Selasa, 29 November 2011

TUGAS MSDM 4, JURNAL MSDM DAN RESUME

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TN '09 B (SIANG)


Linking Competitive Strategies
with Human Resource
Management Practices
Randall S. Schuler and Susan E. Jackson
New York University
Over the past several years there has been increased recognition that there is a need to match the char- acteristics of top managers with the nature of the business. According to Reginald H. Jones, former chairman and CEO of the General Electric Company,
When we classified. . . [our] . . . businesses, and when we realized that they were going to have quite different missions, we also realized we had to have quite different people running them.
Within academia there has been similar growing awareness of this need. Although this awareness is being articulated in several ways, one of the most frequent involves the conceptualization and investigation of the relationship between business strategy and the personal characteristics of top managers. Here, particular manager characteristics such as personality, skills, abilities, values, and perspectives are matched with particular types of business strategies. For example, a recently released study conducted by Hay Group Incorporated, in conjunction with the University of Michigan and the Strategic Planning Institute, reports that when a business is pursuing a growth strategy it needs top managers who are likely to abandon the status quo and adapt their strategies and goals to the marketplace. According to the study, insiders are slow to recognize the onset of decline and tend to persevere in strategies that are no longer effective; so, top managers need to be recruited from the outside.
Recruiting outsiders as a part of strategy has been successful for Stroh Brewing Co., once a small, familyrun brewery in Detroit. Some 20% of its senior management team of 25 executives, including President Roger T. Fridholm, have been brought into Stroh since 1978. They've been instrumental in transforming it into the third largest U.S. brewer.
The result of such human resource staffing practices has been rather significant: Growth companies that staffed 20% of their top three levels with outsiders exceeded their expected return on investment by 10%. Those that relied on inside talent fell short of their goals by 20%. The same holds true for companies in declining industries: companies with outsiders in one out of every five top managements jobs exceeded expected returns by 20%; those with a low proportion of outsiders fell 5% short.
Outsiders, of course, are not always helpful. When a business is pursuing a mature strategy, what is needed is a stable group of insiders who know the intracacies of the business. The results of the Hay study suggest that the staffing practices of top management be tied to the nature of the business because different aspects of business demand different behaviors from the individuals running them. The implication, then, is that selecting the right top manager is an important staffing decision. Another perspective holds that top managers are capable of exhibiting a wide range of behavior, and all that is needed is to match compensation and performance appraisal practices with the nature of the business. Peter Drucker, commenting on the relationship between compensation and a strategy of innovation,observed that:
I myself made this mistake [thinking that you can truly innovate within the existing operating unit] 30 years ago when I was a consultant on the first major organizational change in American history, the General Electric reorganization of the early 1950s. I advised top management, and they accepted it, that the general managers would be responsible for current operations as well as for managing tomorrow. At the same time, we worked out one of the first systematic compensation plans, and the whole idea of paying people on the basis of their performance in the preceding year came out of that.
The result of it was that for ten years General Electric totally lost its capacity to innovate, simply because tomorrow produces costs for ten years and no return. So, the general manager not only out of concern for himself but also out of concern for his group postponed spending any money for innovation. It was only when the company dropped this compensation plan and at the same time organized the search for the truly new, not just for improvement outside the existing business, that GE recovered its innovative capacity, and brilliantly. Many companies go after this new and slight today and soon find they have neither.
Similar results illustrating the power of performance appraisal and compensation to affect individual behavior have been reported in the areas of reinforcement, behavior modification, and motivation theories. However, while there has been much written on matching the behavior of top managers with the nature of the business, less attention has been given to the other employees in the organization. Nevertheless, it seemed reasonable to assume that the rest of the workforce would also have to be managed differently, depending on the business. This, then, became our focus of attention.
A critical choice we had to make in our study concerned which aspects of the business we were going to use. Consistent with previous studies, we decided to use the general notion of organizational strategy. On the basis of previous studies that looked at strategy and human resource practices, we decided to adapt Porter's framework of competitive strategy. Using the competitive strategy framework, we developed three archetypes of competitive strategy PHRM practices combinations. These were derived from the literature, secondary sources, and our previous research. We then examined each of the three archetypes in depth, using additional secondary data and field results, and addressed issues regarding implementation and revision of the archetypes. All are presented in this article.
First, we shall review the nature and importance of competitive strategy, and then we shall describe the concept of needed role behavior that enabled us to link competitive strategies and HRM practices.

Competitive Strategies
Crucial to a firm's growth and prosperity is the ability to gain and retain competitive advantage. One way to do this is through strategic initiative. MacMillan defines "strategic initiative" as the ability to capture control of strategic behavior in the industries in which a firm competes. To the extent one company gains the initiative, competitors are obliged to respond and thereby play a reactive rather than proactive role. MacMillan argues that firms that gain a strategic advantage control their own destinies. To the extent a firm gains an advantage difficult for competitors to remove, it stays in control longer and therefore should be more effective.
The concept of competitive advantage is described by Porter as the essense of competitive strategy. Emerging from his discussion are three competitive strategies that organizations can use to gain competitive advantage: innovation, quality enhancement, and cost reduction. The innovation strategy is used to develop products or services different from those of competitors; the primary focus here is on offering something new and diflferent. Enhancing product and/or service quality is the primary focus of the quality enhancement strategy. In the cost reduction strategy, firms typically attempt to gain competitive advantage by being the lowest cost producer. Although we shall describe these three competitive strategies as pure types applied to single business units or even single plants or functional areas, some overalap can occur. That is, it is plausible to find business units, plants, or functional areas pursuing two or more competitive strategies simultaneously. This, and how to manage it, are discussed later.
Competitive Strategy: Needed Role Behaviors
Before developing a linkage between competitive strategy and HRM practices, there must be a rationale for that linkage. This rationale gives us a basis for predicting, studying, refining, and modifying both strategy and practices in specific circumstances.
