JULY 1, 2010 JUNE 30, 2013 STRATEGIC PLAN

Similar documents
Human Resources Department Strategic Plan

People & Organisational Development Strategy

Organisational and Leadership Development at UWS

AB Volvo, Göteborg, Sweden. Ref No , August The Volvo Way

Performance Factors and Campuswide Standards Guidelines. With Behavioral Indicators

Pima Community College District. Vice Chancellor of Human Resources

Texas State University University Library Strategic Plan

Human Resources Pillar

Approved by the Virginia Board of Education on September 27, Virginia Department of Education P. O. Box 2120 Richmond, Virginia

Performance Management Review Process Draft for Management Consultation Review

Human Resources Business Plan 2008/09

HR Strategic Plan

HR TEAM BUSINESS PLAN Page 1 of 5

H U M A N R E S O U R C E S F R A M E W O R K

HRS Strategic Plan

ST. LAWRENCE COLLEGE BUSINESS PLAN

SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY: ACADEMIC STRATEGIC PLAN

Human Resource Secretariat Business Plan to

Leadership Development Handbook

Department of Human Resources FY Strategic Plan

CERTIFICATIONS IN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PROFESSIONAL HRMP EXAM CONTENT OUTLINE

UWG Vision Statement: UWG aspires to be the best comprehensive university in America sought after as the best place to work, learn and succeed!

The Johns Hopkins University Human Resources Competency Dictionary

Certified Human Resources Professional Competency Framework

Department Business Plan. Human Resources

Division of Student Affairs Strategic Plan

The University of Texas at San Antonio. Business Affairs 2016 STRATEGIC PLAN December 2007

Human Resource Management

Goal #1 Learner Success Ensure a distinctive learning experience and foster the success of students.

Division of Human Resources. Strategic Plan For a Culture of Excellence

The Graduate School STRATEGIC PLAN

College of Architecture Strategic Plan

Search Profile. Vice President, People and Culture

Human Resource Strategic Plan

Alignment of ANCC Forces of Magnitude and TIGER Collaboratives

Human Resources Strategic Plan

College of Architecture Strategic Plan

We HAVE to do Performance Reviews We GET to do Career Development

Identifying and Developing Leaders in House: The LaGuardia Community College Leadership Development Program

People Strategy 2013/17

Creating Tomorrow s Public Service. May, A Corporate Human Resource Management Strategy For the Newfoundland and Labrador Core Public Service

A new era for HR. Trinity College Dublin Human Resources Strategy 2014 to 2019

Performance Management Guide For Managers

the Defence Leadership framework

Superintendent Effectiveness Rubric*

Human Resources Management Program Standard

Individual Development Planning (IDP)

Human Resources Department FTE s

1. Overall, how satisfied are you working for The Company? Extremely Dissatisfied. Very Dissatisfied. Somewhat Dissatisfied.

Prepared by: Kate Tarrant Prepared February 3, 2015

BUSINESS PLAN: Human Resources

Colorado Professional Teaching Standards

NORTH EAST SCOTLAND COLLEGE HUMAN RESOURCES STRATEGY. Version Date: 18 November 2014 Approved by: Human Resources Committee

Leadership and Management Competencies

UC Merced Performance Appraisal Employee Information. Appraisal Ratings. Part One: Core Competencies. Competency Comments: Performance Assessment

LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK

[BEAUMONT HEALTH PHYSICIAN LEADERSHIP ACADEMY] Beaumont Health Physician Leadership Academy

IMAGINE REGINA ACCELERATING EXCELLENCE. City of Regina Corporate Strategic Plan

San José State University Strategic Plan

UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MISSION, VISION & STRATEGIC PRIORITIES. Approved by SBA General Faculty (April 2012)

Eight Leadership Principles for a Winning Organization. Principle 1 Customer Focus

ASAE s Job Task Analysis Strategic Level Competencies

STRATEGIC PLAN

HUMAN RESOURCES. Management & Employee Services Organizational Development

Leadership Principles

SMART. NIMBLE. COMPASSIONATE. PREPARED. SMART. Strategic NIMBLE. Plan COMPASSIONATE PREPARED.

