Description
Solution
Table of Contents
Task One- Written Paper on Wellbeing at Work. 2
1.1 Theories; Application on Issues in Workplace. 2
1.2 Wellbeing Managed to Support organisation Goals. 3
1.3 Wellbeing Practices in Organisations Value. 4
2.1 Stakeholders Contribution for Improving Wellbeing at Work. 5
2.2 Wellbeing Interaction with People Management Areas. 6
2.3 Organisational Context Shaping Wellbeing. 7
Task Two- Wellbeing Program Suitable for Repas. 7
3.1 Repas Employee Wellbeing; Initiatives. 7
Wellbeing Initiatives to address these needs. 8
3.2 Design Wellbeing Program/Initiatives to address identified Repas Needs. 9
Wellbeing Needs to be Addressed. 9
Key Components to Delivery of the Program.. 9
3.3 Program Implementation Process. 11
3.4 Monitoring and Evaluation of Employees Wellbeing. 13
Task One- Written Paper on Wellbeing at Work
1.1 Theories; Application on Issues in Workplace
Wellbeing Theories
Positive Psychology- Positive psychology is identified as a humanistic approach in psychology which focus on issues leading to improved happiness and wellbeing. In Alam (2022), the rationale of this is to complement schools of psychology which focus on problematic behaviours and thinking approach and managing any issue emerging. For instance, PERMA Framework of wellbeing is appropriate (Wagner et al., 2020).
The advantages of positive psychology entail ability to build an individual strength in a holistic manner for success in their practice. In Houge Mackenzie and Brymer (2020), this is contrary to forcing excellence in unsuitable areas. In practice, by use of the theory, there is a possibility of succeeding in their job roles with workplace relations satisfaction.
The disadvantages include what Alam (2022) identify as over-emphasising on an individual ignoring the community/society which is equally important. Further, it is inappropriate in terms of its detailed understanding leading to failing in guiding people who encounter a lot of issues.
Application of Theory in Workplace– Considering an organisation including Repas, operating in different business environments/locations, this theory is relevant for improving their different stakeholders engaged. Further, with the organisation being based in various environments, the theory is relevant to boost individual pursuits, expanding the scope of people leisure activities. In entirety, the identified activities have a positive impact in improving employee health and wellbeing. Additionally, Wang et al. (2021) note that by using the positive psychology, there is a possibility of building effectiveness in working and to strengthen it. For example, if work-life balance is effective as opposed to nutrition, the former would have more strengths as opposed to fixing the latter.
Psychological Contract– As defined in CIPD (2023), this entail consideration of expectations of individual, their beliefs. Being ambitious and roles in lenses of employers and employees. Hence, this theory emphasise on human part of the employment relations. For advantages, psychological contract is noted as harnessing agility successfully. According to Personio (2023), this grants an opportunity for real-time prioritising on the relations of various players. The importance of this is employment relations success being influenced by demand for evidencing a holistically balanced and fairness in psychological contract. The disadvantages include lack of a precise and implicitness of overall expectations of employees wellbeing, ineffective communication and verbalised. Further, there can be biasness in terms of overall employers expectations for the employee and as such issues in their use in health and wellbeing.
Application of Theory in Workplace– The importance of using this theory to impact wellbeing is guided by the prevalent factors including autonomy, mastering environment, individual development, positive relations with all, life purpose and self-acceptability. In Zacher and Rudolph (2021), breaching psychological contract by employers is unavoidable. The most appropriate strategy would include setting relevant wellbeing initiatives for increasing collaboration of employees and employers in their practices. For mental health conditions prevailing, their management and solving issue of stress amongst employees would be achieved.
1.2 Wellbeing Managed to Support organisation Goals
In Gorgenyi-Hegyes et al. (2021) definition, the overall employees wellbeing is focusing on overall mental, physical, economic and emotional health of the individuals involved in an organisation. The importance of this is the effectiveness of provision of mutual-based gains for people, entity, economies and societies. Working in MNGHA organisation for example, the organisation invest on health and wellbeing initiatives which contribute to their employees success and acquiring an optimum potential in their operations.