Consistent with previous research, the rationale developed is based on what is needed from employees apart from the specific technical skills, knowledges, and abilities (SKAs) required to perform a specific task. Rather than thinking about task-specific SKAs, then, it is more useful to think about what is needed from an employee who works with other employees in a social environment. These needed employee behaviors are actually best thought of as needed role behaviors. The importance of roles and their potential dysfunction in organizations, particularly role conflict and ambiguity, is well documented.
Based on an extensive review of the literature and secondary data, several role behaviors are assumed to be instrumental in the implementation of the competitive strategies. Exhibit 1 shows several dimensions along which employees' role behaviors can vary. The dimensions shown are the ones for which there are likely to be major differences across competitive strategies. This can be illustrated by describing the various competitive strategies and their necessary organizational conditions in more detail, along with the needed role behaviors from the employees.
Innovation Strategy and Needed Role Behaviors
Because the imperative for an organization pursing an innovation strategy is to be the most unique producer, conditions for innovation must be created. These conditions can be rather varied. They can be created either formally through official corporate policy or more informally. According to Rosabeth Moss Kanter:
Innovation fand new venture development may originate as a deliberate and official decision of the highest levels of management or there may be the more-or-less "spontaneous" creation of mid-level people who take the initiative to solve a problem in new ways or to develop a proposal for change. Of course, highly successful companies allow both, and even official top management decisions to undertake a development effort benefit from the spontaneous creativity of those below.
To encourage as many employees as possible to be innovative, 3M has developed an informal doctrine of allowing employees to "bootleg" 15% of their time on their own projects. A less systematic approach to innovation is encouraging employees to ofl!"e r suggestions for new and improved ways of doing their own job or manufacturing products.
Overall, then, for firms pursuing a competitive strategy of innovation, the profile of employee role behaviors includes (1) a high degree of creative behavior, (2) a longer term focus, (3) a relatively high level of cooperative, interdependent behavior, (4) a moderate degree of concern for quality, (5) a moderate concern for quantity, (6) an equal degree of concern for process and results, (7) a greater degree of risk taking, and (8) a high tolerance of ambiguity and unpredictability.
The implications of pursuing a competitive strategy of innovation for managing people may include selecting highly skilled individuals, giving employees more discretion, using minimal controls, making a greater investment in human resources, providing more resources for experimentation, allowing and even rewarding occasional failure, and appraising performance for its long run implications. As a consequence of these conditions, pursuing an innovation strategy may result in feelings of enhanced personal control and morale, and thus a greater commitment to self and profession rather than to the employing organization. Nevertheless, benefits may accrue to the firm as well as the einployee, as evidenced by the success of such innovative firms as Hewlett Packard, the Raytheon Corporation, 3M, Johnson & Johnson, and PepsiCo.
Thus, the innovation strategy has significant implications for human resource management. Rather than emphasizing managing people so they work harder (cost reduction strategy) or smarter (quality strategy) on the same products or services, the innovation strategy requires people to work differently. This, then, is the necessary ingredient.
Quality Enhancement Strategy and Needed Role Behaviors
At Xerox, CEO David Kearns defines quality as "being right the first time every time." The implications for managing people are significant. According to James Houghton, chairman of Corning Glass Works, his company's "total quality approach" is about people. At Corning, good ideas for product improvement often come from employees, and in order to carry through on their ideas Corning workers form short-lived "corrective action teams" to solve specific problems.
Employees also give their supervisors written "method improvement requests," which differ from ideas tossed into the traditional suggestion box in that they get a prompt formal review so the employees aren't left wondering about their fate. In the company's Erwin Ceramics plant, a maintenance employee suggested substituting one flexible tin mold for an array of fixed molds that shape the wet ceramic product baked into catalytic converters for auto exhausts.
At Corning, then, quality improvement involves getting employees committed to quality and continual improvement. While policy statements emphasizing the "total quality approach" are valuable, they are also followed up with specific human resources practices: feedback systems are in place, team work is permitted and facilitated, decision making and responsibility are a part of each employee's job description, and job classifications are flexible.
Quality improvement often means changing the processes of production in ways that require workers to be more involved and more flexible. As jobs change, so must job classification systems. At Brunswick's Mercury Marine division, the number of job classifications was reduced from 126 to 12. This has permitted greater fiexibility in the use of production processes and employees. Machine operators have gained greater opportunities to learn new skills. They inspect their own work and do preventive maintenance in addition to running the machines. It is because of human resource practices such as these that employees become committed to the firm and, hence, willing to give more. Not only is the level of quality likely to improve under these conditions, but sheer volume of output is likely to increase as well. For example, in pursuing a competitive strategy involving quality improvement, L.L. Bean's sales have increased tenfold while the number of permanent employees has grown only fivefold.
The profile of employee behaviors necessary for firms pursuing a strategy of quality enhancement is (1) relatively repetitive and predictable behaviors, (2) a more long term or intermediate focus, (3) a modest amount of cooperative, interdependent behavior, (4) a high concern for quality, (5) a modest concern for quantity of output, (6) high concern for process {how the goods or services are niade or delivered), (7) low risk taking activity, and (8) commitment to the goals of the organization.
Because quality enhancement typically involves greater employee commitment and utilization, fewer employees are needed to produce the same level of output. As quality rises, so does demand, yet this demand can be met with proportionately fewer employees than previously. Thanks to automation and a cooperative workforce, Toyota is producing about 3.5 million vehicles a year with 25,000 production workers about the same number as in 1966 when it was producing one million vehicles. In addition to having more productive workers, fewer are needed to repair the rejects caused by poor quality. This phenomenon has also occurred at Corning Glass, Honda, and L.L. Bean.
Cost Reduction Strategy and Needed Role Behaviors
Often, the characteristics of a firm pursuing the costreduction strategy are tight controls, overhead minimization, and pursuit of economies of scale. The primary focus of these measures is to increase productivity, that is, output cost per person. This can mean a reduction in the number of employees and/or a reduction in wage levels. Since 1980, the textile industry's labor force decreased by 17%, primary metals, almost 30%, and steel, 40%. The result has been that over the past four years, productivity growth in manufacturing has averaged 4.1% per year, versus 1.2% for the rest of the economy." Similar measures have been taken at Chrysler and Ford and now are being proposed at GM and AT&T. Reflecting on these trends. Federal Reserve Governor Wayne D. Angell states, "We are invigorating the manufacturing sector. The period of adjustment has made us more competitive.
