Review Report HRM
Review Report HRM
Review Report HRM
Abstract
This study comprehensively evaluated the links between systems of High Performance Work
Practices and firm performance. Results based on a national sample of nearly one thousand firms
indicate that these practices have an economically and statistically significant impact on both
intermediate employee outcomes (turnover and productivity) and short- and long-term measures
of corporate financial performance.
Introduction
This is a review of the study “The Impact of Human Resource Management Practices on
Turnover, Productivity, and Corporate Financial Performance”. The study focuses on how
human resource management (HRM) policies and practices affects the firm performance as an
important topic.
The study is supported by related literature to examine that a firm's current and potential human
resources are important concern in the development and execution of its strategic business plan
and human resource management practice can help to produce a basis of continual competitive
advantage.
Theoretical literature clearly suggests that the behavior of employees within firms has important
implications for organizational performance and that human resource management practices can
affect individual employee performance. Thus, the empirical literature on this study concentrates
on prior work examining the influence of HRM Practice on employees’ turnover, productivity,
and corporate financial performance.
Method
The sample was drawn from compact disclosure, a database containing comprehensive financial
information, Firms were included in the sample if they had more than a hundred employees and
excluded if they were foreign-owned, holding companies, or publicly held divisions or business
units of larger firms. These criteria yielded 3,452 firms representing all major industries.
Summary
The study supports some prior research in this area. A developing body of research has reported
positive associations between firm-level measures of HRM systems and organizational
performance.
The results are clearly presented and specifically addresses each research questions. Appropriate
narrative are described in text. Overall, the result suggests that employee skills and
organizational structures scale was negatively related to turnover, while both scale were
positively related to productivity and corporate financial performance.
Reference list
Barney, J. 1991. Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management,
17: 99-120.
Becker, B. E., & Olson, C. A. 1987. Labor relations and firm performance. In M. M. Kleiner, R.
N. Block, M. Roomkin, & S. W. Salsburg (Eds.), Human resources and the performance of
the firm: 43-85. Washington, DC: BNA Press.