social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
Strategic HRM and HCM
1. HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Module 1 Lecture 2*
MUHAMMED NOWFAL S
Assistant Professor
Department of Management Studies
KMM College of Arts and Science
Kochi – Kerala
Email ID: Muhammednowfal.s@gmail.com
*Contents based on MG University Syllabus
4. STRATEGIC HRM
Business objectives are accomplished when human resource practices, procedures
and systems are developed and implemented based on organizational needs, that is,
when a strategic perspective to human resource management is adopted
Strategic HRM ‘is the interface between HRM and strategic management’
5. SHRM is an approach that defines how the organization’s goals will be achieved
through people by means of HR strategies and integrated HR policies and practices
SHRM involves the exercise of strategic choice and the establishment of strategic
priorities - implementation of strategy and the strategic behavior of HR specialists
6. AIM OF SHRM
To generate organizational capability by ensuring that the organization has the skilled, engaged,
committed and well-motivated employees it needs to achieve sustained competitive advantage.
Integration:
The vertical alignment of HR strategies with
business strategies and the horizontal integration
of HR strategies
Provide a sense of direction
in an turbulent environment so that the business
needs of the organization and the individual and
collective needs of its employees can be met by
the development and implementation of practical
HR policies.
7. SHRM – Best practices model
Employment security
Selective hiring
Self-managed teams
High compensation contingent on performance
Training to provide a skilled and motivated workforce
Reduction of status differentials
Sharing information
8. SHRM Practices - Delery and Doty (1996)
The use of internal career ladders
Formal training systems
Results-oriented appraisal
Performance-based compensation
Employment security
Employee voice
Broadly defined jobs
9. SHRM – Guest 1999
Selection and the careful use of selection tests to identify those with potential to
make a contribution.
Training, and in particular a recognition that training is an ongoing activity.
Job design to ensure flexibility, commitment and motivation, including steps to
ensure that employees have the responsibility and autonomy fully to use their
knowledge and skills.
Communication to ensure that a two-way process keeps everyone fully informed.
Employee share ownership programmes to increase employees’ awareness of the
implications of their actions on the financial performance of the firm
12. HUMAN CAPITAL
Knowledge, skills and abilities of the people employed in an organization
The human factor in the organization; the combined intelligence, skills and expertise
that gives the organization its distinctive character
The human elements of the organization are those that are capable of learning, changing, innovating and
providing the creative thrust which if properly motivated can ensure the long-term survival of the organization
13. HUMAN CAPITAL – CONSTITUENTS
Intellectual Capital : the stocks and flows of knowledge available to an
organization
Social Capital : knowledge derived from networks of relationships
within and outside the organization
Organizational Capital : Institutionalized knowledge possessed by an
organization that is stored in databases, manuals, etc
14. HUMAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
A set of practices related to people resource management
Workforce acquisition, workforce management and workforce optimization
approach to employee staffing that perceives people as assets (human capital) whose
current value can be measured and whose future value can be enhanced through
investment.
HCM recognizes people as investors of their personal human capital
Main source of value to the organisation
15. HCM is concerned with obtaining, analysing and reporting on data that informs the
direction of value-adding people management, strategic investment and operational
decisions at corporate level and at the level of front line management
HCM defined as an approach to people management that treats it as a high level
strategic issue rather than an operational matter “to be left to the HR people
The focus of HCM is more on the use of metrics (measurements of HR and people
performance) as a means of providing guidance on people management strategy and
practice
16. OBJECTIVES OF HCM
To determine the impact of people on the business and their contribution to value;
To demonstrate that HR practices produce value for money in terms (e.g. ROI).
To provide guidance on future HR and business strategies.
To provide data that will inform strategies and practices designed to improve the
effectiveness of HRM in the organization.
17. MAJOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO HCM
1986 – The Know-How Company – Karl Erik Sveiby
1997 – The New Wealth of Organizations – Thomas Stewart
2000 – The ROI of Human Capital – JacFitz - Enz
2001 – The Human Value of the Enterprise – Andrew Mayo
2002 – Corporate Longitude – Leif Edvinsson
18. QUESTIONS ON PEOPLE MANAGEMENT RAISED BY HUMAN CAPITAL
THEORY
What are the key performance drivers that create value?
What skills do we have?
What skills do we need now and in the future to meet our strategic aims?
How are we going to attract, develop and retain these skills?
How can we develop a culture and environment in which organizational and
individual learning takes place that meets both our needs and the needs of our
employees?
How can we provide for both the explicit and tacit knowledge created in our
organization to be captured, recorded and used effectively
19. HCM STRATEGIES
Human Capital
Strategy
Human Assets
Profile
Performance
Management
Recruitment
Selection
Career
Development
Plans
Coaching and
Mentoring
Core Values
Core Competencies
Performance
Improvement
Revenue Per
employee
Cost Per
employee
Profit Per
employee
20. HUMAN CAPITAL DRIVEN BUSINESS MODEL
Focus on tangible and intangible assets
Valuation of physical, financial, human and structural assets
Use decision criteria for knowledge and human capital investments
Process and customer cost focus
Focus on the future (value creation measurement)
People are treated as expenses and investments
Focus on present cash flow and future revenue streams
Focus on dynamic budgets and revenue streams
Focus on short-term and long-term profitability, added value and sustainability
21. HCM VS HRM
In HCM ‘people are value adders, not overheads’ while in HRM ‘people are (treated as) a significant
cost and should be managed accordingly
In HRM, the HR team is seen as a support service to the line’ while in HCM is clearly seen and
respected as an equal business partner at senior levels’ and is ‘holistic, organization-wide and systems-
based’ as well as being strategic and concerned with adding value
23. IHRM
Process of managing people across international boundaries by multinational
companies.
Involves the worldwide management of people, not just the management of
expatriates
24. ISSUES IN IHRM
The impact of globalization
Globalization requires organizations to move people, ideas, products and information around the
world to meet local needs (Ulrich, 1998).
International environmental differences
Environmental differences between countries have to be taken into account in managing globally.
These include markets, institutions, regulations, collective bargaining and labour-force
characteristics.
25. International cultural differences
National cultural differences can be critical and insensitivity to
them can result in business failure (as well as failure and career
consequences for individual managers).
26. Managing expatriates
Expatriates can be difficult to manage because of the problems associated with adapting to and
working in unfamiliar environments, concerns about their development and careers, difficulties
encountered when they re-enter their parent company after an overseas assignment, and how they
should be remunerated.
Global hr practices
Talent management/employee branding
International assignments management
Managing an international workforce