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Developing a HRM Model - The Four Faces of HRM Autoria: Betânia Tanure, Paul Evans, Vera L. Cançado Abstract This essay endeavours to discuss the literature about The Three Faces of Human Resource Management (HRM) model, to compare it to Brazilian literature and researches and to present the model, The Four Faces of HRM. First, we discuss the model that has been developed from the reality of North American and European companies – the Three Faces of HRM - the building, the partner change and the navigator. Each of the faces and its underlying roles reflects a different set of assumptions about the link between HRM and organizational performance. Each face corresponds to a different theoretical perspective and has particular implications for HRM. Then, we argue that the data and the analyses of Brazilian reality revealed a prior face to the builder, called the executor. In Brazilian development, some historical and economic characteristics still permeate the management rationality. They include centralized power, personal relationships and flexibility, great adherence to the “modern” and imported management techniques, without appropriate adaptation to local reality. In addition, HRM development in Brazil is almost half a century later than in other developed countries. Those characteristic reflect on HRM. Research on HRM in Brazilian companies indicates that HR is still operational, even though it utilizes modern and sophisticated practices. Analyzing such considerations, we conclude that the evidence justifies the face of the executor, preceding the builder face on the Three Faces of the HRM model. However, we do not mean that this first face – the executor – should be characteristic only of companies in Brazil or in developing countries. We are just saying that the data revealed this face, characterizes the Four Faces of HRM model. 1 INTRODUCTION To meet the demands of global organizations, HR needs to perform new roles, more complex and even more paradoxal. There are several models of HR´s new setting of actions (Burke & Cooper, 2005; Ulrich, 1997; Weiss, 1999, among other). Within these models, we can highlight the contribution of Evans, Pucik and Barsoux (2002). From research undertaken in Europe and the United States, they concluded that the relationship between Human Resources Management (HRM) and organizational performance can be seen through three different roles or faces: the builder, that cements HR´s foundations in a consistent form; the changing partner, that searches for the realignment of companies strategies to the external environment; and the navigator, which helps the organization to face the contradictions and paradoxes of the globalized companies. The first face is building HRM or getting the basics of human resource management into place and ensuring its internal coherence. While this role is often the responsibility of specialized personnel or an HR department, it may be assumed by line management. In both cases, the strategy of the firm is taken for granted, and the builder may over time become a custodian of HRM. The second face or stage is realigning HRM so as to meet the needs of the changing external environment. Shifts in the marketplace or the structure of competition or the advent of new technologies call for a strategic realignment within the firm. Attention is focused on reconfiguring and changing the approach to HRM, so as to implement new strategies effectively. Typically this involves a partnership between line management and the professionals within HR. We call this role the change partner. The third face may be described as steering by HRM and it is called the navigator. Here strategic and HR factors cannot be separated. Both are interlinked. The focus is on 1 developing the capabilities of the organization and its people to thrive in a world of continuous change, which in fact means constructively managing the tensions between opposing forces such as short-term operating results and long-term growth, global integration and local responsiveness, the need for change and the continuity required by execution. Indeed these contradictions are at the heart of what is called the transnational firm. However, the experience of Tanure, Evans and Pucik (2007) and the results of some research undertaken in Brazil (Costa, 2000; Fischer & Albuquerque, 2001; Hanashiro, Texeira & Zebinato, 2001; Sarsur, 1997) showed that it is necessary to adapt this model to Brazilian reality. This is not to say that it should be adapted just for Brazil or developing countries, although data from HR in South America (Elvira & Davila, 2005) suggested that it is similar in other Latin America developing countries. We just discovered that the data from Brazilian companies suggest the need to add the fourth face to the model. In Brazilian development, some historical and economic characteristics still permeate the rationality of organizational management, such as centralized power, personal relationships and flexibility (DaMatta, 1983; Faoro, 1979; Freyre, 1981; Holanda, 1989; Ribeiro, 1995; Tanure, 2005). Combined with these characteristics, we observe great adherence to the “modern” management techniques that come from developed countries, without adapting appropriately to local reality (Caldas & Wood, 1999). Some research results indicated that HR is not seen as a