The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context

Orientation: The last two decades have seen a great interest in the development of human resource management (HRM) professional competence models to advance the value-add of HR practitioners in organisations. However, empirical research on competency requirements for HR practitioners in the South Af...

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Main Authors: Nico Schutte, Nicolene Barkhuizen, Lidewey van der Sluis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2015-09-01
Series:SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Online Access:https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1290
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spelling doaj-b0ab1b9bc3bc4cfeb65b3354665d43e62020-11-24T21:02:53ZengAOSISSA Journal of Industrial Psychology0258-52002071-07632015-09-01411e1e910.4102/sajip.v41i1.1290996The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African contextNico Schutte0Nicolene Barkhuizen1Lidewey van der Sluis2Department of Industrial Psychology, School of Management Sciences, Mafikeng Campus, South AfricaDepartment of Industrial Psychology, School of Management Sciences, Mafikeng CampusDepartment of Industrial Psychology, School of Management Sciences, Mafikeng Campus, South Africa; Leadership and Management Development, Nyenrode Business University, the NetherlandsOrientation: The last two decades have seen a great interest in the development of human resource management (HRM) professional competence models to advance the value-add of HR practitioners in organisations. However, empirical research on competency requirements for HR practitioners in the South African context has not been forthcoming. Research purpose: The main objective of the present research was to validate a HRM competence measure for the assessment of professional HRM competencies in the workplace. Motivation for the study: Competency models can assist HR professionals in supporting their organisations to achieve success and sustainability. Research approach, design and method: A cross-sectional research approach was followed. The proposed HRM Professional Competence Model was administered to a diverse population of HR managers and practitioners (N = 483). Data were analysed using SPSS 22.0 for Windows. Main findings: Exploratory factor analysis resulted in three distinguishable competency dimensions for HR professionals: Professional behaviour and leadership (consisting of the factors Leadership and personal credibility, Solution creation, Interpersonal communication and Innovation), Service orientation and execution (consisting of the factors Talent management, HR risk, HR metrics and HR service delivery) and Business intelligence (consisting of the factors Strategic contribution, HR business knowledge, HR business acumen and HR technology). All factors showed acceptable construct equivalence for the English and indigenous language groups. Practical/managerial implications: Managers can utilise the validated competence measure to measure the performance of HR practitioners in the organisation. Contribution/value-add: This research adds to the limited HR professional competence measures that currently exist.https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1290
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nico Schutte
Nicolene Barkhuizen
Lidewey van der Sluis
spellingShingle Nico Schutte
Nicolene Barkhuizen
Lidewey van der Sluis
The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
author_facet Nico Schutte
Nicolene Barkhuizen
Lidewey van der Sluis
author_sort Nico Schutte
title The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
title_short The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
title_full The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
title_fullStr The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
title_full_unstemmed The validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the South African context
title_sort validation of a human resource management professional competence model for the south african context
publisher AOSIS
series SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
issn 0258-5200
2071-0763
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Orientation: The last two decades have seen a great interest in the development of human resource management (HRM) professional competence models to advance the value-add of HR practitioners in organisations. However, empirical research on competency requirements for HR practitioners in the South African context has not been forthcoming. Research purpose: The main objective of the present research was to validate a HRM competence measure for the assessment of professional HRM competencies in the workplace. Motivation for the study: Competency models can assist HR professionals in supporting their organisations to achieve success and sustainability. Research approach, design and method: A cross-sectional research approach was followed. The proposed HRM Professional Competence Model was administered to a diverse population of HR managers and practitioners (N = 483). Data were analysed using SPSS 22.0 for Windows. Main findings: Exploratory factor analysis resulted in three distinguishable competency dimensions for HR professionals: Professional behaviour and leadership (consisting of the factors Leadership and personal credibility, Solution creation, Interpersonal communication and Innovation), Service orientation and execution (consisting of the factors Talent management, HR risk, HR metrics and HR service delivery) and Business intelligence (consisting of the factors Strategic contribution, HR business knowledge, HR business acumen and HR technology). All factors showed acceptable construct equivalence for the English and indigenous language groups. Practical/managerial implications: Managers can utilise the validated competence measure to measure the performance of HR practitioners in the organisation. Contribution/value-add: This research adds to the limited HR professional competence measures that currently exist.
url https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1290
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