The different examples of wellbeing entail;
Absence Management– From the time COVID-19 pandemic arose, staff absenteeism has substantially hindered achievement of a successful organisation practice. This is supported by CIPD (2023a) which recommend an organisation such as MNGHA to invest on wellbeing strategies to manage absence cases. Hence, to embrace various determinants of absenteeism and support strategies such as counselling of the employees, total rewards provision, absenteeism would be managed with great success.
Supporting Organisation Goals– Considering an organisations such as MNGHA, one of their objective is “To achieve 90% success provision of health and wellbeing for KSA Citizens”. Through a reduced health and wellbeing to manage absenteeism cases, there is a possibility of ensuring organisations engage enough employees.
Occupational Health-In line with Sinclair et al. (2020) findings, offering employees with an appropriate opportunity to take part in workplace strategies for increasing health and wellbeing is essential. Considering MNGHA organisation for example, it is important managing declining burnouts/stress issues and job satisfaction increasing.
Supporting Organisation Goals– Occupational health lead to supporting staff wellbeing. For MNGHA organisation, organisation goals are used to recruit employees for occupying market and profits acquisition. For the goals management, it is essential for prioritising employees occupational health. This lead to inclusion of retention levels of high-level qualified staff.
1.3 Wellbeing Practices in Organisations Value
Reflecting on the CIPD HR Professional Map, wellbeing is categorised as the Specialist Knowledge (CIPD, 2023b). The accrued value is evidenced by the level of assisting management of stress levels and to assist creation of positive working environment relevant for staff engagement and performance.
The value which is accrued entail;
Employees Motivation– In line with CIPD (2021), there exist a direct correlation of employees wellbeing and motivation. By investing on a good employee wellbeing, appropriate social bonds are developed with employees appreciation felt. Employees wellbeing has a direct correlation with reduced burnout and stress levels evident. This imply that lacking a good wellbeing in entities is linked with staff stress, pressures and lack of a feeling of satisfaction in assigned functions.
Productivity– In Krekel et al. (2019) report, impact of wellbeing ranges from a feel which affect the sick days number taken by the employees, performance levels, burnouts and likelihood of leaving their organisation. From a basic point of view, lacking a good wellbeing contribute to 80% of increase in medical costs owing to preventable conditions. This is while approximately £15 millions of increased opportunities for all 9,000 staff being lost due to issues or hardships. In total, £300 billion can be lost to turnover, hence affecting productivity.
Further, there are areas in which wellbeing of employees cannot be in a position of achieving. These include;
Failure to respect employees privacy-Majorly, wellbeing strategies pursued by an entity include provision of personal information in order to customise it. For example, in an organisation, age, Body Mass Index, pre-disposure to conditions and salary levels would be required to be revealed. According to CIPD (2021), the identified data fully disclosure to other parties would lead to a negative implication on the staff happiness levels and at the end their wellbeing.
Implementation Costs– For being in a good position to maintain staff wellbeing initiatives, organisations must significantly incur immense costs. As evidenced in Ho and Kuvaas (2020) this is owing to the necessity emerging to control all professionals and guarantee them a holistic inclusion for all employees holistically. Further, for employees, this is cost-intensive since it is long-term and affect the level of maintaining commitment in their assigned functions.
2.1 Stakeholders Contribution for Improving Wellbeing at Work
Success in implementation of wellbeing at work depend on stakeholders…
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- Within six months, PS&M personnel will be provided with chances for capacity building through partnerships with educational institutions to gain knowledge and skills for implementing category management.
- The PS&M would become more motivated in the long run by providing recognition and benefits for pursuing category management implementation.
