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Viewing questions 11-20 out of questions
Questions # 11:

Which activity expands an employee's job by providing more control responsibility, and discretion?

Options:

A.

Shadowing

B.

Job enrichment

C.

Succession planning

D.

Job enlargement

Questions # 12:

The executive leadership team at a global IT company with over 300,000 employees in 140 countries decides they want more information about the state of the talent at the organization. They are concerned that they do not have enough insight about the talent pool across the organization. This has prevented HR from identifying and planning for retention risks and has caused delays in filling critical positions. Additionally, leaders across the organization lack an effective way to identify the best staff for their teams and must rely on recommendations from others. The VP of HR is asked to identify a talent management software solution and oversee its companywide implementation.

A talent management software package has been selected. Which action should the VP of HR take to create an effective implementation project team?

Options:

A.

Select employees who have the most knowledge about talent management software solutions.

B.

Choose stakeholders who represent different functions and locations across the company.

C.

Ask leaders to assign the highest performing employees from their departments to the project.

D.

Assign leaders who have had the most challenges related to talent management to the project.

Questions # 13:

A small company in the energy industry has a policy that states that employees who work overtime hours will be compensated with leave rather than with cash. Due to the nature of the industry, overtime work is common for employees who work in departments within the company’s core areas of operations. Employees throughout the company have been unhappy with this policy for many years, but have remained willing to work overtime hours when asked. However, managers are becoming increasingly reluctant to approve the leave that employees have earned because it leads to staffing shortages. As a result, more and more employees are refusing to work overtime hours. Senior leaders ask the company's HR business partner (HRBP) to investigate the problem further and to provide a solution. Senior leaders accept a recommendation from the HRBP to amend the current overtime policy to provide overtime pay to employees in the core areas of operations. Because they work so little overtime no change is recommended for employees in the administrative areas.

The administrative employees complain that the new policy is unfair. What should the HRBP do?

Options:

A.

Tell the administrative employees that they should document their grievances in writing so that HR can formally present their complaints to the company's senior leaders

B.

Meet with administrative employees to address their concerns and explain the rationale behind the business decision.

C.

Invite administrative employees to discuss their concerns with HR.

D.

Conduct a salary review for administrative staff to ensure they are being paid competitively.

Questions # 14:

A company is looking to launch an employee volunteer program as a creative recruiting tool. Which benefit should the HR director stress when creating a business case for this program?

Options:

A.

Goodwill

B.

Present benefits

C.

Future benefits

D.

Philanthropy

Questions # 15:

A new HR director is hired into the HR department of one at a midsize, engineering company. The HR director immediately notices that, unlike all other major departments, HR is never invited to any important meetings, or involved in strategic discussions. The president of the company sees the sole use of an HR department as meeting legal requirements and the core duties of the HR director are to onboard new employees, help them complete their paperwork and address employee complaints. The HR director sees several areas where HR can add value to the company such as improving employee engagement, automating various HR systems, and introducing a performance review process. The HR director recognizes that the company needs one to two additional HR employees to truly be able to implement these important initiatives. When the HR director asks the president about the possibility of hiring two new HR employees, the president laughs and replies that one HR employee is costing the company more than enough.

While developing the performance appraisal system, several employees explain to the HR director that they largely work independently, making it difficult to provide ratings for others. What approach should the HR director propose to meet the needs of the company?

Options:

A.

Restructure employees' work so that they work more collaboratively.

B.

Ask managers to make ratings based on documentation and material provided by the individual employees.

C.

Introduce more concrete performance criteria including the number of projects completed and client satisfaction ratings.

D.

Design a new performance management system focused on the achievement of individual goals tied to organizational goals.

Questions # 16:

Which element is fundamental to an inclusive global workplace?

Options:

A.

A workplace that values individual and group differences

B.

A company with a variety of social and cultural identities among its staff

C.

An organization that has numerical representation of individuals from different backgrounds

D.

A firm that has an active diversity and inclusion policy

Questions # 17:

A new HR director is hired into the HR department of one at a midsize, engineering company. The HR director immediately notices that, unlike all other major departments, HR is never invited to any important meetings, or involved in strategic discussions. The president of the company sees the sole use of an HR department as meeting legal requirements and the core duties of the HR director are to onboard new employees, help them complete their paperwork and address employee complaints. The HR director sees several areas where HR can add value to the company such as improving employee engagement, automating various HR systems, and introducing a performance review process. The HR director recognizes that the company needs one to two additional HR employees to truly be able to implement these important initiatives. When the HR director asks the president about the possibility of hiring two new HR employees, the president laughs and replies that one HR employee is costing the company more than enough.

A recently hired female engineer submits an HR complaint saying that she is not given the most visible opportunities despite her being one of the most experienced engineers at the company. After confirming that this is happening what should the HR director do in response?

Options:

A.

Meet with the employee's manager to develop a career plan to provide more visible opportunities for the employee.

B.

Develop an equal opportunity statement and email it to all employees.

C.

Make the engineer's manager aware of the bias and require diversity training for the team.

D.

Form a women's mentoring group within the company.

Questions # 18:

A global manufacturing organization is dealing with a high level of attrition among machine operators as well as difficulty recruiting machine operators at a recently acquired factory. The HR director is attempting to address the issue. During exit interviews, multiple employees mention they are leaving to take higher-paying jobs at other companies in the area. The HR director of the factory in that country believes that the company needs to raise the salaries of the machine operators to address this. The HR director contacts the chief human resource officer (CHRO) to discuss the need for a salary adjustment. The CHRO is located in another country and has never been to the country where the factory is located. The CHRO reviews the most recent salary study for the region and indicates that the salaries the company is paying are competitive with other companies in the region. The CHRO also says that due to recent increases in operating expenses and declines in revenue, it would be financially irresponsible to provide raises.

If the HR director does secure a salary raise for the machine operators, how should the HR director assess whether it is effective in dealing with the machine operator recruitment and retention problem?

Options:

A.

Conduct monthly pulse surveys with machine operators to gauge the overall morale of the machine operators.

B.

Compare machine operator turnover statistics in the year following the raise to the year before the raise.

C.

Conduct focus groups with machine operators to gauge their sentiments regarding the raise.

D.

Review time-to-fill statistics for all machinist vacancies both before and after the raise.

Questions # 19:

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 analyze the impact of the pay increase on entry-level employees over the three-month period?

Options:

A.

Set up interviews with entry-level employees to identity factors responsible for the retention of current employees.

B.

Track whether conversion rates from applicant to employee increase for entry-level positions.

C.

Track online reviews about the company by employees and candidates.

D.

Administer a job satisfaction survey to compare responses of employees who satisfy their pay and those who did not.

Questions # 20:

An organization is experiencing an influx of administrative tasks and needs additional support on a short-term basis for four hours a day. Which is the best type of contingent worker for the role?

Options:

A.

Part-time employee

B.

Temporary employee

C.

Contractor

D.

Intern

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