Human Resource Management
People and Performance
Keith Bradley(Editor)
Dartmouth Publishing Co Ltd
Published on 16. April 1992
Book
Hardback
125 pages
978-1-85521-293-0 (ISBN)
Description
"Human Resource Management" examines specific areas in which human resource management will be critical to business performance in the 1990s and beyond. In this changing environment, personnel managers will play an increasingly important role. The first part of the book covers the challenges to traditional personnel management which are being posed by changes in demography, culture and competitiveness. "Human Resource Management" puts forward potential strategies that involve not just the personnel departments, but a firm's entire structure. Topics covered include: the role played by British culture and institutions in recruitment, current definitions of work-time, and the costs of training new recruits who soon leave the company suggesting the alternative strategy of "mentoring". There is also an examination of the training and development of management. The second part of the book looks at specifically organizational problems. The key issue for Western business is quality, which the Japanese have made a source of competitor advantage. Quality involves the establishment of a quality culture within the firm and therefore demands a new appreciation of human resources.
The essays go on to discuss company accounting, information technology, corporate strategy, profit-sharing and the John Lewis Partnership. The book concludes with a constructive look ahead arguing that with the rise of high technology in modern industrial society, which demands that firms rely more upon the expertise of their personnel, means we need qualitative and quantitative analysis and measurement of social capital as a precious resource.
The essays go on to discuss company accounting, information technology, corporate strategy, profit-sharing and the John Lewis Partnership. The book concludes with a constructive look ahead arguing that with the rise of high technology in modern industrial society, which demands that firms rely more upon the expertise of their personnel, means we need qualitative and quantitative analysis and measurement of social capital as a precious resource.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
notes, bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 162 mm
Width: 226 mm
Weight
400 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-85521-293-0 (9781855212930)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Content
Introduction: people and performance, John Redwood; the human capital audit and business performance, Keith Bradley. Part 1 Recruitment and training: population ageing and employment policies, Paul Johnson; excellence in personnel management, Leonard Peach; human capital flows and business efficiency, Leslie Hannah; the new workforce, Steve Shirley; mentoring and the development of social capital, Richard Caruso; management development and career success, David Guest, et al. Part 2 Organization and human resources: people and quality, Stephen Hill; management accounting and the measurement of business; performance - some dilemmas, Eamonn Walsh; management information systems - opportunity or risk?, Ian Angell; profit-related pay - a strategic instrument for the 1990s, Greg Clark; profit-related pay - the implications for the economy, Christopher Huhne; competitive success through participation - the John Lewis Partnership, Simon Taylor; human resources as social capital, Richard Caruso.