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Human Resource Management in the Service Sector

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Human Resource Management in the Service Sector Lectures 8 and 9: Law Firms Objectives Understand the basic characteristics of the sector Identify the traditional ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Resource Management in the Service Sector


1
Human Resource Management in the Service Sector
  • Lectures 8 and 9 Law Firms

2
Objectives
  • Understand the basic characteristics of the
    sector
  • Identify the traditional model of organising and
    management of HR
  • Consider some of the key changes in the sector
    and the responses of law firms
  • Identify the challenges this presents for HRM and
    for knowledge management
  • Focus on the key issue of remuneration and
    reward, especially variable reward
  • Analyse a practical case drawing on our knowledge
    of theory

3
Overview
  • Introduction to the sector
  • Traditional model of organisation and of HRM
  • Changes in organisation and HRM
  • Implications for managing knowledge and managing
    people
  • Key issues remuneration and reward brief recap
  • Introduction to the case and organisation of the
    task

(Kinnie et al, 2006 Hunter et al, 2002 Morris
and Pinnington, 1998 Maister, 2003, Scherer,
1995)
4
Introduction to the sector
  • Barristers and solicitors our focus on
    solicitors (law firms)
  • Selling an intangible service advise and
    represent clients on criminal and civil cases
  • Modern law firm traced back to early 1900s
    mostly family practices before this
  • Very large firms the magic circle (London
    based, major corporations)
  • Medium sized firms mix of work mostly for
    corporates
  • Small mostly private and routinised legal work
  • Internal organisation into specialities
    practice groups

5
Law Firms traditional business model
  • Wide range of legal matters dealt with for major
    clients
  • Partners maintained close personal links with
    clients to keep and gain new business
    reputation is important
  • Dedicated human capital to client and to
    specialist areas built organisational capability

6
Traditional organisational structure
Partners Finders
Associates Minders
Assistants Grinders
7
Traditional organisational structure
  • Partners sell services or create demand
    (Finders of new business) and claim part of the
    profits of the firm equity often linked to
    seniority (lockstep)
  • Associates (Minders) who manage the work
    salaried and looking for promotion
  • Assistants - (Grinders) told what to do and
    how to do it no voice, no role - do the hard
    legal work and research also salaried

8
Traditional HR model
  • External Resourcing
  • elite recruitment hired prior to qualification
  • Training and Development
  • Apprenticeship model trained supervised and
    rewarded by the partner
  • Internal Resourcing - promotion
  • up or out promotion up to partner (6 years) or
    leave the firm for a competitor or client
    competitive tournament model
  • Reward
  • making partner but problem of how to create
    the right set of incentives to align aims of
    associates with those of the partners and the
    firm (Morris and Pinnington, 1998)

9
Traditional HR practices Up or Out
High reward for equity partners
Partner in 6 years or leave the firm
Apprenticeship model
Elite recruitment
10
Market changes
  • Growth of in-house lawyers clients become more
    demanding
  • More complex law - need for greater specialism
  • Firms become larger and more complex
  • Growth of transactional work which does not need
    lawyers and is more routinised (eg personal
    injury, property)

11
How have law firms responded?
  • Strategic planning and marketing becoming more
    like businesses
  • Structural changes board structure, managing
    partner, directors of functions
  • Growth of a sectoral approach combined with the
    traditional practice group approach eg become
    specialists in health and local authorities
  • Flatter structures and more devolved organisation

(Hunter et al, 2002)
12
Changes in the HR model
  • Tiers of partners who were rewarded differently
    salaried partners
  • External staff brought into senior positions
    lateral hires - (rainmakers)
  • Greater specialisation earlier
  • Non-partnership tracks established
  • Senior associates need to retain or recruit in
    highly valued but low profit areas
  • External staff brought in as senior associates
  • Semi-professional staff brought in (paralegals)
    to do the routine work

13
  • Performance controls typically chargeable time,
    fees against targets and time charged against
    targets
  • More benign promotion systems not solely focused
    around partnership
  • Promotion criteria
  • Getting new business, fee earning ability,
    technical skill, getting on with clients, getting
    on with peers, management ability
  • Self regulation of performance
  • Monitoring by peers and clients

14
Implications for managing knowledge and managing
people
  • Recognition that knowledge is a competitive asset
    need to manage knowledge strategically
  • Larger firms have sought to manage their
    knowledge often using IT systems for explicit
    knowledge
  • Importance of tacit knowledge and client and
    network capital how to convert this tacit
    knowledge into explicit know that could be
    codified

(Kinnie et al, 2006 Hunter et al, 2002)
15
The HR Wheel
Strategy
Resourcing
Structure
Job and Work Design
Involvement
Intellectual Capital
Training and Development
Performance Management
Pay and Reward
Delivery
16
Challenges presented to HRM
  • Resourcing technical skills and fit with wider
    culture of knowledge sharing
  • Training and development improve specialist
    knowledge and create greater versatility
  • PMS improve performance and stimulate knowledge
    sharing and discretionary activities
  • Reward individual performance and encourage
    commitment to the interests of the firm
  • Involvement retain valuable members of staff and
    create feelings of loyalty and commitment to the
    firm
  • Our focus is on remuneration and reward

17
Remuneration and Reward in High Trust
  • Bases for rewarding performance job, person or
    performance
  • Fixed and variable pay systems
  • Performance pay some key questions
  • Introduction to the case study

18
Strategies for Reward job, person or performance?
JOB
job rate
job rate and performance pay
skill level in job
PERFORMANCE
commission piece-rate
skill-based and gainsharing
PERSON
Competence/skill-based
19
Fixed Pay Systems
20
Variable pay systems
21
Performance Pay some key questions
  • the explicit link of financial reward to
    organisation, group or individual performance
  • What performance? what are the key criteria,
    what is being measured
  • Whose performance? individual, team, firm
  • How is it measured? how is the data collected,
    from whom?
  • What is the mechanism? link to performance
    management system?
  • How is it paid? financial and non-financial

22
High Trust
  • Local law firm - medium sized and growing fast
  • Strong emphasis on culture and values inclusive
    and mutual respect building social capital
    sharing work and knowledge
  • Issue of how to reward their staff who contribute
    to the success of the firm while reinforcing
    their values
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