The concept of strategic human resources management (SHRM) holds
considerable promise for improving government performance. However, to
realize this promise, it is necessary to invest the concept with clear
meaning. This article explores unresolved issues regarding the meaning
of SHRM and its relevance to public organizations. Arguing that the
value of the concept is undermined by tying it too closely to strategic
planning, the article offers an expanded, two-pronged understanding of
SHRM. The personnel office, in addition to helping the agency implement
strategic initiatives, also carries out an integrated personnel program
guided by a coherent theory about what it should be doing and why.
The concept of strategic human resources management (SHRM) is well
established in business literature.[1] It refers to ongoing efforts to
align an organization's personnel policies and practices with its
business strategy. The recent interest in SHRM reflects a growing
awareness that human resources are the key to success in both public and
private organizations. Yet, despite this growing awareness, the
relevance of SHRM to public organizations is far from clear. Government
agencies rarely operate in competitive markets and thus do not develop
business strategies in the same sense that private organizations do. And
because they function within larger systems of authority, they do not
enjoy the same degree of autonomy that private organizations do to alter
their personnel policies or provide performance-based incentives to
employees. Given these inherent differences, SHRM cannot be transferred
successfully from the private to the public sector without tailoring its
design and implementation to the unique characteristics of public
organizations.
At present there remain many unresolved issues about what
modifications are required and the probabilities of their success. If
SHRM is to succeed in fundamentally altering the role of the personnel
department and the practice of public personnel management, greater
clarity is required regarding the concept of SHRM and how it is to be
implemented in public organizations. Accordingly, this article examines
unresolved issues regarding the relevance of SHRM for government
agencies and closes with an argument for an expanded understanding of
what it means to manage human resources strategically.
Procedural and Structural Prerequisites: Unresolved Issues
Figure 1 presents a conceptual framework representative of the kind
found in the business literature. It depicts SHRM as a process that
merges strategic planning and human resource management. Specifically,
it views SHRM as a continuous process of determining mission-related
objectives and aligning personnel policies and practices with those
objectives. The personnel department plays a strategic role to the
extent that its policies and practices support accomplishment of the
organization's objectives. Key components include analyzing the
agency's internal and external environments, identifying the
agency's strategic objectives, developing HR objectives and
strategies consistent with the agency's goals (vertical
integration), and aligning HR policies and practices with each other
(horizontal integration). For this conceptual understanding of SHRM to
be implemented successfully, certain structural and procedural
requirements must be satisfied. These core requirements include the
following:
1. An established strategic planning process.
2. Involvement of the HR director in the strategic planning process
and full consideration of the personnel-related implications of the
strategic objectives or initiatives under discussion.
3. A clear statement, written or unwritten, of each agency's
mission and the strategic objectives to be achieved in pursuit of
mission.
4. The vertical alignment of personnel policies and practices with
an agency's mission and strategic objectives, and the horizontal
integration of personnel policies and practices with each other.
5. A personnel office whose organizational role and structure are
consistent with and contribute to the attainment of the agency's
mission and strategic objectives.
These prerequisites capture what is required to integrate strategic
planning with human resources management in a way that enhances
organizational performance. Such an integration is difficult to achieve,
for example, if there is no strategic planning process in place, no
participation by the personnel director, and no subsequent development
of personnel initiatives designed to support identified objectives.
These prerequisites are explored below, along with unresolved issues
about how to fulfill them in governmental settings.
An Established Strategic Planning Process
The role of strategic planning is to provide agencies with a clear
sense of direction by clarifying mission, setting priorities, and
identifying goals and objectives. NAPA's Guide for Effective
Strategic Management of Human Resources recommends a short and simple
planning process, five to seven days in length, which establishes five
or six key objectives to be accomplished during the next few years.[2] A
short and simple process has the advantage of providing a clear sense of
direction to line and staff officials without becoming an overly
elaborate and ultimately hollow planning exercise.
Most federal agencies engage in strategic planning because they are
required to do so by the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993.
The extent of its use among state and local governments, although
somewhat less clear, is indicated by the results of two studies. Of
those responding to a national survey of state agencies conducted by
Berry and Wechsler, 60 percent said they had strategic planning
processes in place.[3] Similarly, in a study of municipalities with
populations between 25,000 and 1,000,000, Poister and Streib found that
60 percent had adopted strategic planning in at least one department or
program area.[4] These findings indicate that a large and growing number
of state and local agencies are using strategic planning as a basic way
of doing business.
One unresolved issue is whether the goals of SHRM are best achieved
through a single, top-down, jurisdiction-wide strategic planning process
or by separate agency-level planning processes. The business literature
promotes strategic planning as a company-wide process in which top
executives identify strategic objectives for the entire organization and
managers develop their operational plans accordingly. But however
appropriate this may be in the private sector, it is less so in the
public sector. The essential task of government agencies is to execute
public law. Because each agency has a unique mission and set of mandates
to carry out, a single, top-down strategic planning process is less
appropriate for purposes of SHRM. As Poister and Streib observed in
their study of municipal governments, strategic planning may be
"more useful for major organizational units with a unified sense of
mission rather than a highly diversified and fragmented municipal
jurisdiction as a whole."[5] While it is true that states such as
Oregon[6] and communities such as Rock Hill, South Carolina[7] have
engaged in strategic planning, such efforts are typically short-term
exercises designed to resolve jurisdiction-wide problems or policy
issues rather than institutionalized processes designed to enhance
agency performance. Enhanced performance is the purpose that SHRM is
intended to serve. Because each agency has a unique mission and set of
mandates, SHRM logically requires agency-level strategic planning
processes guided by legislative intent as well as the chief
executive's policy or political agenda. The subsequent integration
of agency plans into a jurisdiction-wide strategic plan is not required
for purposes of SHRM.
A second unresolved issue is whether SHRM requires a particular
kind of strategic planning to deliver on its promise of enhanced
organizational performance. Strategic planning may be practiced in a
variety of ways.[8] It may be externally-oriented, bringing together a
diverse range of stakeholders to resolve issues of mutual concern, or
internally-oriented, bringing together a cross-functional team of agency
officials to set internal priorities and objectives. It may be mandated
from above for purposes of accountability, or adopted voluntarily by an
agency to establish a clear sense of direction. It may comprise a
temporary, problem-specific process that ends when the immediate problem
has been resolved, or an ongoing, institutionalized process for goal
setting and issues management. Lastly, it may follow the Harvard policy
model and call for extensive analysis of the agency's internal and
external environments, or it may avoid lengthy analyses, opting instead
for simple goal-setting exercises.[9] Process characteristics are
important because they affect how seriously strategic planning is taken
by agency staff, its perceived value as a management tool, and how much
it ultimately contributes to organizational performance.
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