SHRM Alignment of HR Function With Business Strategy
SHRM Alignment of HR Function With Business Strategy
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Strategic HR Review, Vol. 13 Issue: 4/5, doi: 10.1108/SHR-03-2014-0023 Write for this journal
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/SHR-03-2014-0023
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Article Type: Strategic commentary From: Strategic HR Review, Volume 13, Issue 4/5
Thought leaders share their views on the HR profession and its direction for the future
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14/05/2017 SHRM: alignment of HR function with business strategy: Strategic HR Review: Vol 13, No 4/5
SHRM Connotation
Strategic human resource management (SHRM) is, indeed, one of the most momentous concepts in the field of
business and management today. The idea of SHRM is to promote high performance workplaces and human capital
management. SHRM can be defined as the linking of human resources (HR) with organisations’ strategic goals and
objectives so as to improve business performance and develop organisational culture that nurture innovation,
flexibility and competitive advantage. In an organisation, SHRM means accepting and involving the HR function as a
strategic partner in the formulation and implementation of the company’s strategies through HR activities such as
recruiting, selecting, training and rewarding personnel. It basically centers on HR programs with long-term objectives
i.e. instead of focusing just on internal HR issues, the major focus is on addressing and solving problems that affect
people management programs in the long run. Therefore, the primary goal of strategic HR is to increase employee
productivity and to identify key HR areas where strategies can be implemented in the long run to improve the overall
employee motivation along with productivity. Strategic orientation of human resource management (HRM) is
important for all organisations irrespective of its size and domain. It simply requires the alignment of every HR
function with business strategy. It establishes relationship between HRM and strategic management of the
organization and facilitates the HRM to change its image as a “cost center” to that of a “strategic business partner”.
Thus, the SHRM can be defined as the organisations action plan to align HRM with strategic business objectives so
that the competitive advantage can be achieved through its skilled, committed and well-motivated workforce. This
can only be possible if every HR function is strategically aligned.
Human resource planning (HRP) is a process of analyzing and identifying the need for and availability of HR so that
the organisation can meet its objectives. The need for HRP is to reduce the significant lead time between recognition
of job requirement and getting a qualified person to fill that need. This means HR is required to have an idea of the
job market and how it can match to hiring needs as no organization can meet its goals without recruiting talented
workers. Hiring, indeed, is an important aspect of HRP, as it provides the doorway for bringing in new employees and
choosing individuals suited to the company’s culture and requirement. During hiring, the HR department looks for an
applicant who specifically fits the job criteria or someone who is the most versatile individual. However, today HRP is
viewed as a strategic operational process and its focus has shifted from traditional Hiring and Staffing to towards
forecasting and succession planning that can handle different contingencies which intern impacts the success of
business operations. Effective HRP can reduce turnover by keeping employees apprised of their career opportunities
within the company. The success of HRP depends on how meticulously the HR department can integrate effective
HRP with the organization’s business planning process. Strategic human resource planning (SHRP) is based on close
working relationships between HR department and line managers. SHRM can be defined as a deliberate attempt of
HR deployment to empower the organization to meet organizational goals, objectives and consistencies. Succession
planning plays an important role in strategic alignment if HRP. Through succession planning organisations recruit
skilled employees, develop their knowledge, skills, and abilities further, and prepare them for advancement or
promotion into ever more challenging roles. This process ensures that employees are constantly developed fill each
needed role. So, that a talent pipeline is maintained.
The core responsibility of recruitment and selection processes is “identifying the right pool of talent for establishing
the right candidates”. Earlier, recruitment and selection was considered as traditional function with standard
approach where the focus was on person–job fit. However, now, organisations are aiming at person–organisation fit
and, therefore, applicants are selected against organizational characteristics rather than job-specific criteria. Today,
choosing the correct employee is, indeed, essential to the development an effective SHRM system.
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Strategic recruitment and selection (SR&S) can be defined as strategic integration of recruitment and selection with
long-term business objectives so that strategic demands of the organisations can be translated into an appropriate
recruitment and selection specification. In this, the alignment of candidate’s objective and business’s objective has
become must. However, not all the job positions in the company are strategic and are not critical for the business
operation. The strategic recruitment is focused only on the key job positions in the organization. It is focused on the
hiring of the job positions needed for the accelerated growth of the business. The strategic recruitment can be a
separate process from the usual recruitment process for the mass job positions.
Increasingly high performing organizations today are recognising the need to use best training and development
practices to enhance their competitive advantage. Training and development is an essential element of every
business if the value and potential of its people is to be harnessed and grown. By definition, training and
development refers to the process to obtaining or transferring knowledge, skills and abilities needed to carry out a
specific activity or task. Strategic positioning of training and development directly promotes organizational business
goals and objectives. Key business challenges require that organisation thoughtfully gauge their market position and
determine the talent, skills and knowledge to be successful. By adopting a strategic approach to training and
development rather than an unplanned and ad hoc one, training and development initiatives become more targeted,
measurable and effective. The strategic training and development (ST&D) is all about identifying, designing and
delivering training programmes to employees to make them capable of delivering in accordance with business
strategy. In addition, the evaluation of the outcomes to check the effectiveness of the training programme based on
planning to determine whether the training was effective to its contribution to the business strategy.
Traditional performance management systems often fail to deliver desired business objectives because
communications from the top are not always clearly understood further down the line, leading to a mismatch
between corporate strategy and how it is translated into targets at a team or individual level. Then, if the business
goals and strategy and the employee motivation and culture are not in harmony, results certainly suffer. This missing
link can be complemented by the strategic performance management (SPM) approach. Top management must
address how they actually want to manage performance? What targets must be met and by when? And how do they
want managers and employees to work to achieve them? It is important not only to identify HR competencies in
accordance with the business needs and develop selection and development practices to secure those
competencies but also to evolve and implement a performance evaluation plan that links the performance of the
employees to the strategic goals. It is certainly essential to have strategically linked compensation system to improve
firm performance and to retain employees with required competencies. SPM creates this link between the strategy
and culture of an organization and its ability to manage employees’ performance to have direct impact on business
performance. SPM is actually about strategy implementation to deliver value by delivering the desired outcomes in
accordance with business strategy. SPM link the individual’s objectives and performance management, driving the
skill and capability requirements and ensure its alignment to the core values of the organisation.
The main objective of compensation policy is to give the right rewards for employee performances, their skills,
competencies, their knowledge and experience to attract and retain them. It is again certainly an important motivator
to reward the employees for their market worth and also for achievement of the desired organisational results.
However, the traditional compensation and reward system alone cannot ensure the fulfilment of the business
objectives. Strategic compensation and reward management (SCRM) facilitate the alignment of compensation and
reward policy with business, which can be achieved by taking a data-driven approach so that the pay and benefits are
allocated to only those positions and workers that produce the greatest return. One of the healthier ways to motivate
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14/05/2017 SHRM: alignment of HR function with business strategy: Strategic HR Review: Vol 13, No 4/5
employees and reward the stellar performers is to have variable pay rewards system based upon the individual and
team performance to their contribution towards the achievement of organisations business objectives.
Teena Bagga is an Assistant Professor and Sanjay Srivastava are both based at Amity Business School, Amity
University, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Teena Bagga can be contacted at: mailto:[email protected]
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