scholarly journals Strategic Human Resource Management, Innovation Capability and Performance: An Empirical Study in Indonesia Software Industry

2015 ◽  
Vol 211 ◽  
pp. 874-879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riza Aryanto ◽  
Avanti Fontana ◽  
Adi Zakaria Afiff
Author(s):  
Anastasia A. Katou

The purpose of this chapter is to review methodological issues highlighted in the empirical literature in the field of strategic human resource management that may be applied to the hospitality industry, and to propose possible solutions to overcome methodological problems. The chapter makes use of a general HRM-performance linkage framework that refers to the ‘black box' in strategic human resource management, and is based on the three HRM perspectives (universalistic, contingency, configurational).


Author(s):  
KONSHIK KIM

This study established the social and economic human resource management (HRM) systems and analysed their respective impacts and interplay on the innovation capability and product innovation. With 1,940 longitudinal samples over five waves, the results show that the effects of the social HRM system on the capability and performance of innovation are much stronger than the effect of the economic HRM system on innovation capability and product innovation. The findings also show that no congruence effects between the social and economic HRM systems on the innovation capability and product innovation were found in that the combined effects of the two HRM systems are not maximised when the levels of the two HRM systems are in agreement. Further, findings suggest that the main effects of the social HRM system can be supplemented with the economic HRM system in that the effects of the social HRM system tend to increase as the level of the economic HRM system increases. This study contributes to the understanding of the HRM system that has traditionally pursued one best bundle of HRM practices regardless of underlying principles and assumptions on human nature and society.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (12) ◽  
pp. 211-227
Author(s):  
NYAMBANE ARIRI NYAMBANE ◽  
Stephen M. A. Muathe

Performance of employees in the Ministry of Health, Nairobi City County has been dismal. There have been instances of inability amongst employees to meet deadlines, low efficiency, and dismal productivity. The objectives of the study included; assessing the influence of recruitment, career management, reward and performance appraisal practices on performance of employees in the Ministry of Health. The study was guided by the strategic management and performance theories. The study adopted mixed methods approach and thus applied descriptive research design. The target population comprised of 15 Departmental Heads and 425 employees all totaling to 440. Using the Central Limit Theorem, 132 respondents, that is, 30.0% of 440, was selected. Stratified sampling was applied to create five strata based on the number of departments in the Ministry of Health Nairobi. Heads of department will be selected using purposive sampling whereas 25 employees will be selected from each department using simple random sampling to avoid bias. This procedure enabled the researcher to realize a sample of 5 heads of departments and 127 employees. The questionnaire was used to collect data from employees whereas interviews with heads of departments. Qualitative data were analyzed thematically along the objectives and presented in narrative forms whereas quantitative data were analyzed descriptively using frequencies and percentages and inferentially analyzed using ANOVA Test Analysis with the help of SPSS Version 23. The study established that, at the Ministry of Health in Nairobi County, employees’ efficiency, productivity and ability to meet deadlines are low. It is also evident that strategic human resource management practices such as recruitment, career management, reward and performance appraisal practices have not been fully exhausted. Thus, the study recommends that the Ministry of Health should endeavor to train their employees in order to improve the organizational performance. The Ministry of Health should provide employees opportunity to make decisions on how to go about their tasks, seeking employees’ input in managerial decisions, delegating to them tasks that they can handle, equipping them with skills required by their jobs, setting achievable targets and incorporating employees in fair evaluation of performance, salary increase and fair administration of rewards. Job performance should be considered in determining the compensation of employee’s performance.


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