In addition to reducing the number of employees, firms are also reducing wage levels. For example, in the household appliance industry where GE, Whirlpool, Electrolux, and Maytag account for 80% of all production, labor costs have been cut by shifting plants from states where labor is expensive to less costly sites. The result of this is that a new breed of cost-effective firms are putting U.S. manufacturing back on the road to profitability."
Cost reduction can also be pursued through increased use of part-time employees, subcontractors, work simplification and measurement procedures, autornation, work rule changes, and job assignment flexibility. Thus, there are several methods for reducing costs. Although the details are vastly different, they all share the goal of reducing output cost per employee.
In summary, the profile of employee role behaviors necessary for firms seeking to gain competitive advantage by pursuing the competitive strategy of cost reduction is as follows: (1) relatively repetitive and predictable behaviors, (2) a rather short term focus, (3) primarily autonomous or individual activity, (4) modest concern for quality, (5) high concern for quantity of output (goods or services), (6) primary concern for results, (7) low risk taking activity, and (8) a relatively high degree of comfort with stability.
Given these competitive strategies and the needed role behaviors, what HRM practices need to be linked with each of the three strategies?
Typology of HRM Practices
When deciding what human resource practices to use to link with competitive strategy, organizations can choose from six human resource practice "menus." Each of the six menus concerns a different aspect of human resource management. These aspects are planning, staffing, appraising, compensating, and training and development.
A summary of these menus is shown in Exhibit 2. Notice that each of the choices runs along a continuum. Most of the options are self explanatory, but a rundown of the stafiSng menu will illustrate how the process works. A more detailed description of all menus is provided elsewhere."
Recruitment
In each of these areas, a business unit (or a plant) must make a number of decisions; the first choice involving where to recruit employees. Companies can rely on the internal labor market, e.g., other departments in the firm and other levels in the organizational hierarchy, or they can rely on the external labor market exclusively. Although this decision may not be significant for entry level jobs, it is very important for most other jobs. Recruiting internally essentially means a policy of promotion from within. While this policy can serve as an effective reward, it commits a firm to providing training and career development opportunities if the promoted employees are to perform well.
Career Paths
Here, the company must decide whether to establish broad or narrow career paths for its employees. The broader the paths, the greater the opportunity for employees to acquire skills that are relevant to many functional areas and to gain exposure and visibility within the firm. Either a broad or a narrow career path may enhance an employee's acquisition of skills and opportunities for promotion, but the time frame is likely to be much longer for broad skill acquisition than for the acquisition of a more limited skill base. Although promotion may be quicker under a policy of narrow career paths, an employee's career opportunities may be more limited over the long run.
Promotions
Another stafiing decision to be made is whether to establish one or several promotion ladders. Establishing several ladders enlarges the opportunities for employees to be promoted and yet stay within a given technical specialty without having to assume managerial responsibilities. Establishing just one promotion ladder enhances the relative value of a promotion and increases the competition for it.
Part and parcel of a promotion system are the criteria used in deciding who to promote. The criteria can vary from the very explicit to the very implicit. The more explicit the criteria, the less adaptable the promotion system is to exceptions and changing circumstances. What the firm loses in fiexibility, the employee may gain in clarity. This clarity, however, may benefit only those who fulfill the criteria exactly. On the other hand, the more implicit the criteria, the greater the fiexibility to move employees around to develop them more broadly.
Socialization
After an employee is hired or promoted, he or she is next socialized. With minimal socialization, firms convey few informal rules and establish new procedures to immerse employees in the culture and practices of the organization. Although it is probably easier and cheaper to do this than to provide maximum socialization, the result is likely to be a more restricted psychological attachment and commitment by the em ployee to the firm, and perhaps less predictable behavior from the employee.
Openness
A final choice to be made in the staffing menu is the degree of openness in the staffing procedures. The more open the procedures, the more likely there is to he job posting for internal recruitment and self nomination for promotion. To facilitate a policy of openness, firms need to make the relevant information available to employees. Such a policy is worthwhile; since it allows employees to select themselves into jobs, it is a critical aspect of attaining successful job person fit. The more secret the procedures, the more limited the involvement of employees in selection decisions, but the faster the decision can be made.
A key aspect of the choices within the staffing activity or any other HRM activity is that different choices stimulate and reinforce different role behaviors. Because these have been described in detail elsewhere, their impact is summarized below.
Hypotheses of Competitive Strategy HRM Archetypes
Based on the above descriptions of competitive strategies and the role behaviors necessary for each, and the brief typology of HRM practices, we offer three summary hypotheses.
Innovation Strategy
Firms pursuing the innovation strategy are likely to have the following characteristics: (1) jobs that require close interaction and coordination among groups of individuals, (2) performance appraisals that are more likely to refiect longer term and group based achievements, (3) jobs that allow employees to develop skills that can be used in other positions in the firm, (4) compensation systems that emphasize internal equity rather than external or market based equity, (5) pay rates that tend to be low, but that allow employees to be stockholders and have more freedom to choose the mix of components (salary, bonus, stock options) that make up their pay package, and (6) broad career paths to reinforce the development of a broad range of skills. These practices facilitate cooperative, interdependent behavior that is oriented toward the longer term, and foster exchange of ideas and risk taking.
Quality Enhancement Strategy
In an attempt to gain competitive advantage through the quality enhancement strategy, the key HRM practices include (1) relatively fixed and explicit job descriptions, (2) high levels of employee participation in decisions relevant to immediate work conditions and the job itself, (3) a mix of individual and group criteria for performance appraisal that is mostly shortterm and results oriented, (4) relatively egalitarian treatment of employees and some guarantees of employment security, and (5) extensive and continuous training and development of employees. These practices facilitate quality enhancement by helping to ensure highly reliable behavior from individuals who can identify with the goals of the organization and, when necessary, be fiexible and adaptable to new job assignments and technological change.
