree.

Dated: Zainab Shakeel

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Acknowledgement

This dissertation is the result of the contributions and cooperation of many people, other than

my own small efforts.

I wish to extend my sincere thanks to all my teachers, who have bestowed me with the

erudition that has made this assignment possible.

In particular I wish to extend my earnest and heartfelt thanks to my supervisor

MR. ASAD ALI (Sr. Assistant Professor) Al-Barkaat Institute of Management

Studies , Aligarh whose timely advice, sermonizing words of wisdom and motivation

inspired me into finishing this assignment successfully. I am indebted to him for his

involvement.

I also wish to thank my parents and all those unknown people who agreed on filling my

questionnaires painstakingly and thus helped me actually go ahead with my assignment or my

work would have remained confined to my imagination.

In the end I would also like to add that this report exists because of the cooperation of all

and that I take no credit for this achievement but responsibility for any mistake and

inaccuracies.

Zainab Shakeel

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

TABLE OF CONTENT

Certificate

Declaration

Acknowledgemen

Chapter – 1 Introduction 1-8

Chapter – 2 The Importance of a HR Policies & Practices Strategy 9-20

Chapter – 3 Background of Tata Steel Ltd. 21-28

Chapter – 4 HR policies practices in Tata steel 29-50

Chapter – 5 Research Methodology 51-53

Objectives of the study

Chapter – 6 Data Analysis and Interpretation 54-67

Findings

Chapter – 7 Suggestions and Conclusion 68-73

Suggestions
Recommendations
Limitations
Conclusion

Bibliography 73-74

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

CHAPTER-1

INTRODUCTION

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Introduction

Human resource policies are systems of codified decisions, established by an

organization, to support administrative personnel functions, performance

management, employee relations and resource planning.

Each company has a different set of circumstances, and so develops an individual

set of human resource policies.

Purposes

The establishment of policies can help an organization demonstrate, both

internally and externally, that it meets requirements for diversity, ethics and

training as well as its commitments in relation to regulation and corporate

governance of its employees. For example, in order to dismiss an employee in

accordance with employment law requirements, amongst other considerations, it

will normally be necessary to meet provisions within employment contracts and

collective bargaining agreements. The establishment of an HR Policy which sets

out obligations, standards of behavior and document disciplinary procedures, is

now the standard approach to meeting these obligations.

HR policies can also be very effective at supporting and building the desired

organizational culture.[2] For example recruitment and retention policies might

outline the way the organization values a flexible workforce, compensation

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

policies might support this by offering a 48/52 pay option where employees can

take an extra four weeks holidays per year and receive less pay across the year.

HR Policies & Employment Legislation

Developing HR Policies

This section gives practical information to organizations on how to

develop HR policies and procedures. The guide is designed for small

nonprofits. It will be useful to those who are just beginning to develop

policies and those who are reviewing and updating existing policies. Tools

you will find in this section include a Policy Template, a Guide to

Developing an Employee Handbook, and a template Statement of

Understanding.

Why policies are important

Policies serve several important functions:

Communicate values and expectations for how things are done at your

organization

Keep the organization in compliance with legislation and provide

protection against employment claims

Document and implement best practices appropriate to the organization

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Support consistent treatment of staff, fairness and transparency

Help management to make decisions that are consistent, uniform and

predictable

Protect individuals and the organization from the pressures of

expediency

Defining policy and procedure

A policy is a formal statement of a principle or rule that members of an

organization must follow. Each policy addresses an issue important to the

organization's mission or operations.

A procedure tells members of the organization how to carry out or

implement a policy. Policy is the "what" and the procedure is the "how to".

Policies are written as statements or rules. Procedures are written as

instructions, in logical steps.

Steps in Policy Development

Your workplace is unique and therefore you may need to develop policies

very specific to your organization and type of work, for which there are no

templates or benchmarks. Typically, policy development will follow the

following steps:

Step 1: Establish need for a policy

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Step 2: Develop policy content

Step 3: Draft the policy

Step 4: Write the procedure

Step 5: Review of the policy by key parties

Step 6: Approve the policy

Step 7: Implement the policy

Step 8: Policy review and update

Step 9: Communication of changes to the policy

Role of the board of directors in HR policy development

Boards can play a variety of roles in HR policy development. It is helpful to have

the board clearly define the role they want to take in policy development, whether

they want to be involved in shaping the content or be involved only at the

approval stage. They may decide that only some fundamental policies require

their review and other policies can be approved and managed by the executive

director. Alternatively, a board may form an HR committee to write policies and

procedures. The board may set a time frame for reviewing HR policies, or they

may delegate this responsibility.

If your organization develops a policy on the development, review and update of

organization policies, the role of the board can be outlined in it.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Examples of HR Policy Practiced Areas in an Organization

Human resources policies can be compared to game rules. They safeguard

fairness and equality for everyone in the organization, guide management and

supervisors, and clearly explain expectations. HR policies reflect organizational

culture and ensure compliance with employment legislation. Outlined in the

employee handbook, every HR policy addresses five points: scope, or who it

covers; accountability, or who enforces it; definitions of relevant terms;

procedures; and any relationship to other policies.

Employee Conduct

An organization uses HR policies to notify members of its workforce what it

expects of them. Topics range from dress code to using social media. The steps to

take for absences and thresholds that trigger consequences for absenteeism fall

under an attendance policy. Discipline and corrective action policies detail

procedures and subsequent outcomes for performance issues. Although only

publicly traded firms need an ethics policy to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley

Act of 2002, Business Ethics online magazine editor Michael Connor told Inc.

that all businesses should have an ethics policy to minimize risk. Such a policy

presents the firm's position on honesty, confidentiality and accountability, and

defines gift-giving situations and conflicts of interest.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Employment Terms

The conditions under which employment may end protect employees and

employers when written as policy. "At will" employment, under which an

employer reserves the right to terminate an employee without notice or cause is a

good example. If you allow a 60- or 90-day probationary period for new hires or

if employment hinges on adherence to noncompete requirements, your employee

handbook should cover these policies. Some organizations outline their policies

on reduction in force.

Work Environment

HR policies that deal with the work environment explain the organization's vision

for diversity and other equal employment opportunity criteria, including a zero

tolerance for harassment and grievance procedures. Businesses that adopt smoke-

free and fragrance-free rules include them as HR policies. Safety and related

training policies, whether OSHA-mandated or not, assure employees that the

company takes their well-being seriously. Examples of safety policy topics

include wearing ID badges, visitors, and steps for emergencies such as fire, lost

children, evacuations and inclement weather.

Staffing

Clearly defined policies for recruitment, hiring, promotions and transfers guide

human resources professionals and minimize litigation risks. These road maps

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

address reference checks, background checks, testing requirements and

documentation retention. When and if hiring relatives -- nepotism -- is acceptable

appears in some HR policy manuals, as do onboarding, career planning and the

internal selection process.