strategic partner. However, HR has, in fact, an operational role and its contribution to the organization’s performance is not clearly perceived (Fischer & Albuquerque, 2001; Hanashiro, Texeira & Zebinato, 2001; Sarsur, 1997; Tanure, Evans & Pucik, 2007, among others). Other research showed that line managers do not believe that HR is able to contribute to their task of team management (Cançado et al., 2005; Coda et al., 2005). Tanure, Evans and Pucik (2002) proposed this fourth face called the executor, preceding the builder face. In many companies, HR just carries out administrative activities and recruiting and selecting people functions. It only fulfills a bureaucratic role. These practices are easy to identify in small and medium companies, but they also appear in some large companies. In these large companies, the HR practices and policies can be sophisticated and even considered to be benchmarking. However, there is a lack of coherence between them and organizational strategies. This aspect is the key point to understand in the addition of the executor’s face in the model. Taking as a reference The Three Faces of HRM (Evans, Pucik & Barsoux, 2002), this essay discuss the literature about the model, to compare it to Brazilian literature and researches and to present the model The Four Faces of HRM. 2 THE THREE FACES OF THE HRM MODEL Despite the globalization of corporations, there is a variety in human resource practices across countries and industries (Brewster & Hegewisch, 1994; Sparrow & Hiltrop, 1994). Culture and context make the issue of how HRM contributes to organizational performance even more complex. In addition to the diversity, there is considerable flux over time in what is regarded as successful HR practice (Bartlett & Yoshihara, 1988; Porter, Takeuchi & Sakakibara, 2000). Research and the experiences of Evans, Pucik and Barsoux (2002) over three decades with multinational firms lead to the conclusion that one reason for the controversy and confusion is that we are looking at different aspects. There are three different faces to the contribution that HRM can make to organizational performance. They are the builder, the change partner and the navigator. These faces can be thought of as stages, because development in most organizations goes from the simple to the complex. Each of these faces or phases of HRM and its underlying 2 roles reflects a different set of assumptions about the link between HRM and organizational performance. Each face corresponds to a different theoretical perspective that has particular implications for HRM. In the first face - Building HRM – the focus is on foundations. Every organization must cope with a number of basic and vitally important human resource tasks, those of attracting, motivating, and retaining people. Most texts on personnel and HRM are organized around frameworks for these basic activities. Examples of such texts are Torrington and Hall (1995), Milkovich and Boudreau (1997), Jackson and Schuler (1999), Noe, Hollenbeck et al. (1999). This framework is the basis in this paper for discussion of the functional foundations of HRM. The key activities of HR are recruitment and selection, development and training (including career management), and performance management (including commitment management and rewards). The quality of such foundations is related to the consistency of the elements, the way in which they fit together. The traditional activity-based view of HRM misses what is, perhaps, the most important issue at the building stage – namely that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Objective-setting, appraisal, and reward practices may contribute separately to performance. However, they contribute much more when they are considered to be parts of an overall performance management system. Consistency is important for performance for many reasons. For example, if a firm invests a great deal of money in skill development, it should pay attention to retention through feedback practices, above-average compensation, and careful attention to career management. Policies of long-term employment do not make sense unless people have valuable skills that are worth retaining. Consistency is also psychologically important – as the performance, motivation, and retention of staff suffers when they are subjected to policies that they perceive to be inconsistent or when they feel that they have been treated unfairly or not as well as others. Some scholars argue that consistency is one of the only nostrums in the domain of HRM (Bacon, 1999; Baron & Kreps, 1999; Mabey, Skinner & Clark, 1998). If practices and policies are constantly changing, productive energy will drain away and lead to dysfunctional frustration. Underlying the idea of consistency is the concept of fit, which is clearly the most important theoretical perspective underlying HRM. The concept of fit first appeared in the 1960s. It was associated with developments in systems theory and was also a reaction against previous, “one-best-way” thinking about management (Evans & Doz, 1992).The basic idea of systems theory is that nothing is right unless it fits with the other elements of a system. Other concepts that are associated with fit theory are matching, coherence or consistency, complementarity, and contingency. Since then, the approaches to fit evolved from the human relations movement and focused on