Performance management & Best practices
Performance management & Best practices
Definition of human resource best practices
As
soon as organizations realized the importance of employees, they started to
search for a way to benefit from their huge capabilities. If employees are trained,
motivated, and encouraged, they can differentiate organizations by increasing
organizational creativity, innovation, productivity, and profitability (Lee,
Mazzei, & Kim, 2018). This focuses on human potential gave birth to people
management within organizations, or in other words, what we call now “human
resources management”. Even though the importance of human abilities is not
understood at companies’ emersion era, nowadays, organizations know that
employees’ output can be improved through management tactics and practices
leading to better organizational performance (Ibidunn, Osibanjo, Adeniji,
Salau, & Falola, 2015).
These
practices are mainly called “high performance work practices” (HPWPs) (Pittino,
Visintin, Lenger, & Sternad, 2016). “high performance work practices”
(HPWPs) appeared in the United States in the nineties and were introduced to
many industries such as textile and manufacturing (Karatepe & Olugbade,
2016). However, HPWPs concept underwent several changes in its interpretation.
At the beginning it focused on the individual discretionary efforts as a major
instigator to organizational performance. Nowadays, the use of HPWPs is to
improve both individuals’ lives and organizational performance (Ashton &
Sung, 2002) and (Murphy, Torres, Ingram, & Hutchinson, 2018). By adopting
HPWPs substantial effects such as increased performance, productivity, and
profits appeared on organizations. Naturally, many researchers attempted to
cover this interesting topic, however most of those research and studies
focused on how to connect HPWPs with organizational performance.
Theory of
High-Performance Work Practices
From
the time of the industrial revolution, researchers and business leaders have
tried to describe and evaluate specific work-related practices and methods that
can increase productivity and give a competitive edge to organizations. All the
efforts exerted in this area gave birth to many terms such as “high-performance
practices”, “employee involvement”, “employee participation” and “flexible work
organizations”. What is in common between all previously mentioned terms is
that all of them are used to describe workplace practices that underline
employees’ contribution role in improving organizational performance. The
relationship between HPWPs and organizational performance was mentioned and was
found positively correlated by many researchers such as (Combs, Liu, Hall,
& Ketchen, 2006), (Shin & Konrad, 2017), (Garg, 2019), and many others.
The use of “high performance” assumes that employees’ participation always has
a positive impact on organizational productivity and performance (Parks, 1995).
The Relationship between
HPWPs and Organizational Performance
Despite
the debate about high performance work practices definition, HPWPs are not
considered as a new concept; they are simply work practices that can be
intentionally presented to improve organizational performance. They may consist
of a mixture of innovative human resources practices which will properly use
employee knowledge, skills, and abilities with an aim to achieve organizational
performance enhancements. Additionally, HPWPs affect employee engagement and
their sense of accomplishment and can be seen as a set of human resource
practices that give the organization a competitive advantage (Huselid, 1995)
and (Albrecht, Bakker, Gruman, Macey, & Saks, 2015). A broadly accepted
definition is that HPWPs are a set of complementary work practices covering
three broad areas. These broad areas, as per Sung and Ashton (2005), are: first,
high employee involvement practices, second, human resources practices and
third, reward and commitment practices.
The
concrete fact assuring the positive link between HPWPs and organizational
performance was not easy to demonstrate at the begining. However, many
researchers tried and succeeded like (Combs, Liu, Hall, & Ketchen, 2006),
(Obeidat, Mitchell, & Bray, 2016), and (Garg, 2019) to demonstrate a
progressive correlation between HPWPs and organizational performance. They
mentioned in their analysis that there is no doubt about the existence of such
relationship whereby organizations can increase employee’s performance by
implementing HPWPs. Combs, Liu, Hall, and Ketchen (2017) also mentioned that
according to strategic human resources theory, the mediators that drive the
relation between HPWPs, which should be formalized through organizational
systems known as high performance work practices systems, and performance are:
research design, context, and organizational strategy. Their analysis showed an
increase of 20 standardized units for each unit increase in HPWP use i.e., once
HPWPs are applied, organizations who implement them can have 20% increase in
their performance in comparison to the previous performance. Several
researchers demonstrated the same.
