HRM Practice Clusters in Relation to Size and Performance: An Empirical Investigation in Canadian Manufacturing Smes.
Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship 2007, Wntr, 20, 1
-
- $5.99
-
- $5.99
Publisher Description
Introduction It is increasingly accepted that certain organizational factors, such as the nature of the human resource management (HRM) system, can explain in part business performance. As Hansen and Wernerfelt (1989: 409) have suggested, the building of an effective, directed, human organization can be a critical issue in firm success and development. This was a weighty argument in favor of the resource-based theory to which Wernerfelt (1984) largely contributed; Prahalad and Hamel (1990), Barney (1991), Peteraf (1993), Teece, Pisano and Shuen (1997), among others, subsequently enhanced this theory by their own contributions.
Performance, HR Practices and the HR Manager in Small Entrepreneurial Firms.
2007
Perceived Acute Human Resource Management Problems in Small and Medium Firms: An Empirical Examination (Report)
2009
Strategic Human Resources As a Strategic Weapon for Enhancing Labor Productivity: Empirical Evidence (Manuscripts)
2006
A Profile of Human Resource Personnel and Practices in Micro, Small, And Medium Sized Enterprises (Manuscripts)
2005
Urban vs. Rural: Human Resource Management in Smes (Manuscripts)
2006
Having a Human Resource Manager in a Canadian Small Business: What Difference Does It Make?
2004
Cash Conversion Cycle Management in Small Firms: Relationships with Liquidity, Invested Capital, And Firm Performance.
2011
Quebec's Coastal Maritime Industrial Cluster: (Not) Innovative and (Locally) Embedded?
2008
Small Business Leadership: Does Being the Founder Matter?
2010
Small Business Retirement Plan Participation and Needs for Information: Evidence from a Survey in Vermont (Survey)
2009
Exploring Motivation and Success Among Canadian Women Entrepreneurs (Survey)
2006
Exporting As a Means of Growth for Women-Owned Canadian Smes.
2004