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International Human Resource Management

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Title: International Human Resource Management


1
  • InternationalHuman ResourceManagement
  • University of Kassel
  • Kassel
  • April 2008
  • Dr. Dilek Zamantili Nayir

2
Dr. Dilek Zamantili Nayir
  • Born and raised in Germany (until age of 12)
  • German High School Istanbul
  • Istanbul University Faculty of Business
    Administration
  • 12 years private sector (local, MNC, expatriate)
  • 8 years academia

3
Teaching
  • Strategic Management
  • Organization Theory
  • Organization Planning
  • Management of SME
  • International Management
  • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Entrepreneurship

4
Research
  • AIB, EGOS, EIBA
  • Journal of International Management, Journal of
    Knowledge Management, Journal of Management
    Development etc.

5
Dr. Dilek Zamantili Nayir
Married Two kids Turkish ... of age
6
Deutschsprachiges Managementstudiumam Bosporus
Die Deutschsprachigen Abteilungen
für Betriebswirtschaftslehre und
Wirtschaftsinformatik
7
MARMARA UNIVERSITYFACULTY OF BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATIONDEPARTMENT OFBUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION IN GERMAN LANGUAGE
  • Est. in 1991 under cooperation with the DAAD
    (German Academic Exchange Service) and the
    Marmara University
  • Multi-cultural perspective on both academic and
    industrial aspects of the business environment.

8
Student profile of our department
  • Total nr. 400.
  • About 600 graduates since establishment of the
    departments.
  • Exchange students
  • After the first four semesters of general
    education, Controlling Marketing
    ManagementOrganization
  • Classrooms with max. 25 students

9
Industry support
10
  • INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

11
Learning outcomes
  • After reading this chapter, you should be able
    to
  • Define the concept of human resource
    management.
  • Identify distinct theoretical contributions in
    the field of HRM.
  • Discuss the usefulness of these dominant
    mainstream approaches to HRM in an international
    context.
  • Define the concept of international human
    resource management and its key elements.
  • Understand the main models and themes of
    international human resource management.

12
Internationalizationof the context of business
  • Increased speed of change in communication and
    transportation technologies
  • Continues to widen the geographic imagination and
    reach of businesses beyond their traditional
    geographically constrained scope

13
Internationalization
  • Expansion of economic markets
  • Desire to access better pools of resources
  • Challenge of competition
  • Improved mobility of people

14
International, transnationaland multinational
companies
  • Thriving on these favourable conditions
  • Achieving unprecedented economic and political
    success
  • Major challenges in the process of becoming
    international players.

15
New ways of doing business?
  • Or transfer established practices between their
    home and host countries?
  • Some companies Ethnocentric approaches, choosing
    to transfer their home-country practices to their
    international operations
  • Others Diversified or localized their business
    practices to the specific conditions of the host
    countries

16
Operational level
  • Strategic choices Choices for functional areas
    in business, including human resource management.

17
Definitions of human resource management (HRM)
  • Have evolved over time
  • A number of competing meanings
  • ... a range of management activities which aim
    to achieve organizational objectives through
    effective use of employees....

18
Cliché of our times
  • ... people are the most important resource in
    business
  • One of the main organizational resources
  • On a par with or even more significant than
    financial, technological and physical resources
  • Radical departure from earlier approaches and
    definitions of people management (secondary
    business concern to management of other resources
    of organizations).

19
GROUP ACTIVITY
20
GROUP ACTIVITY
  • Identify different names given to activities
    associated with people-management in your
    country.
  • Define and discuss these different names and
    professional activities associated with each of
    them.

21
Historical development of human resources
  • Can shed some light on our understanding of its
    current definition and practice.
  • Human resource management Complex and elusive
    history
  • Complex Rhetoric and practice of HRM - different
    historical paths of development.
  • HRM History as old and complex as the history of
    work and organization

22
Human resource management as academic area of work
  • Only in the 1950s with the works of Drucker
    (1954) and McGregor (1957).
  • The Practice of Management Peter Drucker coined
    the term human resources
  • Wider international recognition in academic and
    practitioner circles by the 1980s, particularly
    in the Anglo-Saxon world.

