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Summary Human Resource Management Strategy - Chapter 16 (CIE A-Level Business 9609)

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This summary contains all the information from Chapter 16 that CIE could ask students about Human Resource Management Strategy, such as: Approaches to human resource management strategy (hard and soft HRM) Employment Contracts Measurement, causes and consequences of employee performance (labour productivity, absenteeism) Management by objectives Strategies for improving employee performance The changing role of IT and AI in HRM Recent IT applications in HRM The summary also contains the definitions for clarity. PRO TIP: Always add definitions in your exams because you get knowledge points for them I used this summary to study for my A-Levels in May 2023 and received an A! CIE A-Level 9609 Business

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Uploaded on
September 9, 2023
Number of pages
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Written in
2022/2023
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Summary

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Human resource management strategy
Chapter 16

16.1 Approaches to human resource management
strategy
HRM strategy: a long-term plan for the management of an organisation’s human
resources
● Developing an HRM strategy is one of the most important jobs of an HR
director or manager
● All resources need to be planned for: finance, materials, business
accommodation and employees
● Without a long-term HR plan, a business will almost certainly have:
○ The wrong number of employees, many with inappropriate skills
○ Unsuitable payment methods
○ Inappropriate employment contracts for different types and grades of
people
○ Poor employee performance
○ Poor application of IT to HR issues


Hard and soft HRM
Hard HRM: an approach to managing employees that focuses on cutting costs
Soft HRM: an approach to managing employees that focuses on their development
so that they reach self-fulfilment and are motivated to work hard and stay with the
business
● Hard HRM is to view employees as resources just like any other business
resource
● People are managed in a similar way as raw materials as they must be
obtained as cheaply as possible and be used as much as possible to keep
labour costs per unit low
● There is little to no concern about work-life balance
● Similar to the theory X view and Taylor’s approach to motivation
● Soft HRM views employees as an asset to the business who must be cared
for and developed
● As a result, employees will contribute to the success of a business, not just
physically
● Theory Y view and Herzberg’s theory of motivation

● Some businesses now adopt a hard approach to their less important
peripheral workers and the soft approach to their core workers

, ● Core workers are the employees the business doesn’t want to lose and they
are considered the key to future business success
● They should be developed, trained and motivated in ways that will greatly
increase the chances of having high morale and a desire to stay with the
business

The hard approach might save money on the peripheral workers’ costs in the short
term but:
● It could increase recruitment and training costs in the long term as temporary
workers have to be recruited frequently
● Demotivated workers with little job security might be unproductive which
reduced company efficiency and profitability
● Bad publicity regarding insecure employment contracts might lead to negative
consumer and pressure-group actions against the company
● Hard HRM ignores the findings of Maslow, Mayo and Herzberg as workers
aren’t offered job security, esteem or job enrichment


Employment contracts
● It’s a legal requirement in most countries for employers to provide workers
with an employment contract
● They are not required to give a full-time employment contract but some key
employees offer this certainty
Full-time employment contracts: an employment contract that is for a complete
working week
Permanent employment contracts: a contract that employs the worker unless
they’re dismissed, made redundant or decide to leave

Advantages of full-time and permanent employee contracts
● They help satisfy employees’ safety and security needs defined by Maslow
● They can result in employee loyalty to the business being high and in labour
turnover low
● Employers are more likely to finance training programmes as the workers are
likely to stay with the business

Disadvantages of full-time and permanent employee contracts
● Labour costs become fixed costs as they can’t be varied with output or
demand for the products of the business
● The contracts are inflexible, they don’t allow employers to vary their working
hours, amount of workers etc

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