Human Resourse Development (HRD) Assignment 3: Case Report

Background

SunTech is a start-up company that  specialises in providing computer servers to medium  and large corporates. They were founded 5 years ago by the owner Mathew Horton.  Mathew has a background in selling IT solutions and is very technically focused. He  acknowledges that his leadership and people skills could be enhanced. SunTech is bracing  for expansion and they have recently increased the HR team to include a  new Learning &  Development (L&D) manager.Last financial year SunTech recorded revenue of $15 million and profit of $8 million. There is a projected figure of 20 new hires over the next 12 months. Most projects completed by  SunTech are usually delivered at high quality, on time  and on budget. There are a few  projects which go over budget and time and this could be due to managers with limited  people management skills.

SunTech workforce

SunTech initially started as a team of 7 staff and has been through immense growth over the last 3 years. They have 60 staff all based in Victoria. Turnover of staff is very low at 4%. The industry average is 12%. SunTech is made up of the following departments: Finance,  Marketing, Operations (HR, Facilities & IT), Sales and Network Engineering. The two key  departments are the Sales department (total 15 staff) and Network Engineering department(total 25 staff). Both teams have a flat structure with only a few senior managers for each  department. The Sales team are client facing and are good at managing stakeholder  relationships but at times lack a basic understanding of the technical specifications of the  products. The Network engineering department is technically focused and highly skilled in ITknowledge but are not confident in communicating clearly between themselves and with other departments. Sometimes there is miscommunication between departments which can cause stress.  

Managers in the organisation have mainly been promoted on their technical abilities and  not their people management skills. There is no training provided for new managers or staff wanting to enhance their management and leadership skills. 

SunTechs culture is described as one of working hard, achieving goals, and celebrating successes. They value  teamwork and providing quality products. The senior management  team would like to further boost the culture to include knowledge sharing amongst  departments and better communication between team members and managers.There are eight members of the Senior Executive team. Two of which understand the  importance of lifelong learning and developing staff to perform and grow. The remaining six members understand the Tech sector well but not necessarily the importance of developing staff and having good HRD practices.

Challenges

Due to the growth of the organisation, SunTech staff has not have much formal training.  Training has been at best ad hoc and when training is provided there is no evaluation that takes place. The organisation does not know if the training is suitable or  if it meets the  needs of their staff. One staff member who attended training commented that  The workshop was fun, and I enjoyed meeting and connecting with new team members across  the organisation. But I dont know if I will remember all this content and how I can apply it effectively in my work for the long term.You have noticed that training activities are inconsistent across the organisation. Some departments (i.e. Sales) have development opportunities such as workshops and online courses, while others (e.g. Network engineering and Operations) do not have any training  provided. Staff survey results indicated that staff would like more development opportunities for both their technical skills and soft skills such as communication, influencing and leadership skills.  There is a generous budget allocation ($50,000) for training and development and over the last 12 months only a quarter of the budget has been utilised. This is largely due to major  projects taking up significant time so staff are unable to attend or complete any training.

Case Report

As the new L&D manager you have been asked to provide  a report which includes your  analysis of current L&D activities, a  proposed plan moving forward and example learning  activities to the SunTech Senior Executive team.Your report/submission will include the following elements:

Explain the importance of HRD for the organisation

Analyse and explain the HRD issues that you have identified – this is your overall  analysis based on the information provided

Explain and present a solution in the form of an HRD design and implementation plan that includes the following elements:

1.Needs assessment (i.e. how will you carry this out to provide more detailed  information on the key areas you have identified)

2.Design & Implementation (i.e. possible learning programs/activities based on the issues you have identified)

3.Evaluation (i.e. how you will evaluate the HRD program you have proposed)

Provide a conclusion and recommendations

You are asked to keep the report within 2000 words (+/- 10% allowed). However, you are  welcome to use appendix to provide supplementary materials and the appendix will not be included in word count. 

Assessment Guideline

In general, your report/submission should fulfil these needs: 

Your report must focus on the case study provided. Your report should be written for your target audience (the Senior executive team) 

Your report must reference the topics covered in this course 

Your report should include applied knowledge from the Human Resource Development course and demonstrate your ability to use such knowledge in making sound business judgment appropriate for the organisational context

Your report should generate solid recommendations for the organisation

Your report should be presented and structured in a way that is easy for the target audience to read and digest.

You must include a minimum of 10 references (excluding those provided for the case studies)

Assessment Criteria

Executive Summary & Introduction: Provides a robust and logical executive summary (4 marks)

Coverage: Provides a comprehensive yet succinct overview of the topic areas (10 marks)

Content: The content of the report addresses the elements listed and provides quality analysis and key academic perspectives/views, along with clear arguments.  (10 marks)

Conclusion and recommendations: The conclusion and recommendations closely relate to the discussions from the literature and critical analysis as developed in the main body of the report. The conclusion finishes with a clear take-away message for the readers (4 marks)

Clarity of writing: Clear, logical, and engaging writing in delivering your message; Free from typos and grammatical mistakes; Clear structure; Ideas presented are coherent throughout the report (6 marks)

Supporting materials and referencing: The information and analysis was gathered from many diverse, high-quality sources. Referencing style following Harvard reference styles for in-text and list of references (6 marks