Benefits

The company must explain its stance regarding benefits. Paid time off -- personal

days, sick days, vacation, holidays, jury duty and bereavement -- require written

policies to avoid misunderstandings, disappointment and confusion. Programs for

tuition reimbursement and employee assistance also merit separate policies.

Worker's compensation and leaves of absence are prime HR policy candidates, as

are 401(k)s, domestic partner eligibility and perks such as travel vouchers.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

CHAPTER-2

THE IMPORTANCE OF A HR POLICIES &


PRACTICES STRATEGY

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

The Importance of an HR Policies & Practices Strategy


The Organization values Human Resources as the most potent factor towards

maximizing capital returns. Towards this goal and achieving the vision of the

Company, the organization has put with operation processes and avenues around

contemporary people practices covering amongst others, in areas of Sourcing,

Performance Management, Culture, Work life balance, People Capability, People

Engagement, etc. The Organization has an open, transparent culture, enabling

employees to share views, suggestions, and concerns with their Superiors. Assess

to Management at all levels is encouraged.

In continuation of such efforts to build a vibrant workplace, practices & processes

instituted along multiple interventions mentioned above are being continuously

strengthened.

Towards employee motivation, retention & ownership, the Company has

implemented revised policies, reviewed pay across levels from entry level

onwards. The focus of such review is market driven along with rewarding

meritorious performers.

Work life balance activities through recreation, sports and cultural events

continue at various units. Festivals, events are periodically organized, involving

employees and their families to bring in a sense of bonding and camaraderie.

Towards continued building people capability, technical & other trainings

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

whether in-house or external continue to be in focus. Technical training is

reemphasized along with behavioral skill to enhance technical skills and

leadership qualifies.

Infusion of contemporary skills at middle & senior levels continue as also internal

movements, career progression to retain & reward individuals and provide

avenues to shoulder higher responsibilities.

Job rotations, overseas visits and exposures continue towards building people

capability in itself and for the future. Key positions continuity planning has been

put in place to ensure a pipeline of quality & talented individuals.

The organization believes that people are one of its major strengths, repository of

knowledge, merit oriented & value based.

"Why," you may ask, "do I need a policies and practices strategy for my

business?"

The simple answer is...because you have people working for you.

With human nature being what it is, employees will test limits and act "creatively"

in workplace situations, so you need a strategy for developing, communicating and

enforcing a set of policies and practices that reflect your standards of acceptable

behavior.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

But a successful policies and practices strategy does more than draw boundaries; it

also recognizes and addresses people's needs.

There are many different types of people, and not surprisingly, they react

differently to the need for policies and practices based on those differences. For

example, some people prefer there be a written policy for everything, while others

favor having no policies at all and would leave everything open to interpretation as

situations arise. Neither of these extremes contributes to a work environment that's

conducive to high productivity levels. The answer is found in between, with the

right number and types of policies and practices that are focused on a primary

goal--improving individual performance in the workplace.

When you get to the heart of the matter, performance improvement is really about

the process of setting expectations and meeting them. The focus in business is not

just about meeting specific goals, but also about how you achieve them. And the

"how" affects the liabilities you create in the process.

So how can you make sure your employees have clear expectations and are treated

fairly as they work to help build your company? The answer is found in the way

you address four key elements related to the development and deployment of your

policies and practices: roles, rules, consequences and tools.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Roles

People like to have a clear understanding of their role in a company as well as the

roles of others. Every successful team has well-defined positions for its members:

Everyone knows what he or she is to do, how to do it and how their performance

can impact those around them. In business, this means you need to have clear

reporting structures that spell out who's in charge and how tasks are to be

accomplished in the organization.

This approach applies not only to intradepartmental structures, but also to

company-wide or interdepartmental projects. In addition, role definition is a

foundational part of establishing clear performance expectations for each

employee.

Rules

Managers and employees need to share a clear understanding of what is and what

is not acceptable behavior within the company. Unfortunately, in today's

workplace, an employer can be held liable for the bad behavior of an employee,

especially when that bad behavior affects other employees, clients or individuals.

Having a clear set of behavioral expectations is critical to establishing that you're

not contributing to that bad behavior as an employer.

Setting clear and specific behavioral standards in the form of rules establishes a

framework for spotting and addressing violations of those standards. If you rely on

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

loosely defined general standards that aren't properly documented, then violations

become subjective and open to interpretation. The result of such ambiguousness is

often litigation.

Consequences

It's important that you clearly state consequences for violations of your behavioral

standards so that employees know what to expect and have fair warning of those

expectations. In addition, clear consequences help to ensure that you aren't limited

in your options for dealing with improper behaviors.

To establish these standards and violation consequences, sit down and think

through the over-the-line behaviors that won't be permitted in your company. It's

essential that you know ahead of time what employee actions require an

immediate dismissal. Similarly, you want to know what performance issues may

qualify for a more progressive disciplinary approach, and then define the steps

involved in that approach.

By nature, people are complex beings who will confound you one minute and

astound you the next. And except for violations that warrant immediate firings, it's

usually a wise, compassionate and financially prudent course to help people

strengthen their character by overcoming their weaknesses. Also, this approach

provides you with a way to retain experienced employees and recover your

investment in their training.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

I've found that managers are often disappointed in an employee's performance

even though the manager never clearly communicated his or her expectations to

that employee. If you don't take steps to set clear expectations, the consequences

you administer for failure to meet those expectations can seem unfair. This is

extremely important because an employee who feels they've been treated unfairly

can create a great deal of liability. In many cases, the key issue is not whether they

were actually treated unfairly but whether the employee feels or perceives that

they were treated unfairly.

And it doesn't stop with the affected employee. If you or your managers haven't

clearly communicated your expectations to one employee, chances are you haven't

done so with other employees as well and they can be quick to empathize with any

affected workers. It's natural for employees to wonder, "What if that happened to

me?" To avoid the negative effect such a chain-reaction can have on your

workplace, be clear about your expectations with all employees at all times. Most

employees will appreciate and respect your forthright clarity.

Building a great company has a lot to do with how people work together. Policies

and practices can improve the way your employees interact, while minimizing the

personnel obstacles that often arise in today's workplaces.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Tools

Tools address the question of how you support the people in your company who

manage other employees. When faced with a specific personnel issue, what

resources are available to them? Do they have an employee handbook or a policy

guide? What about regular training in company policies and practices, coupled

with simple, easy-to-use forms to guide them when dealing with particular issues?

Are you giving them a clear directive on working with your human resources

personnel or legal representatives? Are your resources available online?

