THE ROLE OF HRM IN SUPPORTING INNOVATION STRATEGIES - RECOMMENDATIONSON HOW RESEARCH-AND-DEVELOPMENT MANAGERS SHOULD BE TREATED FROM AN HRM PERSPECTIVE
Kd. Martell et Sj. Carroll, THE ROLE OF HRM IN SUPPORTING INNOVATION STRATEGIES - RECOMMENDATIONSON HOW RESEARCH-AND-DEVELOPMENT MANAGERS SHOULD BE TREATED FROM AN HRM PERSPECTIVE, R & D Management, 25(1), 1995, pp. 91-104
In recent years, consultants and academics have encouraged managers to
use Human Resource Management (HRM) practices to help implement their
competitive strategies. In particular, there has been enthusiasm for
tailoring HRM practices to fit innovation strategies since achieving a
competitive advantage based on technological superiority is very much
associated with the quality of the firm's human resources. Unfortunat
ely, there is little empirical research that examines how HRM can best
support innovation strategies, and even less that evaluates the effec
tiveness of HRM practices in encouraging innovation in various functio
nal settings, such as R&D departments. This research is an attempt to
bridge this gap. Data were gathered from 115 divisions (SBUs) in 89 Fo
rtune 500 companies in the US, and analyzed to identify which HRM prac
tices used with R&D managers were most strongly associated with innova
tion and SBU performance. This article, which also includes descriptiv
e data on how R&D managers are selected, compensated and evaluated, co
ncludes with the authors' recommendations on how R&D managers should b
e treated from an HRM perspective.