Organizational
Performance
Significantly
higher levels of performance were found in large firms with a strong human
resources management (HRM) system (Wu, Hoque, Bacon, & Bou Llusar, 2015).
This clearly demonstrates that a strong HRM system that contains bundles of
well selected HPWPs is more likely to have a greater impact on performance
(Bowen & Onsoff, 2004) and (Garg, 2019). Therefore, it is useful to
emphasize again that the “best” set of HPWPs in a given organization can depend
on many criteria and steps preceding their implementation. Then, one of the
fundamental steps is inserting HPWPs in the organizational strategy and systems
in order to enhance organizational performance (McAlearney, Hefner, Robbins,
& Garman, 2016). This enhancement of organizational performance must reach
all aspects of the organization, especially human resource management. This is
why strategic human resources management (SHRM) theories assert that HPWPs
affect organizational performance by increasing employees’ knowledge, skills
and abilities, by empowering and motivating them to apply their competencies in
the workplace. Applying HPWPs in an organization provides employees with better
probabilities of developing and improving their skills than an organization
which does not apply them (Ogbonnaya & Valizade, 2018). HPWPs can also
increase motivation between employees encouraging them to perform better. As a
result, HPWPs can benefit organizations in higher performance which can
generate additional profits to both employer and employee (Godard, 2004) and (Shin
& Konrad, 2017).
Ashton, D. N., & Sung, J.
(2002). Supporting Workplace Learning for High Performance Working.
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Albrecht, S. L., Bakker, A. B.,
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(2002). Supporting Workplace Learning for High Performance Working.
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(2004). Understanding HRM-Firm Performance Linkages: The Role of the “Strength”
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& Ketchen, D. (2006). How Much do High-Performance Work Practices Matter? A
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Ibidunn, S., Osibanjo, A. O.,
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High-Performance Work Practices and Job Outcomes of Employees in Nigeria.
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McAlearney, A. S., Hefner, J.,
Robbins, J., & Garman, A. N. (2016). Toward a High-Performance Management
System in Health Care, Part 4: Using high-Performance Work Practices to Prevent
Central Line-Associated Blood Stream Infections—A Comparative Case Study.
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Murphy, K., Torres, E., Ingram,
W., & Hutchinson, J. (2018). A Review of High Performance Work Practices
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Organizational Performance. Employee Relations.
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Pittino, D., Visintin, F.,
Lenger, T., & Sternad, D. (2016). Are High Performance Work Practices
Really Necessary in Family SMEs? An Analysis of the Impact on Employee
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Shin, D., & Konrad, A. M.
(2017). Causality between High-Performance Work Systems and Organizational
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Wu, N., Hoque, K., Bacon, N.,
& Bou Llusar, J. C. (2015). High-Performance Work Systems and Workplace
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Performance management procedures are systematic methods of informing employees about the performance and productivity characteristics that are required of them. Performance management is a collection of tasks that include knowing what goals are and how they should be measured, performance evaluation, performance feedback, incentive-based performance, career planning, motivation, training, and development. The characteristics included a method for reconsidering performance-improvement decisions and comparing individual achievements to predicted results. Effective performance management strategies can assist firms in implementing harmonisation in the performance of roles and managing a varied workforce through poaching (Dixit and Sharma, 2021).
ReplyDeletePerformance measurement is a central mechanism in both assessment and evaluation, which provides the required data for identifying the most appropriate interventions to measurably improve performance (Guerra-López, 2008, 2010).
DeleteYes Rinosha, The Employee Performance appraisal is critical, once when maintaining employees aligned with individual goals and the company's overall goals (Harvard Business School Press, 2009). Managers can use a respectively beneficial approach to assessing. As a result, reviews usually ascertain future career paths and performance growth, and managers need to spend enough time preparing for them.
ReplyDeleteLevy and Williams (2004) identify two
ReplyDeletemain categories of contextual factors influencing the
performance appraisal systems and processes, proximal
and distal factors, underlining the purpose of
performance appraisal, rather motivation and appraisal
frequency as proximal factors, and organizational climate
and culture, organizational objectives, human resources
strategies, economic factors and technological
developments as distal factors