The myth of HR strategizing Analyzing Strategic Human Resource Management as global practice and local praxis
Abstract
The idea of Strategic Human Resource Management (SHRM), to combine HR strategizing
with business strategizing in order to increase organizational performance, is today generally
accepted and many organizations have transformed their HR organization from support functions into
business partners. However, critical voices are questioning the actual success of the
transformation and claim that HR still struggle to contribute with valuable strategic input. The
aim of this study was to apply a Strategy-as-Practice (SaP) approach towards HR strategizing and
investigate if, how, when and why HR practitioners are involved in strategic activities in order to
question the “myth” of SHRM and getting closer to the actual praxis of HR strategizing. By
interviewing HR practitioners in USA and Sweden, the study investigates how global ideas of
SHRM translate into local activities and result in a variation of strategizing activities
within different contexts. Based on SaP and institutional theory as theoretical frameworks, this
study suggests that HR practitioners act in a setting where the idea of SHRM is institutionalized
and accepted but the actual HR strategizing activities are still more or less marginalized from
business settings. HR practitioners are to some extend fighting to legitimize their role as
important strategic contributors which have direct impact on quality of HR strategizing activities
and indirect on organizations competitive advantage. The study suggests a need for organizations to
look beyond the myth of HR strategizing in order to create the right contextual factors that
enhance optimal use of SHRM.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2013-08-09Author
Eldemark, Linnéa
Keywords
Strategic Human Resource Management
Globalization
HR transformation
Strategy-as- Practice
Institutional theory
Language
eng