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SHRM models

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Human Resource Management (HRM) focuses on effectively managing people within an organization to achieve both individual and organizational goals. Key HRM functions include recruitment and selection, training and development, performance management, compensation, and employee relations. By fostering a positive work environment and aligning HR strategies with business objectives, HRM plays a vital role in enhancing employee motivation, productivity, and retention. Ultimately, successful HRM contributes to a more engaged workforce and supports long-term organizational success.

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Lecture 4

SHRM models

Rise of SHRM:
- 1980S – rise of HRM – passive assets
- 1990’s emphasises on strategic management of people- align people with
organizational objectives
- SHRM – basic assumption is that internal resources provide the basis for competitive
advantage
- SHRM is a new field of research between strategy and HRM.

What is SHRM?
- “The intentions of the corporation both explicit and covert, toward the management
of its employees expressed through philosophies, policies and practices”
Torrington et al., 2005:28


- “The development of a consistent aligned collection of practices, programs and
policies to facilitate the achievement of the organisation’s strategic objectives”
Mello, 2006: 152

-39% of UK firms did not have a written HR strategy (Guthridge and Lawson 2008)

Theoretical perfectives:
- The resource-based view
- The universalist/best practice and stakeholder approach
- The best fit/ contingency

Resource-based view of HRM
- HRM provides sustained competitive advantage when these 4 attributes are present:
o Valuable to the firm (VALUE)
o Scarce and hard to obtain (RARITY)
o Difficult for competitors to copy (IMITABILITY)
o Can be used and is readily replaced by alternative – is the firm organised to
capture value (ORGANISED)
Barney 1991
Resource based view (RBV) model:

, HCM – linked to RBV (critiques of RBV)
- High commitment management
- Look for scarce, valuable and unique workers
- Control approach
- Employees not considered equal to managers etc
- Lower-level employees less visible, less mobile and weaker bargaining power enables
firm to make greater profits
- Top managers/ professionals easily lost to competitors as highly visible and mobile –
demand high reward for performance

Is HRM difficult to copy?
- Three barriers to copying HRM:
o Imitation – path dependency
 Employment practices and relationships develop slowly overtime
contexts – not easily replicated
o Socially complex and persistent routines
o Casual ambiguity – difficult to grasp precise ways employment practices
generated value
 Single HR practices easily copied
 Difficult to replicate culture, trust, tacit knowledge and
understanding,

Criticisms of RBV:
- Difficult to find resources that meet the criteria
- External pressures and market are ignored
- Generalised guidance

Definition of best practice HRM:
- Universalist approach
- (AKA) High performance management – Appelbaum et al 2000
- “a particular set of HR practices has the potential to bring about improved
organisational performance for all organisations”
Marchington and Wilkinson 2005
- Universalist approach: HR as ‘best practice’; surveys suggests there is ‘one best way’;
statistical linkages eh between HR practices and business outcomes (e.g. reduce
turnover, productivity)
- Too unitarist, assuming workers will comply with managerial policy (Truss et al,
2012)
- Top down approach from managers to employees

Best practice
- 2 strands of thinking
o Shareholder dominant (believe employees are a resource and all aspects
should be oriented towards profit and maximise shareholder profit)
o Stakeholder-oriented approach (values all stakeholders eg employees,
management, custoemrs, suppliers etc.
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