Talent management
Talent Management
moneycompass.com.my
According to CIPD (2007), talent includes of
those individuals who can make a change to organizational performance, either
through their immediate contribution or in the longer term by demonstrating the
highest levels of potential. Talent management is the process of identifying,
developing, recruiting, retaining and deploying those talented people.
As suggested by Lewis and Hackman (2006), talent management is defined in three ways. Those are as a combination of standard human resource management practices such as recruitment, selection and career development, as the creation of a large talent pool, ensuring the quantitative and qualitative flow of employees and last way is as a good based on demographic necessity to manage talent.
As suggested by Lewis and Hackman (2006), talent management is defined in three ways. Those are as a combination of standard human resource management practices such as recruitment, selection and career development, as the creation of a large talent pool, ensuring the quantitative and qualitative flow of employees and last way is as a good based on demographic necessity to manage talent.
Talent management term may refer simply to
management succession planning and management development activities, although
this concept does not really add anything to these familiar processes except a
new name. It is good to regard talent management as a more comprehensive and
integrated bundle of doings, the aim of which is to secure the flow of talent
in an organization, bearing in mind that talent is a major corporate resource (Armstrong,
2014).As stated by Tansley and Tietze (2013) talent management includes strategies and protocols for the systematic
attraction, identification, development, retention and deployment of
individuals with high potential who are of particular value to an organization.
Talent management strategy
Cappelli (2008) revealed that the image of a
successful talent management strategy are that it is inclusive and that it can
address and resolve any incongruity between the supply and demand of talent. He
stated that too many firms have more employees than they need for available positions,
or a talent shortfall and always at the wrong times. He argued that talent
management should not just be about employee development or succession planning
as many of the commonplace definitions suggest, but should focus on helping the
firm attain its strategic objectives.
References
Armstrong. M, (2014). Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice, 14th edition
Cappelli, P (2008) Talent on Demand: Managing
talent in an uncertain age, Boston MA, Harvard Business School Press
CIPD (2007f) Talent Management Fact Sheet,
CIPD, London
Lewis, R E and Hackman, R J (2006) Talent
management: a critical review, Human Resource Management Review, 16 (2), pp
139–54
Tansley, C and Tietze, S (2013) Rites of
passage through talent management stages: an identity work perspective,
International Journal of Human Resource Management, 24 (9), pp 1799–815
flow is good. keep up good works
ReplyDeleteWell structured essay with latest references. Good job.
ReplyDeleteLatest references, it would be more colorful with International examples. keep it up good work
ReplyDeletenice flow and latest reference, well executed essay
ReplyDeleteGood job. It would be even better if you have discussed about inclusive & exclusive approach as well
ReplyDeletePlease rewrite three reference, 3 intext citations and two examples of international nature it should be in ur own words dont need too many definitions
ReplyDeleteAmended Dr.
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