ABSTRACT
Human Resource Management is one of
the factors that determine organisation’s performance and it is used by quite a
large number of organisations to increase the productivity of employees which
also increases the organisation’s total productivity and enhances the
organisation’s efficiency and effectiveness. The study examined the impact of
human resource management on organisation’s performance. To achieve this, a
public survey was adopted and data were obtained through the distribution of
rate scale questionnaire and oral interviews. The sample for this study
comprises of employees from MTN Nigeria, Access Bank, Fidelity Bank, Wema Bank,
Forte Oil Plc and African Petroleum Oilfield Services Limited (a subsidiary of
Forte Oil Plc) and also from Mutual House Insurance company. Frequency Tables
and charts were used to represent the bio data and responses from respondent,
Regression was used in testing the hypotheses. The results therefore, reveal
that there is a significant relationship between human resource management and
organisation’s performance as human resource management was divided into human
resource policies, employee welfare, employee participation and employee
training and satisfaction. This study concludes that four major factors are
responsible for the success of human resource management in improving
organisation’s performance which includes the implementation of human resource
policies, inclusion of the investment and value of employee’s remuneration in
the organisation’s culture, employee participation and employee training and
satisfaction. The study recommends that organisations should try as much as
possible to implement human resource policies put in place by them and there
should be a periodic review and assessments (performance appraisal) for
employees in the organisation.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background to the Study
In today’s increasingly competitive
business environment, organisations keep evolving ways of ensuring their
continued survival and improving organisational performance on a sustained
basis. Human resources are considered the most important asset of an
organization, but very few organizations are able to fully harness its
potential. Pfeffer (1994) argued that human capital has long been held to be a
critical resource in most firms. Lado and Wilson (1994, p. 701) define a human
resource system “. . . as a set of distinct but interrelated activities,
functions, and processes that are directed at attracting, developing, and
maintaining (or disposing of) a firm‟s human resources. Companies are now
trying to add value with their human resources and human resource (HR)
department has been set up in order to manage their human capital, where as organisation
in last decade, managed their human capital through personnel department which
is only a small division of the company. The process of managing the human
capital is called human resource management (HRM). Traditionally, management of
this system has gained more attention from service organizations than from
manufacturing organizations. However, to enhance operational performance,
effectively managing this system is equally important in both types of
organizations. Needless to say, sophisticated technologies and innovative
manufacturing practices alone can do very little to enhance operational
performance unless the requisite human resource management (HRM) practices are
in place to form a consistent socio-technical system. For this reason, manufacturing
organizations need to carefully evaluate their existing HRM practices and
modify them, if needed, so that employees can effectively contribute to
operational performance improvement. This lack of attention is surprising when
one considers human resources‟ critical role in achieving superior performance
in competitive priorities, such as low cost, quality, delivery, flexibility,
and innovation.
Nigerian organizations have started
realising the importance of HRM. Cheah et al. (2003) stated that Nigerian
managers realised that HRM had to be effective to bring about organisational
stability and harmony. Besides, they also stated that the diversity of the
composition of the modern workforce in Nigeria requires more appropriate and
imaginative HRM solutions. As several scholars have noted that managing people
is more difficult than managing technology and capital (Barney, 1991; Lado
& Wilson, 1994), principally, in a country like Nigeria which is a
developing country with more labour than capital, failure in managing human
capital and maintaining the harmony within an organisation will create fatal
problems to the organisations. Nigerian government has envisioned as a
developed nation by 2020. Government has also recognised that human resource
management can play an important role for the said vision. Managing human
resources has become critical to the success at all companies, large and small,
regardless of industry (Ulrich, 1997). Stavrou-Costea (2005) also argued that
the effective human resource management can be the main factor for the success
of a firm. Today the most of the companies believed that without efficient HRM
programmes and activities companies would not achieved and sustained
effectively (Schuler, 2000). Consequently most of the organisations, domestic
companies and multinational companies in Nigeria nowadays tend to focus more on
HRM and also treated HRM as a key of success. In as much as the policies are
there, the organisations still do not implement them. Considering the need for
HRM practices, Effective Human Resources Management (HRM) provides a means,
through which an organisation attracts, retain, develop, motivate and
adequately compensate employees for a sustained growth and increased
competitiveness. Thus, this research is expected to become, in an important
part, a meaningful guideline for human resource management practitioners and
other stakeholders to see the critical role of Human Resources Management in
the success or failure of companies and ensuring the efficient and effective
functioning of companies as against their competitors.
1.2 Statement Of The Research Problem
The increasing competitive business
environment has made every business to strive towards the improvement of
organisational performance in all aspects, human resource management is one of
them and in absence of it, problems could arise.
The following are problems identified
with this research work:
1. Strategic human resource policies
put in place and failure to implement these policies by the management has
contributed to poor performance in companies in Nigeria.
2. Weak organisational culture,
disregard for the value of workers‟ remuneration and resistant to change the
overall culture of the organisation by the management has led to poor
performance in companies in Nigeria.
3. lack of involvement of the
employees in decision making, quality circles and team work in organisations
led to poor human resource management which also affects organisational
performance in Nigeria.
4. Negligence on the part of board of
directors and laziness on the part of the human resource manager in the
performance of their responsibilities to the organisation in selecting the
right person for the right job, job training and job satisfaction has
contributed to poor human resource management and ultimately poor performance
in organisations in Nigeria.
1.3 Objectives Of The Study
Generally, this study seeks to explore
the relationship between human resource management and organisational
performance.
The specific objectives are set out as
follows:
1.To examine the impact of different
human resource policies on organisation‟s performance and find out why
organisations hesitate to implement them in Nigeria .
2.To review organisation‟s culture and
whether the investment and value of workers‟ remuneration are fitted into
organisation‟s performance criteria in Nigeria.
3. To facilitate employee involvement
and participation in decision making quality circles and team work all of which
contributes to effective performance of organisations in Nigeria.
4. To examine the responsibilities of
the board of directors and human resource managers in the areas of job
selection, job training and job satisfaction which contributes to good human
resource management and performance in organisations in Nigeria.
TOPIC: THE IMPACT OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ON ORGANISATION’S PERFORMANCE
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 75
Price: 3000 NGN
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