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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley, U.K. :Emerald,
    UID:
    almahu_9949069059602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xvii, 176 p.) : , ill.
    ISBN: 9780857249746 (electronic bk.) :
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, v. 8
    Content: Organizations have increasingly been introducing web-based applications for HRM purposes, and these are frequently labeled as electronic Human Resource Management (e-HRM). Much is expected of e-HRM in terms of improving the quality of HRM and increasing its contribution to company performance. Major investments are involved and are justified given the expectations that e-HRM will improve HRM quality in organizations by freeing staff from administrative loads. These beliefs originate from ideas about the endless possibilities of information technologies (IT) in facilitating HR practices, and about the infinite capacity of HRM to adopt IT. At the same time, it is not clear where e-HRM research should be positioned. Is it a new and substantial research area, or at the crossroads of other academic domains, such as Innovation Management, IT implementation, and/or HRM? Theoretical complexity has practical consequences for e-HRM projects and their management. The one-sided scholarly e-HRM works available fail to fully address this lack of clarity and, if anything, deepen the divisions between the various academic domains. To this end, we have been involved in a series of research projects, academic workshops, and conferences exploring the application of information technologies to various HR practices. Along with the Special Issues of the International Journal of HRM, International Journal of Technology and Human Interactions, and International Journal of Training and Development, this volume is a tangible outcome of three European e-HRM Academic Workshops (2006, 2008, 2010), and two International Workshops on Human Resource Management (2007 and 2008). Further, we gratefully acknowledge Graeme Martin, Martin Reddington, and Heather Alexander for their 2008 book on technology and transforming HR. By focusing on the theories and practices of technology in HRM in a range of international settings, it provided a foundation for our project and this volume and has, hopefully, allowed us to bring a greater focus to the theoretical developments within the field of e-HRM research. We hope that this book clarifies the need to crystallize a theoretical framework for e-HRM research, raises further questions, and supports discussions.
    Note: Introduction / Tanya Bondarouk, Huub Ruël, Jan Kees Looise -- ch. 1. Theoretical approaches to e-HRM implementations / Tanya Bondarouk -- ch. 2. Human resource information systems : an integrated research agenda / Huub Ruël, Rodrigo Magalhães, Charles C. Chiemeke -- ch. 3. 'Web mining' as a novel approach in e-HRM research / Stefan Strohmeier, Franca Piazza -- ch. 4. Linking HR strategy, e-HR goals, architectures, and outcomes : a model and case study evidence / Martin Reddington, Graeme Martin, Tanya Bondarouk -- ch. 5. A framework for the comparative analysis of HR shared services models / Tanya Bondarouk -- ch. 6. 'Local universe' and uses of an HR Intranet : discursive results from the case of middle management / Karine Guiderdoni-Jourdain, Ewan Oiry -- ch. 7. Language issues in e-HRM implementation in the multinational firm / Jukka-Pekka Heikkilä, Adam Smale -- ch. 8. e-Recruitment : from transaction-based practices to relationship-based approaches / Aurélie Girard, Bernard Fallery -- ch. 9. Drivers of the adoption of online recuitment : an analysis using innovation attributes from diffusion of innovation theory / Emma Parry, Miguel R. Olivas-Luján.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780857249739
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley, U.K. :Emerald,
    UID:
    almahu_9949068923802882
    Format: 1 online resource (xvi, 276 p.) : , ill.
    ISBN: 9781781908990 (electronic bk.) :
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, v. 11
    Content: Social media are changing the way businesses interact in technology-mediated ways with most of their stakeholders. Strategically-minded manager s, researchers and students cannot afford to ignore the new ways in which interactions with customers, employees, shareholders, and many other important constituents are taking place as a result of the widespread availability and creative use of these new technologies. Conventional wisdom is being challenged and virtual workspaces that had never been conceptualized are opening at blistering speed. This volume in the Advanced Series in Management series bridges empirical and theoretical approaches to identifying and demystify this set of emerging, exciting new family of user-gene rated content technologies. With contributions from and about a wide diverse range of countries, from emerging to established, researchers and informed practitioners will find intriguing, diverse perspectives on how the social media revolution challenging managers and management scholars. Involving disciplines as different as management, communications, information technology, personnel, finance and others, contributions in this boo k will be cited in future research projects or used in classrooms and other training settings by those more likely stay in the leading edge of this family of innovative tools.
