A Guide To The HR Lifecycle
A Guide To The HR Lifecycle
Like many other parts of life and business, human resources has a unique life cycle. The HR life cycle is
basically the sequence of the stages employees go through and the role human resource managers are tasked
to take on during each one of those stages.
The HR lifecycle is a concept in human resources management that describes the stages of an employee’s
time with a given organization and the responsibilities of the human resources department at each
stage. Each stage of the HR lifecycle presents its own challenges and opportunities.
When there’s a breakdown at any stage of the HR lifecycle, you need to take the necessary steps to sort out
the issue such that both your employees and your business continue to grow. Below are the seven stages of
the human resource’s lifecycle that you need to be paying attention to as a manager:
Attraction
The first step to having great employees on your team is attracting them to your workplace – getting them to
notice your employer brand. However, employer branding is not about advertising that you are a good
employer. It’s about being one. It’s easy to think that throwing cooler, wackier perks in the workplace is the
key to attracting the very best talent to your team but that just isn’t it.
Yes, perks are cool – playing ping pong at work is really fun. Yes, they improve day-to-day life for your
employees. However, they alone aren’t going to attract and keep people at your company. Your mission,
current employees, company culture, and the opportunities for growth in your organization offers carry far
more weight than any exciting games or free snacks.
Your employer brand is what helps prospective job applicants buy into what your company is all about—
your culture, people, and purpose. Your employer brand effectively highlights these qualities that make your
organization a special place to work, setting you apart from the crowd, humanizing your organization, and
ultimately inspiring candidates to apply for your consideration.
Recruitment
Hiring the right people is very vital to the growth and productivity of any business. In order to succeed in the
recruitment phase of the HR lifecycle, your human resources department needs to:
create a strategic staffing plan with a thorough understanding of the positions that need to be filled
and what will be expected of an employee;
create compensation and benefits packages competitive enough to attract the top talent;
develop an interviewing protocol suitable for the positions looking to be filled;
place the job ads in the right channels where they can be picked up by the right talent;
select candidates whose résumés look promising, conducting employment interviews, and;
administer assessments such as personality profiles to choose the best applicant for the job.
Onboarding
Onboarding is the process by which new employees are introduced to your organization. It is through this
process that the employee becomes a member of the company’s workforce through learning her new job
duties, establishing relationships with co-workers and supervisors and developing a niche.
Creating a structured onboarding program is the key to getting the most of out of this stage of the HR
lifecycle. According to a 2007 study by the Wynhurst Group, when employees go through structured
onboarding, they are 58 percent more likely to remain with the organization after three years.
Enablement
This stage of the HR lifecycle entails orienting new hires and formally introducing them to your
organization and its culture, mission, vision, and values. Orientation is usually conducted as a conference-
style event where information is delivered to the new hires through presentations and question-and-answer
sessions. Companies often schedule time for each of their leaders to come in and greet new employees,
introduce themselves and explain their roles within the business.
The roles of human resource managers during the enablement stage include:
introducing the new hires to the company mission, vision, and values;
guiding new employees through the paperwork they need to complete;
introducing new hires to benefit plans, answering questions about how and when to use them;
introducing new hires to the workplace’s safety, health, and any other key policies;
ensuring new employees have all the tools they need to get started with the actual tasks of their new
position including passwords, identification, parking passes, etc., and;
introducing new employees to the rest of your staff and assigning a coworker to them to support their
transition and help them feel more connected with your company.
Development
This is the stage at which the employee and the human resources department work out her long-term career
goals with the company. Human resource managers can use personality profile testing at this stage to help
the employee determine their best career options with the company.
Career development opportunities are essential to keep an employee engaged with the company over time.
Once an employee has established themselves at the company and determined their long-term career
objectives, the HR department must try to help him meet their goals, if they are realistic. This can include
professional growth and training to prepare the employee for positions of greater responsibility.
Retention
This stage of the HR lifecycle gives you the opportunity to re-energize your staff, thank them for their hard
work, and recognize important milestones. HR departments can show employees appreciation by offering
unique benefits such as flexible work schedules, gift cards, and extra paid time off.
Great businesses find a way to identify and celebrate the employees who are going above and beyond, and
then take deliberate measures to nurture and groom them to continue working for the company.
Separation
All cycles must come to an end – including HR life cycles. Sometimes it ends with retirement, leaving to
return to school, leaving for more pay or better benefits, to tend to family responsibilities or involuntary
downsizing for economic or strategic reasons.
Whatever the case, the role of HR in this process is to manage the transition by:
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