Workforce.com

Last updated

Workforce.com is a workforce management technology company, whose current activities are engineering, software, research, and media. The company is headquartered in Chicago, US, and has offices in the United Kingdom, Australia, and Southeast Asia. It started in 1922 as Personnel Research Foundation, originally issuing publications dealing with workforce management. [1]

Contents

The journal

The publication was pioneered by James Rowland Angell, President of Yale and Carnegie Corporation in 1922; the Engineering Foundation and the National Research Council formed a joint initiative to coordinate the efforts of the 250 scientific, engineering, labor, management and educational bodies which were studying personnel problems in the United States. The first publication. Journal of personnel research, published by the Personnel Research Foundation, was a monthly magazine published from 1922-1927 ISSN 0886-750X.  OCLC 1644562 (and available of Proquest) -- see  Worldcat [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1644562].  The first issue was published in May 1922, and included Angell’s address to a research conference, entitled “Reasons and Plans for Research Relating to Industrial Personnel''.

From 1922 to 1996, the Journal of Personnel Research tackled different milestones, regulations, and workforce management trends and issues, including The Hawthorne Productivity Studies, Social Security Act of 1935, COBRA, and HIPA. It was continued by their journal, Personnel until 1996 [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/976716858], also a monthly (or bi-monthly), published first by William & Wilkins for the foundation, and then from 1991-1996 by ACC Communications, Inc, Costa Mesa, CA.  ISSN 0031-5745  OCLC 1605910.

It was continued by Workforce, published by ACC Communications 1997-2003. ISSN 1092-8332. OCLC 36210566, and then by Workforce management, 2003-2013, from the same publisher ISSN 1547-5565  OCLC 52570066.  From 2003 - 2013, it was published by Crain Communications, ISSN 1547-5565   OCLC 52570066. The volume numbering was continued throughout the various titles.

The firm

In 1997, when the Journal of Personnel Research transitioned to Workforce, it grew to be not just a magazine, but a multimedia firm servicing the HR industry with magazines, research, webinars, and events. In 2011, it introduced the Game Changers Awards, an initiative to recognize HR practitioners who have been innovative and created a positive impact on Human Resources.

In 2019, Workforce was acquired by Australian entrepreneur, [2] Tasmine Trezise, [3] who merged the research and media with a workforce management platform now called Workforce.com. Although started as an academic journal to document and distribute ideas and developments in workforce management using research and science, its successor, Workforce.com, works with various organizations and research bodies to explore workforce management's aspects from the point of view of management.

Technology and Workforce Management Platform

The firm's current core activities are improving business operations and workforce management through its platform that covers employee scheduling, time and attendance, employee engagement, labor analytics, employee apps, and automated labor compliance.

It serves over 7,000 customers in some 80 countries and 10 languages. The platform is delivered as a multi-tenant cloud application and can be deployed and implemented completely remotely. It is supported with live video conference training, product documentation, and web-based customer support.

Related Research Articles

Human resources (HR) is the set of people who make up the workforce of an organization, business sector, industry, or economy. A narrower concept is human capital, the knowledge and skills which the individuals command. Similar terms include manpower, labor, personnel, associates or simply: people.

Analytics is the systematic computational analysis of data or statistics. It is used for the discovery, interpretation, and communication of meaningful patterns in data. It also entails applying data patterns toward effective decision-making. It can be valuable in areas rich with recorded information; analytics relies on the simultaneous application of statistics, computer programming, and operations research to quantify performance.

