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The role of HR

The role of HR. Comparative HRM: Theory & Practice. Universalism vs Contextual. Universalism-Contextual debate Is there a best practice approach? Convergence as a 3 rd alternative. Environment. Organization. International Context Includes: International Agreements. Corporate Strategy.

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The role of HR

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  1. The role of HR

  2. Comparative HRM: Theory & Practice

  3. Universalism vs Contextual • Universalism-Contextual debate • Is there a best practice approach? • Convergence as a 3rd alternative

  4. Environment Organization International Context Includes: International Agreements Corporate Strategy National Context Includes: culture political/legislative economic social patterns of ownership etc. HRM Strategy Includes: integration devolvement to line employment policies involvement policies reward policies work systems etc. HRM Practice Includes: selection performance appraisal rewards development industrial relations communication etc. National HRM Context Includes: education/training labor markets trade unions industrial relations etc. Contextual Model of HRM

  5. People Employee Champion Change Agent Operational Focus Strategic Focus Administrative Expert Strategic Partner Process HR Role Framework Source: Conner J. Ulrich D. (1996). “Human Resource Roles: Creating Value Not Rhetoric” Human Resource Planning September

  6. Development Selection Performance Appraisal Rewards The Michigan Matching Model of HRM

  7. Stakeholder interests Shareholders Management Employee groups Government HRM Policy Community Unions Choices Long-term Employee HR Outcomes consequences influence Commitment Individual well Human Competence being Resource flow Congruence Organizational Reward systems Cost effectiveness Work systems Situational effectiveness Societal well- factors being Work force characteristics Business strategy and conditions Management philosophy Labor market Unions Task technology Laws and societal values The Harvard Model of Human Resource Management

  8. Role of HRM departments • Differing roles in different countries. • Some more administrative some more strategic • As some of the administrative work is outsourced or computerised, there can be more emphasis on strategic role.

  9. Role of HRM department • Is it represented on the board of directors • Is it involved in strategic management • Where was the HR manager recruited

  10. Moving from a centralised to decentralised HR model • Trend towards management through cost-centre profit-centre based approach • Line managers are more in contact with employees. They have the main responsibility for performance. • Issue of responsiveness to customers. • A move towards reducing overhead and realtime staffing.

  11. Pressures slowing the devolvement to line managers • Line managers not enthusiastic to take on HR activities • Line managers may regard HR activities as a lower priority • Not enough training and support to line managers in HR duties

  12. Integration and devolvement • Degree of integration of HRM into business strategy • Degree of devolvement: the degree to which HRM practive involves and gives responsibility to line managers rather than personnel specialits

  13. Mechanics (low integration and low devolvement) • Specialist, but limited skills and interests of HRM practitioners. • Professional personnel manager with higher’ imperatives than the organization. Belief that specialist knowledge is beyond the scope of untrained people. • Focus on the mechanical requirements of the function. • Increasing isolation from strategic interests of the organization.

  14. wild west (low integration and high devolvement) Individual manager free to develop his/her own employee relationship. lncreased power to hire and fire, reward and develop employees. Potential for incoherence, inconsistency and strong employee reactions.

  15. Guarded strategists (highintegration but lowdevolvement) • Specialists powerful figures in the organization. • Close liaison with senior managers to develop strategy. • Large and influential departments with centralized control of policies. • Better line managers frustrated with lack of control, poor managers welcome lack of responsibility.

  16. Pivotal (high integration and high devolvement) Senior personnel managers act as catalysts, facilitators and co-ordinators. Small, but powerful departments. Monitoring of and internal consulting on HRM developments. Responsibility and authority devolved to the line. Problems with resourcing high-calibre business- orientated HRM managers.

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