    Note: Strategic management and social media : the leading edge / Miguel R. Olivas-Luján, Tanya Bondarouk -- Digital behaviors and people risk : challenges for risk management / Andy Phippen, Simon Ashby -- Leveraging social media technology for business transformation : the case of corporate social communities / Richard L. Gruner, Damien Power, Paul K. Bergey -- Strategic management and social media : an empirical analysis of electronic social capital and online fundraising / Raymond Henry, Lisa Bosman -- Disentangling the strategic use of social media in the insurance industry : a value co-creation perspective / Manuel Castriotta ... [et al.] -- You might be reputable but are you "liked"? Orchestrating corporate reputation co-creation on Facebook / Anna K. Zarkada, Christina Polydorou -- Social media as a strategic tool : going beyond the obvious / Poonam Arora, Carolyn E. Predmore -- Increasing dynamic capabilities of health organizations with social media / Ricky C. Leung -- Social media champions : drivers and sophistication process of social media strategic management / Lukasz M. Bochenek, Sam Blili -- Innovation management, lead-users, and social media : introduction of a conceptual framework for integrating social media tools in lead-user management / Markus Ernst, Alexander Brem, Kai-Ingo Voigt -- Social media as marketing strategy : an explorative study on adoption and use by retailers / Carlota Lorenzo-Romero, Efthymios Constantinides, María-del-Carmen Alarcón-del-Amo -- Global talent management in multinational corporations and the role of social networks / Huub Ruël, Tanya Bondarouk, Lena Dresselhaus -- Culture and social media : exploration of differences between the United States and Japan / Satoko Suzuki, Kosuke Takemura -- Social networking sites (SNS) : talent management in emerging markets : India and Mexico / Pramila Rao.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781781908983
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics
    RVK:
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley, U.K. :Emerald,
    UID:
    almahu_9949068926002882
    Format: 1 online resource (xiv, 218 p.) : , ill.
    ISBN: 9781783505364 (electronic bk.)
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, v. 13
    Content: Organizations increasingly establish Shared Service Centers, either for transactional (administrative) or transformational (organizational change) purposes. Their popularity originates from a combination of efficiency gains and an increase in service quality, without giving up control of the organizational and technical arrangements. The belief is that shared services should maximize the advantages of centralized and decentralized delivery of business functions. The volume deals with sample questions, including: What do shared service models involve? What are the structural arrangements between shared services and the organizations? Which business processes can and/or should be shared? What are the structural differences between shared services in different business processes? This ASM volume intends to move towards more systematic research action. Five main theoretical priorities shape the content of the volume: conceptualizing shared services for different types of business processes, business strategy and shared services, shared services and performance, pluralism in organizing shared services, and governance of shared services in different types of organizations.
    Note: Shared service centers : from cost savings to new ways of value creation and business administration / J. Strikwerda -- Managing boundaries better : the key to more effective HR shared services / Peter Reilly -- Shared services : standardization, formalization and control : a structured literature review / Tanya Bondarouk, Christina-Maria Friebe -- What is shared services? / Joseph Soalheira, Greg Timbrell -- Governance and control of shared service centres / Reinald Minnaar -- Structuring shared services : realizing SSC benefits through end-users' usage of an HR portal / Jeroen Meijerink, Joost ten Kattelaar, Michel Ehrenhard -- A knowledge management perspective to Shared Service Centres : a case study of a finance SSC / Ian Herbert, Will Seal -- Value creation by transactional Shared Service Centers : mapping capabilities / Marco Maatman, Tanya Bondarouk -- Interorganizational Shared Services : creating value across organizational boundaries / Paul C. van Fenema, Bianca Keers, Henk Zijm.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781783505357
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9949068927602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xxii, 215 p.)
