What is Off the Job Training?

Answer Posted / tauqeer

Any new employee who is quite unaware the organization
culture & ethics with working methodology needs proper
training to give his/her best to the organization. There
are two ways to train employees either by on the job or off
the job training.
Off the job training consist all the information including
company profile & his/her job profile in a formal &
systematic manner away from the working place with help of
Computers, seniors & curent employees working on the same
level. This Make them familier with thier work & the
organization.After off the job training we can conduct on
the job training.

Is This Answer Correct ?    35 Yes 10 No



Post New Answer       View All Answers


Please Help Members By Posting Answers For Below Questions

how can you define hr and change management?

1769


who are the maincustomer of a personnel department and which two qualities are important for those working there to display if it is fulfil its purpose?

1663


Human Resource Management The present state of recession in the IT industry - as a Human Resource Manager How are you going to undertake Human Resource Planning at Macro Level to tide over this crisis?

2396


what recruitment techniques will u adopt?

1913


when basic salary is 21000/ pm on deduction 12% then in same condition gross salary is in-cress up to 21000/pm how deducted the esi .

1102






how can we communiucate as realistic a picture as possible of a job and of the organization to prospective emplyees? What kins of issues are most crucial to them?

1701


What control mechanisms might be most appropriate to ensure that action plans match targeted needs

1947


Case let 1 Trust them with knee-jerk reactions," said Vikram Koshy, CEO, Delta Software India, as he looked at the quarterly report of Top Line Securities, a well-known equity research firm. The firm had announced a downgrade of Delta, a company listed both on Indian bourses and the NASDAQ. The reason? "One out of every six development engineers in the company is likely to be benched during the remaining part of the year." Three analysts from Top Line had spent some time at Delta three weeks ago. Koshy and his team had explained how benching was no different from the problems of excess inventory, idle time, and surplus capacity that firms in the manufacturing sector face on a regular basis, "Delta has witnessed a scorching pace of 30 per cent growth during the last five years in a row," Koshy had said, "What is happening is a corrective phase." But, evidently, the analysts were unconvinced. Why Bench? Clients suddenly decide to cut back on IT spends Project mix gets skewed, affecting work allocation Employee productivity is set to fall, creating slack working conditions. High degree of job specialization leads to redundancy What are the options? Quickly cut costs in areas which are non-core look for learning’s from the manufacturing sector Focus on alternative markets like Europe and Japan Move into products, where margins are better. Of course, the Top Line report went on to cite several other "signals," as it said: the rate of annual hike in salaries at Delta would come down to 5 per cent (from between 20 and 30 per cent last year); the entry-level intake of engineers from campuses in June 2001, would decline to 5 per cent (unlike the traditional 30 per cent addition to manpower every year); and earnings for the next two years could dip by between 10 and 12 per cent. And the loftiest of them all: "The meltdown at Nasdaq is unlikely to reverse in the near future." "Some of the signals are no doubt valid. And ominous," said Koshy, addressing his A-Team, which had assembled for the routine morning meeting. "But, clearly, everyone is reading too much into this business of benching. In fact, benching is one of the many options that our principals in the US have been pursuing as part of cutting costs right since September, 2000. They are also expanding the share of off-shore jobs. Five of our principals have confirmed that they would outsource more from Delta in India-which is likely to hike their billings by about 30 per cent. At one level, this is an opportunity for us. At another, of course, I am not sure if we should be jubilant, because they have asked for a 25-30 per cent cut in billing rates. Our margins will take a hit, unless we cut costs and improve productivity." "Productivity is clearly a matter of priority now," said Vivek Varadan, Vice-President (Operations). "If you consider benching as a non-earning mode, we do have large patches of it at Delta. As you are aware, it has not been easy to secure 70 per cent utilization of our manpower, even in normal times. I think we need to look at why we have 30 per cent bench before examining how to turn it into an asset." "There are several reasons," remarked Achyut Patwardhan, Vice-President (HR). "And a lot of it has to do with the nature of our business, which is more project-driven than product-driven. When you are managing a number of overseas and domestic projects simultaneously, as we do at Delta, people tend to go on the bench. They wait, as they complete one project, and are assigned the next. There are problems of coordination between projects, related to the logistics of moving people and resources from one customer to another. In fact, I am fine-tuning our monthly manpower utilization report to provide a breakup of bench costs into Examination Paper Semester I: Human Resource Management IIBM Institute of Business Management specifics-leave period, training programmes, travel time, buffers, acclimatization period et al." "It would be worthwhile following the business model used by US principal Techno Inc," said Aveek Mohanty, Director (Finance). "The company has a pipeline of projects, but it does not manage project by project. What it does is to slice each project into what it calls 'activities'. For example, communication networking; user interface development; scheduling of processes are activities common to all projects. People move from one project to another. It is somewhat like the Activity Based Costing. It throws up the bench time straightaway, which helps us control costs and revenue better." "I also think we should reduce our dependence on projects and move into products," said Praveen Kumar, Director (Marketing). "That is where the opportunity for brand building lies. In fact, now is the time to get our technology guys involved in marketing. Multiskilling helps reduce the bench time." "Benching has an analogy in the manufacturing sector," said Girish Shahane, Vice-President (Services). "We could look for learning's there. Many firms have adopted Just-In-Time (JIT) inventory as part of eliminating idle time. It would be worthwhile exploring the possibility of JIT. But the real learning lies in standardization of work. It is linked to what Mohanty said about managing by activities." "At a broader level, I see several other opportunities," said Koshy, "We can fill in the space vacated by US firms and move up the value chain. But before we do so, Delta should consolidate its position as the premier outsourcing centre. Since there are only two ways in which we can generate revenue-sell expertise or sell products-we should move towards a mix of both. Tie-ups with global majors will help. Now is the time to look beyond the US and strike alliances with firms in Europe- and also Japan-as part of developing new products for global markets." Questions 1. Should benching be a matter of concern at Delta? 2. What are the risks involved in moving from a project- centric mode to a mix of projects and products?

3302


How are the various factors of production affected by global competition? Do we manage people any differently in a globally competitive environment?

1750


As jobs become more team-oriented, assessment centers will be used more often for non-management jobs. Do you agree or diagree?

1814


What should be the con1ponents of a fair policy with regard to collecting, maintaining, and disseminating information about employees?

1562


How long would it take you to make a meaningful contribution to this organization

2355


If you have done your BE in Computer science then why you choose HR as a profession ?

1142


What are the tasks of HR executive and manager? Why a student choose HR?

1612


Hii I pased my MBA HR through corespondance and I did my BSC (com sci) right now I am not in my country and I don't know any thing about HR because I passed my MBA just for passing now can any one tell me what should I do to get a job ? In which field should I go ? I have 7 months experience in HR but I don't think its working to find a job. pls suggest me what should I do?

1837