CHAPTER 14 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAPTER 14: INTERNATIONAL/ GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT Copyright © 2005 South-Western. All rights reserved. footer.
Advertisements

GLOBAL HRM Kourosh Yazdani ft, Hamed Rafiei February 2007 Dr. rer. Pol. Paivand Sepehri’s HRM Course Department of Industrial Engineering Faculty of Engineering.
Managing Global Human Resources
Developing a Global Management Cadre
Chapter 5 Global Human Resource Management
CHAPTER 14 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved.
International Human Resources Management
Copyright Atomic Dog Publishing, 2004 Chapter 14 Establishing HRM Practices Overseas.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama t e n t h e d i t i o n Gary Dessler.
Global Human Resource Management
Chapter 4 Global Human Resource Management
International Human Resources Management
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama 1 Human Resource Management ELEVENTH EDITION G A R Y D E S S L E R © 2008 Prentice.
1.
Human Resource Management : Gaining a Competitive Advantage Chapter 15 Managing Human Resources Globally Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
International Human Resources Management
COMPONENTS OF HRM u Recruitment u Selection u Training & Development u Performance Appraisal u Compensation u Labor Relations.
Department of Business Management Human Resource Management
HR and the Internationalization of Business
BZUPAGES.COM Presenters MIT-09-37JAVED ABBAS MIT AMIR BUKHARI MIT-09-33HAMMAD RAZA MIT-09-38MUHAMAD MUMTAZ Presenters MIT-09-37JAVED ABBAS MIT
Human Resource Management
Chapter 15 Learning Objectives
International Business 9e
Managing Human Resources Globally
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Managing Human Resources in a Global Business Dessler & Cole Human Resources Management in Canada Canadian Tenth.
International HR 1. Globalization Forces for Globalization Free Trade (EU, NAFTA, WTO) Free Trade (EU, NAFTA, WTO) Political and economic liberalization.
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
© Laura Portolese Dias 2011, published by Flat World Knowledge Human Resource Management By Laura Portolese Dias 14-1.
BZUPAGES.COM Managing Global Human Resources Presented to: Sir Ahmad Tisman Pasha Presented By: Muniba Mariyum Roll No:40 Muhammad Bilal Roll No : 41 Presented.
Department of Business Management Strategic Human Resource Management Ing. Miloš Krejčí
BZUPAGES.COM Presentation On “Managing Global Human Resources” Kamran Ghaffar Roll # MIT-3 rd Semester Institute of Computing Bahauddin Zakariya.
Cross-Cultural Management 1 GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCES.
Global Human Resource Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin International Business, 6/e, 7/e Portions © 2007, 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All.
1 Human Resources Planning for Global Expansion Chapter 13.
CSC350: Learning Management Systems COMSATS Institute of Information Technology (Virtual Campus)
COMPONENTS OF HRM Recruitment Selection Training & Development Performance Appraisal Compensation Labor Relations.
15-1 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. fundamentals of Human Resource Management 4 th edition by.
1– 1 MGT-351 Human Resource Management Chapter-17 Managing Global HR.
1 Dessler, Cole and Sutherland Human Resources Management in Canada Canadian Ninth Edition Chapter Eighteen Managing Human Resources in an International.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama t e n t h e d i t i o n Gary Dessler.
International Human Resource Management/Global HRM
Chapter 13 International Human Relations. 2 Learning Objectives 1)Discuss the four major reasons why businesses become multinational companies. 2)Identify.
20-1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Part Six Managing International Operations Chapter Twenty Human Resource Management.
Selection of Expatriate Managers
Human Resources Management 12e Gary Dessler
CHAPTER 14: INTERNATIONAL/ GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
International Human Resources Management
Managing Global Human Resources
5 Meeting Other HR Goals Collective Bargaining and Labor Relations
CHAPTER 14: GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
INTERNATIONAL TRAINING, DEVELOPMENT, & CAREERS
International Human Resources Management
CHAPTER 14: INTERNATIONAL/ GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Human Resources Planning for Global Expansion
Chapter 15 MANAGING HUMAN RESOURCES GLOBALLY
International Business Environment
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Managing Global Human Resources
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
Chapter 17 International HRM
GLOBAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Managing Global Human Resources
Managing Human Resources in an International Business
WHAT IS IHRM?  Globalisation of business has probably touched the HR manager more severely than any other functional head  International orientation.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO IHRM.
International Human Resources Management
CHAPTER 14 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Managing Human Resources Globally
International Business
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 14 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

The International Imperative Why organizations expand internationally: To capture enhanced market opportunities that foreign countries may present. To achieve economies of scale in production and administration by expanding the scope and volume of operations to international markets. Keeping up with industry leaders may require that an organization enter foreign markets. Acquiring ownership of a foreign-based organization or subsidiary.