    ISBN: 9781784411299 (electronic bk.) :
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, v. 14
    Content: This volume places social innovation between human resource management (HRM) and technology. There is a growing acceptance of the theory that HRM is strategically important for social innovation within organizations. To meet the requirements of globalization, diversity, "war for talent", and fast technological developments, HRM should allow a greater amount of flexibility and innovation in their policies and practices. In order for this to happen, however, HRM needs to be modernised by replacing inefficient and unsustainable HR practices and forms with flexible, sound, and pioneering ones, crossing inter- and intra-organizational boundaries. Built within the Social Innovation research tradition, this volume views innovation of HRM from two ends of one continuum: At one end, HR practices and policies should be designed to support innovative organizational members, the creation of new ideas, an innovative organizational climate, and enlargement of the innovation capacity of organizations. At the other end, the HRM function evolves through applying new structures and new channels for delivery of the HR practices, and through involving new agents in the management of Human Resources.
    Note: The mediating role of trust and social cohesion on the effects of new ways of working : a Dutch case-study / Jan De Leede, Jorien Kraijenbrink -- Social innovation through information provision / Diana Limburg -- Principles to guide employees to next level innovation cycles : how organisations can develop new sustainable business? / André Nijhof, Victor Paashuis -- Employability and social innovation : the importance of and interplay between transformational leadership and personality / Claudia M. Van der Heijde, Beatrice I.J.M. Van der Heijden -- Firm-level creative capital and the role of external labour / André Veenendaal, Marina Kearney -- Innovating HRM implementation : the influence of organisational contingencies on the HRM role of line managers / Anna Bos-Nehles, Maarten van Riemsdijk -- Practicing social innovation : enactment of the employee-organization relationship by employees / Jeroen Meijerink -- Global talent management in MNCs in the digital age : conceptualizing the GTM-ICT relationship / Huub J.M. Ruël, Christina Lake -- HRM, technology and innovation : new HRM competences for old business challenges? / Tanya Bondarouk, Eline Marsman, Marc Rekers.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781784411305
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley, U.K. :Emerald,
    UID:
    almahu_9949068924202882
    Format: 1 online resource (xv, 255 p.) : , ill.
    ISBN: 9781781909010 (electronic bk.) :
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, v. 12
    Content: Social media have radically shifted the way people relate with each other and with organizations in technology-mediated ways; few areas are being impacted more strongly than Human Resources or Personnel Management. Attraction of candidates, internal communication with employees, communication with and among people; creation, design, testing and promotion of new services, new ways of organizing are appearing and changing the landscape at record speeds. This volume in the Advanced Series in Management utilizes empirical and theoretical approaches to shed light on this exciting set of emerging, stimulating new uses of technology that stretch creativity beyond conventional limits.
    Note: Social media and human resource management : it takes two to tango / Tanya Bondarouk, Miguel R. Olivas-Luján -- Social network screening : pitfalls, possibilities, and parallels in employment selection / Donald H. Kluemper -- What is the future of employer branding through social media? Results of the Delphi study into the perceptions of HR professionals and academics / Tanya Bondarouk ... [et al.] -- Recruiting Gen Yers through social media : insights from the Italian labor market / Rita Bissola, Barbara Imperatori -- Social media in internal communications : a view from senior management / Tanja Sedej, Gorazd Justinek -- Integration of social media in recruitment : a Delphi study / Aurélie Girard, Bernard Fallery, Florence Rodhain -- Social media as a mechanism for engagement? / Emma Parry, Adriano Solidoro -- Managing entitativity through social media / David A. Askay, Anita Blanchard, Jerome Stewart -- Using social media for job search : evidence from Generation Y job seekers / Laxmikant Manroop, Julia Richardson -- The integration of online face-to-face social networking : the need for managerial reconfiguration / Barbara Imperatori, Dino Ruta -- Personae of interest : managers identities and the online mirror / Giulia Ranzini, Christian Fieseler -- Toward the development of a social information system research model / Opal Donaldson, Evan W. Duggan -- Social Media as enabler of crowdsourcing / Ivan Zupic.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781781909003
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley :Emerald Publishing Limited,
    UID:
    almafu_9960795685702883
    Format: 1 online resource (209 pages)
    ISBN: 1-80117-712-0
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management ; 28.
