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Strategic Human Resource Management

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Title: Strategic Human Resource Management


1
Strategic Human Resource Management
  • Dr. George S. Benson
  • benson_at_uta.edu
  • http//management.uta.edu/Benson/default.htm

2
Human Resource Management
3
Who performs the HR function?
  • Companies need around 100 employees to have
    dedicated HR staff
  • HR to staff ratio around 1 to 100 for larger
    businesses
  • Supervisors perform many HR functions
  • Professionalism of HR staff
  • 75 of HR Executives have backgrounds in HR
  • Specialization within fields
  • Compensation and Benefits
  • Training and Development
  • HR Information Systems
  • Organizational Development

4
  • We want to have more people selling instead of
    watching people sell and fewer human resource
    people watching God only knows that they
    watch.
  • Bob Lipp -- Citigroup Cost Cutter
  • Fortune Magazine January 11, 1999

5
Bathroom Breaks at Jim Beam
  • Workers on the bottling line are fuming about
    being limited to four breaks per 8 1/2 hour
    shift, only one of which can be unscheduled.
  • "Our policy is fair and reasonable and it does
    respect the real needs that our employees have,"
    said Jack Allen, human resources director at the
    Clermont plant.
  • CNN Aug 28, 2002

6
Changing Views of HR
  • Business strategies require specific skills and
    behaviors to be successful.
  • HR practices can be crafted to develop certain
    types of skills and encourage behaviors.
  • HR practices should support the core
    competencies and strategy of the organization.

7
Strategic View of Human Resources
  • Employees are human assets that increase in value
    when appropriate policies and programs are
    applied.
  • Effective organizations recognize that their
    employees do have value, much as same as the
    organizations physical and capital assets have
    value.
  • Employees are a source of sustainable competitive
    advantage.

8
Sources of Employee Value
  • Technical Knowledge
  • Markets, Processes, Customers, Environment
  • Ability to Learn and Grow
  • Openness to new ideas
  • Acquisition of knowledge and skills
  • Decision Making Capabilities
  • Motivation
  • Commitment
  • Teamwork
  • Interpersonal skills, Leadership ability

9
Implications for Organizations
  • Job and work design
  • Training and employee development
  • Determination of compensation
  • Integrated performance management
  • Advancement opportunities
  • Development of retention strategies
  • Measuring the impact of HR

10
The Investment-Oriented Organization
  • Organizational Characteristics
  • Sees people as central to its mission/strategy.
  • Has a mission statement and strategic objectives
    that espouse the value of human assets in
    achieving goals.
  • Has a management philosophy that encourages the
    development and retention of human assets and
    does not treat or regard human assets in the same
    ways as physical assets.

11
Investment Orientation Factors
  • Senior Management Values and Actions
  • An organizations willingness to invest in its
    human resources is determined by the investment
    orientation of its managers.
  • Attitude Toward Risk
  • Investment in human resources is inherently
    riskier due to lack of absolute ownership of
    the asset.
  • Nature of Skills Needed by Employees
  • The more likely that skills developed by
    employees are marketable outside the firm, the
    more risky the firms investment in the
    development of those skills.

12
Investment Orientation Factors
  • Utilitarian (Bottom Line) Mentality
  • An attempt is made to quantify employee worth to
    the organization through a cost-benefit analysis.
  • The soft benefits of HR programs and polices
    are difficult to objectively quantify because
    they affect many different organizational areas
    and have differential effects on individual
    employees.
  • Availability of Outsourcing
  • If cost-effective outsourcing is available,
    investments will be made only in HR activities
    producing the highest returns and largest
    sustainable competitive advantages.

13
The Strategic Importance of HRM
  • Competitive Advantage
  • When all or part of the market prefers the firms
    products and/or services.
  • Ways firms can use HRM to gain sustainable
    competitive advantage
  • Maximize the value added by employees
  • Acquire rare employees
  • Develop a culture that cant be copied.
  • Performance requires HR practices that
  • Match the business strategy
  • Are internally consistent
  • Fit with organizational values and beliefs
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