Tools like these are vital not just to help avoid litigation, but also to minimize the

time it takes for you to deal with productivity-draining people issues instead of

core business matters. Because many small-business owners lack these resources

and aren't sure where to turn for help, they may use attorneys and HR consultants

on an a la carte basis to address such issues. Other businesses call on professional

employer organizations like Administaff to provide the support of a full-service

human resources department.

Whatever your approach, the key to success is to devote the time and resources it

takes to develop a policies and practices strategy for your business before the need

arises. It's an investment that can pay large dividends in increased productivity and

minimized litigation. And it's an essential component of your comprehensive

people strategy.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

How to Create Effective and Legal HR Policies

A policy is a guide to action and decision-making under a given set of

circumstances that ensures consistency and compliance with the law within the

framework of an employer‟s objectives and management philosophy. A

comprehensive written policy manual is essential in today‟s complex, competitive,

and regulation-ridden corporate environment.

There must be a single, up-to-date, authoritative source of guidance and

information to which managers and supervisors can turn not only in situations

where the "right" course of action is unclear but also in cases where they are

tempted to act on memory or instinct. With a policy manual to point the way, or to

back up what they feel is a justifiable action or decision, company managers and

supervisors will be able to act swiftly, decisively, fairly, legally, and consistently.

Written policies should do more than help supervisors and managers make

difficult decisions. They should also provide the framework and background for

such decisions, so that supervisors can explain to their subordinates (and to

themselves) why a certain action or decision is the right one under the

circumstances. Some policy manuals give a brief introduction to each policy,

stating the reason a policy is needed in this area, and what the employer hopes to

achieve through implementation of the policy.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Employee handbooks may create legal liability issues when a policy either runs

counter to a law mandate or when breach of contract or wrongful discharge claims

arise from any failure to follow handbook policies and procedures. While

employee handbook policies must be written within the context of the various

federal and state laws governing employment, they should be written in a way that

employees and supervisors (and a potential jury) understand.

In addition, employers must take care to preserve the at-will relationship in states

where that is the standard. For example, many state courts have held that

disciplinary policies included in employee handbooks can create implied contracts

requiring employers to follow all the disciplinary steps before terminating an

employee. This is problematic, especially when an employer is faced with an

employee who has engaged in serious misconduct. Therefore, employers should

make sure their policies include appropriate language reserving the right to decide

what disciplinary action is appropriate in any given situation.

If an employer has an employee handbook for policies, the handbook should

include:

An at-will statement and contract disclaimer

A statement regarding the employer‟s right to revise the policies

An acknowledgment form for the employee to sign

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

The following policies are what many HR professionals and legal counsel consider

“must haves:”

Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) statement (covering Title VII of the

Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, Age Discrimination

in Employment Act, and relevant state discrimination law)

Policy against harassment and the complaint procedure

Family and Medical Leave Act Policy

The following are other policies that HR professionals should consider for their

organization:

Employee classification (exempt/nonexempt) policy

Compensation and payroll practices policy

Paid time off policy

Leaves of absence (non-FMLA) policy

Other benefits policy

Performance evaluation policy

Work rules and discipline policy

Access to personnel files policy

Reference policy

Candidate referral program

Grooming and dress code

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Grievance or open-door policy

Other policies unique to the organization (like safety, encouraging

volunteerism, etc.)

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

CHAPTER-3

BACKGROUND OF TATA STEEL LIMITED

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

TATA STEEL LIMITED

Tata Steel Limited (formerly Tata Iron and Steel Company Limited (TISCO)) is

an Indian multinational steel-making company headquartered in Mumbai,

Maharashtra, India, and a subsidiary of the Tata Group. It was the 12th largest

steel producing company in the world in 2012, with an annual crude steel capacity

of 23.8 million tonnes, and the second largest private-sector steel company in

India (measured by domestic production) with an annual capacity of 9.7 million

tonnes after SAIL and JSW Steel

Tata Steel has manufacturing operations in 26 countries, including Australia,

China, India, the Netherlands, Singapore, Thailand and the United Kingdom, and

employs around 80,500 people. Its largest plant is located in Jamshedpur,

Jharkhand. In 2007 Tata Steel acquired the UK-based steel maker Corus which

was the largest international acquisition by an Indian company till that date.

It was ranked 471st in the 2013 Fortune Global 500 ranking of the world's biggest

corporations. It was the seventh most valuable Indian brand of 2013 as per Brand

Finance.

On February 12, 2012 Tata Steel completed 100 years of steel making in India.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

History

TISCo is a worldwide steel industry founded in 1907 by Dorabji Tata. The

company is situated in Mumbai. TISCo stands for Tata Iron and Steel Company

Limited.Tata Iron and Steel Company was established by Dorabji Tata on August

25, 1907, as part of his fatherJamsetji's Tata Group. By 1939 it operated the

largest steel plant in the British Empire. The company launched a major

modernization and expansion program in 1951. Later in 1958, the program was

upgraded to 2 Million metric tonnes per annum (MTPA) project. [9] By 1970, the

company employed around 40,000 people at Jamshedpur, with a further 20,000 in

the neighboring coal mines. In 1971 and 1979, there were unsuccessful attempts

to nationalise the company. In 1990, it started expansion plan and established its

subsidiary Tata Inc. in New York. The company changed its name from TISCO to

Tata Steel in 2005.

Acquisitions

NatSteel in 2004: In August 2004, Tata Steel agreed to acquire the steel making

operations of the Singapore based NatSteel for S$486.4 million in cash.


[13]
NatSteel had ended 2003 with turnover of S$1.4 billion and a profit before tax

of S$47 million. The steel businesses of NatSteel would be run by the company

through a wholly owned subsidiary called Natsteel Asia Pte Ltd. The

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

acquisition was completed in February 2005. At the time of acquisition, NatSteel

had a capacity of about 2 million tonnes per annum of finished steel.[15][16]

Millennium Steel in 2005: Tata Steel acquired a majority stake in the Thailand-

based steelmaker Millennium Steel for a total cost of $130 million. It paid US$ 73

million to Siam Cement for a 40% stake and offered to pay 1.13 baht per share for

another 25% of the shares of other shareholders. For the year 2004, Millennium

Steel had revenues of US$406 million and a profit after tax of US$29 million. At

the time of acquisition, Millennium Steel was the largest steel company in

Thailand with a capacity of 1.7 million metric tonnes per annum, producing long

products for construction and engineering steel for auto industries. [16] Millennium

Steel has now been renamed to Tata Steel Thailand and is headquartered

in Bangkok. On March 31, 2013, it held approx. 68% shares in the acquired

company.

