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International Human Resource Management

11. International Human Resource Management. Learning Objectives. Know the basic functions of human resource management Define international human resource management Understand the difference between international and domestic human resource management

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International Human Resource Management

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  1. 11 International Human Resource Management

  2. Learning Objectives • Know the basic functions of human resource management • Define international human resource management • Understand the difference between international and domestic human resource management • Know the types of workers used by multinationals

  3. Learning Objectives • Know how and when to use expatriate managers • Know the skills necessary for a successful expatriate assignment • Understand how expatriate managers are compensated and evaluated • Appreciate the issues regarding expatriate assignments of women managers

  4. Learning Objectives • Know what to do to make the expatriate assignment easier for their female expatriates • Understand e.HR systems and how they can be useful in IHRM • Understand the relationship between choice of a multinational strategy and international human resource management

  5. Human Resource Management and Functions • Human resource management (HRM): deals with the entire relationship of the employee with the organization • Recruitment: process of identifying and attracting qualified people to apply for vacant positions • Selection: process of filling vacant positions in the organization

  6. Basic HRM Functions • Training and development: giving employees the knowledge, skills, and abilities to perform successfully • Performance appraisal: system to measure and assess employees’ work performance

  7. Basic HRM Functions • Compensation: organization’s entire reward package, including financial rewards, benefits, and job security • Labor relations: ongoing relationship between an employer and those employees represented by labor organizations

  8. International Human Resource Management (IHRM) • All HRM functions, adapted to the international setting • Two added complexities compared to domestic HRM - Must choose a mixture of international employees - Must decide the extent of adaptation to local conditions

  9. Types of Employees in Multinational Organizations • Expatriate: employee from a different country • Home country nationals: expatriate employees from the parent firm’s home country • Third country nationals: expatriate workers who come from neither the host nor home country

  10. Types of Employees in Multinational Organizations • Host country nationals: local workers who come from the host country where the unit is located • Inpatriate: employees from foreign countries who work in the country where the parent company is located • Flexpatriates: employees who are sent on frequent but short-term international assignments

  11. The Expatriate or the Host Country Manager • Multinationals must decide whether to use expatriates or home country nationals • Need to look at some questions - Given the firm’s strategy, what is the preference for the position?

  12. The Expatriate or the Host Country Manager • Using expatriate managers - Do parent country managers have the appropriate skills? - Are they willing to take expatriate assignments? - Do any laws affect the assignment of expatriate managers? • Using host country managers - Do they have the expertise for the position? - Can we recruit them from outside the company?

  13. Is the Expatriate Worth It? • Decisions must take into account costs of such assignments - High cost - High failure rate

  14. Exhibit 11.1: Paying for the Expatriate Manager: Indices of Cost of Living Abroad

  15. Reasons for U.S. Expatriate Failure • Individual - Personality of the manager - Lack of technical proficiency - No motivation for assignment • Family - Spouse or family members fail to adapt - Family members or spouse do not want to be there

  16. Reasons for U.S. Expatriate Failure (cont.) • Cultural - Manager fails to adapt - Manager fails to develop relationship with key people

  17. Reasons for U.S. Expatriates Failure (cont.) • Organizational • Excessively difficult responsibilities • Failure to provide cultural training - Company fails to pick the right person • Company fails to provide the technical support • Excess of difficult responsibilities of international assignment • Failure of company to consider gender equity

  18. Strategic Role of Expatriate Assignments • Helps managers acquire international skills • Helps coordinate and control operations dispersed activities • Communication of local needs/strategic information to headquarters • In-depth knowledge of local markets • Provide important network knowledge

  19. International Cadre • International cadre (or Globals): Separate group of expatriate managers who specialize in a career of international assignments - Have permanent international assignments - Move from international assignments to international assignments - Recruited from any country - Sent to worldwide locations to develop cross-cultural skills

  20. Flexpatriates • The frequent flyers who travel on short notice for shorter time durations while maintaining their family and personal lives at the home-country location • Key functions - Sent to explore markets - Consider problem areas in the foreign subsidiary - Manage projects - Help with transfer of technology

  21. Flexpatriates • Advantages - Do not experience many of the family and personal difficulties and stress associated with expatriate assignments - Much less expensive than expatriate – no relocation or repatriation costs

  22. Flexpatriate • Disadvantages - Taxation issues can become complicated if the assignment exceeds six months – he company may end up paying the tax - Does not fully integrate into the local work environment and does not learn low to adapt locally - May be resented for neglecting the host-country culture

  23. Key Success Factors for Expatriate Assignments • Technical and managerial skills • Personality traits • Relational abilities • Family situation • International motivation • Stress tolerance • Language ability • Emotional intelligence

