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Business Strategy, Human Resource Management and Corporate Performance: Evidence from Small Firms in the UK and US

Michie, Jonathan; Sheehan, Maura

Authors

Jonathan Michie



Contributors

Cees van Beers
Editor

Alfred Kleinknecht
Editor

Roland Ortt
Editor

Robert Verburg
Editor

Abstract

There is a large and growing literature on the relationship between the use of human resource management practices on the one hand, and corporate performance on the other (see for example Appelbaum et al., 2000; Guest et al., 2000; Huselid and Becker, 1996; Ichniowski et al., 1994, 1997; Mac-Duffie, 1995; Way, 2002; Wood and de Menezes, 1998). This literature has mostly found some degree of positive association between the use of such human resource practices on the one hand and organizational outcomes and corporate performance on the other. However, the strength and significance of the associations found varies across studies. Thus the general claim from the HR literature — of a positive association between what might be termed ‘progressive’ human resource management practices on the one hand, and organizational outcomes and corporate performance on the other — is precisely that: a general claim that may not apply to any given firm, since that firm may not exhibit the specific characteristics — such as pursuing an innovating rather than cost-cutting strategy — that are found to be particularly associated with these positive outcomes.

Publication Date 2008
Deposit Date Feb 20, 2020
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Book Title Determinants of Innovative Behaviour: A Firm’s Internal Practices and its External Environment
Chapter Number 2
ISBN 978-1-349-30236-9
Keywords Small Firm Human Resource Management Business Strategy Corporate Performance Human Resource Management Practice
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2534876