Corus in 2007: On 20 October 2006, Tata Steel signed a deal with Anglo-Dutch

company, Corus to buy 100% stake at £4.3bn ($8.1 billion) at 455 pence per

share. On 19 November 2006, the Brazilian steel company Companhia

Siderúrgica Nacional (CSN) launched a counter offer for Corus at 475 pence per

share, valuing it at £4.5 billion. On 11 December 2006, Tata preemptively upped

its offer to 500 pence per share, which was within hours trumped by CSN's offer

of 515 pence per share, valuing the deal at £4.9 billion. The Corus board promptly

recommended both the revised offers to its shareholders. On 31 January 2007,

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Tata Steel won their bid for Corus after offering 608 pence per share, valuing

Corus at £6.7 billion ($12 billion).

In 2005, Corus employed around 47,300 people worldwide, including 24,000 in

the UK. At the time of acquisition, Corus was four times larger than Tata Steel,

in terms of annual steel production.Corus was the world's 9th largest producer of

Steel, whereas Tata Steel was at 56th position. The acquisition made Tata Steel

world's 5th largest producer of Steel.

2 Rolling mill companies in Vietnam in 2007: Tata Steel through its wholly

owned Singapore subsidiary, NatSteel Asia Pte Ltd, acquired controlling stake in

two rolling mill companies located in Vietnam: Structure Steel Engineering Pte

Ltd (100% stake) and Vinausteel Ltd (70% stake). The enterprise value for the

acquisition was $41 million. With this acquisition, Tata Steel got hold of two

rolling mills, a 250k tonnes per year bar/wire rod mill operated by SSE Steel Ltd

and a 180k tonnes per year reinforcing bar mill operated by Vinausteel Ltd.[21][22]

Operations

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

The Tata Centre in Kolkata, India

Tata Steel is headquartered in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India and has its marketing

headquarters at the Tata Centre in Kolkata, West Bengal. It has a presence in

around 50 countries with manufacturing operations in 26 countries including:

India, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, UAE, Ivory Coast, Mozambique, South

Africa, Australia, United Kingdom, The Netherlands, France and Canada.[23]

Tata Steel primarily serves customers in the automotive, construction, consumer

goods, engineering, packaging, lifting and excavating, energy and power,

aerospace, shipbuilding, rail and defence and security sectors.[24]

Expansion plans

Tata Steel has set a target of achieving an annual production capacity of 100

million tons by 2015; it is planning for capacity expansion to be balanced roughly

50:50 between green field developments and acquisitions.[25][26] Overseas

acquisitions have already added an additional 21.4 million tonnes of capacity,

including Corus (18.2 million tonnes), NatSteel (2 million tonnes) and

Millennium Steel (1.2 million tonnes). Tata plans to add another 29 million

tonnes of capacity through acquisitions.

Major greenfield steel plant expansion projects planned by Tata Steel include:

a 6 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Kalinganagar, Odisha, India;

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

an expansion of the capacity of its plant in Jharkhand, India from 6.8 to

10 million tonnes per annum;

a 5 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Chhattisgarh, India (Tata Steel

signed a memorandum of understanding with the Chhattisgarh government in

2005; the plant is facing strong protest from tribal people);

a 3 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Iran;

a 2.4 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Bangladesh

a 10.5 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Vietnam (feasibility studies

are underway); and

a 6 million tonne per annum capacity plant in Haveri, Karnataka.

Awards and recognitions

In 2013, Tata Steel was ranked India's 7th most admired company by Fortune

magazine. It was India's most admired company in 2012.[42][43]

In 2013, Tata Steel received the Most Admired Knowledge

Enterprises (MAKE) award for 2012 at Global and Asian level. The company

has previously been recognised by the Indian MAKE awards on six accounts

since its inception in 2005.

It won the 'Golden Peacock' award in 2009 for its corporate social

responsibility (CSR) initiatives.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

In 2008, Tata Steel was awarded Deming Application Prize for excellence in

Total Quality Management.

The company is part of the composite Dow Jones Sustainability World Index

(DJSI World) since 2008. DJSI World comprises leaders in sustainability (the

top 10% in terms of performance), selected on the basis of long-term

economic, environmental and social criteria, from the largest 2500 companies

in the world.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Chapter-4

HR POLICIES PRACTICES IN TATA STEEL

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

HUMAN RESOURCE POLICIES OF TATA STEEL

MANPOWER PLANNING

Manpower planning enables HR department to project its short to long term needs

on the basis of its departmental plans so that itcan adjust its manpower

requirements to meet changing priorities. The more changing the environment the

department is in, the more the department needs manpower planning to show:

The number of recruits required in a specified timeframe and the

availability of talent

Early indications of potential recruitment or retention

difficulties

Surpluses or deficiencies in certain ranks or grades  availability of suitable

qualified and experienced successors

PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL

Performance appraisal assesses an individual's performance against previously

agreed work objectives. Performance appraisal is normally carried out once a year.

They assess key result areas of their employees, workers and supervisors. Since it

is a joint responsibility of the individual and the supervisor; every individual in

TISCO are co prime to each other.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

It also enables management to compare performance and potential between

employees and subordinates of the same rank.

Rating of employees is done by their performances. It is given as per ranks very

good, average, and average to medium and below average. On the basis of these

rankings highest reward of the year is given to best suitable worker. The better

performing employee gets the majority of available merit pay increases, bonuses,

and promotions.

TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT

The Technical Education Advisory Committee guides employee

development and training in line with strategic goals of the company and

long-term objectives. The in-house training centres impart majority of

the training programmes. (Technical Institute & Management

Development Centre).

Employees are also deputed to other organizations and training centres in

the country such as ITI and abroad for specialized training.

Officers are trained into business managers through special general

management programmes such as at CEDEP, France.

They are trained to know the changes in environment, market, and in steel

prices.

They also get training of problem solving techniques, conflict

management, etc.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

COMPENSATION PLANNING

□ Itdepends on financial capabilities.

□ Yearly increments are given.

□ Compensation for inflation is common for all employees.(flat rates)

□ It is decided by union and management where various demands are negotiated.

□ It is paid as per other industries.  Individual performance bonus is also given.

DEVELOPMENT OF EMPLOYEES

At Tata Steel, there is a continuous effort of staying in touch with

employees to ensure that there is the right culture to engage them in

consistent performance improvement. There are well-established and

effective arrangements at each business location for transparent

communication and consultation with Works Councils and Trade Union

representatives. Further, the Company has always registered steady quality

improvement and productivity enhancement through dedicated efforts of

the Company Performance Improvement teams, focused on technical best

practice transfer and the value of knowledge networks.

Towards the well-being of employees Tata Steel has put into practice many

initiatives, events and programmes that have helped to create not only an

enduring loyalty amongst employees but also enabled them to have a more

fulfilled life.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Special benefits provided to employees

Medical facilities:

Free medical facilities for employees and their family, which continues

even after retirement.

Housing facilities:

Subsidised electricity, water and housing facilities to all employees.

