A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance

Purpose: This article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (HRM) practices with financial, market and operational performance. Design/methodology/approach: An exhaustive search of HRM-performance link resulted in a f...

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Main Authors: Sukhpreet Kaur, Gurvinder Kaur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-02-01
Series:South African Journal of Business Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/2070
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spelling doaj-0740e8e01da44aa288ed3bb8eea905702021-03-25T11:41:14ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Business Management2078-55852078-59762021-02-01521e1e910.4102/sajbm.v52i1.20701067A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performanceSukhpreet Kaur0Gurvinder Kaur1School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, PatialaSchool of Humanities and Social Sciences, Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, PatialaPurpose: This article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (HRM) practices with financial, market and operational performance. Design/methodology/approach: An exhaustive search of HRM-performance link resulted in a final sample (k) of 24 independent studies. For this purpose, Comprehensive Meta-Analysis (Version 3.0) software was used. Heterogeneity of the studies was determined using Q-statistic with a p-value, I2, T2 and Tau. As the degree of heterogeneity was very high, random effects model was selected to estimate the mean of effects. Lastly, publication bias was studied using graphical and statistical methods. Findings/results: The results revealed the average correlational (r) association of HRM practices with financial performance, market performance and operational performance as 0.305, 0.434 and 0.311, respectively. More specifically, HRM practices have the strongest association with market performance. Practical implications: The results statistically quantify the association between HRM practices and organisational performance measures for developing desired knowledge, skills and abilities to generate higher and improved performance. The results of this study provide HR managers with evidence that right investment in human resources does significantly contribute to the bottom line; they should make better and higher allocation of the resources for HRM. Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to meta-analytically examine the varying association of HRM with three distinct organisational performance measures.https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/2070purpose: this article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (hrm) practices with financial, market and operational performance. design/methodology/approach: an exhaustive s
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sukhpreet Kaur
Gurvinder Kaur
spellingShingle Sukhpreet Kaur
Gurvinder Kaur
A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
South African Journal of Business Management
purpose: this article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (hrm) practices with financial, market and operational performance. design/methodology/approach: an exhaustive s
author_facet Sukhpreet Kaur
Gurvinder Kaur
author_sort Sukhpreet Kaur
title A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
title_short A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
title_full A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
title_fullStr A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
title_full_unstemmed A meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
title_sort meta-analytical study on the association of human resource management practices with financial, market and operational performance
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Business Management
issn 2078-5585
2078-5976
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Purpose: This article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (HRM) practices with financial, market and operational performance. Design/methodology/approach: An exhaustive search of HRM-performance link resulted in a final sample (k) of 24 independent studies. For this purpose, Comprehensive Meta-Analysis (Version 3.0) software was used. Heterogeneity of the studies was determined using Q-statistic with a p-value, I2, T2 and Tau. As the degree of heterogeneity was very high, random effects model was selected to estimate the mean of effects. Lastly, publication bias was studied using graphical and statistical methods. Findings/results: The results revealed the average correlational (r) association of HRM practices with financial performance, market performance and operational performance as 0.305, 0.434 and 0.311, respectively. More specifically, HRM practices have the strongest association with market performance. Practical implications: The results statistically quantify the association between HRM practices and organisational performance measures for developing desired knowledge, skills and abilities to generate higher and improved performance. The results of this study provide HR managers with evidence that right investment in human resources does significantly contribute to the bottom line; they should make better and higher allocation of the resources for HRM. Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to meta-analytically examine the varying association of HRM with three distinct organisational performance measures.
topic purpose: this article draws on the meta-analysis technique to systematically analyse and compare the association of human resource management (hrm) practices with financial, market and operational performance. design/methodology/approach: an exhaustive s
url https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/2070
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