CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF STUDY
According
to Thompson (2008), Promotion is
the advancement of an employee's rank or position in an
organizational hierarchy system. Promotion may be an employee's
reward for good performance, i.e., positive appraisal. Before a company
promotes an employee to a particular position it ensures that the person is
able to handle the added responsibilities by screening the employee with
interviews and tests and giving them training or on-the-job experience. A
promotion can involve advancement in terms of designation, salary and benefits,
and in some organizations the type of job activities may change a great deal.
The opposite of a promotion is a demotion.
A
promotion can involve advancement in terms of designation, salary and benefits,
and in some organizations the type of job activities may change a great deal.
In many companies and public service organizations, more senior positions have
a different title: an analyst who is promoted becomes a "principal
analyst"; an economist becomes a "senior economist"; or an
associate professor becomes a "full professor". The amount of salary
increase associated with a promotion varies a great deal between industries and
sectors, and depending on the what parts of the hierarchical ladder an employee
is moving between. In some industries or sectors, there may be only a modest
increase in salary for a promotions; in other fields, a promotion may
substantially increase an employee's salary.
The
same is true with benefits and other privileges; in some industries, the
promotion only changes the title and salary, and there are no additional
benefits or privileges (beyond the psycho-social benefits that may accrue to
the individual). In some not-for-profit organizations, the values of the
organization or the tightness of funding may result in there being only modest
salary increases associated with a promotion. In other industries, especially
in private sector companies, a promotion to senior management may carry a
number of benefits, such as stock options, a reserved parking space, a corner
office with a secretary, and bonus pay for good performance. The degree to
which job activities change varies between industries and sectors. In some
fields, even after an employee is promoted, they continue to do similar work. For
example, a policy analyst in the federal government who is promoted to the post
of senior policy analyst will continue to do similar tasks such as writing
briefing notes and carrying out policy research. The differences may be in the
complexity of the files that the individual is assigned to or in the
sensitivity of the issues that they are asked to deal with. In other fields,
when an employee is promoted, their work changes substantially. For example,
whereas a staff engineer in a civil engineering firm will spend their time
doing engineering inspections and working with blueprints, a senior engineer
may spend most of their day in meetings with senior managers and reading
financial reports. In symphony orchestras, when a musician such as a violinist
is promoted to the position of concertmaster, their duties change
substantially. As a violin player, the individual played the music as part of
the violin section. As a concertmaster, the individual plays solo parts,
decides on the bowings and interpretation of the music, and leads the violins
during performances. Different organizations grant the hiring and promoting
managers different levels of discretion to award promotions. In some parts of
the private sector, the senior management has a very high level of discretion
to award promotions, and they can promote employees without going through much
procedures or formalities such as testing, screening, and interviewing. In the
public sector and in academia, there are usually many more checks and balances
in place to prevent favoritism or bias. In many Western public service bodies,
when a manager wants to promote an employee, they must follow a number of
steps, such as advertising the position, accepting applications from qualified
candidates, screening and interviewing candidates, and then documenting why
they chose a particular candidate. In academia, a similar approach is used,
with the added safeguard of including several layers of committee review of the
proposed promotion using committees which include members of other faculty and
experts from other universities.
In
Cross River University of Technology (CRUTECH), promotion is done annually and
commences in April. All department heads submits a comprehensive assessment of
the teaching administrative abilities of each staff which includes result of
students’ evaluation. Staffs are considered for promotion if they have spent up
to about three years.
There
is no computerised system which takes in the criteria for promotion in CRUTECH
to determined if a staff is fit for promotion or not. All promotion documents
are computed manually and pose a lot of problems when promotion is to be given
to staffs. There by there is need for the development of a computerised
promotion system so as to eliminate the manual promotion determination methods
being presently under taken by CRUTECH.
1.2
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
The
present promotion system of Cross River University of Technology, Calabar is
done by manual means, whereby a committee (promotion and appointment
committee) is form to consider if a particular staff is
reach or satisfied all the promotion criteria. This promotion process takes a
whole lot of time in doing these, looking into the promotion criteria and secondly,
they is bound to be a bias attitude of the committee to favour their own
personal interest or candidate and as such, lot of partial is involve in the
manual process and this is a big problem to be tackled
1.3
AIM AND OBJECTIVE OF
THE STUDY
The aim is to design and
develop an automated staff promotion software to accomplish the following :
- Reduce
the bias action of the promotion committee members.
- Reduce the
long process involve in the
conducting interview
TOPIC: DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF STAFF PROMOTION SYSTEM
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 64
Price: 3000 NGN
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