Who Does HR Report To?
Missy
30 Posts
We are looking at yet another restructure and we will probably report to the CFO from now on. I think reporting to the president makes more sense, but am curious about how it works in other organizations.
Comments
Previous to me, HR reported to the CEO and under that supervision, the company hired more people and ignored personnel issues because the CEO did not want to focus personnel issues or employee problems. He thought that personnel issues were not very important so, they got ignored and managers had a hay day keeping their departments overstaffed.
The CFO can be objective for the entire company and balance the financial needs of the business against the personnel needs of the various departments. In addition, the financial impact of any potential lawsuits are usually more readily recognized by the CFO and those issues are more likely to be brought to the forefront quicker by the financial department than the CEO who may just dismiss it without recognizing the consequences of his or her actions.
Since I am not an HR professional, I don't understand the reluctance that some of the replies seem to indicate regarding reporting to the CFO...unless the HR person would rather not have any financial responsibility to their employer?
I certainly respect and appreciate what our CFO represents and the role he holds in the company. Fortunately, he and I have a good working relationship and have mutual respect for each other's positions in the company.
THe idea behind the change was that HR is intricately related to Performance, depts are staffed based on how the managers measure his/her depts' performance and how these performance measures align with strategic objectives. For example, if you expect all calls to be answered at 1st ring, then HR must review this with the dept mgr to see how s/he wants to meet this performance measure...more headcounts or look for aumatomated solutions or review/change the performance measure etc etc considerations. HR becomes an active partner in the operational accountability of each dept, instead of just passively adding headcounts to each dept based on the instructions of the managers. The Director of Performance Mgt also oversees all training and development programs.
Right now where I work, HR reports to the Director of Finance. This is 260-staff private organization. There is only 1 HR person handling all HR matters. The arrangement clearly states the position of the company.
[url]http://www.hrhero.com/conference/guestspeaker.shtml[/url]
Christy Reeder
Website Managing Editor
[url]www.HRhero.com[/url]
LORD GOD, NEVER have HR report to a CFO! This rarely, if ever, works, because the CFO is hard result, hard dollar, black & white oriented. If your company wants to hold up any and all improvements in performance management, employee/management development or anything else that is difficult to measure against dollar investment, then move forward with the HR-CFO reporting structure.
HR needs direct access to and support from the CEO. What happens is the CEO generally doesn't fully understand all the intracacies of the HR function, and so is inclined to pawn off the supervision of the function to another main division, generally Finance/Accounting due to the payroll, retirement & benefits functions. (Sometimes Operations due to the recruitment and training functions). The mere fact that HR is comprised of so many specialized functions critical to the organization should tell the CEO that s/he needs the top HR person as a direct report.
Wish me luck!!