Over the years of my
career, it’s been my observation that one constant in every organization is
that human resources is just baffling.
As in: I cannot for the
life of me grasp how these people stay employed.
I get it that despite using
the term “human” in the department title, their sole function is to protect the
interests of company management. (Calling them “People Operations”, “Employee
Success” or “Employee Experience” doesn’t change that in the least.) Their only
interest in actual humans is to ensure that they do not sue the corporation for
violating any laws, while disbursing the absolute minimum in the way of
monetary outlay they can get away with.
Because shareholder
value.
This has been my
experience in multi-national corporations of tens of thousands of employees and
very small start-ups. The only ones that haven’t fallen into this pattern are
the ones too small to have a human resources department. As soon as someone
with the letters SPHR after their name is hired, we’re on the slide down to
bafflement.
(And the only department
to rival HR in that wonder is Marketing. Honest to God, in so many places,
Marketing cannot find its way out of a paper bag with a compass and a seeing eye dog. And I’ve worked in Marketing,
and I still can’t figure out why it
collectively screws the pooch.)
The denizens of HR here
are certainly upholding the honor of the profession. I’ve mentioned
before how they touted with great fanfare that they were creating an “Employee
Downtime” area by replacing several tables in the employee lunchroom with a
couple of couches, three TV monitors and a foosball table, for which no one
asked. I don’t like to think how much money that cost—money that could have
gone into coffee- and tea-making facilities.
But apparently the
effort to stand up the down-area plumb wore HR out, because you practically
have to file a FOIA request to get any information about your healthcare
benefits. The one person in the department who has that remit never replies to
a query the first time around; it’s only after multiple emails and voicemails
that she’ll graciously condescend to give you an ort from the table—like…the
group ID number for the dental plan.
Seriously—why offer the
benefit if you’re going to block people from using it?
Oh, wait—never mind. I
answered my question back in graf 3 above.
The question for which I do not have an answer is: to whom does one report HR?
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