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friday403
25-11-2009, 01:33 PM
As you will already know the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) has announced a series of projects to develop HR standards in the United States, in conjunction with ANSI.

In Australia, the university sector has been working on HR standards:

QUT | HR | National Advisory Standards for the Professional Practice of HR in Australian Universities (http://www.hrd.qut.edu.au/hrbenchmarking/wpp.jsp)

This work is currently in draft form and practitioner comments are invited.

friday403
03-03-2010, 03:08 PM
Have to due your own due diligence on this one:

HRcoach (http://www.hrcoach.com.au/news/69)

This franchising group offers training in Auditing under the HR standard but it doesn't appear to be endorsed by any of the auditing professional bodies.

IvanaC
04-03-2010, 06:56 AM
Hello I believe that Standards Australia have already published a suite of HR standards for sometime....are these specific standards for the universities?

I would be happy to read them over and comment as I was also involved with the development of the other standards.

regards, Ivana

friday403
04-03-2010, 08:52 AM
Ivana,

There was a Standards Australia project running that has not, to my knowledge, released it's output. They did release a Guideline to Emerging Best Practice but this wasn't a Standards document.

IvanaC
04-03-2010, 06:17 PM
Hi Friday403

not 100% sure it has been a while since I was there - I have downloaded the standards out for comments and will have a read of them.

cheers, Ivana

friday403
27-01-2011, 11:28 AM
The QUT Project Team has added a draft HR Framework to the project home page at:

http://www.hrd.qut.edu.au/hrbenchmarking/docs/wpp_hrFramework.pdf

The updated standards are listed at: QUT | HR | National Advisory Standards for the Professional Practice of HR in Australian Universities (http://www.hrd.qut.edu.au/hrbenchmarking/wpp.jsp)

friday403
18-02-2011, 09:20 AM
The next issue that needs to be addressed is placing the metrics and measures used in HR evaluation in context.

For example the recent 44 page SHRM standards product "Cost per hire" is a process/output measure. The alternative cost per hire (what it might have been if we had adopted a different strategy, method and timeframe) is an example of a metric evaluation on an economic basis.

By overlaying an outcomes based management framework (sectoring efficiency, effectiveness and economy) on commonly used HR metrics and measures we can readily see what the metric is telling us and also what it is not telling us.

The key is discovering the outcome measure for each area of HR activity.