1 / 16

HRM for MBA Students

HRM for MBA Students. Lecture 1 People management: personnel management and human resource management. Learning outcomes. A good appreciation of the ‘people management’ function in contemporary organisations Knowledge of ‘human resource management’ (HRM) and ‘personnel management’ (PM)

hal
Download Presentation

HRM for MBA Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HRM for MBA Students Lecture 1 People management: personnel management and human resource management

  2. Learning outcomes • A good appreciation of the ‘people management’ function in contemporary organisations • Knowledge of ‘human resource management’ (HRM) and ‘personnel management’ (PM) • An appreciation of the theoretical development of HRM • Understanding of the relationship between HRM and business strategy • An appreciation of the practical application of HRM • Recognition of the themes of HRM in the early twenty-first century.

  3. ‘People are the only real source of ... continuing competitive advantage.’ Prahalad and Hamel (1990)

  4. We can define people management as: ‘all the management decisions and actions that directly affect or influence people as members of the organisation rather than as job-holders.’

  5. What do people managers do? Their role has specific objectives under four headings: • Staffing objectives • Performance objectives • Change management objectives • Administration objectives Torrington, Hall and Taylor (2002)

  6. The ‘Ulrich model’ of HRM Human Resources should become: • a strategic partner with top management • an expert in administration • a champion for employees • an agent of continuous transformation Ulrich (1998)

  7. ‘Building organisational capability is HR’s heartland’ andHR managers ‘can help make capitalism human’ Linda Holbech (2007 )

  8. Taylorism Principles of ‘scientific management’ (1911): • time and motion studies of work processes • standardisation of tools, implements and methods • increased division of labour Taylorism + machine-paced work = Fordism

  9. The evolution of people management

  10. Personnel management • The first Industrial Revolution: welfare role • Rise of trade unionism: industrial relations role • ‘Scientific management’: training;sophisticated recruitment and selection • Thus by the 1970s the Personnel management paradigm

  11. Human resource management • Loss of faith in traditional mass-production techniques • The example of Japanese quality • Technological development • Thus by the 1990s the (post-Taylorist) HRM paradigm

  12. Perspectives in management • Unitarist • Conflict is ‘wrong’ • Pluralist • Conflict is not ‘wrong’ but must be managed • Radical/critical • Conflict is inevitable ... and may be ‘right’

  13. The Harvard model of HRM

  14. ‘Ideal types’ of PM and HRM

  15. HRM in practice • Evidence of significant adoption of HRM practices • (Workplace Employee Relations Surveys and others) • But still two traditions or paradigms • Most organisations share characteristics of both • But HRM is in the ascendant

  16. Key themes in HRM • High-involvement employee work practices • Flexible organisation (core and periphery) • Micro-level work organisation (teamworking) • Sophisticated HR for recruitment • Unitarist employee relations • Change management • The learning organisation • Knowledge management • Leadership

More Related