Permissions may be granted to groups in exactly the same way as to any other user ID.
Permissions on tables, views, and procedures are inherited by members of the group, including other groups and their members. There are some complexities to group permissions that database administrators need to keep in mind.
The DBA, RESOURCE, and GROUP permissions are not inherited by the members of a group. Even if the personnel user ID is granted RESOURCE permissions, the members of personnel do not have RESOURCE permissions.
Ownership of database objects is associated with a single user ID and is not inherited by group members. If the user ID personnel creates a table, then the personnel user ID is the owner of that table and has the authority to make any changes to the table, as well as to grant privileges concerning the table to other users. Other user IDs who are members of personnel are not the owners of this table, and do not have these rights. If, however, SELECT authority is explicitly granted to the personnel user ID by the DBA or by the personnel user ID itself, all group members do have select access to the table. In other words, only granted permissions are inherited.