Challenges For Human Resource Management and Global Business Strategy
Challenges For Human Resource Management and Global Business Strategy
Challenges For Human Resource Management and Global Business Strategy
Many organizations are already using HR analytics for workforce planning. To avoid coming
skills shortages, HR can expand its use of analytics such as gender and other diversity metrics to
further understand the make-up of recruits and provide matching incentives.
HR challenge: Preparing for the complexities of hiring, managing and integrating a global
workforce
The growth of liberal cross-border trade, the use of communications technology and the
expansion of transnational companies are not likely to let up. Attracting global talent requires
staying abreast of new strategies for finding and attracting talent. Business technology
consultancy Infosys decided to hire Chinese graduates and started by inviting and teaching a
select group of Chinese students English at its office in Mysore, India, allowing the company to
source workers from a neighboring country cost-effectively.129
Technologies such as social media are essential for recruiting, but the challenge is to align these
new strategies with business goals. Aberdeen Group, a provider of business research intelligence,
found that successful organizations are taking a holistic approach to recruitment that includes
company branding, screening, assessment, hiring and onboarding, with technology helping at
each step.130
Companies are also faced with the need to develop the means to assess skills across divergent
talent sources and then creating training programs to fill skills gaps after employees are hired. In
addition, they need to understand how to manage and integrate multicultural employees. When
US pharmaceutical Upjohn merged with Swedish Phamarcia AB, no one foresaw the resistance
to company-imposed policies such as alcohol-testing and smoking, which resulted in cost
overruns, a slowdown in product launches and the eventual sale of the company.131
Managers can begin by understanding the nuances of the cultures using various tools such as
Hofstedes lenses, explained earlier in this paper, or the GLOBE projects nine dimensions of
culture.132 Although these tools tend to simplify the complex issues, they provide good bases for
understanding the diverse cultures of employees and encouraging sensitivity.
It developed training programs that resulted in significant numbers of women, youths, people
with disabilities and indigenous workers productively joining its workforce across the globe.133
HR challenge: Making the business case for CSR
Corporate social responsibility is among the top challenges companies face when expanding into
new markets, especially in developing regions. Business practices that are acceptable locally are
frequently at odds with the values of the company and the laws of its regulatory agencies. This
creates a tug-of-war between social responsibility and the need to be successful in those markets,
which can turn into significant risk.
The challenge for HR is to gain a detailed understanding of local environments and their
accepted business practices. It then needs to establish protocols that are customized for each
region and communicate these protocols throughout the organization and across its supply chain.
When local labor laws or practices conflict with the organizations CSR policies, HR needs to be
the voice of the individual and ensure that the company maintains its integrity, even when this
goes against the potential economic value. HR faces the additional challenge of demonstrating to
the company how good CSR policies strengthen the brand, increase customer loyalty and boost
shareholder value.
HR challenge: Balancing corporate and societal cultures while promoting diversity
Some cultural attributes, such as a command-and-control management style, can be modified to
fit local cultures, while others, such as integrity and human rights policies, cannot be
compromised. HR needs to understand and deal with the complexities, deciding which corporate
culture elements can change and which are essential to protecting the organizations values and
ethics. The company cannot change anti-bribery policies, but it may choose to change its dressdown-Fridays rule. Management may also choose to impose cultural elements, such as giving
back to the community consistently across the global organization. The challenge becomes even
more complex when dealing with new workers, those engaged through means such as
crowdsourcing, as well as remote and temporary workers. HR also needs to develop programs to
assist executives to adapt when they move from the head office to regions with different societal
and cultural norms.
solutions to problems, because each person brings more unique perspectives and experiences to
the table.
The challenge for HR is to educate managers on how to take advantage of the cultural
differences while mitigating any friction. Developing practices for promoting collaboration
among diverse workers and communicating values and policies across countries and ethnicities
will be important to driving success within global organizations.
HR challenge: Identifying skills on a local level
Companies that can identify skills beyond those presented in traditional CVs and rsums will
have an advantage over their competitors. Identifying the desired skills and finding them in a
pool of candidates is a significant challenge for HR, especially when entering new markets and
geographies.