HUMAN RESOURCES 2005 SERVICE STRATEGY BUSINESS PLAN

Defining Human Resources Moving to Strategic HR

STRATEGIC PLAN SUPPORTING STUDENT SUCCESS

Build a Better Workplace: Engagement Edition

Libraries and Educational Technologies Professional & Performance Development Form Library Faculty Self Evaluation

Integrated Marketing, Communications and Engagement. February 13, 2013

Performance Management Competencies. for Schedule II Levels 7-12

Rhode Island School of Design Strategic Plan Summary for critical making. making critical

Business Operations Leadership Team (BOLT)

Strategic Plan

HUMAN SERVICES MANAGEMENT COMPETENCIES

2012 Higher Education Survey

A Strategic Vision for Human Resources

DENVER WATER STRATEGIC PLAN

FAO Competency Framework

EXHIBIT CC. Identifying Management Level Knowledge, Skills and Abilities. Executive Core Competencies (ECCs)

Raise Your Voice, Raise Your Skills

Institutional Vision, Proposed Mandate Statement and Priority Objectives

METROPOLITAN COLLEGE. Goals and Student Assessment Outcomes Measures. Graduate Degree Programs

A Sleeves up Approach 1. Managing Neck Deep: A Sleeves up Approach to Academic Leadership. Presentation Team:

Comparison Between Joint Commission Standards, Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award Criteria, and Magnet Recognition Program Components

Director of Human Resources

Mental Health at Work - A Review

The Standards for Leadership and Management: supporting leadership and management development December 2012

*Performance Expectations, Elements and Indicators

Competency-Based Education Programs

DEFINITION OF MENTORSHIP

THE UNIVERSITY ON NAIROBI STRATEGIC PLAN,

Self Assessment Tool for Principals and Vice-Principals

Transcription:

DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES JULY 1, 2010 JUNE 30, 2013 STRATEGIC PLAN

Introduction Human resource strategies are institutional efforts to support people (leaders, faculty and staff) to contribute to their full capacity and to be fully engaged and aligned with the directions of the University. Well executed human resource strategies bring success to individuals, teams, work units and ultimately, the University. It s at the core of being a high performing organization. This approach is important to the long-term success of the University. Our collective goal then is to build a culture of high performance, an organization made up of people who are: emotionally connected and committed to achievement and the success of the University, involved and supported to reach their full potential, and engaged in positive, inclusive and healthy work environments. National trends show that the scope of the human resources role is expanding and that HR services are becoming increasingly instrumental in attracting, engaging, supporting and inspiring faculty and staff to achieve excellence. Properly selected, engaged and aligned faculty and staff are foundational to Dalhousie s aspiration to becoming the best university and it is for this reason that developing excellent human resources is one of seven core objectives of the Strategic Focus. This strategy document is comprised of 3 elements: a) A situation analysis that sets out the external factors, internal factors, and opportunities that will likely impact the Department and therefore was considered in the formulation of the strategy. This analysis is the result of consultations with the University s executive leadership, Deans, HR Forum participants and members of the HR Department itself, as well as reference to contemporary literature and benchmarking of exemplary human resource models. b) The second element outlines the preferred future for the Department developed in light of the situation analysis. It defines the mission, vision, what we want to be known for and our guiding principles. Broadly speaking this is where we aspire to be in 3 5 years. It will be a challenge to achieve, but represents a future we are committed to create. c) The third element spells out the strategic goals and actions needed to realize our vision. Each goal details concrete results or indicators of success and the actions that, taken together, will enable us to achieve those results. This strategy is not just an operational plan for the Human Resources department. Elements of the Human Resource Department s operational plan are critical to successfully implementing the strategic University-wide initiatives, but a broader organizational endorsement of these strategic goals will be required if we are truly partnering to develop excellent human resources for Dalhousie University. Page 1

Situation Analysis The Context In Which HR Can Expect to Operate External Factors demographic trends, specifically : aging workforce and concerns about how to manage elimination of mandatory retirement, widening generational differences, increasing diversity, internationalization; competitive environment for attracting and retaining students, funding and benefactors of all kinds; competitive environment for attracting and retaining superior faculty and staff; greater public and internal scrutiny and accountability; changing legislation with significant HR implications; increasing opportunities/imperatives for inter-institutional cooperation; and an economy in upheaval: with potentially severe financial implications on the pension shortfall, on budgets and on anxiety of employees. Internal Factors demand for both decentralization and centralization although the culture currently favours decentralization (often resulting in inconsistent practices); increasing complexity of HR issues, the perception that they are difficult to address and that unions make it more challenging; insufficient will, alignment, tools and capabilities to effectively address HR issues, manage performance and stimulate engagement; increased expectations among our clients for a comprehensive and contemporary range of services, simplified access to information and support; a labour management climate that is currently collegial and stable but with a history of volatility - could be impacted by next rounds of bargaining; need for data management and systems that inform effective and timely decision making; a range of human resource alignment challenges (changing requirements of the University but difficulty changing people or duties to match, rewards aren t necessarily aligned with strategic objectives, difficulties changing staffing levels and capabilities); a changing leadership dynamic (agendas of new leaders coming into play but not fully integrated, increasing recognition of importance of effective leadership, tools and training not currently sufficient); changing competency requirements for administrative employees and limited access to opportunities to expand them; changing technology platform across campus; poorly developed mechanisms to communicate and foster an appreciation of what Dalhousie offers as an employer; and perceived to be rule bound more concerned with enforcement than enabling. Some Opportunities to Capitalize On a new Strategic Focus; completion of the workplace survey leading to an invitation and resources to address some issues; pension review committee development of a formalized leadership development program; build on stable labour relations; recent establishment of a distributed HR Forum with great potential for further development. Page 2

