News
& Articles
Human Resource Management
Published in the Rochester Business Journal
October 3, 2003
© 2003 HR Works, Inc.
Conducting an effective human resource audit ensures compliance, reduces costs and supports
strategic planning
By
Candace Walters
As a business owner or executive, you're working hard to build a successful organization. You have had no serious problems in the
employment area until today, when a notice arrived from the Department of Labor
(DOL) saying that you're being investigated. What prompted this notice? A
disgruntled employee who claimed you cheated him or her out of wages? You may
never know.
What should you expect if your company must submit to a DOL investigation? The CFO of a local business recently spent more than 60
hours preparing for and meeting with the DOL investigator. She had to provide
time records from the past three years, the employee handbook, organizational
charts, employee names, social security numbers, hire dates and job
descriptions. As part of the process, the investigator also conducted private
interviews with several employees. In the end, the DOL ordered her company to
make significant payment for back wages. The firm also incurred its own legal
fees
How can an organization avoid the time, expense and embarrassment of a DOL investigation? The best solution: Conduct an audit of
your own HR Department and make sure your pay practices and other policies
comply with ever changing state and federal regulations.
What is an HR audit?
Used optimally, a human resource audit helps senior
management to:
- Ensure compliance with wage-and-hour laws and the
myriad of other employment and benefits-related statutes.
- Examine the effectiveness and costs of HR policies and
practices and their role in the organization's strategic planning.
- Benchmark actual against desired performance and
develop an action plan for addressing shortfalls.
- Save money by identifying and correcting
inefficiencies and compliance problems.
Progressive organizations will embrace a well-executed
HR audit as an important tool for creating, updating and executing HR
strategies and best practices that will provide long-term support to the
organization's big picture.
The HR audit process
Auditing a human resource department is a systematic
process that involves at least two steps:
- Gathering information to determine compliance,
effectiveness, costs and efficiencies.
- Evaluating the information and preparing a written report,
with an action plan based on exposures, priorities and a timeline for
instituting changes. In order to reduce exposure to legal liability, some
changes will need to be implemented immediately, while others can be completed
in three to six months.
Like a financial audit, an HR audit must be
comprehensive in order to be effective. The audit review includes but is not
limited to:
- Department infrastructure
- Compliance with state and federal employment laws
- Recruitment and selection processes
- Employment-related tests
- Employee relations
- Performance-evaluation processes
- Documentation, including employee handbooks
- Job descriptions
- Personnel records and files
- Benefits administration practices
- Benefit costs
- Exempt and non-exempt classifications
- Time-keeping and pay practices
- Recordkeeping and posting requirements
- Policies governing independent contractors
- Training and Development
- Technology
- Safety and security
- Labor relations
Immediate benefits of an HR audit
As with accounting audits, the findings and recommendations
from HR audits are only as good as the information provided. If you are not
entirely honest and objective, no purpose is served.
However, if staying on the right side of the law and reducing legal exposure are not
enough incentive to launch your organization on the audit path today, consider
the other benefits. Very typically, small to medium-size companies realize
almost instant cost savings once an audit is complete and changes are
implemented. For example:
- Correcting benefit premium errors and overpayments can
generate many thousands of dollars in savings.
- Initiating a safety program can reduce workers
compensation experience modification numbers, reducing annual premium costs by
tens of thousands of dollars.
- Shopping benefit costs among alternative carriers and
modifying employer/employee co-pay ratios can recoup dramatic savings.
- Examining the effectiveness of recruiting tools can
pare the expense of filling positions.
A small or medium-size firm also may benefit from using an
HR audit to:
- Study retention and turnover, employing a neutral
party to solicit honest feedback from employees, and allowing the company to
develop an action plan.
- Examine the company's foundation for its compensation
philosophies and develop an objective method of grading jobs, with new ranges
that are market-competitive and internally equitable.
- Create or enhance an employee-referral program or
internal jobs board.
- Improve employee communication and ensure that the HR
department is accessible.
- Identify opportunities to outsource areas within human
resources that offer more value to the company
The optimal outcome: Taking HR to the next level
Certainly, companies that complete an HR audit for compliance and cost reasons will enjoy an improved employment climate and a
healthier bottom line. Organizations that opt to gain maximum benefit, however,
also will use the HR audit to ensure that HR practices are linked to and play a
vital role in the company's strategic planning and execution.
HR Works, Inc. is an HR management outsourcing and consulting firm serving more than 600 clients in the Rochester, Buffalo,
Syracuse and Baltimore/Washington areas. HR Works provides HR Department
outsourcing, part-time and interim HR managers, affirmative action plans,
HR*Stars recruitment services, legally reviewed employee handbooks and
supervisor manuals, compensation programs, training and more. To offer comments,
write walters@hrworks-inc.com
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