The HR Audit Process: A Model: and Accepted
The HR Audit Process: A Model: and Accepted
The HR Audit Process: A Model: and Accepted
roadmap for action can be developed that will help determine the order in which to address the issues
raised. In addition to a formal report, it is critically important to discuss the results of the audit with
employees in the HR department, as well as the senior management team, so everyone is aware of
necessary changes and approvals can be obtained quickly.
Create action plans
It is critical actually to do something with the information identified as a result of an audit. The
company must create action plans for implementing the changes suggested by the audit, with the
findings separated by order of importance: high, medium and low. It actually increases legal risk to
conduct an audit and then fail to act on the results.
Foster a climate of continuous improvement
At the conclusion of the audit, it is important to engage in constant observation and continuous
improvement of the company's policies, procedures and practices so that the organization never ceases
to keep improving. This will ensure that the company achieves and retains its competitive advantage.
One way to do this is to continuously monitor HR systems to ensure that they are up-to-date and to
have follow-up mechanisms built into every one of them.
One approach is to designate someone on staff (or an outside consultant) to monitor legal
developments to ensure that HR policies and practices are kept current. Likewise, it is important to
keep track of the audit findings/changes made, turnover, complaints filed, hotline issues, employee
survey results, etc., to identify trends in the company's employment-related issues. Identifying
problematic issues, growth areas or declining problem spots can help in the decision of where to
allocate time, money and preventive training resources in the future.
essential that timekeeping policies and practices be clearly communicated and consistently
administered.
Insufficient documentation. Reviews of employer hiring practices often uncover inadequate
documentation, such as missing or incomplete I-9 Forms. Employers can be fined between $100 and
$1,000 for each failure to accurately complete an I-9 Form. Fines for these violations can easily add up,
with reported cases of repayment totaling over $100,000.
An evaluation of the company's operational HR policies, practices and processes with a focus on
key HR department delivery areas (e.g., recruitingboth internal and external, employee retention,
compensation, employee benefits, performance management, employee relations, training and
development, etc.).
2.
A review of current HR indicators (e.g., number of unfilled positions, the time it takes to fill a
new position, turnover, employee satisfaction, internal grievances filed, number of legal complaints,
absenteeism rates, etc.).
Functional audit. Again, the details will vary, but in a functional audit a specific function, such as payroll, is
assessed to confirm it is operating as intended. This type of audit is typically then rotated across all
functions, such as performance management, and complaint investigation.
Wage and hour practices audit. This type of audit looks to uncover any potential problems with wage and
hour practices. For example, it could uncover whether employees who are required to take lunch breaks
have been doing so. It could also look to discover whether all overtime is being calculated and paid properly.
These are just a couple of examples of the types of audits that could be conducted under the wage and hour
umbrella.
Exemption audit. This type of audit assesses whether all employees who are classified as exempt from
overtime are actually qualified to receive that exemption.
Job description audit. While this activity isnt always referred to as an audit, it serves the same function. The
key here is to review job descriptions and update them both for accuracy and for compliance.
Safety audit. As the name implies, this type of audit assesses the safety measures taken within the
organization. (This may or may not fall under HR audits, depending on company structure.) Companies need
to ensure theyre complying with OSHA standards consistently.
Hiring process audit. This type of audit looks at the hiring processes to ensure theyre consistent, efficient,
and nondiscriminatory.
Training and development audit. This type of audit assesses the employee development programs in place
within the organization. It looks to analyze what gaps exist and whether all statutory training has been
completed.
Compensation and benefits audit. This type of audit can take many forms, depending on business needs. It
could be used to ensure that all regulations related to implementing and carrying out benefits are being met.
It could ensure that compensation is in alignment with company objectives. It could be used to ensure that
private employee informationsuch as health information related to the administration of a health insurance
benefitis kept completely separate from other employee information.
The outcome of the skills audit process is a skills gap analysis. This information will enable the
organisation to improve by providing the appropriate training and development to individuals to
cater for the identified skill gaps.
This information is essential for a number of reasons:
Without this information you don't know where to improve.
With this information your training and development will be better planned and
more focused.
Recruiting needs are better defined and more likely to result in the most
appropriate candidate.
Placement decisions are easier with knowledge of current competence levels.
Career pathing and succession planning is assisted with accurate information on
individuals.
a. Determine skills
requirements
c. Determine
development needs
and plan for training/
restructuring
Once skills audit information has been collected, an analysis of the results may be used
for planning purposes relating to training and development and other Human Resource
interventions. Recommendations are then discussed and agreed actions are
implemented.