    Content: The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online. Smart industry requires better management. As industrial and production systems are future-proofed, becoming smart and interconnected through use of new manufacturing and product technologies, work is advancing on improving product needs, volume, timing, resource efficiency, and cost, optimally using supply chains. Presenting innovative, evidence-based, and cutting-edge case studies, with new conceptualizations and viewpoints on management, Smart Industry, Better Management explores concepts in product systems, use of cyber physical systems, digitization, interconnectivity, and new manufacturing and product technologies. Contributions to this volume highlight the high degree of flexibility in people management, production, including product needs, volume, timing, resource efficiency and cost in being able to finely adjust to customer needs and make full use of supply chains for value creation. Smart Industry, Better Management illustrates how industry can enabled by a more network-centric approach, making use of the value of information and the latest available proven manufacturing techniques.
    Note: Chapter 1. Reflections of understanding Smart Industry / Milou Habraken -- Chapter 2. Smart business and the social value of AI / Agata Leszkiewicz, Tina Hormann, and Manfred Krafft -- Chapter 3. Personality Development in Higher Education in the Era of Industry 4.0 Comparing educational practices and philosophies in Industry 1.0 and Industry 4.0 / Klaas Stek -- Chapter 4. Ambidexterity as the response of Smart Industry 4.0 - towards better HR practices / Sylwia Przytula, Katarzyna Tracz-Krupa, and Susane Rank -- Chapter 5. Cross-docking: Current Research versus industry practice and Industry 4.0 adoption / Fabian Akkerman, Eduardo Lalla-Ruiz, Martijn Mes, and Taco Spitters -- Chapter 6. Human-robot collaboration in a Smart Industry context: Does HRM matter? / Marie Molitor and Maarten Renkema -- Chapter 7. Accessing and integrating distant capabilities in Smart Industry projects / Ednilson Bernardes and Hervé Legenvre -- Chapter 8. Decision-support tools for Smart transition to circular economy / Devrim Murat Yazan, Guido van Capelleveen, and Luca Fraccascia -- Chapter 9. Supporting utility mapping with a deep learning driven analysis tool / Christian Versloot, Maria Iacob, and Klaas Sikkel. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-80117-715-5
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley, United Kingdom ; North America ; Japan ; India ; Malaysia ; China : Emerald Publishing
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048421025
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (ix, 198 Seiten)
    Edition: First edition
    ISBN: 9781801177122 , 9781801177146
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management volume 28
    Note: Open Access
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-80117-715-3
    Language: English
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Author information: Bondarouk, Tanya
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley :Emerald Publishing,
    UID:
    almafu_9959234160902883
    Format: 1 online resource (353 pages) : , illustrations.
    Edition: First edition.
    ISBN: 1-78714-918-8 , 1-78714-315-5
    Series Statement: The changing context of managing people
    Content: The HRM field is entering smart businesses where the human,digital and high-tech dimensions seem to increasingly converge, and HRM needsto anticipate its own "smart" future. Technological developments andinterconnectedness with and through the Internet (often called the "Internet of Things") set new challenges for the HRM function. Smartness enacted by HRMprofessionals - notions of "smart industries", "smart things" and "smartservices" all put new pressures on strategic HRM. Since the 1990s,organisations have increasingly been introducing electronic Human ResourceManagement (e-HRM), with the expectation of improving the quality of HRM andincreasing its contribution to firm performance. These beliefs originate fromideas about the endless possibilities of information technologies (IT) infacilitating HR practices, and about the infinite capacity of HRM to adopt IT.This book focuses on the progression from e-HRM to digital HRM towards smart HRM. It also raises several important questions that businessesand scholars are confronted with: What kind of smart solution can and will HRM offer to meet the expectations of thelatest business developments? Can HRM become "smart" and combinedigitisation, automation and a network approach? How do businesses futureprooftheir HRM in the smart era? What competences do employees need to ensurebusinesses flourish in smart industries? With rapid technological developments and ever-greater automation andinformation available, the HRM function needs to focus on non-routine andcomplex, evidence-based and science-inspired, and creative and value-addedprofessionally demanding tasks.