Higher studies:

Monetary incentives to employees acquiring higher qualifications in a related

field along with study leave, scholarships etc. when necessary.

HolidayHomes:

Tata Steel has five holiday homes for benefit of employees during vacation.

Tata Steel Officer's Beach Club:

All officers ofTata Steel are eligible to be members of the Beach Club that

offers holidays in elite hospitality chains.

Family Benefit Scheme:

In the tragic case of a fatality in theWorks, a monthly pension equal to the

amount of the last drawn salary of the deceased is given to the legal heir until

the time the deceased would have attained the age of 60.

DEVELOPING PEOPLE

Valuing its people as a great asset,Tata Steel is committed to their development,

both in order to benefit the individual and to benefit the Company through

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

increased knowledge and skills. In order to leverage maximum potential of human

resource to achieve business objectives the Company recognises that enrichment

of people will help retain a motivated workforce in a competitive environment.

Skills Development - Non-officers

Skills training is a process that begins at the time of an employee joining the

company and continues throughout his or her career. Employees work in clusters

of multi-skilled workers and move across and within clusters on improving their

skills levels. The Technical Training Institute imparts vocational and basic skills

training; the departments impart on-the- job training.

In order to promote self-directed learning, the Company has introduced e-learning

whereby employees can access electronic courses from their departmental e-

Learning centres.

Skills Development - Officers

Tata Steel Management Development Centre conducts a number of managerial

and functional competency based programmes for officers and supervisors.The

objectives of these programmes are:

To build individual capability by enhancing managerial and functional

competencies which are critical to operations, service and support functions.

To build a leadership pipeline in the organisation to prepare the people to meet

the challenges of growth, globalisationand change.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Equal opportunity practises

Tata Steel is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis

of race, caste, religion, colour, ancestry, marital status, sex, age or nationality. The

Company

Affirmative Action Policy promotes equal access to its employment and

opportunities and all decisions are merit based. Respect for equal opportunities as

set out in the Tata Code of Conduct is followed. The HR Policy and Affirmative

Action Policy are monitored by the Ethics Counsellor and supported by an

effective grievance redressal mechanism.

Tata Steel encourages female employees to advance their career with initiatives

dedicated towards personal development and professional advancement. The

Women Empowerment Cell examines and addresses the issues and concerns of

female employees and ensures that they do not miss out on any growth

opportunity

Free d om of association and collective bargaining

Tata Steel respects the employees

Right to exercise freedom of association and collective bargaining and provides

appropriate support for this. There is an established system of joint working and

collective bargaining, which ensures that every employee is able to exercise this

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

right without any fear. Pioneering the concept in India, a system of Joint

Consultation has been in place inTata Steel for more than 50 years.

A Fortune 500 company, the Tata Steel Group is the world's second most

geographically diversified steel producer, employing around 80,000 people across

five continents in nearly 50 countries. The Group's vision is to be the world's steel

industry benchmark in 'Value Creation' and 'Corporate Citizenship' through the

excellence of its people, its innovative approach and overall conduct.

Underpinning the vision is a performance culture committed to targets, safety and

social responsibility, continuous improvement, openness and transparency. To

know more, The Hindu Opportunities spoke to Mr. P Senthil Kumar, Chief

Human Resource Officer, Tata Steel.

What are your unique HR practices regarding recruitment?

Tata Steel has always endeavoured to offer some of the best HR practices and the

recruitment process is no exception. The recruitment process is unique as it entails

identifying talent from the pool through various practices. Some of them can be

enlisted as follows:

Opportunities for employee wards - domain wise written test, assessment centre,

personal interview.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

We also select talent through Lateral Recruitment process which involves

interview by HR, subject matter expert and personal interviews.

Group Migration Policy for our employees, which enables the group employees to

explore opportunities to work at Tata Steel from other group companies.

We provide career opportunities for down the line people and internal job postings

ensuring that the best talent pool deserves the right opportunity in bringing the

best practices in the company.

Campus Selection - B schools, T Schools - written test, psychometric test,

personal interview.

Shadow recruitment for niche senior talent

What are your initiatives regarding employee relations, employee

development and growth.

Employee relations

Tata Steel is of the opinion that people are its greatest asset and has therefore

adopted the best practices for its employees.

Trade Unions: The Company believes that a healthy union is an asset for it. Trade

unions are therefore present and encouraged at all locations. All the non-officers

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

(~86% of the total workforce) are represented by 26 independent trade unions

across all locations.

Joint Consultations: Tata Steel is a pioneer of joint consultation in India. A unique

system of joint consultation has been in place in Tata Steel for more than 55 years

in which both management and employee representatives consult each other at all

levels on matters relating to the progress and prosperity of the organisation,

including production, productivity, quality, safety, welfare, training, etc. A

minimum of 56 Joint Departmental Council meetings are held in a year.

Grievance Handling Mechanism: Grievances and complaints of employees at Tata

Steel are handled through well-defined and user friendly mechanisms in order to

redress them at the initial stages thereby ensuring employee satisfaction. The

informal grievance resolution mechanism is an online process and goes by the

name of “Samadhan”. The formal grievance resolution is divided into three stages,

with each stage being reached when a solution is not arrived in the previous stage.

These are further referred to the Central Works Committee.

HR Service Desk: In line with Tata Steel‟s philosophy of “Values Stronger than

Steel”, creating “trust” among employees is an inseparable part of the long term

vision of the company.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Benefits and Facilities: Tata Steel has many „firsts‟ in the area of employee

welfare. Several welfare initiatives of Tata Steel were institutionalised even before

it was formalised worldwide as a convention of the ILO. The Steel Works is the

only steel manufacturing unit and the largest of its kind in the world, to adopt and

enforce SA 8000 as a tool to improve workplace standards.

Employee Health: Apart from continuous preventive health surveillance of

employees (which includes both statutory & non-statutory health check-ups), a

unique programme on Wellness@Workplace has been launched across the

company.

Higher Studies: Monetary incentives to employees acquiring higher technical

qualifications in a related field.

Employee development and growth

The company believes in providing continuous skill and competence upgrading of

all employees by providing access to necessary learning opportunities, on an equal

and non-discriminatory basis. As a management approach Tata Steel has identified

the following strategies to meet this challenge: (i) maximise utilisation of available

employees through right skilling and (ii) recruitment of technically qualified

persons.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Tata Steel encourages a holistic approach to learning and development through its

well established in-house training facilities and approaches. The Tata Steel

Management Development Centre (TMDC) endeavours to provide primarily

managerial training and also functional training to all officers of Tata Steel, the

Shavak Nanavati Technical Institute (SNTI) provides the essential technical and

functional training to all officers and non-officers of the Company.