A layoff or downsizing is the temporary suspension or permanent termination of employment of an employee or, more commonly, a group of employees for business reasons, such as personnel management or downsizing an organization. Originally, layoff referred exclusively to a temporary interruption in work, or employment but this has evolved to a permanent elimination of a position in both British and US English, requiring the addition of "temporary" to specify the original meaning of the word. A layoff is not to be confused with wrongful termination. Laid off workers or displaced workers are workers who have lost or left their jobs because their employer has closed or moved, there was insufficient work for them to do, or their position or shift was abolished. Downsizing in a company is defined to involve the reduction of employees in a workforce. Downsizing in companies became a popular practice in the 1980s and early 1990s as it was seen as a way to deliver better shareholder value as it helps to reduce the costs of employers. Research on downsizing in the US, UK, and Japan suggests that downsizing is being regarded by management as one of the preferred routes to help declining organizations, cutting unnecessary costs, and improve organizational performance. Usually a layoff occurs as a cost-cutting measure. A study of 391 downsizing announcements of the S&P 100 firms for the period 1990-2006 found, that layoff announcements resulted in substantial increase in the companies’ stock prices, and that the gain was larger, when the company had prior layoffs. The authors suggested, that the stock price manipulation alone creates a sufficient motivation for publicly-traded corporations to adopt the practice of regular layoffs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Recruitment</span> Process of attracting, selecting and appointing candidates to a job or other organization

Recruitment is the overall process of identifying, sourcing, screening, shortlisting, and interviewing candidates for jobs within an organization. Recruitment also is the process involved in choosing people for unpaid roles. Managers, human resource generalists and recruitment specialists may be tasked with carrying out recruitment, but in some cases public-sector employment, commercial recruitment agencies, or specialist search consultancies are used to undertake parts of the process. Internet-based technologies which enhance all aspects of recruitment are now widespread, including the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

Human resource management is the strategic and coherent approach to the effective and efficient management of people in a company or organization such that they help their business gain a competitive advantage. It is designed to maximize employee performance in service of an employer's strategic objectives. Human resource management is primarily concerned with the management of people within organizations, focusing on policies and systems. HR departments are responsible for overseeing employee-benefits design, employee recruitment, training and development, performance appraisal, and reward management, such as managing pay and employee-benefits systems. HR also concerns itself with organizational change and industrial relations, or the balancing of organizational practices with requirements arising from collective bargaining and governmental laws.

Workforce management (WFM) is an institutional process that maximizes performance levels and competency for an organization. The process includes all the activities needed to maintain a productive workforce, such as field service management, human resource management, performance and training management, data collection, recruiting, budgeting, forecasting, scheduling and analytics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Workforce productivity</span> Concept in economics

Workforce productivity is the amount of goods and services that a group of workers produce in a given amount of time. It is one of several types of productivity that economists measure. Workforce productivity, often referred to as labor productivity, is a measure for an organisation or company, a process, an industry, or a country.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Employee engagement</span> Relationship between an organization and its employees

Employee engagement is a fundamental concept in the effort to understand and describe, both qualitatively and quantitatively, the nature of the relationship between an organization and its employees. An "engaged employee" is defined as one who is fully absorbed by and enthusiastic about their work and so takes positive action to further the organization's reputation and interests. An engaged employee has a positive attitude towards the organization and its values. In contrast, a disengaged employee may range from someone doing the bare minimum at work, up to an employee who is actively damaging the company's work output and reputation.

In human resources, turnover is the act of replacing an employee with a new employee. Partings between organizations and employees may consist of termination, retirement, death, interagency transfers, and resignations. An organization’s turnover is measured as a percentage rate, which is referred to as its turnover rate. Turnover rate is the percentage of employees in a workforce that leave during a certain period of time. Organizations and industries as a whole measure their turnover rate during a fiscal or calendar year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Society for Human Resource Management</span>

The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) is a professional human resources membership association headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia. SHRM promotes the role of HR as a profession and provides education, certification, and networking to its members, while lobbying Congress on issues pertinent to labor management.

CSA was a division of Cambridge Information Group and provider of online databases, based in Bethesda, Maryland before merging with ProQuest of Ann Arbor, Michigan in 2007. CSA hosted databases of abstracts and developed taxonomic indexing of scholarly articles. These databases were hosted on the CSA Illumina platform and were available alongside add-on products like CSA Illustrata. The company produced numerous bibliographic databases in different fields of the arts and humanities, natural and social sciences, and technology. Thus, coverage included materials science, environmental sciences and pollution management, biological sciences, aquatic sciences and fisheries, biotechnology, engineering, computer science, sociology, linguistics, and other areas.

