Title: Bus 159 Presentation: Effectiveness Implications of Strategic HRM
1Bus 159 PresentationEffectiveness Implications
of Strategic HRM
- Dr. Stan Malos
- SJSU College of Business
2Article Presented High-Involvement Management
and Workforce Reduction Competitive Advantage or
Disadvantage?
- Zatzick Iverson, Simon Frazer Univ.
- Academy of Management Journal
- October, 2006
3Overview of Article
- -What are High-Involvement Management
Practices HIMPs in the Strategic HRM context? - -How can HIMPs impact Productivity or otherwise
offer a source of Strategic Competitive
Advantage? - -How is the relationship between HIMPs and
Productivity affected by Workforce Reductions? - -What are the corresponding practical
implications for Strategic Human Resource
Management?
4What are High-Involvement Management Practices
HIMPs in the Strategic HRM context?
- -HIMPs Systems of management practices giving
employees skills, information, motivation, and
latitude - -Examples Team-based training and incentives,
flexible job design, and information sharing to
facilitate effective interaction and improve
productivity
5How can HIMPs impact Productivity or otherwise
offer a Strategic Competitive Advantage?
- -By generating and sustaining firm-specific human
capital development - -By developing dynamic capabilities to integrate,
build, and reconfigure internal and external
competencies based on that firm-specific human
capital
6How is the relationship between HIMPs and
Productivity affected by Workforce Reductions?
- -Layoffs and other workforce reductions can be
perceived as psychological contract violations
that decrease motivation and commitment - -Loss of firm-specific human capital and
high-involvement competencies undercut gains
otherwise realized through HIMPs
7Hypotheses
- H1 Layoffs moderate the relationship between
HIMPs and productivity (i.e., more extensive
HIMPs will relate to greater productivity losses
from RIFs) - H2 Continued investments in HIMPs after RIFs
will lessen these effects
8Methods How this study was conducted
- -Archival survey data from Canadian government
labor statistics used to assess Productivity,
HIMPs, and layoffs - -Productivity measured as log of revenues minus
expenditures per employee - -HIMP intensity measured as extent of flexible
job design, problem-solving teams, self-directed
work groups, training, employee information
sharing, and gainsharing
9Results Support for the hypothesized
relationshipsHierarchical Regression Results
- H1 Layoff rates negatively related to
productivity as predicted - H2 Interactions indicate effects are less when
HIMPs are continued after RIFs - see Table 2 and Interaction Figureshard copy
10Take-home message Practical implications for
Strategic Human Resource Management
- RIFs may cut short-term costs but also reduce
productivity and overall performance - If RIFs do become necessary, consider unit-level
retention to maintain work group synergies and
other benefits of HIMPs - Dont give up on HIMPs after RIFs added training
and investment in human capital development may
be needed to reassure layoff survivors and
reinstate motivation, commitment, and related
productivity gains
11Questions?