Sunday, January 22, 2012

Structure of New HR Service Delivery Model



The scheme of work involves setting up a new structure, which accommodates a higher proportion of activities being migrated to a 'HR Centre'. This centre incorporates both transactional and strategic elements — see Figure 1. Business partners and strategic HR advisors are assigned to the various MPS operating units. Web-based self-service tools complete the service delivery model.

 
Figure 1: Overview of new organisation.
The responsibilities of the different facets of the model are set out below:

HR Shared Service Centre

The operational hub of the model is the Shared Service Centre, responsible for delivering the policies and programmes developed in the Strategic Centre, and designed around tiers (0 — Self-Service (on-line answers and transactions); 1 — Human Resources Advisory Centre (24x7 service); 2 — Expert Services (specific queries, more complex or time-consuming transactions); 3 — HR Operational Support (deployed from the Expert Services, this group is based in the business; one-to-one interactions where sensitive or complex cases require this level of support)).

Business Partners and Strategic HR Advisors

This area is responsible for understanding/defining HR requirements from a business perspective; ensuring the Shared Service Centre is meeting local SLAs in the delivery of HR services; developing business solutions to meet business requirements in conjunction with the Strategic Centre and working with SMTs to manage the organisation.

Strategic Centre

The Strategic Centre designs and develops policies, processes and programmes to support business requirements; utilising intelligence coming from the Service Centre and Business (Business Partners / Strategic HR Advisors) and understanding issues/gaps to design corporate HR solutions; proactively identifying trends across organisation; Interfacing with Training, Leadership and Organisation Development.
Reflecting on these proposals, Martin Tiplady acknowledged that gaining stakeholder buy-in had been challenging.
For many people, the intended changes to our service delivery model have been perceived as a centralisation programme, with all the connotations that brings in regard to taking away well-thought-of local resources and replacing them with a faceless, centralised bureaucracy. In fact it is not a centralisation programme; it is just that as a line manager the things you expect to be done by your HR manager 'down the corridor' will now get done in another way.
Allied to that, we needed to use technology rather better than we do, in a sense that we spend quite a lot of time in HR updating individual records and doing lots of checking. Well, the new model relies quite a lot on self-service and we shall be relying on our technological infrastructure rather more in the future.
If I'm frank, we have the support of our top management, the Board, who have undoubtedly questioned and challenged the programme but they have been willing to listen to the arguments and have been persuaded. However, when I go out into the Boroughs, and visit our Operational Command Units (OCUs) there is still a job to do winning over hearts and minds. It is there that the perception of centralisation is probably at its most acute.

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