Title: Models of Human Resource Management
1Models of Human Resource Management
2Outline
- Your experiences with HR
- Historical roots of HR in the U.S.
- Current HR roles and activities
- Strategic HR management
- Evaluation of the strategic approach
3Think about Human Resources in your Company
- What roles and activities best characterize what
the HR function does in your company? - What are the general perceptions of HR at your
company? Are these mostly positive or mostly
negative or a mix? - What would make the HR function more valuable in
your company?
4Historical Roots of HR
- Forces that determine the fate of HR practices
- Labor markets
- Government policy and regulation of employment
- Unions
- Societal norms regarding fair employment
Based on Jacoby, S. 2003. A century of human
resource management. In Kaufman, Beaumont,
Helfgott (eds.) Industrial relations to human
resources and beyond. Armonk, NY M.E. Sharpe,
pp. 147-171
5Historical Roots of HR
- 19th Century
- Drive system of foreman
- Three developments that reduced foreman power
- Scientific management focus on efficiency
- Welfare work
- Vocational guidance
- First personnel functions develop
6Historical Roots of HR
- WWI Period and after (up to 1929)
- Tight labor markets, labor unrest, strikes,
government regulation of employment - Developments
- Personnel departments formed to deal with
external forces - Welfare capitalism by leading firms
- Personnel managers support line managers
7Historical Roots of HR
- Turbulent Years (1929-1945)
- Stock market crash, high unemployment, strong
union growth, and more government regulation - Developments
- Personnel departments decimated in wake of
depression union growth - Main role labor relations to deal with unions to
prevent strikes and deal with government mandates - Codification of employment policy and fringe
benefit expansion due to organizing efforts.
8Historical Roots of HR
- Golden Years (1950s 60s)
- Strong unions, but slow growth, more government
regulation of employment, middle management
growth, finance function emphasized, and societal
expectation of fair employment practices - Developments
- Personnel departments grow and begin to
incorporate behavioral science knowledge
(attitude surveys, motivation, morale,
psychological testing) - Split roles labor relations to deal with unions
and employee relations to deal with other
employment issues
9Historical Roots of HR
- 1970s
- Stock market drop of 1969, growth of non-union
firms, proliferation of civil rights laws, worker
dissatisfaction mounts from routinized work,
global pressures - Developments
- Personnel departments grow in importance
- Roles are in change and development, union
avoidance, employee job enrichment and
empowerment - Split roles labor relations less prestigious
employee relations became human resource
management, which begins to take on more
strategic focus
10Historical Roots of HR
- 1980s 1990s
- Deregulation of industries, loose labor markets
with periods of high unemployment, weak unions,
growth of professional jobs and contraction of
middle management, intense global competition,
technological advances, weakening government
mandates, focus on quarterly results due to
activist shareholders - Developments
- Outsourcing of HR activities
- Line managers start quality and high performance
practices without HR - To survive, HR takes hard approach and tries to
quantify its value managerialist focus
11Human Resources Roles,Past and Present
- Clerk/administrator (operational roles)
- Controller of employee costs through efficient
systems - Legal and ethical watchdog (Sarbanes-Oxley)
- Behavioral scientist
- Strategic partner with line managers planning
and implementation - Change agent and broker
12Differentiated Roles of HR
Expert Resource Pool Analysis
Benchmarking Planning Design Support rollout of
programs
Business Partners (Consultants)
Generalists Support line Implementation Manage
client Expectations Manage projects
Central Service Center Transactions Design and
implement support systems Automation
From Kesler, G.C., Law, J.A. 1998.
Implementing major change in the HR
Organization The lessons of five companies.
Human Resource Planning, pp.26-38.
13Recent Directions in HR
- Competency modeling and job analysis
- Job and organization fit in selection
- Building high performance work systems
- Building organizational learning and
effectiveness - Arbitration and mediation to resolve conflicts
- Building employee empowerment and voice
- Work/life balancing
14Strategic Approach of HR
- 1. The management of people is integrated with
the strategic plans of the firm - 2. Helps company deal with environmental forces
and internal problems in order to achieve long
term goals - 3. HR functions are integrated with financial,
marketing, operations, RD functions - 4. Proactive stance rather than reactive problem
solving - 5. Focus is on change, learning, and capability
improvement
15STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS
Analysis of External Environment
Analysis of Internal Environment
Threats and Opportunities
Strengths and Weaknesses
Mission and Goals
Corporate, Business, and Functional Level Strategy
16Evaluation of the strategic approach
- What does the research show?
- Huselid (1995) studied 968 firms in 35
industries. - Results
- Strategic HR in the form of HPWP reduced turnover
by 7 and increased sales by 27,000 (per
employee per year). - Profitability rose by more than 4000 per
employee, and market value rose by more than
18,000 per employee
Huselid, M.A. 1995. The impact of human
resource management practices on turnover,
productivity, and corporate financial
performance. Academy of Management Journal,
38(3), 635-672
17Evaluation of the strategic approach
- Lawler Mohrman (2003) Surveyed 150 firms in
2001 to determine if HR was becoming a strategic
partner, and if so, in what areas it was making
contributions and if it was effective - Results
- Only 41 indicated that HR was a strategic
partner - Where it is a strategic partner, HR does more
planning, organizational design, organizational
development, and employee development, and is
viewed as more effective - Completely integrated HRIS systems allow more
strategic partnering - Other features transactional work is
outsourced line-HR manager teams work together
rotation of people in and out of HR area HR is
headed by trained and experienced HR person
Lawler, E.E., Mohrman, S.A. (2003). HR as a
strategic partner What does it take to make it
happen? Human Resource Planning, 26(3), 15-29.
18Evaluation of the strategic approach
- What did Wright et al. (2001) find?
- Research questions?
- Sample?
- Results?
- Conclusions?
19Critique of Strategic Approach
- What does Richard Peterson have to say about the
focus on strategic HRM? - What is Sara Rynes response to Petersons
criticism? - What do you think?