Both HPWS and SMEs have received growing attention in HRM research. However, the literature on HRM in SMEs has mainly focused on the issues of “homogeneity” versus “heterogeneity” behaviours, on the one hand, and on the antithesis between the “small is beautiful” and the “bleak-house” perspectives on the other. Based on original information acquired by means of a survey performed on more than one hundred Italian firms and an in-depth study of eight of them, this study analyzes the degree of adoption of HPWS and aspects related to the processes of change towards HPWS in medium-sized firms. We consider the main theoretical approaches that address the choices made by enterprises, paying particular attention to the role of organizational culture. The main findings show that: (i) decision-making power on work organisation is a prerogative of the owner and top management, while HRM functions play an important role mainly in the proposal-making stage; (ii) change in smaller enterprises is managed autonomously by management, while worker involvement prevails in larger enterprises; (iii) strategies for change concentrate mainly on clearly identified occupational groups and they do not translate into a true paradigm of change in organisational management as a whole. These findings have major implications for future research and for the SME policy debate.
High-performance work systems and the change management process in medium-sized firms
DELLA TORRE, Edoardo Ezio;
2013-01-01
Abstract
Both HPWS and SMEs have received growing attention in HRM research. However, the literature on HRM in SMEs has mainly focused on the issues of “homogeneity” versus “heterogeneity” behaviours, on the one hand, and on the antithesis between the “small is beautiful” and the “bleak-house” perspectives on the other. Based on original information acquired by means of a survey performed on more than one hundred Italian firms and an in-depth study of eight of them, this study analyzes the degree of adoption of HPWS and aspects related to the processes of change towards HPWS in medium-sized firms. We consider the main theoretical approaches that address the choices made by enterprises, paying particular attention to the role of organizational culture. The main findings show that: (i) decision-making power on work organisation is a prerogative of the owner and top management, while HRM functions play an important role mainly in the proposal-making stage; (ii) change in smaller enterprises is managed autonomously by management, while worker involvement prevails in larger enterprises; (iii) strategies for change concentrate mainly on clearly identified occupational groups and they do not translate into a true paradigm of change in organisational management as a whole. These findings have major implications for future research and for the SME policy debate.File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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