Cost Reduction Strategy
In attempting to gain competitive advantage by pursuing a strategy of cost reduction, key human resource practice choices include (1) relatively fixed (stable) and explicit job descriptions that allow little room for ambiguity, (2) narrowly designed jobs and narrowly defined career paths that encourage specialization, expertise, and efficiency, (3) short term, results oriented performance appraisals, (4) close monitoring of market pay levels for use in making compensation decisions, and (5) minimal levels of employee training and development. These practices maximize efficiency by providing means for management to monitor and control closely the activities of employees.
An Innovative Strategy: One Company’s Experience
Frost, Inc., is one company that has made a conscious effort to match competitive strategy with human resource management practices. Located in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Frost is a manufacturer of overhead conveyor trolleys used primarily in the auto industry, with sales of $20 million. Concerned about depending too heavily on one cyclical industry. President Charles D. "Chad" Frost made several attempts to diversify the business, first into manufacturing lawn mower components and later into material-handling systems, such as fioor conveyors and hoists. These attempts failed. The engineers didn't know how to design unfamiliar components, production people didn't know how to make them, and sales people didn't know how to sell them. Chad Frost diagnosed the problem as inflexibility. "We had single purpose machines and single purpose people," he said, "including single purpose managers."
Frost decided that automating production was the key to fiexibility. Twenty six old fashioned screw machines on the factory fioor were replaced with 11 numerical controlled machines paired within 18 industrial robots. Frost decided to design and build an automated storage and retrieval inventory control system, which would later be sold as a proprietary product, and to automate completely the front office to reduce indirect labor costs. The new program was formally launched in late 1983.
What at first glance appeared to be a hardware oriented strategy turned out to be an exercise in human resource management. "If you're going to reap a real benefit in renovating a small to medium size company, the machinery is just one part, perhaps the easiest part, of the renovation process," says Robert Mclntyre, head of Amprotech, Inc., an affiliated consulting company Frost formed early in the automation project to provide an objective, "outside" view. "The hardest part is getting people to change."
Frost was clearly embarking on a strategy of innovation. As it turns out, many of the choices the conipany made about human resource practices were intended to support the employee role behaviors identified as being crucial to the success of an innovation strategy.
For example, the company immediately set out to increase employee identification with the company by giving each worker 10 shares of the closely held company and by referring to them henceforth as "share holder employees." The share ownership, which employees can increase by making additional purchases through a 401 (d) plan, are also intended to give employees a long term focus, which is another behavior important for an innovation strategy to succeed. Additional long term incentives consist of a standard corporate profit sharing plan and a discretionary profit sharing plan administered by Chad Frost.
Frost's compensation package was also restructured to strike a balance between results (productivity) and process (manufacturing). In Frost's case, the latter is a significant consideration, since the production process is at the heart of the company's innovation strategy. Frost instituted a quarterly bonus that is based on companywide productivity, and established a "celebration fund" that managers can tap at their discretion to reward significant employee contributions. The bonuses serve to foster other needed employee role behaviors. By making the quarterly bonus dependent on companywide productivity, the company is encouraging cooperative, interdependent behavior. The "celebration fund" meanwhile, can be used to reward and reinforce innovative behavior. (Even the form of the celebration can be creative. Rewards can range from dinner with Chad Frost to a weekend for an employee and spouse at a local hotel, to a belly dancing performance in the office.)
Frost encourages cooperative behavior in a number of other ways as well. Most offices (including Chad Frost's) lack doors, which is intended to foster openness of communication. Most executive perks have been eliminated, and all employees have access to the company's mainframe computer (with the exception of payrole information) by way of more than 40 terminals scattered around the front office and factory floor.
In our view, a vital component of any innovation strategy is getting employees to broaden their skills, assume more responsibilities, and take risks. Frost encourages employees to learn new skills by paying for extensive training programs, both at the company and at local colleges. It even goes further, identifying the development of additional skills as a prerequisite for advancement. This is partly out of necessity, since Frost has compressed its 11 previous levels of hierarchy into four. Because this has made it harder to reward employees through traditional methods of promotion, employees are challenged to advance by adding skills, assuming more responsibilities, and taking risks.
Honda's Quality-Enhancement Strategy
We can identify those human resource practices that facilitate product quality by examining Honda of America's Marysville, Ohio plant.*' With a current workforce of approximately 4,500, this plant produces cars of quality comparable to those produced by Honda plants in Japan. Although pay rates (independent of bonuses) may be as much as 30-40% lower than rates at other Midwest auto plants, Honda has fewer layoffs and lower inventory rates of new cars than its competitors. How is this possible? One possible explanation is that Honda knows that the delivery of quality products depends on predictable and reliable behavior from its employees. In the initial employee orientation session, which may last between 3 and 4 hours, job security is emphasized. Employees' spouses are encouraged to attend these sessions, because Honda believes that spouse awareness of the company and its demands on employees can help minimize absenteeism, tardiness, and turnover. Of course, something so critical to (juality as reliable behavior is not stimulated and reinforced by only one human resource practice. For example, associates who have perfect attendance for four straight weeks receive a bonus of $56. Attendance also infiuences the size of the semiannual bonus (typically paid in spring and autumn). Impressive attendance figures also enhance an employee's chances for promotion. (Honda of America has a policy of promotion from within.) In addition to getting and reinforcing reliable and predictable behavior, Honda's HRM practices ericourage a longer-term employee orientation and a fiexibility to change. Employment security, along with constant informal and formal training programs, facilitate these role behaviors. Training programs are tailored to the needs of the associates (employees) through the formal performance appraisal process, which is developmental rather than evaluational. Team leaders (not supervisors) are trained in spotting and removing performance deficiencies as they occur. To help speed communication and remove any organizational sources of performance deficiences, the structure of the organization is such that there are only four levels between associates and the plant manager. At Honda, cooperative, interdependent behavior is fostered by egalitarian HRM practices. All associates wear identical uniforms with their first names embossed; parking spaces are unmarked, and there is only one cafeteria. All entry-level associates receive the same rate of pay except for a 60-cents-an-hour shift differential. The modern health center adjacent to the main plant is open to all. These practices, in turn, encourage all associates to regard themselves collectively as "us" rather than "us" versus "them." Without this underlying attitude, the fiexible work rules, air-conditioned plant, and automation wouldn't be enough to sustain associate commitment and identification with the organization's goal of high quality. The success of Honda's quality enhancement strategy goes beyond concern for its own HRM practices. It is also concerned with the human resource practices of other organizations, such as its suppliers. For example, Delco-Remy's practice of participative management style, as well as its reputation for producing quality products at competitive prices, was the reason why Delco was selected by Honda as its sole supplier of batteries.
