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People No Limits uv.es/luna Roberto.Luna@uv.es

TALENT MANAGEMENT: INFLUENCES ON JOB SATISFACTION AND PERFORMANCE Roberto Luna-Arocas Associate Professor, University of Valencia, Spain Jose Vicente Pascual Ivars Assistant Professor, University of Valencia, Spain Lorena Garrido Bautista University of Valencia, Spain. People No Limits

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People No Limits uv.es/luna Roberto.Luna@uv.es

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  1. TALENT MANAGEMENT: INFLUENCES ON JOB SATISFACTION AND PERFORMANCE Roberto Luna-Arocas Associate Professor, University of Valencia, Spain Jose Vicente Pascual Ivars Assistant Professor, University of Valencia, Spain Lorena Garrido Bautista University of Valencia, Spain People No Limits www.uv.es/luna Roberto.Luna@uv.es

  2. Today business has to cope with hard competition and continuous change (Hamel & Prahalad, 1994) and Human Resources Management (HRM) is clearly affected by this turbulent environment UIrich (1997, p.304) emphasise “under environment conditions of low change, attention to HR practices had little impact on business results, but under environmental conditions of high change, executive attention to HR practices had a large impact on business results”

  3. In spite of the great deal of research in HRM in the last decades, there is still a big gap between what happens in theory and practice (Pfeffer & Sutton, 1999). If a talent strategy it means a return of investment about twenty two points over other firms in the same sector, why it is not widespread in firms if talent strategy is related with performance?

  4. Talent strategy it means attract, develop and retain people with excellence competencies to work. Generally, talent management (TM) is associated with competency based management (CBM) where competencies are aligned to organizational values and goals (Hayton & McEvoy, 2006; Kochanski & Ruse, 1996; Ulrich, 1998; Ulrich et al., 1995).

  5. Some organizations refuse talent • But is talent a shortage? • Talent mindset is not presence in firms. • Right Management Consultants (Philadelphia, a subsidiary of Manpower; Credit Union Management, 2004): • for out ten managers and executives are considered excellent leaders, exhibiting management talents their employer’s value most.

  6. TM is the highest challenge for Human Resources in the 2015 • The Boston Consulting Group (BCG): 1350 managers in 27 countries done by and the European Association of Personnel Management (EAPM) • five main challenges for the future, being TM the most critical and valued. • HR Focus, a prestige practitioner journal anticipated the most important issues from HR managers: • 75% were worried about retaining and developing key employees in organizations.

  7. Gupta (2001, p. 2), editor in chief of American Journal of Business (formerly Mid-American Journal of Business) assesed • “If I am puzzled as you are with the crisis of TM, I encourage you to engage in some serious study of this issue. We need to learn more before it´s too late”. • Boudreau and Ramstad (2005) in an article published in Human Resource Management • underline the fact that nowadays, a talent science is needed given it´s incremental importance to stimulate talent decisions.

  8. Tolich (2005) in Administrative Science Quarterly expresses the bad TM in a knowledge economy. • In 2007 the Harvard Business Review gives a special emphasis on TM • HBR Spotlight, How to manage the most talented) with two articles: • “Leading clever people” (Goffee & Jones, 2007) and • (2) “Crisis at the Summit” (Parsons & Pascale, 2007. • The Economist published in 2006 an article entitled The battle for brainpower claiming that organizations are much concerned about TM.

  9. Talent Management (TM) from the resource based view • Talent management (TM) is associated with competency based management (CBM) where competencies are aligned to organizational values and goals (Hayton & McEvoy, 2006; Kochanski & Ruse, 1996; Ulrich, 1998; Ulrich et al., 1995). • There is a clear consensus about the importance of employee behaviours more than the human resources practices in the value creation of an organization (e.g. MacDuffie, 1995; Schuler & Jackson, 1987; Wright & Snell, 1998; Colvin & Boswell, 2007 • One of the streams of research that seems to hold “the promise of creating a truly strategic approach to talent management” (Lewis & Heckman, 2006, p. 145) is precisely the resource-based view (RBV) perspective. • The HR arquitecture is a value-creating system that raises the question of the appropriate locus of strategic value creation (Becker & Huselid, 2006, p. 900).

  10. HYPOTHESES

  11. METHODOLOGY • Sample • 198 employees working in the city and province of Valencia, Spain • Measurements • Talentmanagement Scale • Alignement • Manager´s TM • Talent Competency • Job Autonomy • Talent Management Development • Job Satisfaction (Adapted from Price, 1977) • Job Performance (Adapted from Kuvaas, 2008; Tam et al., 2002)

  12. RESULTS • Step 1: Path Analysis TMJP

  13. RESULTS • Step 2: Path Analysis JSJP

  14. RESULTS • Step 3: Path Analysis TPsPOP mediated by Job Satisfaction

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