New to HR Management - HELP!
jburmeister
12 Posts
[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON 09-21-03 AT 08:21AM (CST)[/font][p][font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON 09-21-03 AT 08:16 AM (CST)[/font]
Hey, everyone! I just started my new HR Manager position last Wednesday for a small (45 employees) very NEW company - less than 1 year old. They did not have a Human Resources department before me. Within 3 days, I have already had to resolve about 3 major personnel issues and have had literally NO time to set up my files and get organized. I don't know about you guys, but I must have some kind of organization and work flow process before I am of service to anyone. I have stayed from 9am - 9pm each day trying to get some things under control, and I am just getting a bit overwhelmed. I guess this is very different for me because this is my first "Management" position - before I was actually reporting to a Director of HR. Now that person is me.
I guess what I am asking from you guys is a way to "deal" with being needed constantly vs. taking the time to do the administrative, compliance and paperwork - I MUST get this company's internal processes in place before anything else, yet they have so many employee personnel issues that need resolved because they really had no one to go to before I was there. I want to be there for them, but at the same time I have to get these company processes in place...and my own processes in place! On top of all this, I am also responsible for benefits and recruiting...2 more major things, and I really have no materials yet - no enrollment forms, no SPDs, no HIPAA policy... nothing.
I love HR, and I love being able to help employees on a daily basis, but I need a few days (or at least sections of my days) to get some organizing, ordering and research done.
Any suggestions, comments, etc.?
(:l
Thanks in advance for any help, guys!
Hey, everyone! I just started my new HR Manager position last Wednesday for a small (45 employees) very NEW company - less than 1 year old. They did not have a Human Resources department before me. Within 3 days, I have already had to resolve about 3 major personnel issues and have had literally NO time to set up my files and get organized. I don't know about you guys, but I must have some kind of organization and work flow process before I am of service to anyone. I have stayed from 9am - 9pm each day trying to get some things under control, and I am just getting a bit overwhelmed. I guess this is very different for me because this is my first "Management" position - before I was actually reporting to a Director of HR. Now that person is me.
I guess what I am asking from you guys is a way to "deal" with being needed constantly vs. taking the time to do the administrative, compliance and paperwork - I MUST get this company's internal processes in place before anything else, yet they have so many employee personnel issues that need resolved because they really had no one to go to before I was there. I want to be there for them, but at the same time I have to get these company processes in place...and my own processes in place! On top of all this, I am also responsible for benefits and recruiting...2 more major things, and I really have no materials yet - no enrollment forms, no SPDs, no HIPAA policy... nothing.
I love HR, and I love being able to help employees on a daily basis, but I need a few days (or at least sections of my days) to get some organizing, ordering and research done.
Any suggestions, comments, etc.?
(:l
Thanks in advance for any help, guys!
Comments
Thanks for the excellent advice.
I will try some of these things out starting tomorrow...
I will have to for my sanity...
Thanks again...I'll check back later for more comments.
I feel your pain. x:'( I've been in my current position for two years and have not accomplished nearly as much as I'd hoped by now. Similar story - too many fires, too little me. I don't have a door that I can close to the physical interruptions, and I am learning to say "I need to finish this right away and I'll get back to you by (whenever)". I share the office with four others of various departments and it's crazy all day.
I like Don Ds Twin's suggestion and I take a similar approach. In my day timer (week at a glance) I highlight the "do or die" stuff for the week and just move the rest to the next week. I tend to schedule waaayyy too much and every now and then have to reprioritize.
I am also fortunate to have a great ops manager and sometimes ask her help in non-decision-making HR tasks such as investigating employee complaints. The time-consuming groundwork gets done and I can take it from there. Of course I return the favor when she needs help. Maybe you could ask whoever handled personnel issues before you to continue with the "gathering information" process for just another week while you get things in order? (That's assuming they are good at that sort of thing...)
Good luck and stick with the Forum. I learn from it every day, and it brings me sanity (and sometimes a dose of humanity) when I'm losing it.
1) NEVER CLICK ON THE ALERT FOR A NEW THREAD AT THE END OF YOUR POSTINGS, FOR SURE YOU'LL HAVE LOTS OF POSTINGS BY "THE DON'S OR PORK"!
2) STOP GOING INTO THE FORUM UNTIL TODAY'S FIRES ARE OUT OR WORKING!
GIVE US YOUR E-MAIL ADDRESS AND WE'LL LOAD YOU UP WITH OUR PERSONALIZED ASSISTANCE! Seriously, if you need something in particular just ask and I'm sure anyone of us will give you what we have that might or might not help, but you can be the judge! I have a very good employee handbook that has served me well; I will share for a price, of your asking!!!
PORK
If you don't have a door (Lori you might try this too) and your supervisor is okay with it, take a 2 or 3 hour lunch once a week and work out of the office. We have a pizza hut a block away and I go early and get the corner booth. I can work on drafts, reading newsletters or other materials, update my calendar, write notes, outlines or memo's.
Good Luck! Barbara
Take a lot of deep breaths and think about what you want your department to look like next week, next month, next year, etc. It's easy to say and hard to do, but it's critical that you take the time to do it right.
Shortcuts have a way of becoming short circuits.
Good luck, and welcome to the best online HR community in the world!
And you are right, I do have a lot of freedom to set things up how I would like them to be...that is a tremendously wonderful feeling...a very different feeling that I am not quite used to yet. I have always had to "run it by" someone before implementing, and now I really don't have to do a lot of that. Of course, I have to get the final approval from the CEO, but he seems very open to new, innovative ideas...he's great!
Again, thanks guys...and I look forward to coming back again and again!