A Cost-Reduction Strategy at United Parcel Service
Through meticulous human engineering and close scrutiny of its 152,000 employees. United Parcel Service (UPS) has grown highly profitable despite stiff competition. According to Larry P. Breakiron, the company's senior vice-president of engineering, "Our ability to manage labor and hold it accountable is the key to success."" In other words, in an industry where "a package is a package," UPS succeeds by its cost-reduction strategy. Of all paths that can be taken to pursue a cost-reduction strategy, the one taken by UPS is the workstandard/simplification method. This method has been the key to gains in efficiency and productivity in creases. UPS's founder, James E. Casey, put a premium on efficiency. In the 1920s, Casey hired pioneers of time and motion study such as Frank Gilbreth and Fredrick Taylor to measure the time each UPS driver spent each day on specific tasks. UPS engineers cut away the sides of UPS trucks to study how the drivers performed, and then made changes in techniques to enhance worker effectiveness. The establishment of effective work standards has led not only to enormous gains in efficiency and cost reduction; it actually makes employees less tired at the end of the day. During the day, the employees engage in short-term, highly repetitive role behaviors that involve little risk taking. Because specialists identify the best way to accomplish tasks, employee participation in job decisions is unnecessary. Through the use of time and motion studies, UPS has established very specific ways for workers to perform their jobs. The company also monitors closely the performance of the workers. More than 1,000 industrial engineers use time and motion study to set standards for a variety of closely supervised tasks. In return, the UPS drivers, all of whom are Teamsters, earn approxi mately $15 per hour—a dollar or so more than the drivers at other companies. In addition, employees who perform at acceptable levels enjoy job security.
Which Competitive Strategy Is Best?
Of the three competitive strategies described here, deciding which is best depends on several factors. Certainly customer wants and the nature of the competition are key factors. If customers are demanding quality, a cost-reduction strategy may not be as fruitful as a quality improvement strategy. At the Mercury Marine division of Brunswick and at Corning Glass Works, the issues seem to be quality. According to Mc-Comas, "Customers, particularly industrial trial buyers, would have been no more inclined to buy their products even if the manufacturer could have passed along savings of, say, 10% or even 20%.'"=' If, however, the product or service is relatively undifferentiated, such as the overnight parcel delivery industry, a cost-reduction strategy may be the best way to gain competitive advantage. Even here, though, there is a choice. United Parcel Service, for example, is pursuing the cost-reduction strategy through work process refinements such as work clarification, standardi-
zation, measurement, and feedback. Roadway, in contrast, pursues the same strategy by combining employee independence and ownership (drivers own their own trucks, of various colors; UPS drivers do not own their brown trucks) with as much automation as possible.^' The advantage of these latter approaches to cost reduction, compared with such approaches as wage concessions or workforce reductions, is the amount of time required to implement them. Cost reduction through wage concessions or employee reductions, though painful, can be relatively straightforward to implement. As a consequence, it can be duplicated by others, essentially eliminating the competitive advantage gained by being able to offer lower prices. The adoption of two-tiered wage contracts within the airline industry is a good example: Soon after American Airlines installed a two-tier wage system for its pilots. Eastern, United, and Frontier Airlines negotiated similar contracts with their employees. There may, however, be some external conditions that might permit the success of a strategy of cost re- duction to last. After four straight years of losses and a shrinkage in the number of stores from nearly 3,500 in 1974 to a little more than 1,000 in 1982, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company (A&P) and the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) saw the hand writing on the wall: Either reduce costs and be competitive, or go out of business. According to a Business Week article. In an experimental arrangement negotiated with the . . . . UFCW at 60 stores in the Philadelphia area, workers took a 25% pay cut in exchange for an unusual promise: If a store's employees could keep labor costs at 10% of sales by working more efficiently or by boosting store traffic they'd get a cash bonus equal to 1% of the store's sales. They'd get a 0.5% bonus at 11% of sales or 1.5% at 9.5% of sales. It was a gamble in the low margin supermarket business, but it worked. The result? An 81% increase in operating profits in 1984 and a doubling of A&P's stock price. Although the UFCW agreed with the incentive compensation scheme at A&P, the union appears unwilling to see this practice spread. Consequently, competitors of A&P, such as Giant Food Inc., would have difficulty implementing the same scheme." By contrast, a quality improvement strategy, whether by automation or quality teams, is more time consuming and difficult to implement. As the U.S. auto industry has experienced, it is taking a long time to overcome the competitive advantage gained by the Japanese auto industry through quality improvement. The J.D. Powers 1986 Consumer Satisfaction Index of automobiles suggests, however, that Ford's dedicated approach to quality enhancement may be reaping approach to quality enhancement may be reaping benefits. One Competitive Strategy or Several? Although we focused on the pursuit of a common competitive strategy in our examples, this may be over simplifying reality. For example, at Honda in Marys ville, associates are encouraged to be innovative. Each year the group of associates that designs the most unique or unusual transportation vehicle is awarded a trip to Japan. At UPS, teamwork and cooperation are valued and at Frost, Inc., product and service quality are of paramount importance. Lincoln Electric is recog- nized as one of the lowest cost and highest quality producers of arc welders. While these examples indicate that organizations may pursue more than one competitive strategy at a time, it may be that organizations actually need to have multiple and concurrent competitive strategies. Using multiple strategies results in the challenge of stimulating and rewarding different role behaviors while at the same time trying to manage the confiicts and tensions that may arise as a consequence. This may be the very essence of the top manager's job. According to Mitchell Kapor of Lotus Development Corporation: To be a successful enterprise, we have to do two apparently contradictory things quite well: We have to stay innovative and creative, but at the same time we have to be tightly controlled about certain apects of our corporate behavior. But I think that what you have to do about paradox is embrace it. So we have the kind of company where certain things are very loose and other things are very tight. The whole art of management is sorting things into the loose pile or the tight pile and then watching them carefully. Perhaps, then, the top manager's job is facilitated by separating business units or functional areas thathave different competitive strategies. To the extent that this separation is limited or that a single business unit has multiple strategies, effective means of confrontation and collaboration need to exist. However, even with this issue under control, there is another equallysignificant challenge.