Moreover, Tata Steel ensures the development and growth of its employees in the

best possible ways through the following steps:

70:20:10 Learning and Development Programme

The 70:20:10 concept of Learning and Development of officers has been launched

with an objective of creating a culture where every manager takes ownership for

the development of his/her subordinates. This also helps in instituting systems so

that employees are trained, coached and mentored in a systematic manner such

that they acquire appropriate knowledge, skill and attitude required by the

organisation and are prepared in advance to take up higher responsibilities.

70% of Learning and Development takes place from real life and on-the job

experiences, tasks and problem solving.

20% of Learning and Development takes place through coaching, mentoring,

discussions, guidance by superiors/experts.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

10% of the learning comes from formal Class Room Training.

Job Rotation and Career Planning

In order to eliminate drudgery and maximise the learning opportunities for our

employees, robust processes have been put in place pertaining to job rotation and

career planning. These processes also help raise and retain the technical

capabilities within the organisation by ensuring development of officers through

planned rotation to keep meaningful longevity in each position so that the

executive develops deeper functional capability.

Employee Contact Programme

In addition to the various Employee Satisfaction and Engagement surveys, a

formal method for collecting and resolving officers‟ inputs, named “Employee

Contact Programme”, has been launched in 2009. The key objectives of this

programme are to:

Capture employee concerns on an on-going basis

Analyse concerns to identify need for policy changes

Create a repository of the above data

Create one to one connect with officers

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Ensuring Development and Growth of Employees (EDGE)

The Performance Management System called „Ensuring Development & Growth

of Employees‟ (EDGE) is one of the most important people process for executives

in the organisation which cuts across all levels and sections.

Objectives of EDGE

Align the activities and behaviours of individuals with company's corporate

objectives and values

Develop the capabilities of employees to enhance performance of

individuals or organisation Culture enabling process - empowerment,

creditability, values

Supporting a culture of excellent superior-subordinate relationship

What are your initiatives regarding gender and diversity workforce?

It‟s our belief that businesses should provide and maintain equal opportunities

irrespective of caste, creed, gender, race, religion, disability or sexual orientation.

The core principles enshrined in the policy, and now applied across the Tata Steel

Group worldwide, are:

Equality of opportunity

Continuing personal development

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Fairness and

Mutual trust and teamwork

These principles are underpinned by the five Tata Group core values: integrity,

understanding, excellence, unity and responsibility.

There are a number of initiatives for women which work under the umbrella of

SWATI, the women empowerment cell of Tata Steel. We have self-development

programmes such as Pehchan, Empowering Women Managers to Succeed and

other developmental programmes.

How challenging is it to manage a diverse workforce across countries and

different cultures?

There is a need to understand culture and ethnicities in the areas we operate. The

cultural and value underpinnings are different hence expectations are quite varied

from across cultures. We have policies and initiatives undertaken to address the

needs which are:

Formalising a policy for movement across geographies.

Formalising a policy for settling down of the family at new location.

Formalising a policy for fitment on return.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

How are your HR policies tuned to deal with the challenges that are entailed

in managing a global workforce?

To deal with the challenges of managing a global workforce, our HR policies are

customised to local requirements as well as global requirements as per the needs

of our employees.

To manage global requirements, we have compensation policy which covers

security, political and economic risks of the location and based on which, mobility

premium is inbuilt into the compensation structure.

What HR policies have you planned for your employees in the future?

To support the expansion of our existing facilities, we have planned the following

initiatives:

Recruitment and selection: The process involves Reporting officers/ Heads

of the process in counselling and training for their colleagues

Identifying talent and working with virtual offices

Video simulations to assess the skills required for the job

Employer Branding: Employer to “brand” the organisation as a preferred

employer

People centric - considering employees as customers

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

For our newly joined officers, we are working on a policy to ease their settling

down process in the organisation. To entertain our customers at Marketing and

Sales locations, we are working on policy on Club Membership.

„People are our greatest asset‟

With the Tata Steel group rapidly evolving and expanding its reach strategically

and geographically, there is need to prepare its leaders, both current and future, to

overcome adversities. Consequently, leadership development across all levels is

the focus of its employee policies, along with people development and

growth. Suresh Tripathy, the head of HR at Tata Steel, in conversation

with Nithin Rao, notes that the other key objective is upholding the Tata group‟s

values through transparency and fairness in HR practices and policies.

What are the focus points of the HR practice and the policies that are

pursued at Tata Steel?

At Tata Steel the prime focus in terms of HR practices is on people development

and growth, and employee relations, which is imbibed in the culture of caring for

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

our people. Tata Steel has always held the view that people are its greatest asset.

It has adopted the best standards for employee well-being and quality of life,

strongly promoting workforce rights. The other focal point is upholding the Tata

values through transparency and fairness in HR practices and policies.

One of the primary challenges that HR professionals consistently voice

relates to retaining and rewarding your best employees. How is this managed

at Tata Steel?

Our employee engagement practices, facilities and benefits are aligned towards

ensuring retention of employees. Our engagement survey results are constantly

acted upon to maintain competitive compensation, productive work environment,

employee involvement in improvement initiatives, opportunities for learning and

growth, performance-based rewards and recognition, high standards of amenities

and facilities (housing, medical, education, recreation, social support), and two-

way communication, to name a few.

Leadership development also finds frequent mention as an HR challenge,

especially of late. What has the experience of Tata Steel been on this issue?

The change in the business scenario across the world has been centrestage at the

Tata Steel group. While meeting the current business challenge has been the

focus, there is a clear mandate to be continually resolved to not only weather the

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

current economic storm, but to prepare and equip the group for a healthy future as

a leading global steel organisation.

Further, the business environment is swiftly changing, bringing in its own set of

opportunities and challenges; at the same time, the group is rapidly evolving and

expanding its reach strategically, geographically and culturally. The new

geographies and the shifting environments of the businesses demand that we

prepare our leaders (current and future) to face and overcome such adversities.

Hence, for a sustainable future, leadership development at all levels is the focus

across the Tata Steel organisation.

Business growth has posed a challenge, of a kind never experienced by the

company in the past, resulting in a 45-percent increase in demand for leadership

positions over FY10. Further, 17 percent of our senior leaders are retiring in the

next three years. This has compounded the challenge of meeting the increased

demand in an already constrained supply situation. The executive committee,

headed by the managing director, owns the development and succession plans for

the top positions and reviews availability of talent across all functions during

talent reviews and succession planning meetings.

It has been said that the ethical problems that employees confront are among

the most difficult to resolve for HR managers. Do you agree, and how does

your organisation deal with such issues?

