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Pass the SHRM Senior Certified Professional SHRM-SCP Questions and answers with ExamsMirror

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Questions # 1:

In one of the warehouses of a retail company, several international employees complain to HR that the warehouse manager has forbidden them from speaking in their native language in the workplace. The HR manager speaks with the warehouse manager, who says there have been several reports that the international employees only interact with each other and they have difficulty conversing with the local employees due to language barriers. The HR manager also learns that the international employees can speak the primary language used in the company well enough to understand instructions from their supervisors. Fortunately, there have been no incidents of safety issues where language has been a barrier between local and international employees. However, senior management believes there is a lack of rapport between local and international employees and instructs the HR manager to resolve the issue.

Senior management asks the HR manager to investigate whether other warehouse locations face similar issues between local and international employees. Which approach should the HR manager take to gather the most accurate information?

Options:

A.

Request that employees at all warehouse locations take a survey about their relationships with co-workers.

B.

Conduct a virtual focus group with a representative number of warehouse employees across the country.

C.

Review safety incident logs in warehouses with the most diversity in the languages spoken.

D.

Host a meeting for employees to publicly raise concerns about language barriers in the workplace.

Questions # 2:

An organization manages employee benefits at its headquarters while it manages talent acquisition at regional offices. What is this organization's HR structure?

Options:

A.

Decentralized

B.

Centralized

C.

Outsourced

D.

Matrix

Questions # 3:

A regional government office runs a media broadcasting station that is funded almost entirely by individual and corporate donations. An eight-person team is in charge of planning and coordinating the receipt of gifts including entertaining guests with the CEO and asking philanthropists for large contributions. The manager of the team is results-driven and has consistently led the team to achieve challenging goals for five years. The manager recently moved further away from the office to afford higher quality education. The manager sends an urgent email to the HR director indicating an immediate need to work remotely three days per week. The manager also wants to avoid commuting traffic and come into the office after 11 am. The office has a flexible schedule policy but it has not been reviewed in some time.

The regional government office has been slow to adopt new management approaches, which has made it difficult for the office to compete for top talent in the regional workforce. What should the HR director do to ensure buy-in from managers and executives regarding changes to the telework policy?

Options:

A.

Invite managers and executives to a meeting to discuss the office succession planning approach.

B.

Invite HR representatives from other organizations to talk about their strategies with office executives.

C.

Review exit interview surveys of employees who have left the company.

D.

Research telework best practices and their effect on engagement and retention.

Questions # 4:

A nonprofit health care facility conducts an engagement and culture survey, and the results indicate that employees throughout the organization believe leadership engages in favoritism by providing unequal opportunities for staff. General perceptions of the company's culture are poor, and many employees report intentions to leave their jobs. Several additional concerning findings are isolated to the philanthropic department, which is responsible for acquiring donors and securing charitable partnerships. Employees from this department report poor working relationships among staff, including gossiping and bullying among co-workers. Although the leadership team is aware of the poor working relationships in the philanthropic department, they have not asked the department director to address the issues because of the department's outstanding performance in recent years. However, after considering the recent survey results the leadership team decides to initiate a project to address the culture issues at the facility overall and within the philanthropy department specifically. The operations VP will oversee the project and ask an HR business partner (HRBP) to lead the project. The VP of operations requests that the HRBP collect additional survey data and conduct focus groups during the first phase of the project.

Some members of the leadership team provide the HRBP with a list of employees that they think would be good participants for the focus groups. These leaders are adamant that the HRBP should draw participants from the list. Which action should the HRBP take?

Options:

A.

Inform the leaders that HR will follow best practices when selecting focus group participants.

B.

Explain to the leaders why using only employees from the list might exclude important perspectives.

C.

Conduct one focus group with the recommended employees and one with randomly selected employees.

D.

Remind the leaders that the operations VP asked the HRBP to lead the project.

Questions # 5:

An HR business partner (HRBP) in a large organization has recently been dealing with various issues with the chief human resource officer (CHRO). The HRBP reports to the CHRO. The CHRO does not consistently and clearly communicate information regarding business and strategic issues to the HRBP. The lack of communication has been presenting problems, as the HRBP's internal clients look to the HRBP for information and guidance on all HR topics and initiatives. As a result, the HRBP is often uninformed and unable to assist the clients. The lack of communication and transparency by the CHRO has been negatively impacting the HRBP and the HRBP's clients. The HRBP spends a lot of time trying to get information and often is unprepared to address client issues. In some cases, clients have received HR-related information ahead of the HRBP. Unfortunately, the CHRO has operated in this manner for years, with HR employees often feeling isolated from information and not feeling like they are part of a coherent unit. Despite this, the CHRO has expressed to the HRBP a belief that they have a very effective working relationship with one another.