Change of Competitive Strategies
By implication, changes in strategy should be accompanied by changes in human resources practices. As the products of firms change, as their customers' de-mands change, and as the competition changes, the competitive strategies of firms will change. Consequently, employees will face an ever-changing employment relationship. A significant implication of this is that employees of a single firm may be exposed to different sets of human resource practices during the course of employment. Thus, employees may be asked to exhibit different role behaviors over time and they may be exposed to several different conditions of employment. Although it remains to be seen whether all employees can adjust to such changes, it appears that many can and have. For those who wish not to, firms may offer outplacement assistance to another firm, or even to another division in the company. For those who have problems changing, firms may offer training programs to facilitate the acquisition of necessary skills and abilities as well as needed role behaviors. Another implication is that all components of a system of human resource practices need to be changed and implemented simultaneously. The key human resource practices work together to stimulate and reinforce particular needed employee behaviors. Not to in voke a particular practice (e.g., high participation) implies invoking another (e.g., low participation) that is less likely to stimulate and reinforce the necessary employee behaviors. The likely result is that employees will experience confiict, ambiguity, and frustration.
Conclusion
The recent attack on U.S. firms for failing to keep costs down, not maintaining quality, and ignoring innovation are misdirected, given what many firms like Frost, Honda-Marysville, UPS, Corning Glass, A&P, 3M, and Brunswick are doing." These firms and others are pursuing competitive strategies aimed at cost reduction, quality improvement, and innovation. The aim in implementing these strategies is to gain competitive advantage and beat the competition both domestically and internationally. While cost and market conditions tend to constrain somewhat the choice of competitive strategy, the constraint appears to be one of degree rather than of kind. Consequently, we can find firms pursuing these three competitive strategies regardless of industry. All firms are not seeking to gain competitive strategy. Not doing so, however, is becoming more of a luxury. For those attempting to do so, the experiences of other firms suggest that effectiveness can be increased by systematically melding human resource practices with the selected competitive strategy. Certainly, the success or failure of a firm is not likely to turn entirely on its human resource management practices, but the HRM practices are likely to be critical.
Randall S. Schuler is a professor at the Graduate School of Business at New York University. His interests are stress management, international human resource management, organizational uncertainty, personnel and human resource management, entrepreneur ship, and the interface of business strategy and human resource management. He is currently studying how companies use their human resource practices to gain competitive advantage, the subject of this article. Professor Schuler was just recently visiting professor at the University of Michigan, and was also on the faculties of the University of Maryland, Ohio State University, and Penn State University. He worked for a year at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, and has consulted with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Maryland Bankers Association, Peat Marwick, Owens-Illinois, and Mill Rose. He received his Ph.D. and M.A. degrees from Michigan State University. Professor Schuler has written and edited 15 books, including Personnel and Human Resource Management (3rd Ed.), Case Problems in Management (3rd Ed.), Human Resource Management in the 1980s, Personal Computers for the PHRM, and Managing Job Stress. In addition, he has contributed over 14 chapters to books and has published over 70 articles in professional journals and academic proceedings. Presently, he is serving on the board of the Eastern Academy of Management and is on the editorial boards of the Academy of Management Executive, Human Resource Management, and Journal of Management Group and Organization Studies. He is editor of the Human Resource Planning Journal and is on the board of directors of the Human Resource Planning Society.
Susan E. Jackson, Ph.D., is associate professor of psychology at New York University. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley and has since been on the faculties of the University of Maryland and the University of Michigan. Professor Jackson's research interests include human resource management practices, job-related stress, and top management teams as creative problem solvers. Her articles on these and related topics have appeared in numerous journals, including the Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Journal of Applied Psychology, and Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Making, among others. She is an active member of the Academy of Management and the American Psychological Association, and serves on the editorial board of Personnel Psychology.