    Note: Includes index. , Front Cover -- Electronic HRM in the Smart Era -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- About the Editors -- Foreword -- Introduction, or a long way towards this volume -- How Smart Is HRM? -- Goals and Approach in This Volume -- Chapter 1 An Investigation of the Factors Driving the Adoption of Cloud-Based Human Resource Information Systems by Small- and Medium-Sized Businesses -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Background -- 1.3. Previous HRIS Adoption Research -- 1.4. Theories of Information Systems Adoption -- 1.4.1. Technology Acceptance Model -- 1.4.2. Theory of Planned Behavior -- 1.4.3. Innovation Diffusion Theory -- 1.4.4. Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology -- 1.4.5. Organizational-Level Adoption Theories -- 1.5. The Technology-Organization - Environment Model -- 1.5.1. Technology Context -- 1.5.2. Organization Context -- 1.5.3. Environmental Context -- 1.6. Method -- 1.6.1. Participants -- 1.6.2. Measures -- 1.6.3. Analyses -- 1.7. Results -- 1.7.1. Tests of Hypotheses -- 1.8. Discussion -- 1.8.1. Contributions -- 1.8.2. Limitations -- 1.9. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 2 Assessing the Degree of Human Resource Innovation: An Exploratory Analysis of Irish Hotel Corporations -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Literature Review -- 2.3. Methodology -- 2.4. Findings and Discussion -- 2.5. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3 HR Analytics: Here to Stay or Short Lived Management Fashion? -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Literature Review -- 3.2.1. Conceptualizing HR Analytics as an Innovation -- 3.3. Theory and Hypotheses -- 3.3.1. HR Analytics as an Innovation -- 3.3.2. HR Analytics as a Management Fashion -- 3.3.3. Management Fashion Theory -- 3.4. Methods -- 3.4.1. Sample -- 3.4.2. Analysis -- 3.5. Results -- 3.6. Discussion -- References. , Chapter 4 e-HRM Systems in Support of "Smart" Workforce Management: An Exploratory Case Study of System Success -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Project Background -- 4.3. Literature Review -- 4.3.1. e-HRM Literature on System Success -- 4.3.2. Information System Success Model -- 4.4. Methods -- 4.5. Results -- 4.5.1. Data Quality -- 4.5.2. System Quality -- 4.5.3. Service Quality -- 4.6. Discussion -- 4.6.1. Integrating D& -- M Model into e-HRM -- 4.6.2. Data Quality Recommendations -- 4.6.3. System Quality Recommendations -- 4.6.4. Future Research -- 4.6.5. Limitations -- 4.7. Conclusion -- References -- Appendix: Interview Questions -- Chapter 5 Professional and Non-Professional Social Media as Recruitment Tools: The Impact on Job Seekers' Attraction and Intention to Apply -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Theoretical Framework -- 5.3. Methodology -- 5.3.1. Study 1: Laboratory Experiment -- 5.3.1.1. Procedure -- 5.3.1.2. Measures -- 5.3.1.3. Manipulation Check -- 5.3.1.4. Study 1: Results -- 5.3.2. Study 2: Field Survey -- 5.3.2.1. Procedure -- 5.3.2.2. Measures -- 5.3.2.3. Study 2: Results -- 5.4. Discussion -- 5.4.1. Theoretical and Managerial Implications -- 5.5. Conclusions -- 5.5.1. Limitations and Future Research -- References -- Sitography -- Chapter 6 Aligning the e-HRM and Strategic HRM Capabilities of Manufacturing SMEs: A "Gestalts" Perspective -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Theoretical and Empirical Background -- 6.2.1. The Resource-Based View Theory -- 6.2.2. e-HRM Organizational Capabilities -- 6.2.3. SHRM Organizational Capabilities -- 6.2.4. Strategic Alignment of IT -- 6.3. Methodology -- 6.3.1. Research Model -- 6.3.2. Operationalization of the Research Concepts -- 6.3.3. Data Collection -- 6.4. Results and Discussion -- 6.4.1. Taxonomic Analysis of the Organizational Capabilities of SMEs -- 6.4.2. Assessment of Measurement Model. , 6.4.3. Assessment of the Research Model -- 6.4.4. Test of an Alternative Research Model -- 6.5. Implications for Theory and Practice -- 6.6. Limitations and Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7 Aiming for Strategic e-HRM: Motives and Consequences of e-HRM Implementation in an MNC -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Characteristics of e-HRM in MNCs -- 7.2.1. Motives for Adopting e-HRM in MNC -- 7.2.2. Consequences