Szabist: Project Human Resource Management
Szabist: Project Human Resource Management
Szabist: Project Human Resource Management
HRM IN CONTEXT
HUMAYUN AKHTAR
Structure of chapter
HRM: a vibrant area of study A brief history Research on HRM Managing the relationship between people and organization HRM practice areas Addressing the operational level in projectbased organizations Final thoughts
Drucker used the term human resources to emphasize the distinction between workers and other economic resources.
He stressed the fact that humans are true resources from which the firm benefits they are not merely costs.
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managerial practice in the mid- 1970s, and little by little it more or less replaced the term personnel management in many companies.
In the 1980s, many American corporations were threatened by
between employee and employer, lifelong employment contracts, and working methods directed at quality rather than cost management, strongly contributed to the rising interest in the HRM approach at this particular time
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Evolution of HRM
In the new view, employees were seen as
important strategic resources, not as costs that ought to be minimized. The emergence of the HRM concept was highly influenced by two intellectual developments:
Strategic management Organizational behavior
TYPES OF HRM
The Oxford Handbook of HRM-2007
International HRM is concerned with HRM in companies
as
training
and
development,
HR strategies and their impact on performance, including the connections between business strategy and HRM.
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typically interested in patterns across sectors and industries and in determinants for success.
Two challenges are commonly addressed in this
context.
First, how to measure success at the company level,
work system level and employee level. Second, how to identify key practices.
Information-sharing programs Formal job analysis Internal promotion Quality of Work Life programs Quality Circles: Self-managed teams Incentive plans Training investments Employment security Formal performance appraisals Job Rotation
contingency approach within HRM, emphasizes instead the need of HRM practices to be aligned and integrated with the overall business strategy as well as with organizational and environmental contingencies
1. Flows
2. Performance 3. Involvement 4. Development.
FLOWS:
All management activities directed toward managing the
boundaries, and internal flows, for example, job rotation and assignment to/release from project assignments and project teams.
internal) is critical not only for the organizations capability to ensure the continuous supply of human resources but also for maintaining mutually beneficial relationships between mobile workers and the organization.
PERFORMANCE:
Influencing the design of work settings and support in
order to ensure that people get the proper work conditions to perform a good job
Hygiene factors Physical work conditions Administrative matters Achievement Responsibility Job satisfaction
INVOLVEMENT:
People are given the opportunity to contribute with
their knowledge and experience in order to improve and develop the organization. The area could be divided into at least two sets of activities:
Those directed at employees participation in decision-
making processes Those directed at employees influence over their work conditions
DEVELOPMENT:
The activities of this area aim at giving the flow of
human resources a dimension of long-term development of competences and a career trajectory that is beneficial for both the individuals and the organization.
Competence development. Career systems and development.
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