- Within a year, an effective change management strategy would be pursued, focusing on tracking the change and spotting change resistance
1.0 Introduction
1.1 ADNOC Organisation Background
In this report, the organisation of focus is Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC). This is for understanding the impact of contract terms and conditions on distribution of risk and power with their suppliers. This is an organisation which began its operation in 1971 and today is ranked as the leader in diversified energy group which is owned by Abu Dhabi Government (ADNOC, 2022). The organisation network of holistically integrated business has based their operations across the entire energy value chain assisting their capacity for meeting overall demands of the consistently changing energy markets. For remaining competitive, the organisation has allocated $15 billion for advancing and accelerating lower-carbon solutions, investment in new energy solutions and decarbonisation technologies for lowering their carbon intensity with 25% by 2030 and successfully facilitating their NetZero by 2050 target. The company has a network of fully operational companies that operate throughout the entire hydrocarbon value chain, handling tasks including exploration, production, processing, storing, refinement, and supply in addition to manufacturing a wide range of petrochemical products. I work as a Contract Engineer for ADNOC Offshore, one of the company's divisions. The offshore division of ADNOC is responsible for the delivery and development of oil and gas resources in the waters surrounding Abu Dhabi. With OPEX and CAPEX, ADNOC Offshore spends over 3,000 million dollars annually. The organisation structure is as illustrated in figure 1; Figure 1: ADNOC Organisation Structure1.2 Identified Category Management
The deployment of the iSourcing system, a technology-focused procurement procedure, was chosen as the category management in this study. The need for oil and gas has significantly expanded in the modern era since the Covid-19 epidemic. As a result, ADNOC is forced to spend money on equipment to help them process and refine more oil and gas products. In light of this, the team leader's responsibility is to see that an iSourcing system is in place and can be utilised to purchase the new machines that the company needs to upgrade its operations. Locally in UAE, regionally in the Middle East, and internationally in Western nations, this would apply. This project aims to produce a report outlining the implementation of the change approach. This is done while ensuring the team members and leader have the necessary abilities to carry out the plan successfully. Implementing the new category management strategy is the kind of change being sought. The learner will be the team leader throughout the full category management process since a team has been chosen to oversee the deployment of iSourcing. The practical approach would be utilising various tools and strategies that demonstrate leadership and best practices in change management, along with a focus on the category management data from the ADNOC firm.2.0 Change Management Approach
2.1 Introduction of the Required Change Process
In its Procurement Supply and Management (PS&M) budget, ADNOC had allocated roughly 10 million UAEis before the COVID-19 epidemic. Up to 5,000 domestic and foreign providers are currently utilised in this. Because of the significant financial allocation in PS&M, the ADNOC sourcing method is crucial to their operations in this scenario. Logistics, equipment, and facility administration are all purchased separately by the organisation, all of which fall under the organisation's primary spending categories of computers and technical systems. As a result, they lack a centralised system that would allow all departments to be involved in aiding the procurement procedure (CIPS, 2020). The Burke-Litwin Model (Coruzzi, 2020) can pinpoint the internal and external factors that contributed to the identified change. This model ranks the many change drivers according to their importance and provides evidence of each one in figure 2; Figure 2:Drivers of Change Model When taking into account the ADNOC organisation and indicated change, these elements have the following effects, as stated in Table 1: Table 1:Summary of the Drivers of Change in ADNOC OrganisationFactors of change | Explanation |
External environment | Supply chain networks have been significantly impacted since COVID-19. ADNOC's ability to replenish stock, equipment, and machinery has been affected. Therefore, ADNOC would participate in strategic alliances by including diverse actors and intermediates in the complete value chain through iSourcing |
Individual and oganisational performance | ADNOC's investment in iSourcing would reduce PS&M turnover, everyone's performance, and supply chain network satisfaction. |
Leadership | To ensure iSourcing success, the PS&M will lead and manage efficiently. This inspires and guides other organisations to iSourcing success. |
Mission and strategy | The achievement of ADNOC's aim to provide high-quality oil and gas products would be ensured by the deployment of iSourcing. The justification for this is to quickly and effectively engage highly qualified vendors. |
Organisation culture | Implementing iSourcing would promote the collaborative and teamwork-oriented organisational culture of ADNOC. This is due to the platforms offered by iSourcing that provide suitable options for teamwork and collaboration. |
Task requirements and individual skills | Employees at ADNOC lack the knowledge and skills necessary to deploy iSourcing. This deficit might be filled by offering possibilities for professional advancement. Implementation of the change would be successful. |
Employee motivation | This report's proposal suggests that providing monetary and non-monetary rewards is necessary to encourage people to adopt iSourcing. This is for employing remarkably contemporary systems of practice. |