and Impact of e-HRM -- 7.2.2.1. Consequences of e-HRM -- 7.2.2.2. Impact of e-HRM for Different Stakeholders -- 7.2.3. Strategic Potential of e-HRM -- 7.2.4. Theoretical Framework of the Study and Summary of Literature Review -- 7.3. Methods -- 7.3.1. Research Approach, Design, and Methods -- 7.3.2. Background Information of the Case Company -- 7.4. Findings -- 7.4.1. Motives for Introducing CORE -- 7.4.2. Improved Global Orientation -- 7.4.3. Improved Cost Efficiency -- 7.4.4. Improved Customer Service and Efficiency -- 7.4.5. More Strategic HR Role -- 7.4.6. Consequences and Impacts of e-HRM -- 7.4.6.1. Standardization and a Higher Level of Control -- 7.4.7. Improved Transparency -- 7.4.8. Cost Savings -- 7.4.9. HR Service -- 7.4.10. Impacts on Different Stakeholders -- 7.4.10.1. HR Professionals -- 7.4.11. Line Managers -- 7.4.12. Top Management -- 7.4.13. The Strategic Potential of CORE -- 7.4.13.1. CORE's Role in Making HR More Strategic -- 7.4.14. CORE's Role in Supporting the Business Strategy -- 7.5. Discussion and Conclusions -- 7.5.1. Motives for the Adoption of e-HRM -- 7.5.2. Operational Benefits and Impacts of e-HRM -- 7.5.3. Strategic Impacts of e-HRM -- 7.5.4. Research Limitations -- 7.5.5. Practical Implications -- References -- Chapter 8 e-HRM Challenges: An Australian Perspective -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. Literature Review -- 8.2.1. e-HRM and Its Outcomes. , 8.2.2. Information Systems Managerial Issues Reported in the IT Literature -- 8.2.3. IS Issues in Australia -- 8.3. Methodology -- 8.4. Key e-HRM Challenges: Findings and Discussion -- 8.4.1. e-HRM Technical Challenges -- 8.4.2. HR Issues -- 8.4.3. e-HRM development issues -- 8.5. Implications, Limitations and Suggestions for Future Research -- 8.6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9 Smart Industry Research in the Field of HRM: Resetting Job Design as an Example of Upcoming Challenges -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. The Employment Debate: Current State and Our Perspective -- 9.3. Job Design: Background and Adopted Theory -- 9.4. Method -- 9.5 JCM and Developments -- 9.5.1. Identified Job Characteristics -- 9.5.2. Graphical Illustrations -- 9.6. Smart Industry -- 9.7. Job Design Challenges - For Smart Industry -- 9.7.1. Conceptual Clarity: What Is in a Name? -- 9.7.2. Impact of Smart Industry on Job Design -- 9.8. Direct Effects of Smart Industry on Job Characteristics -- 9.9. Smart Industry as Moderator -- 9.10. Smart Industry as Inspiration for a Configurational Approach -- 9.11. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Appendix -- Chapter 10 What about Agency in e-HRM Research? -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.1.1. Definitions in e-HRM Research -- 10.1.2. Theories in e-HRM Research -- 10.2. Sociomateriality in Information Systems Research -- 10.2.1. Sociomateriality and Agency -- 10.3. e-HRM as a Nexus of Practices and their Material Arrangements -- 10.3.1. The Mangle of e-HRM -- 10.4. Methodological Considerations -- 10.5. Suggestions for Future e-HRM Research -- 10.6. Limitations -- 10.7. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Chapter 11 Changing Role of Social Media at Work: Implications for Recruitment and Selection -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.1.1. Legal and Ethical Guidelines. , 11.1.2. Reliance on Moral Integrity: Importance and Shortcomings -- 11.2. Pre-Recruitment and Selection Issues -- 11.2.1. Reputation Management and Employer Branding -- 11.2.2. Cyber-Vetting or Data Mining Applicants via Social Media? -- 11.3. Post-Recruitment and Selection Concerns -- 11.3.1. Protecting the Organizational Reputation and Brand -- 11.3.2. Social Media Competence -- 11.3.3. New HR Risks -- 11.4. Tackling the Challenges: Recommendations for HR Practitioners -- 11.4.1 Code of conduct -- 11.4.2 Linking the code of conduct to training -- 11.4.3 Realistic job previews -- 11.4.4 Reputation management -- 11.4.5 Strategic continuous professional development (CPD) -- 11.4.6 Accept risk management as part of the HR agenda -- 11.4.7 Let's start listening -- 11.5. A Time for Critical Reflection? -- 11.6. Final Words -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 12 The dis-app-earance of HRM: Impact of Digitization on the HRM Profession -- 