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Ethical business practices have been at the core of the Tata Steel business since

the time of its inception, in line with the Founder‟s philosophy. In order to ensure

that all our employees exhibit behaviour that is consistent with the group‟s ethical

values, Tata Steel adopted the Tata Code of Conduct (formally articulated in

1998) which is applicable to all employees, vendors and other stakeholders. Our

HR managers have been facilitated by clear policies that provide them with

guidelines in resolving ethical problems. A framework is also provided for taking

action against those found violating the code. Senior leadership support provides

further strength to fair and firm redressal of problems, depending on the gravity of

the issue.

Tata Steel encourages whistleblowing and the reporting of instances of unethical

behaviour to the management, while ensuring full protection to the whistleblower

in its „whistleblower protection and reward policy‟.

Companies talk about encouraging teamwork and creating a culture of

collaboration. How important is the role of HR in making this happen?

Culturally, at Tata Steel, there has been specific emphasis on teamwork. Our

work systems are designed to deliver day-to-day output by people working as

teams or clusters; this has matured to the state of being self-managed.

Our incentive schemes and rewards encourage working and delivering as a team.

The total quality management way of working encourages continuous

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

improvement in systems and processes through daily management, small group

activities and suggestion management.

Tata Steel has created a culture of collaboration through its proactive approach to

stakeholder engagement, joint consultative processes and mechanisms for conflict

resolution. This has been rewarded with over eight decades of industrial harmony

and the licence to operate in the very communities in which the company began

operations more than a century ago. Tata Steel takes pride that there are several

instances where it has been the employer of choice for a family for three and even

four generations.

Tata Steel respects its employees‟ right to exercise freedom of association and

collective bargaining. It has ensured that every employee is able to exercise this

right without fear. That‟s why we have enjoyed 85 years of industrial harmony to

date, with no strikes since 1928.

Is the recruitment component of the HR department’s responsibility more

problematic now than before, especially so in India? How do you tap talent

in the circumstances?

Recruitment now would not really fall under the label of „problematic ‟, though it

is much more challenging than before. With the mushrooming of the economy,

each sector actually has to tap the same sources of talent, be they freshers (from

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

campuses) or laterals (from other industries). The number of „quality ‟ campuses

has more or less remained the same, though some of them have increased their

number of seats. In case of laterals, companies may try to influence potential

employees with higher compensation, which may or may not be sustainable.

Here, brand image and employee value proposition, to name two factors, give an

edge to reputed companies.

How exactly does employee engagement manifest itself in your company?

Also, in this context, how important is employee feedback and the company’s

response to feedback?

Employee engagement is a state of emotional and intellectual commitment. An

initiative on employee engagement has been undertaken for white-collared

employees at Tata Steel in partnership with Aon Hewitt to measure the current

levels of engagement of officers in India.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Chapter-5

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY:

Universe:
Finite

Research Design:

Descriptive Research Design

Types of Data:

Primary Data

Secondary

Data

Data Collection Methods:

1. Primary Data

Questionnaire

2. Secondary Data

Magazines

Reports

Sampling Method:

Random Sampling

Sampling Area:

Aligarh

Sampling Size:

100
Sample Unit:

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Tata Steel

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Objectives of Study

To determine the various constitute of the policies in banking organization.

To study the implication of the human resources concerning policies over

banks.

To understand the perception of ehttp://www.globalplacementshyd.

com/indexmployees towards HR policy of banks.

To study the reasons that is contributing in strengthening or weakening of

the banking policy structure.

To study the advances public understanding of the role of the Human

resources management and its vitality for efficient running of the Banks.

To traces the overall status of HRM practices of the public sector industrial

enterprises.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Chapter-6
DATA ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Data Analysis and Interpretation


Q.1.Are you satisfied the present HR Policy?
a. Highly Satisfactory [ 25% ]
b. Satisfactory [ 30% ]
c. Average [ 20% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 15% ]

30
30 25
25
20 20
15 15
10 Highly satisfactory
5 10
Satisfactory Average Dissatisfactory
0 Highly Dissatisfactory

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 25% respondents highly satisfied 30%
respondents satisfied, 20% average, 10% dissatisfied and remaining 15% highly
dissatisfied with this HR Policy.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q2. Are you satisfied the medical benefits provided by the Organization for the
employees & their families?

a. Highly Satisfactory [ 20% ]


b. Satisfactory [ 30% ]
c. Average [ 25% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 15% ]

30
30
25
25
20
20
15
15 Highly satisfactory
10 Satisfactory Average Dissatisfactory
10 Highly Dissatisfactory

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 20% respondents highly satisfied 30%
respondents satisfied, 25% average, 10% dissatisfied and remaining 15% highly
dissatisfied with this medical facility for employees and their families.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q3. How do you rate the Conveyance Allowance offered by the Organization?
a. Highly Satisfactory [ 25% ]
b. Satisfactory [ 20% ]
c. Average [ 15% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 30% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]

Highly satisfactory SatisfactoryAverage


Dissatisfactory Highly Dissatisfactory

10%
25%

30%

20%

15%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 25% respondents highly satisfied 20%
respondents satisfied, 10% average, 30% dissatisfied and remaining 10% highly
dissatisfied with this conveniences allowance.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q4. Rate the Overtime allowance offered by the Organization?


a. Highly Satisfactory [ 20% ]
b. Satisfactory [ 15% ]
c. Average [ 25% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 30% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]

Highly satisfactorySatisfactoryAverageDissatisfactoryHighly Dissatisfactory

10%
20%

30%
15%

25%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 20% respondents highly satisfied 15%
respondents satisfied, 25% average, 30% dissatisfied and remaining 10% highly
dissatisfied with this overtime allowance.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q5. How do you rate leave policy of the Organization?


a. Highly Satisfactory [ 15% ]
b. Satisfactory [ 20% ]
c. Average [ 25% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 30% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]

30
30
25
25
20
20
15
15 Highly satisfactory
10 Satisfactory Average Dissatisfactory
10 Highly Dissatisfactory

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 15% respondents highly satisfied 20%
respondents satisfied, 25% average, 30% dissatisfied and remaining 10% highly
dissatisfied with the leave Policy by the company provide their workers.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q6. Does working in the organization give you a feeling of security?


a. Yes [ 70% ]
b. No [ 30% ]

YesNo

30%

70%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 30% respondents feeling of security and
remaining 70% respondents not feeling with this security.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q7. Does the organization provide housing facility for employees?


a. Yes [ 60% ]
b. No [ 40% ]

YesNo

40%

60%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 40% respondents satisfied and remaining 60%
respondents not satisfied with the house facility provide by company for their
workers or employees.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q8. Which of the following factors which motivates you most ?


a. Salary Increase [ 30% ]
b. Promotion [ 20% ]
c. Leave [ 10% ]
d. Motivational talks [ 15% ]
c. Recognition [ 25% ]

30
30
25
25
20
20
15 Salary increase
15 Promotion Leave Motivation Recognition
10
10
5
0