How International and Domestic HRM Differ International HRM requires: Managing a broader range of functional areas. Becoming more involved in employees’ personal lives. Setting up several different HRM systems for different geographic locations. Participating in international assignments that have sensitive exposure to personal risk.

Assessing Culture: Hofstede’s Cultural Differences Dimensions Individualism or collectivism Individualistic societies value the development of and focus on the individual; collective societies value group relationships. Power distance The extent to which a society is hierarchical, and how power is distributed among its members. Uncertainty avoidance The extent to which a society feels comfortable with ambiguity and values and encourages risk-taking. Quantity (Masculinity) versus Quality of Life (Femininity)

Assessing Culture

Hall’s Model of Cultural Differences Five silent languages that define patterns of communication in the culture: Time- the importance or sense of time in daily activities. Space (distance)- the amount of physical distance individuals attempt to maintain between themselves and others. Material goods- the emphasis or inferences on the possession of goods to signify power, success and status Friendships- the importance of friendships in conferring status on an individual. Agreements- considers how agreements are reached.

Staffing in Global Organization Local- they are citizens of the countries in which they are working Expatriates (expats)- They are noncitizens of the countries in which they are working (e.g. a Bangladeshi worker working in the U.S.) Home-country nationals- they are the citizens of the country in which the multinational company has its headquarters Third country nationals- They are the citizens of a country other than the parent or the host country (e.g. a Bangladeshi executive working in Cardiff branch of a U.S. multinational bank

Why Expatriate Assignments Fail Personality Personal intentions Family pressures Inability of the spouse to adjust Inability to cope with larger overseas responsibility. Lack of cultural skills

Strategic HR Issues in International Assignments Approaches to sending employees abroad: Administrative approach involves merely assisting the employee destined for an international assignment with paperwork and minor logistics Tactical approach involves managing the “risk or failure” factor of overseas assignment by providing paperwork assistance and a modest amount of training. Strategic approach involves extensive support and coordination of the international assignment and a strategized repatriation program at the end of the assignment.

Strategic HR Issues in International Assignments (cont’d)

Selecting Expatriate Managers Adaptability screening Assessing the expat’s (and spouse’s) probable success in handling the foreign transfer. Sending the employee and family members to the host country for several weeks. Overseas Assignment Inventory A test that identifies the characteristics and attitudes international assignment candidates should have.

Orienting and Training for International Assignment Training is needed on: The impact of cultural differences on business outcomes. How attitudes (both negative and positive) are formed and how they influence behavior. Factual knowledge about the target country. Language and adjustment and adaptation skills.

Appraising Expatriate Managers Challenges in appraising overseas managers Determining who should appraise the manager Deciding on which factors to base the appraisal Improving the expatriate appraisal process Weigh the evaluation more toward the on-site manager’s appraisal than toward the home-site manager’s If the home-office manager does the actual written appraisal, use a former expatriate from the same overseas location for advice Stipulate the assignment’s difficulty level, and adapt the performance criteria to the situation

Compensating Expatriates The “Balance Sheet Approach” Home-country groups of expenses—income taxes, housing, goods and services, and discretionary expenses—are the focus of attention. The employer estimates what each of these four expenses is in the expatriate’s home country, and what each will be in the host country. The employer then pays any differences such as additional income taxes or housing expenses.

The Balance Sheet Approach (Assumes Base Salary of $80,000)

Incentives Hardship allowances Mobility premiums Payments to compensate expatriates for exceptionally hard living and working conditions at certain foreign locations. Mobility premiums Lump-sum payments to reward employees for moving from one assignment to another. Foreign service premiums Financial payments over and above regular base pay, and typically range between 10% and 30% of base pay.

Setting Strategic HR Standards

Repatriation

Thank you. Finally, we are done with HRM 480 Thank you! Finally, we are done with HRM 480. Thank you for tolerating me throughout the semester! I am so sorry about the unpleasant events. I wish you success in all your future endeavors! Good luck with the final exam, report and presentation!