hi! i am a new member of this forum. I m currently doing MBA and right now on training. i have been given a project to design Role job descriptions & identifying KRA of each positions. I m finding it difficult to identify KRA's . can Somebody help me with this............
[/quote]
From United States, Boston
[/quote]
From United States, Boston
Dear Sehgal, I have seen few posts regarding kra, so type "kras" in search colum and search in this site. you will get few results regarding the same. All the Best.
From India, Bangalore
From India, Bangalore
Just a suggestion, for what it's worth, in your study and understanding of KRAs.
Many older texts that covered the study of MBO and Peter Drucker also integrated the issue of KRAs--or Key Result Areas--within the study of the MBO process.
As the term Key Results Area--KRA--has evolved, the term has moved away from the seemingly well-defined areas of Business Management into more esoteric and narrowly focused objectives. KRAs originally focused on areas within the enterprise that could be consistently measured in objective terms, and were measured regularly to demonstrate performance.
In my mind, there are always distinct separations between Objectives and Key Result Areas, but more and more in client companies, I'm seeing the two terms blended; creating a mishmash of terms.
When I sit through an investment presentation and hear Investment Bankers discussing the Key Result Areas of an Enterprise, I guarantee you that KRAs of which they speak differ significantly from the KRAs of the Middle Management ranks.
In today's parlance, we must assume that the terms Key Result Areas embrace the Overriding Objectives of yesterday; KRAs will generally be moving targets, subject to results vs plan; and--to prove out Murphy's Law--will most likely be used to illustrate that which someone has NOT achieved!
Alan Guinn, Managing Director
The Guinn Consultancy Group, Inc.
From United States, Bluff City
Many older texts that covered the study of MBO and Peter Drucker also integrated the issue of KRAs--or Key Result Areas--within the study of the MBO process.
As the term Key Results Area--KRA--has evolved, the term has moved away from the seemingly well-defined areas of Business Management into more esoteric and narrowly focused objectives. KRAs originally focused on areas within the enterprise that could be consistently measured in objective terms, and were measured regularly to demonstrate performance.
In my mind, there are always distinct separations between Objectives and Key Result Areas, but more and more in client companies, I'm seeing the two terms blended; creating a mishmash of terms.
When I sit through an investment presentation and hear Investment Bankers discussing the Key Result Areas of an Enterprise, I guarantee you that KRAs of which they speak differ significantly from the KRAs of the Middle Management ranks.
In today's parlance, we must assume that the terms Key Result Areas embrace the Overriding Objectives of yesterday; KRAs will generally be moving targets, subject to results vs plan; and--to prove out Murphy's Law--will most likely be used to illustrate that which someone has NOT achieved!
Alan Guinn, Managing Director
The Guinn Consultancy Group, Inc.
From United States, Bluff City
Hi Lucky,
KRAs are defined for the positions keeping in view the Business requirements and targets.Like for a HR Manager KRA could be of Recruiting people in a given time frame,conducting Employee Satisfaction Survey, etc.
For role directory you can refer the book of Mr. Udai Pareek , this eill give you lot of insight.
Thanks and regards,
Prabhat Saksena
Mobile 0 98102 46426
KRAs are defined for the positions keeping in view the Business requirements and targets.Like for a HR Manager KRA could be of Recruiting people in a given time frame,conducting Employee Satisfaction Survey, etc.
For role directory you can refer the book of Mr. Udai Pareek , this eill give you lot of insight.
Thanks and regards,
Prabhat Saksena
Mobile 0 98102 46426
Find answers from people who have previously dealt with business and work issues similar to yours - Please Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query.