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 30% respondents motivated by salary increase,
20% respondents motivated by promotion, 10% respondents motivated by leave,
15% respondents motivated by motivational talks and remaining 25% respondents
motivated by recognition.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q9. How often is training and development provided to the employees?


a. Once in a month [ 40% ]
b. Once in a year [ 45% ]
c. Others [ 15% ]

45
45 40
40
35
30
25
20 Once in a month
15
10 15 Once in a year
5 Others
0

Once in a Once in a year Others


month

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 40% respondents have training once in a month
45% respondents have training once in a year and remaining 15% respondent
have others period.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q10. On what basis is the compensation for employees calculated?


a. Overall performance [ 50% ]
b. Over time [ 20% ]
c. Code of conduct [ 30% ]

Overall performance Overtime Code of conduct

30%

50%

20%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 50% respondents have basis of compensation is
overall performance, 20% respondent have basis of expectation is overtime and
remaining 30% respondents have basis of compensation is code of conduct.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q11. Additional compensation package including holiday, sick time and health
insurance meet employees expectation?

a. Highly Satisfactory [ 15% ]


b. Satisfactory [ 20% ]
c. Average [ 25% ]
d. Dissatisfactory [ 30% ]
e. Highly Dissatisfactory [ 10% ]

30
30
25
25
20
20 15
Highly satisfactory
15 10 Satisfactory Average Dissatisfactory
Highly Dissatisfactory
10

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 15% respondents highly satisfied 20%
respondents satisfied, 25% average, 30% dissatisfied and remaining 10% highly
dissatisfied with the facilities that are provided by the Bank for their employees.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Q12. In HR department has been successful in reduce adverse condition and


change?
a. To certain extent [ 40% ]
b. To some extent [ 30% ]
c. Not at all [ 30% ]

To certain extent To some extentNot at all

30%
40%

30%

Interpretation:

In the above graph we show that 40% respondents to certain extent, 30%
respondents to some extent and remaining 30% respondents not at all.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Findings

1. It has been found that mostly employees are satisfied with the medical
benefit of the organization.
2. It is also found that many employees are satisfied with the HR policy
of the organization.
3. Many employees are found to have average response towards
conveyance allowance offered by the organization.
4. Maximum employees are found dissatisfied with the overtime
allowance offered by the organization.
5. Most of the employees are found dissatisfied with the leave policy.
6. Most of the employees are not feeling service in the organization.
7. Most of the organization does not provide housing facility to their
employees.
8. In any of the organization increment of salary motivate the employee
mostly.
9. Mostly organization organized yearly training and development
programme to their employees.
10.Most of the employees are dissatisfied with additional compensation
provided by the organisation.
11.Mostly organization compensation their employees on the basis of
their overall performance.
12.Most of the HR Dept. of the origination is found successful in
reducing adverse condition to certain extent.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Chapter-7

SUGGESTIONS AND CONCLUSION

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

SUGGESTIONS

1. Organisation try to provide good overtime allowance to motivate the

employees towards their work.

2. Organisation should provide housing facility according to the employees

level.

3. Organisation time to time make changes in the HR Policy for the welfare of

the employees.

4. HR Department should make policy to cope-up adverse condition coming

from the external environment.

5. During compensation programme code of conduct is also be considered by

the organisation.

6. Organisation should provide separate vehicle for office work.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

RECOMMENDATIONS

It is worthwhile to consider broad-basing the courses conducted in these

institutions among other higher –level educational institutions, so that

specializations in the area of banking and financial services becomes an

option in higher education curricular.

There is a need to adopt global best practices in financial sector regulation

and supervision and adapt them to the domestic environment. This largely

depends on the functioning and policies of public institutions, such as the

RBI as it is increasingly subject to public discussion and debate.

This calls for greater transparency more effective communication, and a

high degree of professionalism in the bank‟s staff, are the need of the hour.

Continuous up gradations of human resources management strategies with

a view to enhancing the level of knowledge, sharpening skills are and also

to important the necessary and work culture must be installed.

There is a pressing need to develop work practices which encourage

efficiency in this banking sector.

Incentive structures need to be conceived, supported by appropriate training

and motivations, which aligns the employee‟s goals and orientations with

the core competencies and strategic advantages of the institution

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

This service sector has to explore the feasibility of entering into

collaborative arrangements with universities and other institutions in India

and abroad to identify and provide specialized training in the financial

services industry with an ongoing flow of emerging training packages.

Information technology is an area where human resources development is

critical fortunately, Indian professionals are world leaders in this area and

spirit of co –operation and partnership between them in banking industries

will result in a strong and modern financial system comparable to the best

in the world.

This committee recommended a system of recruitment from open market,

including lateral induction of experts.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Limitations

1. Due to very tight schedule of working, the employee‟s interaction was

difficult. Most of the employees were often too busy to spare time for

filling up the questionnaire.

2. Some employees were hesitant to fill up the questionnaire especially the

open ended questions.

3. Time period for the survey was very limited

4. Sample size may not be a correct representation of population

5. Lack of interaction

6. Fear of Identity disclose

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

CONCLUSION

At Tata Steel, there is a continuous effort of staying in touch with employees to

ensure that there is the right culture to engage them in consistent performance

improvement. There are well-established and effective arrangements at each

business location for transparent communication and consultation with Works

Councils and Trade Union representatives. Further, the Company has always

registered steady quality improvement and productivity enhancement through

dedicated efforts of the Company‟s Performance Improvement teams, focused on

technical best practice transfer and the value of knowledge networks.

Towards the well-being of employees Tata Steel has put into practice many

initiatives, events and programmes that have helped to create not only an enduring

loyalty amongst employees but also enabled them to have a more fulfilled life.

Tata Steel's Performance Management System has the following aims:

Align the activities and behaviour of the workforce with Company

values and objectives

Assess the performance of individuals comprehensively and fairly

Develop the capabilities of employees to enhance performance

Develop corporate culture

Enhance line management relationships

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)


lOMoARcPSD|39810965

Bibliography

Research Methodology by C.R.

Kothari www.SBI bank.com

www.ICICIbank.com

Brewster, C. and Connock, S. (1985). Industrial Relations: Cost Effective

Strategies, London, Hutchinson.

Brewster, C., C. Gill and S. Lichbell. (1981) Developing an Analytical

Approach in Industrial Relations Policy, Personnel Review, Vol.10, part 2,

pp3-lO.

Brewster, C. and Richbell, 5. (1984), Getting Managers to Implement

Personnel Policies. Personnel Management. December 1982, pp34-37.

Burns, T. and Stalker, G. (1961). The Management of Innovation, London,

Tavistock Press. V

Fowler, A. (1987). When Chief Executives Discover HRM, Personnel Management,


January, pp32-35.

Downloaded by Suhas Lawand (suhaslawand4@gmail.com)

You might also like