  24. Exhibit 11.2: Expatriate Success Factors and Selection Methods

  25. Priority of Success Factors • Assignment length - Technical and professionals skills are key for short assignments • Cultural similarity • Required interaction with local people • Job complexity and responsibility

  26. Exhibit 11.3: Selecting Expatriates: Priorities for Success Factors by Assignment Characteristics

  27. Training and Development • Cross-cultural training: increases the relational abilities of future expatriates and their spouses and families • Training rigor: extent of effort by both trainees and trainers required to prepare the trainees for expatriate positions

  28. Training and Development (cont.) • Low rigor training - Short time period - Lectures and videos on local cultures - Briefings on company operations • High rigor training - Last over a month - Experiential learning - Extensive language training - Includes interactions with host country nationals

  29. Exhibit 11.4: Training Rigor: Techniques and Objectives

  30. Exhibit 11.5: How the Rigor of Training Relates to the Basic Expatriate Assignment Conditions

  31. Expatriate Performance Appraisal • Conducting reliable performance appraisal for the expatriate is very challenging • Challenges • Fit of international operation in multinational strategy • Unreliable date • Complex and volatile environments • Time difference and distance separation • Local cultural situation

  32. Steps to Improve the Expatriate Performance Appraisal • Fit the evaluation criteria to strategy • Fine-tune the evaluation criteria • Use multiple sources of evaluation with varying periods of evaluation

  33. Exhibit 11.6: Evaluation Sources, Criteria, and Time Periods for Expatriate Performance Appraisals

  34. Expatriate Compensation • Compensation packages tend to include many common factors includes: - Local market cost of living - Housing - Taxes - Benefits

  35. Exhibit 11.7: Average Rent of Two-Bedroom, Unfurnished Apartments in Selected European Cities

  36. The Balance-Sheet Approach • Provides a compensation package that equates purchasing power • Allowances for cost of living, housing, food, recreation, personal care, clothing, education, home furnishing, transportation, and medical care

  37. Exhibit 11.8: Balance Sheet Approach To Expatriate Compensation

  38. Additional Allowances and Perquisites • Foreign service premiums • Hardship allowance • Relocation allowances • Home-leave allowances

  39. Expatriate Manager Compensation: Other Approaches • Headquarters-based compensation: paying home country wages regardless of location • Host-based compensation system: adjusting wages to local lifestyles and costs of living • Global pay systems: worldwide job evaluations, performance appraisal methods, and salary scales are used

  40. Repatriation Problem • Difficulties faced coming back home • Three basic cultural problems—“reverse culture shocks” - Adapt to new work environment and culture of home - Expatriates must relearn own national and organization culture - Need to adapt to basic living environment

  41. Strategies for Successful Repatriation • Provide a strategic purpose for the repatriation • Establish a team to aid the expatriate • Provide parent country information sources • Provide training and preparation for the return • Provide a home-leave policy to encourage expatriates to make regular visits to the home office • Provide support for the expatriate and family on return

  42. International Assignments for Women: Two Myths • Myth 1: Women do not wish to take international assignments. • Myth 2: Women will fail in international assignments because of the foreign culture’s prejudices against local women. • Successful women expatriates - Foreign not female—emphasize nationality not gender

  43. International Assignments for Women: Advantages • More visible • Strong in relational skills • Wider range of interaction options

  44. International Assignments for Women: Disadvantages • Face the glass ceiling - Isolation and loneliness - Constant proving of themselves, working harder than male • Need to balance work and family responsibilities • Need to worry about accompanying spouse

  45. More Women in the Future? • Women expatriate managers are expected to grow • Acute shortage of high-quality managers • Increasing number of women provide role models

  46. What Can Companies Do To Ensure Female Expatriate Success? • Provide mentors • Provide opportunities for interpersonal networks as a form of organizational support • Remove sources of barriers • Provide support to cope with dual-career issues

  47. Multinationals and Electronic Human Resource Management • Electronic human resources (e.HR): automation of various aspects of the human resources system of a company

  48. Strategic Benefits of e.HR Systems • Reduce HR and administrative system cost • Improve HR services to employees • Employees take control of their own data • Repository of the wealth of knowledge and skills of expatriates • Employee tracking for career management and other HR purposes

  49. Proper Steps to e.HR Implementation • Develop business case to justify using e.HR or upgrade to e.HR • Make the system customer-focused • Be proactive • Organize collected data in ways that is useful to the organization

  50. Multinational Strategy and IHRM • IHRM orientation: company’s basic tactics and philosophy for coordinating IHRM activities for managerial and technical workers

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