23
Distinction between academic rhetoric and
managerial practice
  • Functions and operational aspects of human
    resource management Practiced since much earlier
    internationally
  • American - British Western European academics
    Only in the last two decades. 1990s Wider
    adaptation of this concept in developing and
    less-developed countries.

24
GROUP ACTIVITY
25
Human resource management
  • Series of changes in name and strategic
    direction.
  • What constitutes human resource management?
  • New concept - Differs from personnel
    management, manpower management and welfare
    management?
  • Change from personnel management to human
    resource management Most significant turning
    point in the historical development of
    people-management discourses.

26
Critical evaluations
  • Merely as a change of name?
  • Simply an attempt at reviving a weakening area of
    work with a new buzz phrase?
  • Or a change of strategic direction recognizing
    human resources as one of the strategically
    important resources of an organization?

27
Changing thename from personnel management to
human resource management
  • Inevitable outcome of the political economy and
    market conditions of the 1980s.
  • HRM Interdisciplinary and fast-changing area of
    study
  • Encompassing Welfare, manpower, personnel
    management. Close association with employee and
    industrial relations, sociology and psychology of
    work.
  • Overwhelming majority of the earlier theoretical
    works on human resource management USA UK

28
THEORETICAL DEVELOPMENT OF HRM
29
Schools of management in the USA and the UK
  • The Michigan Model In order to improve their
    performance, companies must build a direct link
    between their corporate and human resource
    strategies and structures.
  • Promoting an instrumental use of human resources
    in order to realize corporate objectives.

30
Academics from Harvard Business School
  • Broader framework for HRM decisions and strategy
    Decisions stakeholder interests and also a set
    of situational factors.

31
Two classical models of HRM
  • Hard and soft variants of HRM, respectively.
  • Hard variant Employees one of the key
    resources of organizations - should be used
    effectively in order to achieve organizational
    goals.
  • Soft variant Employees first and foremost
    human beings who contribute to the organization
  • More contemporary formulations of HRM
    Combination of soft and hard attributes, rather
    than rejecting one for the other.

32
New York Model
  • Introduced and illustrated the concept of
    strategic fit between corporate and human
    resource strategy.
  • A range of needed role behaviours (Porters
    earlier works on competitive strategies)
  • Can provide a set of prescriptions for desirable
    strategic choices for HRM and industrial
    relations functions.

33
Harvard, Michigan and New York models
  • All three matching models of HRM, because of
    their common aim to match the human resources
    strategy with that of the corporation.

34
GROUP ACTIVITIES
  • Examine the HRM system of a company that you
    know, such as your current educational
    institution or workplace
  • Discuss if their human resource management
    approach conforms to any of the theoretical
    models identified above.
  • Discuss the reasons why your company of choice
    formulated their human resource approach in its
    current form.

35
  • DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL HRM

36
Mainstream HRM theories
  • Formulated in management schools in North America
    and the UK in the 1980s
  • Quickly found their way to other developed and
    developing countries and gained much wider
    international recognition in the 1990s.

37
Take up of HRM principles and techniques in
industrialized countries
  • Context factors
  • Early experiences of industrialization in Western
    Europe and North America Workforces organized
    and supervised differently to the previous era -
    scientific management techniques.
  • Industrial composition in the industrialized
    countries From manufacturing to service
    industries.
  • Need to develop new and effective methods of
    managing human resources in their emerging
    industries.

38
2. Skills shortages
  • Higher rates of employment and economic
    development, ageing populations
  • Changing nature of competitive migration policies
    in USA, Canada, Australia and Germany.
  • Boosting demand for skilled labour
  • Encouraging competitive people-management
    techniques - limited supply of national human
    resources.

39
Rapid development andspread of HRM discourse and
practice
  • Scientific knowledge on HRM taken up by
    management schools internationally.
  • International companies contribute to the
    transfer of HRM techniques and practices
  • Managers experience skills shortages and seek
    effective ways of managing the short supply of
    human resources.

40
HRM techniques
  • International variations in philosophies
  • Approaches and structures of employment relations
  • Trade unions, employment law, management systems,
  • Societal and organizational cultures.

