commitment
and retention
Cohesion Strategy. Establishing a sense job
of community and strong social bonds satisfaction;
through agency newsletters, picnics, comradeship; cooperative
and recreational activities, and by openness; relations;
fostering open and trusting relationships trust. employee
between employees and managers.and retention commitment
The cost-containment strategy tends, in practice, to serve as a
default strategy. Although it is antithetical to McGregor's
understanding of what it means to manage strategic resources
strategically, it is often the strategy of choice among elected
officials concerned with holding the line on labor costs and budget
increases. Where there is no agreed upon vision of success, nor any
theory regarding the strategic importance of human resources to agency
performance, other strategies tend to receive little attention. However,
the convergence of several factors in recent years, including tighter
labor markets, a growing proportion of high-skill and
knowledge-intensive jobs, a better educated workforce with heightened
growth needs, and political pressures to improve government performance,
has turned attention to alternative strategies. The performance
management strategy, for example, has been adopted in jurisdictions
where the values and assumptions of the managing-for-results movement
have gained sway.[26] Similarly, because most government employees are
knowledge workers who can sell their intellectual capital on the open
market, many agencies are turning to a combination of the investment,
involvement, and retention strategies to attract, develop, and retain
the human resources they need to provide knowledge intensive services in
an ever changing environment. The investment strategy in particular
reflects a growing awareness that human competence is the engine behind
the creation of value.[27]
The strategies or combination of strategies chosen, if any, depends
on situational factors such as the nature of the work performed by
agency staff, the agency's capacity for pursuing excellence, and
the priorities of its leaders. Political and practical factors often
divert attention from developing a human resource philosophy or
expending funds to put it into practice. Indeed, as McGregor has noted,
"in the minds of many a case-hardened practitioner, the idea of
strategic public-sector human resource management may well be an
oxymoron."[28] But if the prospects for implementing SHRM in the
public sector are uncertain, the concept itself represents a valuable
goal toward which to strive.
Conclusion
The concept of SHRM as outlined above calls upon the personnel
office to adopt a strategic role in addition to its operational roles as
rule enforcer and guardian of the integrity of personnel systems. For
the personnel staff, adopting a strategic role means being more
responsive to agency goals by acting as consultants and service
providers to line managers; supporting the attainment of the
agency's strategic objectives; and carrying out an integrated,
philosophy-driven personnel program. Although the concept of SHRM is
steeped in problematic, rationalistic assumptions, it nonetheless holds
considerable promise for enhancing government performance. Its success
depends on whether the personnel office can integrate its strategic and
operational roles successfully and whether it can satisfy the norms of
political and formal rationality simultaneously. Too much is at stake
for this potentially valuable concept to become a label for yet another
failed management initiative.
Notes
[1.] Tichy, Noel M., Charles J. Fombrun, and Mary Anne Devanna,
"Strategic Human Resource Management," Sloan Management Review
23 (Winter 1982): 47-61; Cynthia A. Lengnick-Hall and Mark L.
Lengnick-Hall, "Strategic Human Resources Management: A Review of
the Literature and a Proposed Typology," Academy of Management
Review 13 (July 1988): 454-470; Randall Schuler, "Strategic Human
Resource Management and Industrial Relations," Human Relations 42
(No. 2 1989):157-184.
[2.] National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA), A Guide for
Effective Strategic Management of Human Resources (Washington D.C.:
NAPA, 1996).
[3.] Berry, Frances Stokes and Barton Wechsler, "State
Agencies' Experience with Strategic Planning: Findings from a
National Survey," Public Administration Review 55 (March/April
1995): 159-168.
[4.] Poister, Theodore H. and Gregory Streib, "Management
Tools in Municipal Government: Trends over the Past Decade," Public
Administration Review 49 (May/June 1989): 240-248.
[5.] Poister and Streib, "Management Tools," 244.
[6.] Kissler, Gerald R., Karmen N. Fore, Willow S. Jacobson,
William P. Kittredge, and Scott L. Stewart, "State Strategic
Planning: Suggestions from the Oregon Experience," Public
Administration Review 58 (July/August 1998): 353-359.
[7.] Wheeland, Craig M., "Citywide Strategic Planning: An
Evaluation of Rock Hill's Empowering Vision," Public
Administration Review 53 (January/February 1993): 65-72.
[8.] Bryson, John M., Strategic Planning for Public and Nonprofit
Organizations: A Guide to Strengthening and Sustaining Organizational
Achievement (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1995).
[9.] Bryson, John M. and William D. Roering, "Applying
Private-Sector Strategic Planning in the Public Sector," Journal of
the American Planning Association 53 (Winter 1987): 9-22.
[10.] Osborne, David and Ted Gaebler, Reinventing Government
(Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1992).
[11.] Bryson, Strategic Planning; Paul C. Nutt and Robert W.
Backoff, Strategic Management of Public and Third Sector Organizations
(San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1992).
[12.] Bryson, Strategic Planning.
[13.] Bryson and Roering, "Applying Private-Sector Strategic
Planning," 15.
[14.] Mintzberg, Henry, The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning
(New York: Free Press, 1994).
[15.] NAPA, A Guide for Effective Strategic Management of Human
Resources, 17.
[16.] Porter, Michael E., Competitive Strategy: Techniques for
Analyzing Industries and Competitors (New York: Free Press, 1980);
Schuler, "Strategic Human Resource Management and Industrial
Relations."
[17.] Wechsler, Barton and Robert W. Backoff, "The Dynamics of
Strategy in Public Organizations," Journal of the American Planning
Association 53 (Winter 1987): 34-43.
[18.] Popovich, Mark G. (ed.), Creating High-Performance Government
Organizations (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1998).
[19.] Ulrich, Dave, "Strategic and Human Resource Planning:
Linking Customers and Employees," Human Resource Planning 15 (June
1992): 47+.
[20.] NAPA, A Guide for Effective Strategic Management of Human
Resources.
[21.] Perry, James L. and Debra J. Mesch, "Strategic Human
Resource Management," in Public Personnel Management: Current
Concerns, Future Challenges edited by Carolyn Ban and Norma M. Riccucci
(New York: Longman, 1997), 21-34.
[22.] NAPA, A Guide for Effective Strategic Management of Human
Resources, 53.
[23.] Perry and Mesch, "Strategic Human Resource
Management."
[24.] McGregor, Eugene B., Strategic Management of Human Knowledge,
Skills, and Abilities (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1991).
[25.] Christensen, Ralph, "Where is HR?" Human Resource
Management 36 (Spring 1997): 81-84.
[26.] Lawler, Edward E., Strategic Pay: Aligning Organizational
Strategies and Pay Systems (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1990); Popovich,
Creating High-Performance Government Organizations.
[27.] Christensen, "Where is HR?"; Lee Dyer and Gerald W.
Holder, "A Strategic Perspective of Human Resource
Management," in Human Resource Management: Evolving Roles and
Responsibilities edited by Lee Dyer (Washington D. C.: Bureau of
National Affairs, 1988): 1-46.
[28.] McGregor, Strategic Management, 33.
Author
Jonathan Tompkins
Department of Political Science
The University of Montana
Missoula, MT 59812
406-243-5202
Jonathan Tompkins is Professor of Political Science at The
University of Montana. His primary teaching responsibilities include
course in human resources management, strategic planning, and
organization theory. He has published several articles relating to human
resource management and a text entitled Human Resource Management in
Government.
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