The HRBP wants to provide suggestions to the organization’s executives about how to improve communication within the company, but the CHRO does not include the HRBP in strategic discussions that the CHRO has with other executives. What should the HRBP do?

Options:

A.

Write an email to the CHRO explaining the suggestions of the HRBP.

B.

Schedule a meeting with the CHRO to explain the HRBP's suggestions.

C.

Email the CHRO asking if the HRBP may attend the next strategic discussion meeting.

D.

Meet with other executives informally to share the HRBP’s suggestion.

Questions # 6:

A rapidly growing technology start-up company with 200 employees forms a new team to handle recruitment for the company that is independent of the HR team. The recruitment team does not have any specific guidelines for hiring. The HR director wants to establish guidelines to prevent the theft of intellectual property and insists that the recruitment team begin conducting background checks to verify applicants' criminal histones. The recruitment director feels that background checks create unnecessary delays and that the multiple interviews used to make selection decisions serve the same purpose as a background check.

In addition to background checks, the HR director would like for the recruitment director to begin using evidence based selection tools. What would be the most effective way to do this, given that the company is growing rapidly?

Options:

A.

Locate an industry-leading selection test maker and buy an off-the-shelf product.

B.

Conduct a full job analysis and design the selection tools in-house.

C.

Consult academic literature and design a selection tool based on best practices.

D.

Continue using the current process and conduct a validation study of its utility.

Questions # 7:

A large retail company opens a distribution center directly across the street from a small competing firm's distribution center and posts a sign advertising open entry-level positions. The plant manager of the small firm notices that the sign indicates the advertised salary is higher than what the firm pays its entry-level employees. The plant manager is concerned employees will leave the firm to seek work at the competing company. The plant manager notifies the HR manager of the pay differences and requests immediate pay matching for all entry-level employees. The HR manager sets up a meeting with the plant manager, compensation manager, and HR business partner to discuss the issue. They decide to increase base pay to match the competitor's base pay but only for a subset of entry-level roles identified as critical. They also decide to put the pay increase into effect immediately, and the HR manager agrees to monitor the situation over the next three months.

How should the HR manager communicate the new pay increase to current entry-level employees?

Options:

A.

Send an email to supervisors of impacted employees requesting that they explain the change to their direct reports.

B.

Hold in-person group meetings with impacted employees to announce their increased pay.

C.

Send a mass email to all impacted employees explaining the pay increase.

D.

Schedule a meeting with each impacted employee to communicate the pay increase and rationale.

Questions # 8:

An organization increased its workforce by 50% over the past six months, and 90% of the positions were filled by employees working remotely. Which action best supports the organization's increased workforce?

Options:

A.

Providing on-demand computer training for the employees

B.

Including a technology proficiency requirement in job descriptions

C.

Coaching midlevel leadership on how to reduce the sense of isolation

D.

Ensuring that all remote employees acknowledge job expectations

Questions # 9:

Which HR strategy should have the greatest impact on promoting a culture that embraces corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate philanthropy?

Options:

A.

Incorporate CSR concepts into learning and development programs.

B.

Use CSR initiatives to recruit, develop, engage, and retain employees.

C.

Build a strong partnership with corporate CSR leaders to make HR's efforts more visible.

D.

Conduct a survey on employee views of CSR and specifically target corporate philanthropy.

Questions # 10:

The marketing department at a large financial services company chooses five high-performing staff members every year to receive a performance award, which includes a monetary reward and recognition at an end-of-year meeting. Employees are chosen by managers in the marketing department. Each manager nominates two direct reports, and then all managers meet as a group to discuss nominees until a consensus is reached. The names of the winners are given to HR for final approval. The marketing department is preparing to begin this year's nomination process. There have been repeat winners in each of the last three years. A marketing employee files a complaint with the HR director about favoritism in the award process. Additionally, the employee points out that newer employees rarely win the award, which lowers their morale. New employees tend not to win because they spend a couple of years training and shadowing experienced employees before receiving tasks to perform independently.

After the nominations are submitted to HR, a product manager asks the HR director not to approve a nominee who recently insulted the manager during an argument. Which action should the HR director take?

Options:

A.

Direct the manager to discuss the issue with the employee.

B.

Meet with the nominee to learn more information about the incident.

C.

Explain to the manager that the award is based on performance and not interpersonal relationships.

D.

Suggest the manager should not influence awards for the marketing department.

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