Our Mission We lead, support, and partner with the University community in developing excellent human resources for Dalhousie. Our Vision A working and learning environment at Dalhousie where employees are engaged, supported and inspired to achieve excellence. To realize this vision, Human Resources will advance its ability to: be customer focused, flexible and highly collaborative; be progressive in the services we deliver and the way we deliver them; provide HR advice and expertise that is responsive and valued; actively enable employees to advance professionally, personally and in their contributions to the University; and function as a team that is supportive, spirited, creative and continuously learning. Our Guiding Principles We are guided in our teamwork, decisions and actions by the principles of. Service by optimizing the value we bring to the university, being progressive in our approaches, responsive to our clients and colleagues and taking ownership of challenges. Integrity by being honest, reliable, respectful, ethical, fair and following through on commitments. Caring by listening to others, acting with compassion, and expressing appreciation. Excellence by setting our service standards high with a willingness to take risks and continually expand our capabilities so that we can achieve them. Collaboration by establishing and strengthening partnerships, and aligning our activities for the best results. Communication by keeping each other informed, sharing what we are thinking and doing, and addressing issues directly and constructively. Community - by being engaged, welcoming diversity of all kinds and contributing to a positive working and learning environment. Page 3

Our Strategic Goals To realize our mission and vision, we will pursue the following strategic goals: 1. To strengthen policies and practices that attract, engage, develop and sustain faculty and staff who are the best in their field. 2. To build human resource skills, competencies and expertise across Dalhousie University. 3. To cultivate a healthy, vibrant and achievement-oriented workplace. 4. To enhance HR processes, practices and infrastructure to provide high levels of service quality. Strategic Goals and Objectives 1. To strengthen policies and practices that attract, engage, develop and sustain faculty and staff who are the best in their field, we will... lead reforms of the university pension plan; share the results of the workplace survey and pursue opportunities to strengthen engagement and address issues in response to findings; review and respond to concerns related to job evaluation; explore more progressive/flexible approaches to compensation; strengthen orientation and support programs for new employees; enhance professional development, career advancement and job enrichment programs; and improve branding/marketing of Dalhousie as an exemplary place to work publicity materials, a more effective website; 2. To build human resource skills, competencies and expertise across Dalhousie University, we will... develop and implement a leadership program fostering the skills, knowledge and approaches needed to optimize productivity and achievements in both academic and administrative units; develop and maintain a website with relevant and easy to use human resource information and tools for administrators, faculty and staff; develop, monitor and report on appropriate human resource metrics to inform senior leadership decision making; provide a regular orientation and training sessions for those involved in human resource management; and expand and strengthen the HR Forum a distributed network of individuals with responsibility for human resource matters. Page 4

3. To cultivate a healthy, vibrant and achievement-oriented workplace, we will... promote and facilitate incorporation of performance enhancement tools and practices amongst academic and administrative units; develop and implement an organizational health and employee wellness strategy - optimizing effectiveness of the Employee and Family Assistance Program; regularly communicate the achievements and the vibrancy of the Dalhousie community thereby strengthening emotional commitment to the success of the University; develop recognition and reward systems that acknowledge the contributions of all who work at Dalhousie; research and promote effective people practices to support the creation of environments that are highly productive and rewarding to work in; expand capacity to assist with human resource planning; and further strengthen relations with our employee groups - partnering to proactively and constructively address labour management issues. 4. To enhance HR processes, practices and infrastructure to provide high levels of service quality, we will... strengthen our relationship with other departments across the university moving to a partnership model based on mutual understanding, collaboration and support; align human resource goals and priorities between the University s Strategic Focus, the HR Department and units across campus; create broader awareness of how Human Resources can assist units/individuals; establish a strong service culture within the Department - engage in regular consultation, feedback and needs assessment that informs our directions and priorities, improving the integration of services and facilitating more effective and consistent human resource practices; and streamline our processes, optimizing the use of technologies. Page 5