the internal fit between the elements of what constitutes an organization (Burns & Stalker, 1961; Leavit, 1965). The Socio-Technical systems theory emphasized how changes in technology implied a need for changes in work system management, including HR (see Trist & Bamforth, 1951; Thorsud, 1976; see also the British studies of Woodward, 1965; and the empirical work by the Aston School in Birmingham, England). The growing HRM movement adopted this perspective in the applied psychology focus on person-job fit and in the Harvard general management model. In the latter, the four HRM policy areas of work systems, human resource flows, reward systems, and employee influence must combine to create the optimum commitment, congruence, competence, and cost effectiveness (Beer, Spector et al., 1984; Hanna, 1988; and Nadler and Tushman (1988). This means that practices have to be tailored to specific circumstances. In fact, the consistency between external strategy and internal HRM may be what is important. As contingency theory would predict, there is a great deal of evidence to suggest that there are different possible configurations of HRM, organization, and strategic orientation. In summary, we conclude that there is evidence to suggest that firms that pay careful attention to 3 the selection of people and their skill development, worry about means of retaining people who possess valuable skills, and try to find an appropriate way to link performance to individual rewards will indeed yield superior financial results – if their practices are internally consistent and consistent with their strategies. This, in our experience, seems so plausible and supported by the data that one can accept it as a hypothesis that applies universally, regardless of context. Indeed, this is what we mean by “foundations.” However, it is important to emphasize that it is not the specific practices that are important as these do very much depend upon context. The need in our dynamic and competitive business environment for proactive human resource management moves us on to the second face, Realigning HRM. The focus of this second face is managing change, in order to achieve new strategic goals and to implement strategy by facilitating change, including changes that necessary in the deep structure of HRM foundations. The fit remains the theoretical framework behind the second face of HRM. However, achieving this is more complicated since the need for internal consistency must be complemented by a new emphasis on adapting to the demands of the external environment. This is external fit, often called strategic HRM (Lengnick-Hall & Lengnick-Hall, 1988; Meshoulam & Baird, 1987). Sometimes internal fit or consistency is called “horizontal fit” whereas external fit is known as “vertical fit” (Wright & McMahon, 1992). These two aspects of fit, internal and external, were brought together in theories of HRM in the late 80s, although they remain largely separate (Lengnick-hall and Lengnick-hall, 1988 Meshoulam & Baird, 1987). The fit theory is focused on the external interface between an organization and its environment, particularly the competitive environment (Chander, 1962); in the structural contingency theory (Donaldson, 1996; Galbraith & Nathanson, 1979; Lawrence & Lorsh, 1967); or in Porter´s 7-S model, which emphasizes that effectiveness is the fit between the hard Ss of strategy, structure, and systems, and the soft S of staff, Style, skills, and superordinate values. Additionally, the notions of fit and coherence are at the heat of one of the most influential models of managing change, known as the punctuated equilibrium model. Simply put, organizations go through cycles of evolution where tight coherence develops - and revolution where external changes lead to radical reconfiguration of fit (Tushman, Newman & Romanelli, 1986). This underlies the theories of transformational change and has been used to analyze how technological innovation leads to strategic, structural, and organizational revolutions in industries (Tushman & O’Reilly, 1996). While its advocates would regard fit as common sense, there are severe methodological problems with its conceptualization and measurement (Wright & Snell, 1998). The nature of the theory is such that, with an infinite number of angles of fit, it is doubtful that it could ever be proven scientifically, although there is credible evidence that supports certain propositions (Donaldson, 1996). Contextualism argues that contingencies are so complex that they should be the objects of study and that the content of HRM can only be understood in the external context of the firm, its internal context, its business strategy context, and the HRM Context (Hendry and Pettigrew, 1990; Sorge, 1991; Sparrow, Schuler & Jackson, 1994; and Jackson & Schuler, 1995). When looking at "Strategic" Human Resource Management, we should ask, “How does one test the hypothesis that a tight link between HRM and strategy leads to better performance?” This leads to a broader and more complex concept of fit, for which there are many different frameworks. Baron and Kreps (1999) emphasize that HRM must strive to achieve internal coherence on the one hand, as discussed in the previous section, and more externally oriented coherence on the other hand, with five different factors in mind. They are the 4
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