ENDNOTES
The authors wish to thank John W. Slocum, Jr., C.K. Prahalad, and John Dutton for their many helpful suggestions, and the Human Resource Planning Society, the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, New York University, and the University of Michigan for their financial support of this project. 1. C. Fomhrun, "An Interview with Reginald Jones," Organizational Dynamics, Winter 1982, p. 46. 2. D. C. Hamhrick and P.A. Mason, "Upper Echelons: The Organization as a Reflection of Its Top Managers," Academy of Management Review, 9, 1984, 193-206; A. K. Gupta, "Contingency Linkages Between Strategy and General Manager Characteristics: A Conceptual Examination," Academy of Management Review, 9, 1984, 399-412; A. K. Gupta and V. Govindarajan, "Build, Hold, Harvest: Converting Strategic Intentions into Reality," Journal of Business Strategy, 4, 1984a, 34-47; A. K. Gupta and Govindarajan, "Business Unit Strategy, Managerial Characteristics, and Business Unit Effectiveness at Strategy Implementation," Academy of Management Journal, 9, 1984b, 25-41; M. Gerstein and H. Reisman, "Strategic Selection: Matching Executives to Business Conditions," Sloan Management Review, Winter 1983, pp. 33-49; D. Miller, M.F.R. Kets de Vries, and J.M. Toulouse, "Top Executives' Locus of Control and Its Relationship to Strategy-Making, Structure, and Environment," Academy of Management Journal, 25, 1982, 237-253; A. D. Szilagyi and D.M. Schweiger, "Matching Managers to Strategies: A Review and Suggested Frame work," Academy of Management Review, 9, 1984, 626-637; and J.D. Olian and S.L. Rynes, "Organizational Staffing: Integrating Practice with Strategy," Industrial Relations, 23, 1984, 170-183. 3. Lee J.A. Byrne and A. Leigh Cowan, "Should Companies Groom New Leaders or Buy Them?" Business Week, September 22, 94-95.4. Ihid. 5. A.J. Rutigliano, "Managing the New: An Interview with Peter Drucker," Management Review, January 1986, 38-41. 6. D.Q. Mills, The New Competitors, New York: The Free Press, 1985; and M. Beer, B. Spector, P.R. Lawrence, D.Q. Mills, and R.E. Walton, Managing Human Assets, New York: Macmillan, Inc., 1984; R.M. Kanter, "Change Masters and the Intricate Architecture of Corporate Culture Change," Management Review, October 1983, 18-28; and R.M. Kanter, The Change Masters, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983. 7. J.L. Kerr, "Diversification Strategies and Managerial Rewards: An Empirical Study," Academy of Management Journal, 28, 1985, 155-179; J.W. Slocum, W.L. Cron, R.W. Hansen, and S. Rawlings, "Business Strategy and the Management of Plateaued Employees," Academy of Management Journal, 28, 1985, 133-154; D. C. Hamhrick and C.C. Snow, "Strategic Reward Systems," in C. C. Snow (Ed.) Strategy, Organization Design and Human Resources Management, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1987. 8. For detailed examples of how firms use their human resource practices to gain competitive advantage, see R.S. Schuler and I.C. MacMillan, "Gaining Competitive Advantage Through Human Resource Management Practices," Human Resource Management, Autumn 1984, 241-255; R. S. Schuler, "Fostering and Facilitating Entrepreneurship in Organizations: Implications for Organization Structure and Human Resource Management Practices," Human Resource Management, Winter 1986, 607-629; and M.E. Porter, Competitive Strategy, New York: The Free Press, 1980; and M.E. Porter, Competitive Advantage, New York: The Free Press, 1985.






RESUME JURNAL MSDM
Linking Competitive Strategies with Human Resource Management Practices
(Menghubungkan Strategi Kompetitif dengan Sumber Daya Manusia manajemen Praktik)

Selama beberapa tahun terakhir telah terjadi peningkatan pengakuan bahwa ada kebutuhan untuk mencocokkan char-acteristics manajer top dengan sifat bisnis. Menurut H. Reginald Jones, mantan pemimpin dan CEO General Electric Company, Ketika kita diklasifikasik, dan ketika kita menyadari bahwa mereka akan memiliki misi sangat berbeda, kita juga menyadari bahwa kita harus memiliki orang-orang sangat berbeda menjalankan mereka. Dalam akademisi telah ada kesadaran serupa kebutuhan ini. Meskipun kesadaran ini sedang diartikulasikan dalam beberapa cara, salah satu yang paling sering melibatkan konseptualisasi dan penyelidikan hubungan antara strategi bisnis dan karakteristik pribadi dari manajer. Di sini, Karakteristik manajer tertentu seperti kepribadian, keterampilan, kemampuan, nilai, dan perspektif dicocokkan dengan jenis tertentu strategi bisnis.
Hasil dari praktik-praktik seperti staf sumber daya manusia telah agak signifikan: Pertumbuhan perusahaan yang dikelola 20% dari atas mereka tiga tingkat dengan pihak luar melebihi pengembalian yang diharapkan atas investasi sebesar 10%. Mereka yang mengandalkan pada bakat dalam jatuh pendek dari tujuan mereka dengan 20%. Hal yang sama berlaku untuk perusahaan-perusahaan dalam industri menurun: perusahaan dengan pihak luar dalam satu dari setiap lima pekerjaan manajemen puncak diharapkan melebihi keuntungan sebesar 20%; mereka dengan proporsi yang rendah dari luar turun 5% singkat. Luar, tentu saja, tidak selalu membantu. Ketika bisnis sedang mengejar strategi yang matang, yang diperlukan adalah kelompok stabil dalam yang mengetahui intracacies bisnis. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa praktek-praktek Hay staf dari manajemen puncak akan terikat pada sifat bisnis karena aspek-aspek yang berbeda dari bisnis permintaan perilaku yang berbeda dari individu yang menjalankan mereka. Implikasinya, kemudian, adalah bahwa memilih manajer kanan atas adalah sebuah keputusan staf penting. Perspektif lain menyatakan bahwa manajer puncak mampu menunjukkan berbagai macam perilaku, dan semua yang diperlukan adalah untuk mencocokkan praktek kompensasi dan penilaian kinerja dengan sifat bisnis.

Strategi kompetitif
Penting untuk pertumbuhan perusahaan dan kemakmuran adalah kemampuan untuk mendapatkan dan mempertahankan keunggulan kompetitif. Salah satu cara untuk melakukan ini adalah melalui inisiatif strategis. MacMillan mendefinisikan "inisiatif strategis" sebagai kemampuan untuk menangkap kontrol perilaku strategis dalam industri di mana perusahaan bersaing. Konsep keunggulan kompetitif digambarkan oleh Porter sebagai esensi dari strategi kompetitif. Muncul dari diskusi itu adalah tiga strategi kompetitif yang organisasi dapat digunakan untuk mendapatkan keunggulan kompetitif: inovasi, peningkatan kualitas, dan pengurangan biaya. Strategi inovasi adalah digunakan untuk mengembangkan produk atau jasa yang berbeda dari para pesaing; fokus utama di sini adalah pada menawarkan sesuatu yang baru dan diflferent. Meningkatkan produk dan / atau pelayanan yang berkualitas adalah fokus utama dari strategi peningkatan kualitas. Dalam strategi pengurangan biaya, perusahaan biasanya berusaha untuk mendapatkan keuntungan kompetitif dengan menjadi produsen biaya terendah.