A chief human resources officer (CHRO) or chief people officer (CPO) is a corporate officer who oversees all aspects of human resource management and industrial relations policies, practices and operations for an organization. Similar job titles include: chief people officer, chief personnel officer, executive vice president of human resources and senior vice president of human resources. Roles and responsibilities of a typical CHRO can be categorized as follows: workforce strategist, organizational and performance conductor, HR service delivery owner, compliance and governance regulator, and coach and adviser to the senior leadership team and the board of directors. CHROs may also be involved in board member selection and orientation, executive compensation, and succession planning. In addition, functions such as communications, facilities, public relations and related areas may fall within the scope of the CHRO role. Increasingly, CHROs report directly to chief executive officers and are members of the most senior-level committees of a company.

Staff management is the management of subordinates in an organization. Often, large organizations have many of these functions performed by a specialist department, such as personnel or human resources, but all line managers are still required to supervise and administer the activities and ensure the well-being of the staff that report to them.

Job sharing or work sharing is an employment arrangement where two people, or sometimes more, are retained on a part-time or reduced-time basis to perform a job normally fulfilled by one person working full-time. This leads to a net reduction in per-employee income. The people sharing the job work as a team to complete the job task and are jointly responsible for the job workload. Pay, holidays and working hours are apportioned between the workers. In some countries, systems such as pay as you go and PAYE help make deductions for national insurance, and superannuations are made as a straightforward percentage.

Workforce Sciences is an area of workforce measurement and management designed to streamline hiring of personnel in organizations. An emerging discipline, it focuses on the empirical determination of the workforce and business impact of the people side of business -- in order to help organizations find the "ideal" set of employees.

The School of Management and Labor Relations (SMLR) is an industrial relations and professional school of Rutgers University. On June 19, 1947, New Jersey Governor Alfred Driscoll signed into law legislation which formally established the Institute for Management and Labor Relations (IMLR). In 1994 the Rutgers University Board of Governors approved a resolution that restructured IMLR as the School of Management and Labor Relations (SMLR). SMLR is housed at two locations on the Cook and Livingston campuses of Rutgers–New Brunswick.

The Superior University, is a private university in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan.

A distributed development project is a research and development (R&D) project that is done across multiple business worksites or locations. It is a form of R&D where the project members may not see each other face to face, but they are all working collaboratively toward the outcome of the project. Often this is done through email, the Internet and other forms of quick long-distance communication. Distributed development was largely pioneered by the open-source software community.

A human resources management system (HRMS) or Human Resources Information System (HRIS) or Human Capital Management (HCM) is a form of Human Resources (HR) software that combines a number of systems and processes to ensure the easy management of human resources, business processes and data. Human resources software is used by businesses to combine a number of necessary HR functions, such as storing employee data, managing payroll, recruitment, benefits administration, time and attendance, employee performance management, and tracking competency and training records.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paula Caligiuri</span> Psychologist, author

Paula Caligiuri is an American academic, talent management specialist, psychologist, book author, and entrepreneur. As a Distinguished Professor of international business and strategy, she is on the faculty at D'Amore-McKim School of Business, Northeastern University. Her published contributions in the field of international human resource management have won academic distinctions, and been endorsed in scholarly literature and in wider professional circles. Among her books, Get a Life, Not a Job, Managing the Global Workforce,Cultural Agility: Building a Pipeline of Successful Global Professionals, and Build Your Cultural Agility: The Nine Competencies of Successful Global Professionals, received attention by qualified media. Her book She is ranked # 392 among the best business and management scientists in the US, 810 worldwide.

References

  1. "Workforce History". www.workforce.com. Retrieved 2020-08-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. "Australian Tech Entrepreneur Becomes President of Workforce". www.workforce.com. Retrieved 2020-08-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. Ogg, Author: Matt; Simmons, David; Faint, Paris; Jansen, Camilla. "Australia's Top 100 Young Entrepreneurs: 31-40". Business News Australia. Retrieved 2020-08-14.{{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)