Question 101

An HR department at a midsize company hosts regular manager meetings to provide updates regarding company structure practices, and policies. During the recent meeting, the HR director notified all managers of the company's new code of conduct policy and plans for an upcoming training about the policy. The policy explicitly states that managers must not form personal relationships with their direct reports. The HR director explains that the policy was created because concerns about fairness related to promotions and rumors about favoritism were beginning to cause conflict within some departments. Some of the managers express that training is not necessary, but they all agree to attend it. A few days after the training, the HR director receives a complaint from an HR employee who claims to have seen a manager and one of the manager's direct reports at a restaurant. The HR director was already concerned about this manager's judgment because the manager approved a promotion for the same direct report even though the direct report has documented performance-related issues. The HR director discusses the issue with the manager. In response, the manager criticizes the new policy and insists the relationship did not impact the direct report's promotion recommendation. The manager also states that the training was unclear and that other managers have the same opinion.
Which action should the HR director take first to address the claim that other managers believe the training on the code of conduct policy was unclear?
  • Question 102

    In a meeting with the executive team, the CEO lays out the revised second phase of the change initiative aligning their day-to-day business operations with the company's vision of becoming a leader in corporate sustainability. The CEO asks each department head how they will support the upcoming changes. What contribution can the CHRO make?
  • Question 103

    A company was recently certified as a B Corp. What stage of the corporate social responsibility (CSR) maturity curve is the firm in?
  • Question 104

    A newly hired chief human resource officer (CHRO) discovers a flaw in the time-keeping policy that allows senior executives to receive full salaries and benefits without working the expected full-time hours. The CHRO reviews corporate data and identifies three senior executives in the sales department who regularly worked half the expected full-time hours for the past two years. The CHRO also discovers that the sales department has the lowest levels of employee engagement and morale across the corporation. However, the CHRO knows these three senior executives have been with the corporation for over a decade and have established strong alliances with the CEO. The CHRO presents the issue to the CEO and learns the CEO was unaware of the flaw in the policy. The CHRO and CEO agree to discuss the issue during the next executive team meeting.
    During the executive team meeting, the sales department senior executives make allegations about the CHRO's professional qualifications that the CHRO knows are false. Which action should the CHRO take?
  • Question 105

    Which of the following elements is the most critical when establishing an organizational diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) strategy?