Forecasting the number of employees for hiring

Published by rudy Date posted on July 17, 2010

How do you calculate the almost exact number of employees that an organization needs for business expansion as a result of an improved national economy? — Yellow Submarine.

Organizations must compete with other companies to recruit and retain the most competent and motivated employees. To ensure that they are able to recruit the number of quality of workers they need to be effective, organizations must anticipate future staffing needs and hire qualified applicants.

The trouble is that worker shortages are a recurring reality that most people managers face. A recruitment program that operates on a regular basis (say from year to year), during periods of both shortages and abundance remains the best approach to approximate the number of employees for hiring.

But the question remains to be the same. Exactly how do you forecast the approximate number of employees for hiring given a situation, say, an expansion? The easy approach for planning purposes is to determine a variety of factors of including competitive strategy, technology, structure, and productivity. Generally, they can influence the approximate number of workers you will need.

In addition, external factors such as business cycles and economic and seasonal trends can also play a role. This includes certain sectors that rely heavily on temporary workers.

Given this backgrounder, let’s proceed with two approaches — quantitative and qualitative — recommended by Scott Snell and George Bohlander in their 2007 book simply titled Human Resource Management.

As you can imagine, a quantitative approach involves the use of statistical or mathematical techniques like trend analysis which “forecasts employment requirements on the basis of some organizational index.” It is one of the most commonly used approaches by theoreticians and professional planners for projecting HR demand.

If you want an exact number of employees to be hired for a certain period, then you have no choice but to use the quantitative approach.

On the other hand, a qualitative approach is used if you are satisfied with an “inexact approximation rather than absolute results.”

Qualitative forecasting is “frequently more an art than a science” because it is less statistical while it attempts to reconcile the interests, abilities, and aspirations of individual employees with the current and future staffing needs of an organization.

In this case, you have to rely on your internal experts like supervisors, department managers, consultants, or other knowledgeable individuals on the organization’s future employment needs.

To help reduce the amount of subjectivity in the hiring forecast, you may have to use the Delphi technique to summarize the judgment of a select group of individuals. The forecast represents a composite group judgment.

To get a better view, you have to employ both quantitative and qualitative approaches. By combining the results of these two options, you can secure a more complete forecast by bringing together the contributions of both the theoreticians and practitioners. –In The WorkPlace — By Reylito A.H Elbo, Businessworld

Nov 16 – International Day for Tolerance

“No more toleration of corruption!”

Invoke Article 33 of the ILO Constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar
to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations
against serious violations of
Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.

Accept National Unity Government (NUG)
of Myanmar.  Reject Military!

#WearMask #WashHands
#Report Corruption #SearchPosts #TakePicturesVideos

Time to support & empower survivors. Time to spark a global conversation. Time for #GenerationEquality to #orangetheworld!

November


Nov 2 – Intl Day to End Impunity for
Crimes Against Journalists

Nov 9 – World Science Day for Peace
and Development

Nov 16 – International Day for Tolerance

Nov 19 – World Toilet Day

Nov 20 – World Children’s Day

Nov 25 – Intl Day for the Elimination of
Violence Against Women

 

Monthly Observances:


Homes Safety Month

Filipino Values Month
National Rice Awareness Month
National Consciousness Month
for Punctuality and Civility

Environmental Awareness Month
National Children’s Month
Organic Agriculture Month 

 

Weekly Observances:

Nov 19-25: Global Warming and
Climate Change Consciousness Week 

Nov 23-29: National Girls’ Week
Population and Development Week

Nov 25 – Dec 12: Social Welfare Week 18-Day Campaign to End
Violence against Women 

Week 2: Week 3: Drug Abuse Prevention
and Control Week 

Last Week: Safety and Accident
Prevention Week


Daily Observances:

Last Saturday: Career Executive Service
Day 
Nov 19: National Child Health Day

Categories

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.