Sebuah aspek kunci dari pilihan-pilihan dalam aktivitas staf atau kegiatan MSDM lainnya adalah bahwa pilihan yang berbeda merangsang dan memperkuat perilaku peran yang berbeda. Karena ini telah dijelaskan secara rinci di tempat lain, dampaknya diringkas di bawah ini.
Hipotesis dari Arketipe Strategi Kompetitif HRM
Berdasarkan uraian di atas strategi kompetitif dan perilaku peran yang diperlukan untuk masing-masing, dan tipologi singkat praktek HRM, diringkas menjadi :
Strategi Inovasi
Perusahaan mengejar strategi inovasi cenderung memiliki karakteristik sebagai berikut: (1) pekerjaan yang membutuhkan interaksi yang dekat dan koordinasi antara kelompok individu, penilaian kinerja (2) yang lebih mungkin untuk refiect berbasis prestasi jangka panjang dan kelompok, (3) pekerjaan yang memungkinkan karyawan untuk mengembangkan keterampilan yang dapat digunakan dalam posisi lain di perusahaan, (4) sistem kompensasi yang menekankan ekuitas internal daripada eksternal atau ekuitas berbasis pasar, (5) membayar harga yang cenderung rendah, tetapi yang memungkinkan karyawan untuk menjadi pemegang saham dan memiliki lebih banyak kebebasan untuk memilih campuran komponen (gaji, bonus, opsi saham) yang membentuk paket gaji mereka, dan (6) jalur karir yang luas untuk memperkuat pengembangan berbagai keterampilan. Praktek-praktek memfasilitasi koperasi, perilaku saling bergantung yang berorientasi pada pertukaran jangka panjang, dan menumbuhkan ide-ide dan mengambil risiko.
Strategi Peningkatan Kualitas

Dalam upaya untuk mendapatkan keunggulan kompetitif melalui strategi peningkatan kualitas, kunci HRM praktek meliputi (1) relatif tetap dan deskripsi pekerjaan eksplisit, (2) tingkat tinggi partisipasi karyawan dalam pengambilan keputusan yang relevan dengan kondisi kerja langsung dan pekerjaan itu sendiri, (3 ) campuran kriteria individu dan kelompok untuk penilaian kinerja yang sebagian besar berorientasi shortterm dan hasil, (4) pengobatan yang relatif egaliter karyawan dan beberapa jaminan keamanan kerja, dan (5) pelatihan yang ekstensif dan berkesinambungan dan pengembangan karyawan. Praktik-praktik ini memfasilitasi peningkatan kualitas dengan membantu untuk memastikan perilaku yang sangat handal dari individu yang dapat mengidentifikasi dengan tujuan organisasi dan, bila perlu, akan fiexible dan mudah beradaptasi dengan tugas pekerjaan baru dan perubahan teknologi.

Strategi Pengurangan Biaya

Dalam usaha untuk mendapatkan keuntungan kompetitif dengan melakukan strategi pengurangan biaya, pilihan sumber daya kunci manusia praktek meliputi (1) relatif tetap (stabil) dan deskripsi pekerjaan yang jelas yang memungkinkan sedikit ruang untuk ambiguitas, (2) pekerjaan sempit dirancang dan jalur karir sempit didefinisikan yang mendorong spesialisasi, keahlian, dan efisiensi, (3) jangka pendek, penilaian hasil kinerja yang berorientasi, (4) pemantauan dekat pasar membayar tingkat untuk digunakan dalam pembuatan keputusan kompensasi, dan (5) tingkat minimal pelatihan karyawan dan pengembangan. Praktik-praktik ini memaksimalkan efisiensi dengan menyediakan sarana bagi manajemen untuk memantau dan mengontrol ketat aktivitas karyawan.

Implikasi lain adalah bahwa semua komponen dari sistem praktek sumber daya manusia perlu diubah dan dilaksanakan secara bersamaan. Praktek-praktek sumber daya kunci manusia bekerja sama untuk merangsang dan memperkuat perilaku tertentu yang dibutuhkan karyawan. Tidak dalam voke suatu praktek tertentu (misalnya, partisipasi yang tinggi) berarti memohon lain (misalnya, partisipasi rendah) yang kurang mungkin untuk merangsang dan memperkuat perilaku karyawan yang diperlukan. Kemungkinan hasilnya adalah bahwa karyawan akan mengalami confiict, ambiguitas, dan frustrasi.


Kesimpulan
Serangan baru pada perusahaan-perusahaan AS karena gagal untuk menjaga harga turun, tidak mempertahankan kualitas, dan mengabaikan inovasi adalah salah arah, mengingat apa yang banyak perusahaan seperti Frost, Honda Marysville, UPS, Corning Glass, A & P, 3M, dan Brunswick melakukan ini. Perusahaan dan lain-lain mengejar strategi kompetitif yang bertujuan untuk pengurangan biaya, peningkatan kualitas, dan inovasi. Tujuan dalam menerapkan strategi ini adalah untuk mendapatkan keunggulan kompetitif dan mengalahkan kompetisi baik domestik dan internasional. Sementara biaya dan kondisi pasar cenderung agak membatasi pilihan. Strategi bersaing, tampaknya menjadi salah satu kendala. Akibatnya, kita dapat menemukan perusahaan mengejar tiga strategi kompetitif terlepas dari industri semua perusahaan tidak mencari untuk memperoleh strategi bersaing. Bagi mereka yang berusaha untuk melakukannya, pengalaman perusahaan lain menunjukkan bahwa efektivitas dapat ditingkatkan dengan sistematis perpaduan praktik-praktik sumber daya manusia dengan strategi kompetitif yang dipilih. Tentu saja, keberhasilan atau kegagalan suatu perusahaan cenderung tidak beralih sepenuhnya pada praktik manajemen sumber daya manusia, tetapi praktek HRM kemungkinan akan kritis.

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