12.1. Introduction -- 12.2. Theoretical Background -- 12.3. Research Design -- 12.3.1. Sessions with HRM Professionals -- 12.3.2. Secondary Analysis HRM Practice Monitor -- 12.4. Findings/Results -- 12.4.1. Sessions with HRM Professionals -- 12.4.2. Secondary Analysis HRM Practice Monitor -- 12.5. Discussion -- 12.5.1. Limitations of the HRM Practice Monitor -- 12.6. Conclusions -- 12.6.1. Primary Role of the HRM Professional -- 12.6.2. Major Activities of the HRM Professional -- 12.6.3. Most Popular Labels of the HRM Department -- 12.6.4. The Effects of Digitization on the HRM Profession -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-78714-316-3
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics
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  • 9
    UID:
    almahu_9949069044602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xvii, 267 pages).
    ISBN: 9781787563117 (e-book) , 9781787563131 (ePUB)
    Series Statement: Advanced series in management, volume 19
    Content: This volume explores and presents challenges that "traditional" organisations experience once they take off towards self-managing organisations (or Teal Organisations). The concept of Teal Organisations is not surprising nowadays, but strangely enough it remains a dream concept: the majority of modern organisations represent hierarchical managerial constructions, with little to no evidence of self-management.The main characteristics of self-management are well-known: whole tasks; organisational actors equipped with a certain skill portfolio that is required to accomplish these tasks; work organised in teams that have autonomy for decision-making and performance management. Self-management is often accompanied by greater flexibility, better use of employees' creative capacities, increased quality of work life, and decreased employee absenteeism and turnover, eventually resulting in increased job satisfaction and organizational commitment.In this volume, we suggest that self-managing teams require a new way forward in modern organisations. Particularly, we offer a new roadmap for leaders who are responsible for the implementation of self-managing teams.
    Note: Includes index. , Prelims -- Introduction -- The concept of self-managing teams: history and taxonomy -- Literature review of successful self-managing teams -- Healthcare teams in long-term and elderly care at Livio: a case study -- The relevance of line managers in self-managing teams -- Governance mechanisms and HRM Activities in self-managing teams -- The role of organisational support and HRM function in self-managing teams -- Discussion and future outlook -- Appendices -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781787563124
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics , Education
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bingley : Emerald Publishing
    UID:
    gbv_183231782X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (208 p.)
    ISBN: 9781801177153
    Series Statement: Advanced Series in Management
    Content: The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online. Smart industry requires better management. As industrial and production systems are future-proofed, becoming smart and interconnected through use of new manufacturing and product technologies, work is advancing on improving product needs, volume, timing, resource efficiency, and cost, optimally using supply chains. Presenting innovative, evidence-based, and cutting-edge case studies, with new conceptualizations and viewpoints on management, Smart Industry, Better Management explores concepts in product systems, use of cyber physical systems, digitization, interconnectivity, and new manufacturing and product technologies. Contributions to this volume highlight the high degree of flexibility in people management, production, including product needs, volume, timing, resource efficiency and cost in being able to finely adjust to customer needs and make full use of supply chains for value creation. Smart Industry, Better Management illustrates how industry can enabled by a more network-centric approach, making use of the value of information and the latest available proven manufacturing techniques
    Note: English
    Language: Undetermined
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