41
Mainstream humanresource approaches and theories
  • Inadequate in addressing the human resource
    issues facing international and multinational
    companies (MNCs).
  • International human resource management (IHRM)
    emerged as a new area of academic study and
    management practice.
  • Theory of IHRM Recognition only since the late
    1980s

42
Interest in the field of IHRM
  • IHRM field of respectable scholarly interest
    between the disciplines of international
    management and HRM.
  • Not a passing fad, but will grow
  • Cross-national comparative human resources
  • Expatriate management
  • Cross-cultural diversity within multinational
    enterprises

43
  • DEFINING INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

44
Involvement ofmore than one national context
  • No standalone definition of the concept.
  • ... a range of people management functions,
    processes and activities which involve
    consideration of more than one national context
    ...

45
Three levels of practice and study of IHRM
  • Single-country human resource activities often
    involve considerations of international human
    resource issues (skills shortages and recruitment
    of migrant labour)

46
Levels
  • 2. Companies operating in more than one country
    Management of international assignments,
    expatriates and the process of repatriation
    (management of succession, career development,
    strategic staffing, international management
    mobility and training, repatriation)

47
Levels
  • 3. International companies need to address
    national differences between their home and
    host-country operations (national differences in
    management of human resources, providing
    descriptive and prescriptive analysis and
    critical evaluation of the current trends).

48
GROUP ACTIVITY
49
GROUP ACTIVITY
  • Choose three companies, one which is nationally
    based, two with international operations, and
    discuss the relevance of IHRM issues to their
    business conduct.

50
  • PRESCRIPTIVE MODELS AND CRITICAL THEMES IN IHRM

51
Three tricks for a successful IHRM startup
  • Preventing the emergence of divisions and
    divisive perceptions between operations in
    different countries.
  • Working in each country using the terms of
    reference used in that country.
  • Avoiding the assumption that best practice can
    transcend national borders.

52
Seven keys to IHRM practice subsequent to the
start-up stage
  • Understanding the international and global
    context of business, including supply and demand
    dynamics of human resources in each country.
  • Providing guidelines on service policy for
    international operations of the company.

53
  • Considering the financial viability of human
    resource allocations internationally.
  • Documenting and outlining the personal and
    domestic arrangements of individual workers who
    are involved in international assignments, with a
    view to accommodating their requirements.

54
  • 5. Providing clear guidelines on terms and
    conditions for international assignments to
    individual employees prior to allocation of their
    roles.
  • 6. Arranging relocation of employees and their
    families.
  • 7. Setting up a repatriation process which
    ensures smooth return and reintegration of the
    expatriates and their families.

55
Simplified model for the management of human
resources of an international firm
  • a cosmopolitan workforce
  • culture and its diversity across national
    borders
  • compensation and its comparative meanings and
    value
  • the value of communication
  • the development of competences
  • the use of consultants and
  • coordination of international operations in a way
    which values diversity.

56
Model for strategicimplementation of IHRM
  • Resource-based theory of the firm
  • A companys business success Shaped by its
    success in using its key resources.
  • IHRM practice can draw on three resources for
    competitive advantage and business success

57
Three resources for competitive advantage and
business success
  • Parent companys resources Economic, social and
    political conditions of the parent country
  • Parent companys resources Assets, competencies
    and capabilities
  • Host companys resources National and company
    levels
  • ... that can provide competitive advantages and
    be sources of business success.

58
Critic to the strategic IHRM models
  • Different kinds of international firms
  • Differentiating international firms as
    multidomestic, global or hybrid would enable a
    better understanding

59
Conclusion
60
  • Before we go to the NISSERA Case

61
This chapter has ...
  • ... provided an introduction to international
    human resource management,
  • ... explored the development of HRM practice and
    theory in the international context.
  • ... reviewed the definitions and mainstream
    theoretical frameworks of HRM and IHRM

62
Chapter 1
  • ... suggested that IHRM has established itself in
    a respected position between academic and
    practitioner communities.
  • ... also highlighted that IHRM currently
    experiences various challenges and dilemmas.
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