Hi Kankana,
Hmm...well i don't entirely agree with you..it's how you interpret the discussions which you had...
HR has a major in moderating the process ...defining & innovating the same...
Would suggest that you read the article on HR by Dave Ulrich which talks about the roles of HR as it should be....
Dave Ulrich is Professor of Business Administration at the University of Michigan where he is on the core faculty of the Michigan Executive Program, Co-Director of Michigan's Human Resource Executive Program, and Advanced Human Resource Executive Program.
His teaching and research addresses the question: how to create an organization that adds value to employees, customers, and investors?
He studies how organizations change fast, build capabilities, learn, remove boundaries, and leverage human resource activities.
He has helped generate multiple award winning national data bases on organizations that assess alignment between strategies, human resource practices and HR competencies.
Should we do away with HR? In recent years, a number of people who study and write about business - along with many who run businesses - have been debating that question. The debate arises out of serious and widespread doubts about HR's contribution to organizational performance.
Dave Ulrich acknowledges that HR, as it is configured today in many companies, is indeed ineffective, incompetent, and costly. But he contends that it has never been more necessary. The solution, he believes, is to create an entirely new role for the field that focuses it not on traditional HR activities, such as staffing and compensation, but on business results that enrich the company's value to customers, investors, and employees.
Ulrich elaborates on four broad tasks for HR that would allow it to help deliver organizational excellence. First, HR should become a partner in strategy execution. Second, it should become an expert in the way work is organized and executed. Third, it should become a champion for employees. And fourth, it should become an agent of continual change. Fulfilling this agenda would mean that every one of HR's activities would in some concrete way help a company better serve its customers or otherwise increase shareholder value.
Can HR transform itself on its own? Certainly not - in fact, the primary responsibility for transforming the role of HR, Ulrich says, belongs to the CEO and to every line manager who works with the HR staff. Competitive success is a function of organizational excellence, and senior managers must hold HR accountable for delivering it.
Read more about it ..am sure all your apprehensions will be allayed away!!
Cheers,
Rajat