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NATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN HRM: KNOWING WHEN AND HOW TO ADAPT

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Presentation on theme: "NATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN HRM: KNOWING WHEN AND HOW TO ADAPT"— Presentation transcript:

1 NATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN HRM: KNOWING WHEN AND HOW TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 12 NATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN HRM: KNOWING WHEN AND HOW TO ADAPT

2 WHY TO NATIONS DIFFER IN HRM?

3 Exhibit 12.1 The National Context and HRM

4 SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS Include the family, educational, economic, and the political and legal systems Closely linked with national and business culture

5 THREE TYPES OF ISOMORPHISM
Coercive Mimetic Normative

6 THE NATIONAL CONTEXT AND KEY BUSINESS PRACTICES
Education and training of labor pool Laws and cultural expectations for selection practices Types of jobs favored

7 The national context and key business practices, continued
Laws and cultural expectations of fair wage and promotion criteria Laws and traditions regarding labor relations

8 RESOURCE POOL The resource pool represents all the human and physical resources available in a country - both from natural and induced factor conditions

9 RECRUITMENT Attract qualified applicants

10 US RECRUITMENT STRATEGIES
Open and public See Exhibit 12.3

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12 KOREAN RECRUITMENT: A COLLECTIVIST APPROACH
Backdoor School contacts

13 SELECTION

14 THE US APPROACH TO SELECTION
Match skills and job requirements Universalistic criteria See Exhibit 12.4

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16 SELECTION IN COLLECTIVIST CULTURES
The in-group Preference for family Value personal characteristics High school and university ties substitute for family membership

17 IMPLICATIONS FOR THE MULTINATIONAL
Managers must follow local norms to get best workers Often a tradeoff with benefits of home country practices

18 TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT

19 DIFFERENCES IN TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT
Result from: differences in educational systems values regarding educational credentials cultural values regarding other personnel practices

20 Exhibit 12.5 shows training systems used in different countries

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22 Exhibit 12.5 shows skills taught by U.S. organizations

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24 VOCATIONAL EDUCATION IN GERMANY
Standardized national system = a well trained labor force Affects over 65% of 15 to 16 year olds Collaboration of employers, unions, and state See Exhibit Dual system

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26 MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT: U.S.A.
Senior level managers often identify managerial potential Appraisals of managerial readiness Assessment centers Mentoring "Fast track" careers

27 MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT: TRADITIONAL JAPANESE STYLE
Recruits directly from universities Join the company as a group Selected on personal qualities and fit with the corporate culture Mutual commitment of permanent employment

28 Management development: traditional Japanese style, continued
Similar pay and promotion for first ten years - age seniority Informal recognition of those high performance managers

29 SHIFITING SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS: PRESSURES FOR CHANGE
Asahi ties promotions to evaluations Matsushita uses merit pay for managers Honda is phasing out seniority

30 IMPLICATIONS FOR THE MULTINATIONAL
Examine feasibility of exporting training IHRM orientation affects training needs of local managers Locations advantages - see Exhibit 12.9

31

32 PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
Identifying people to reward, promote, demote, develop and improve, retain, or fire

33 U.S. PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL SYSTEM
Performance standards Performance measures Performance feedback Human resources decisions Must meet legal requirements

34 PERFORMANCE APPRIASAL IN COLLECTIVIST CULTUES
Managers work indirectly to sanction poor performance Often avoid direct performance appraisal feedback

35 COMPENSATION Wages and salaries, incentives such as bonuses, and benefits such as retirement contributions

36 COMPENSATION IN THE U.S. Wages and salaries differ based on two major factors external internal

37 COMPENSATION IN JAPAN: TRADITIONAL APPROACH
Base salaries for positions Skill and educational requirements Age Marital status and family size may count Bonuses

38 NEW MERIT (Japanese style)
Can affect pay raises to a greater degree the traditional position/seniority system Does not match the Western view - Nenpo Stresses attitudes as much as performance

39 EX 12.10 THE JAPANESE PAY RAISE FORMULA

40 EVALUATION/COMPENSTATION: Implications for the Multinational
Match HRM orientation Seek location advantages in wages See Exhibit next

41

42 A COMPARATIVE VIEW OF LABOR RELATIONS

43 PATTERNS OF LABOR RELATIONS DEPEND ON:
Historical factors Ideology reasons Management views of unions

44 UNION MEMBERSHIP DENSITY
Germany: estimated 40% belonged to trade unions U.S.A.: 14.2% nonagricultural workforce--down from a high of over 35% in the early 1940s Denmark: over 80% unionized Great Britain: approximate 50% unionized

45 SOME HISTORICAL UNION DIFFERENCES
German formalized, legalistic bargaining centralized between large unions and large corporations works council

46 French--militant/strong ideologies
U.S.--"bread and butter" issues--wages, benefits, and working conditions

47 UNION STRUCTURES Enterprise Craft Industrial Local Ideological
White collar/professional

48 IMPLICATIONS FOR THE MULTINATIONAL
Must deal with local labor practices A factor in location choice - see Exhibit 12.16

49 EXHIBIT WHO GETS ALONG?

50 CONCLUSIONS National context and HRM contrasts between individualist U.S. v. collectivist Recruitment and selection Training and development Performance evaluation and compensation

51 Unionization Implications for location decisions


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