| NEW RECERTIFICATION OPPORTUNITIES FOR HR PROFESSIONALS - Bill Foster, SPHR The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) has initiated new recertification requirements for HR professionals who have been awarded the Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR) credential. Under the new requirements, SPHR certificants must earn 15 of their required 60 recertification credit hours specifically in the strategic management functional area. The HR Certification Institute (HRCI) test specifications define strategic management as "the processes and activities used to formulate HR objectives, practices and policies to meet the short- and long-range organizational needs and opportunities, to guide and lead the change process and to evaluate HR's contribution to organizational effectiveness." This definition is the basis of the new strategic management recertification requirements. Under the new rules, the types of continuing education experiences that count toward the specified credit hours in strategic management actually give certificants opportunities to explore beyond conventional "HR-related" seminars and workshops. Some examples that could fulfill the strategic management requirement are: 1. Interpret information from internal sources, including marketing, financial/accounting, operations and IT, to participate in strategic planning and policy-making.
To be effective strategic partners, HR professionals must know the "business of business" and how it relates to the HR function and the organization's strategic goals. Continuing education experiences that may count toward the strategic management requirement might include upper-level business writing courses, marketing workshops, finance for nonfinancial managers and seminars discussing trends in the workplace. 2. Interpret information related to the general business environment, industry practices and developments, and technological developments from external sources to participate in strategic planning and policy-making.
HR professionals should be able to take work-related information from various resources, synthesize it and apply it to their own work settings. An example of a "recertification" experience that could count under the strategic management area would be research and development of an environmental scan for presentation during an organization's strategic planning meeting. 3. Participate as a partner in the organization's strategic planning process.
Certificants would receive credit for first-time participation in a strategic planning process within their organizations. 4. Establish strategic relationships with individuals in the organization, to influence organizational decision-making. An example might include learning about organizational culture and its effect on HR policies and practices. 5. Establish relationships/alliances with key individuals in the community and in professional capacities to help meet the organization's strategic needs.
Certificants could receive strategic management credits for HR-related work, including organizational social responsibility components such as welfare-to-work or school-to-work programs, philanthropic activities or alliances with community organizations. Recertification credit would not be awarded for merely participating in company-sponsored activities. Certificants must be prepared to demonstrate their involvement in the program and how their HR expertise helped them succeed. 6. Evaluate HR's contribution to organizational effectiveness, including assessment, design, implementation and evaluation of activities with respect to strategic and organizational measurement in HR objectives (refers to participation in change management).
It is not enough to introduce new programs and initiatives within an organization, but HR must also constantly evaluate its return on investment. Recertification credit could result from designing and implementing such programs or for participating in training on measuring HR's contribution to organizational effectiveness. 7. Provide direction and guidance during change in organizational processes, operations, planning, intervention, leadership training and culture. Demonstrated on-the-job leadership in change management could qualify for strategic management recertification credits. 8. Develop and shape organizational policy related to the organization's management of its human resources.
Demonstrate first-time on-the-job experience, developing policy based on your organization's specific needs, such as instituting a telecommuting policy. 9. Cultivate leadership and ethical values in self and others through modeling and teaching.
Possible credits awarded include participation in leadership training and development of an organization's code of ethics. 10. Provide information for the budgeting process, including budget development and review.
To be leaders, HR professionals must have knowledge of budget development and review. HR professionals who need additional training in this area could earn credits for continuing education in finance for nonfinancial managers, budget development, forecasting and project management. 11. Monitor legislative environment for proposed changes in law and take action to support, modify or stop the proposed change (write a member of Congress, give expert testimony at a public hearing, lobby legislators). Credits could be awarded for work to influence the outcome of workplace legislation or legislation affecting your industry. This could include providing testimony and writing or meeting with legislators. HRCI awards one credit hour for testifying to Congress or a state legislative body.
Much of the training and administration involved in a Profiles Checkpoint 360°/Skillbuilder™ series could qualify for recertification credits under these new guidelines. |