Company in process of redoing organizational chart with retirement of officer. Just wondered who other HR people report to? President, Vice President, Financial Operations, etc.
SEELEYHR: I report to the General Manager of the this state operating company, who reports to the President, who happens to be the son of the owners and an owner himself. The General Manager is the operating decision leader for this company. The President consults on operating actions and is directly involved in all legal activity; otherwise, he visits when he wants to fly his jet in for an update and take a look around the state. The operating division of the company produces the BACON, ribs, hams, and on and on, and on not much waste to a hog.
I report to the CEO. Human resources needs to report to the top just like any other department. If not, it will hurt the department and diminish your credibility.
All 3 owners - 105 employees private company. Each decided to have their hand in part or HR's business - but none will make a decision. I've been waiting on approval of an employee handbook since I put one together 15 months ago when I started here. So far - no feedback on draft and draft hasn't been adopted.
The HR person at each of our plants reports to the top person at the plant (GM or Dir. of Ops) with a dotted line to the VP of HR at Divisional who reports to the President. Never to a bean counter.
As Director of HR, I report to the CFO. The CEO and President are the owners of the company and they do not get involved in the day to day operation of the company. In fact they live in another state. Reporting to the CFO has not created a problem for me. He and the Chief Operating Officer report directly to the CEO and President and together "run" the company. Prior position, I reported to the President. Both companies have about 200 employees.
To the CEO. We now have a new CEO, who is working on a new org chart. I have a feeling he is going to change the whole reporting structure, and will have me reporting to the CFO (once he hires one).
For those of you that have experience reporting to both the CEO and CFO, can you tell me what changes I should be on the look out for?
Snip > >For those of you that have experience reporting >to both the CEO and CFO, can you tell me what >changes I should be on the look out for? > >Thanks.
Prepare to get challenged on every initiative/project/expenditure from a cost/benefit standpoint. Your budget, if you're lucky to even get one, will be very lean.
In my experience, it has been difficult to get bean counters to understand that not all HR initiatives can be measured from a tangible $$ standpoint. At least not initially. If you can't show ROI up front as it affects the bottom line, their ears close and upper lips pout.
Hi Everyone I have been reading everyday the Great information you all provide and thought I would jump in also. HR reports directly to the President for our company.
We asked this question in last September's HRhero.com Monthly Survey, on the topic Your HR Department. We asked, "Who does the head of HR report to?" Here are the responses from 682 private-sector, for-profit companies with 50-200 ees:
CEO 21% President 31% Vice President 14% Finance Department 14% Operations Department 4% Other 11%
Responses were different for different-sized companies.
The Controller/CFO/Treasurer does my review and I report to him on a day to day basis. However, I spend as much time working with, talking to etc the owners (the President, CEO and Vice President) as I do to him. So I guess you can say I have a dotted line relationship to owners and report to the CFO. I also work for the 8 General Managers of each plant (which are in 8 different locations all over the US), but I don't report to any of them. E Wart
Comments
PORK
I agree that you should avoid reporting to any bean-counter within the organization. In my experience it's seldom a good fit.
Gene
So three heads are not better than one.
Never to a bean counter.
For those of you that have experience reporting to both the CEO and CFO, can you tell me what changes I should be on the look out for?
Thanks.
>
>For those of you that have experience reporting
>to both the CEO and CFO, can you tell me what
>changes I should be on the look out for?
>
>Thanks.
Prepare to get challenged on every initiative/project/expenditure from a cost/benefit standpoint. Your budget, if you're lucky to even get one, will be very lean.
In my experience, it has been difficult to get bean counters to understand that not all HR initiatives can be measured from a tangible $$ standpoint. At least not initially. If you can't show ROI up front as it affects the bottom line, their ears close and upper lips pout.
Gene
I have been reading everyday the Great information you all provide and thought I would jump in also. HR reports directly to the President for our company.
We asked this question in last September's HRhero.com Monthly Survey, on the topic Your HR Department. We asked, "Who does the head of HR report to?" Here are the responses from 682 private-sector, for-profit companies with 50-200 ees:
CEO 21%
President 31%
Vice President 14%
Finance Department 14%
Operations Department 4%
Other 11%
Responses were different for different-sized companies.
You can find the complete survey results in the Subscribers Area of this website:
[url]http://www.hrhero.com/lc/[/url]
Click on the yellow Survey box. Once you get to the survey results, you can click on "Filter Results" to narrow it down to companies like yours.
Hope this helps.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
I also work for the 8 General Managers of each plant (which are in 8 different locations all over the US), but I don't report to any of them.
E Wart