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Explaining the Performance of Human Resource Management (Paperback, New title): Steve Fleetwood, Anthony Hesketh Explaining the Performance of Human Resource Management (Paperback, New title)
Steve Fleetwood, Anthony Hesketh
R1,214 Discovery Miles 12 140 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Human resource departments increasingly use the statistical analysis of performance indicators as a way of demonstrating their contribution to organisational performance. In this book, Steve Fleetwood and Anthony Hesketh take issue with this scientific' approach by arguing that its preoccupation with statistical analysis is misplaced because it fails to take account of the complexities of organisations and the full range of issues that influence individual performance. The book is split into three parts. Part I deconstructs research into the alleged link between people and business performance by showing that it cannot explain the associations it alleges. Part II attributes these shortcomings to the importation of spurious scientific' methods, before going on to suggest more appropriate methods that might be used in future. Finally, Part III explores how HR executives and professionals understand their work and shows how a critical realist stance adds value to this understanding through enhanced explanation.

Explaining the Performance of Human Resource Management (Hardcover, New title): Steve Fleetwood, Anthony Hesketh Explaining the Performance of Human Resource Management (Hardcover, New title)
Steve Fleetwood, Anthony Hesketh
R2,248 R1,681 Discovery Miles 16 810 Save R567 (25%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Human resource departments increasingly use the statistical analysis of performance indicators as a way of demonstrating their contribution to organizational performance. In this book, Steve Fleetwood and Anthony Hesketh take issue with this 'scientific' approach by arguing that its preoccupation with statistical analysis is misplaced because it fails to take account of the complexities of organizations and the full range of issues that influence individual performance. The book is split into three parts. Part I deconstructs research into the alleged link between people and business performance by showing that it cannot explain the associations it alleges. Part II attributes these shortcomings to the importation of spurious 'scientific' methods, before going on to suggest more appropriate methods that might be used in future. Finally, Part III explores how HR executives and professionals understand their work and shows how a critical realist stance adds value to this understanding through enhanced explanation.

The Mismanagement of Talent - Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy (Hardcover): Phillip Brown, Anthony Hesketh,... The Mismanagement of Talent - Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy (Hardcover)
Phillip Brown, Anthony Hesketh, Sarah Williams
R5,554 R2,305 Discovery Miles 23 050 Save R3,249 (58%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book lifts the veneer of 'employability', to expose serious problems in the way that future workers are trying to manage their employability in the competition for tough-entry jobs in the knowledge economy; in how companies understand their human resource strategies and endeavor to recruit the managers and leaders of the future; and in the government failure to come to terms with the realities of the knowledge-based economy. The demand for high-skilled, high waged jobs, has been exaggerated. But it is something that governments want to believe because it distracts attention from thorny political issues around equality, opportunity, and redistribution. If it is assumed that there are plenty of good jobs for people with the appropriate credentials then the issue of who gets the best jobs loses its political sting. But if good jobs are in limited supply, how the competition for a livelihood is organized assumes paramount importance. This issue, is not lost on the middle classes, given that they depend on academic achievement to maintain, if not advance the occupational and social status of family members. The reality is that increasing congestion in the market for knowledge workers has led to growing middle class anxieties about how their off-spring are going to meet the rising threshold of employability that now has to be achieved to stand any realistic chance of finding interesting and rewarding employment. The result is a bare-knuckle struggle for access to elite schools, colleges, universities and jobs. This book examines whether employability policies are flawed because they ignore the realities of 'positional' conflict in the competition for a livelihood, especially as the rise of mass higher education has arguably done little to increase the employability of students for tough-entry jobs. It will be of interest to anyone looking to understand the way knowledge-based firms recruit and how this is influenced by government policy, be they Researchers, Academics and Students of Business and Management, Industrial Relations, Human Resource Management, Politics or Sociology; Human Resource Management or Recruitment Professionals; or job candidates.

The Mismanagement of Talent - Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy (Paperback, New): Phillip Brown, Anthony Hesketh The Mismanagement of Talent - Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy (Paperback, New)
Phillip Brown, Anthony Hesketh
R1,588 Discovery Miles 15 880 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book lifts the veneer of 'employability', to expose serious problems in the way that future workers are trying to manage their employability in the competition for tough-entry jobs in the knowledge economy; in how companies understand their human resource strategies and endeavor to recruit the managers and leaders of the future; and in the government failure to come to terms with the realities of the knowledge-based economy. The demand for high-skilled, high waged jobs, has been exaggerated. But it is something that governments want to believe because it distracts attention from thorny political issues around equality, opportunity, and redistribution. If it is assumed that there are plenty of good jobs for people with the appropriate credentials then the issue of who gets the best jobs loses its political sting. But if good jobs are in limited supply, how the competition for a livelihood is organized assumes paramount importance. This issue, is not lost on the middle classes, given that they depend on academic achievement to maintain, if not advance the occupational and social status of family members. The reality is that increasing congestion in the market for knowledge workers has led to growing middle class anxieties about how their off-spring are going to meet the rising threshold of employability that now has to be achieved to stand any realistic chance of finding interesting and rewarding employment. The result is a bare-knuckle struggle for access to elite schools, colleges, universities and jobs. This book examines whether employability policies are flawed because they ignore the realities of 'positional' conflict in the competition for a livelihood, especially as the rise of mass higher education has arguably done little to increase the employability of students for tough-entry jobs. It will be of interest to anyone looking to understand the way knowledge-based firms recruit and how this is influenced by government policy, be they Researchers, Academics and Students of Business and Management, Industrial Relations, Human Resource Management, Politics or Sociology; Human Resource Management or Recruitment Professionals; or job candidates.

How to Get the Best Graduate Job - Secret Insider Strategies for Success in the Graduate Job Market (Paperback): David... How to Get the Best Graduate Job - Secret Insider Strategies for Success in the Graduate Job Market (Paperback)
David Williams, Phil Brown, Anthony Hesketh
R293 Discovery Miles 2 930 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

You're a graduate (or you will be soon). You want one of those highly prized top graduate jobs. But you know the competition is tough and the odds aren't in your favor. There are only enough proper graduate jobs for around 5 percent of UK graduates each year, so you know you need all the help you can get to make one of them yours. This unique book provides an insider's view of how graduate recruitment works, based on the observations of independent observers, and shows how you can use this insight to your advantage. The book reveals: how graduate recruitment really works; what you can do to work out where the jobs really are; what criteria employers use to deselect CVs and application forms; how to convince employers to offer an interview; the two possible strategies of player and purist - plus the advantages and downsides of each; and how some students work the system - and get the jobs.

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