Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management, 2019
Abstract Creativity and innovation have been buzzwords of managerial discourse over the last few ... more Abstract Creativity and innovation have been buzzwords of managerial discourse over the last few decades as they contribute to the long-term survival and competitiveness of firms. Given the non-linear, causally ambiguous, and intangible nature of all innovation-related phenomena, management scholars have been trying to uncover factors that contribute to creativity and innovation from multiple lenses ranging from organizational behavior at the micro-level to strategic management at the macro-level. Along with important and insightful developments in these research streams that evolved independently from one another, human resource management (HRM) research – especially from a strategic perspective – has only recently started to contribute to a better understanding of both creativity and innovation. The goal of this chapter is to review the contributions of strategic HRM research to an improved understanding of creativity at the individual-level and innovation at the firm-level. In organizing this review, the authors rely on the open innovation funnel as a metaphor to review research on both HRM practices and HRM systems that contribute to creativity and innovation. In the last section, the authors focus on more recent developments in HRM research that focus on ambidexterity – as a way for HRM to simultaneously facilitate exploration and exploitation. This chapter concludes with a discussion of future research directions.
Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organ... more Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organizational learning literature, this paper develops and tests a model of MNC subsidiaries’ knowledge creation capability as a joint function of knowledge inflows to subsidiaries and their knowledge stocks (i.e., subsidiaries’ internal human, social, and organizational capital). Survey-based data from 106 subsidiaries located in the U.S. suggests that local (i.e., host country) knowledge inflows to a subsidiary are more effective in enhancing a subsidiary’s knowledge creation capability compared to global knowledge inflows from other units of the same MNC. Furthermore, results point to a not-invented-here syndrome in the exploitation of knowledge sourced from the parent company; such that when a subsidiary’s internal social capital is high, the relationship between global knowledge inflows and knowledge creation capability is negative and when it is low, the relationship becomes positive.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2009
Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most ... more Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most MNEs. While previous research in this domain explored the antecedents of MNE subsidiary staffing decisions, strategic outcomes of different staffing patterns (e.g., using parent, host, or home country nationals) have been mostly overlooked. Drawing from the resource-based view of the firm, we develop a theoretical model that explains the links between different strategies for staffing key management positions in host country subsidiaries and the performance of those subsidiaries in their host markets and within their MNE networks. Further, we propose contingencies that moderate the relationship between subsidiary staffing strategy and host country and MNE network performance.
ABSTRACT Work practices that involve employees are generally assumed to be less effective in more... more ABSTRACT Work practices that involve employees are generally assumed to be less effective in more hierarchical societies where employees’ values are not aligned with such practices. In this study, we challenge this assumption by developing a theory that differentiates between the symbolic and instrumental aspects of involvement work systems and proposing that their symbolic impact will be more pronounced in egalitarian societies, whereas their instrumental impact will be more pronounced in hierarchical societies. In particular, we draw on the symbolic action perspective and theories on culture to test the relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness by incorporating organizational climate of participation and national cultural differences in power distance. Using multi-source, multilevel data from 260 facilities of a multinational company operating in 22 countries, we found that the mediated relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness through climate of participation (i.e., the symbolic impact) was stronger among facilities located in lower power distance societies. On the other hand, the direct relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness (i.e., the instrumental impact) was stronger in higher power distance societies. Overall, our study resolves a seeming cultural dilemma with regard to how involvement work systems operate cross-culturally.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2008
This study examines the relationship between cultural distance and the use of parent country expa... more This study examines the relationship between cultural distance and the use of parent country expatriates in the wholly-owned US subsidiaries of 52 multinational corporations. This study also investigates the link between the use of expatriates and subsidiary performance as a function of cultural distance. Testing hypotheses based on transaction costs theory, our results suggest that firms rely on a greater number of parent country expatriates when they are culturally distant from the subsidiary (i.e. the United States). This study further demonstrates the bounded rationality problem faced by multinational corporations: cultural distance moderates the relationship between expatriate staffing and subsidiary performance such that a higher ratio of parent country expatriates is related to lower subsidiary performance, particularly in cases when cultural distance is high.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2009
Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most ... more Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most MNEs. While previous research in this domain explored the antecedents of MNE subsidiary staffing decisions, strategic outcomes of different staffing patterns (e.g., using parent, host, or home country nationals) have been mostly overlooked. Drawing from the resource-based view of the firm, we develop a theoretical model that explains the links between different strategies for staffing key management positions in host country subsidiaries and the performance of those subsidiaries in their host markets and within their MNE networks. Further, we propose contingencies that moderate the relationship between subsidiary staffing strategy and host country and MNE network performance.
Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organ... more Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organizational learning literature, this paper develops and tests a model of MNC subsidiaries'
Strategic human resource management research has mostly gravibted towards financial measura of pe... more Strategic human resource management research has mostly gravibted towards financial measura of performance in order to assess the effectiveness o f human rcsource management initiatives. In this paper, we argue that focusing on organizational performance mainly fmm financial stakeholdm' perspective is no longer suficient. We discuss Ihe implicarims ofglohalitation, changing nature o f work and the need to satisfy multiple stakeholders on how we measut the effectiveness of human rersoum management systems. We provide examples from several reach streams h a t focus an stakeholders other than shareholdas as their main oulcnme o f in~erest.
This exploratory study examines how expatriate management practices differ with respect to three ... more This exploratory study examines how expatriate management practices differ with respect to three international management strategies (local, centralised or global) in 27 mature multinational corporations. In particular, this study examines the categories of expatriate assignments, the strategic integration of expatriate assignments into leadership development and the types of human resource practices that firms utilise to manage expatriates. Results indicate that organisations differentially assign expatriates based on the firm's respective international management strategy. Firms with a global management strategy made greater use of developmental expatriates, had a greater number of senior managers with expatriate experience and had a stronger focus on leadership development through expatriation. Firms did not differ with respect to their use of expatriate management practices based on their international management strategy.
International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, Aug 1, 2010
This study explores cross-cultural and individual differences in predicting employer reputation a... more This study explores cross-cultural and individual differences in predicting employer reputation as a driver of organizational attraction. Controlling for occupational and generational differences, this study examines the importance of employer reputation when choosing an employer among graduate engineering students in nine countries. At the cultural level, the impact of two cultural syndromes of individualism vs collectivism and verticalness vs horizontalness is examined. At the individual level, the influence of their ...
Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management, 2019
Abstract Creativity and innovation have been buzzwords of managerial discourse over the last few ... more Abstract Creativity and innovation have been buzzwords of managerial discourse over the last few decades as they contribute to the long-term survival and competitiveness of firms. Given the non-linear, causally ambiguous, and intangible nature of all innovation-related phenomena, management scholars have been trying to uncover factors that contribute to creativity and innovation from multiple lenses ranging from organizational behavior at the micro-level to strategic management at the macro-level. Along with important and insightful developments in these research streams that evolved independently from one another, human resource management (HRM) research – especially from a strategic perspective – has only recently started to contribute to a better understanding of both creativity and innovation. The goal of this chapter is to review the contributions of strategic HRM research to an improved understanding of creativity at the individual-level and innovation at the firm-level. In organizing this review, the authors rely on the open innovation funnel as a metaphor to review research on both HRM practices and HRM systems that contribute to creativity and innovation. In the last section, the authors focus on more recent developments in HRM research that focus on ambidexterity – as a way for HRM to simultaneously facilitate exploration and exploitation. This chapter concludes with a discussion of future research directions.
Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organ... more Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organizational learning literature, this paper develops and tests a model of MNC subsidiaries’ knowledge creation capability as a joint function of knowledge inflows to subsidiaries and their knowledge stocks (i.e., subsidiaries’ internal human, social, and organizational capital). Survey-based data from 106 subsidiaries located in the U.S. suggests that local (i.e., host country) knowledge inflows to a subsidiary are more effective in enhancing a subsidiary’s knowledge creation capability compared to global knowledge inflows from other units of the same MNC. Furthermore, results point to a not-invented-here syndrome in the exploitation of knowledge sourced from the parent company; such that when a subsidiary’s internal social capital is high, the relationship between global knowledge inflows and knowledge creation capability is negative and when it is low, the relationship becomes positive.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2009
Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most ... more Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most MNEs. While previous research in this domain explored the antecedents of MNE subsidiary staffing decisions, strategic outcomes of different staffing patterns (e.g., using parent, host, or home country nationals) have been mostly overlooked. Drawing from the resource-based view of the firm, we develop a theoretical model that explains the links between different strategies for staffing key management positions in host country subsidiaries and the performance of those subsidiaries in their host markets and within their MNE networks. Further, we propose contingencies that moderate the relationship between subsidiary staffing strategy and host country and MNE network performance.
ABSTRACT Work practices that involve employees are generally assumed to be less effective in more... more ABSTRACT Work practices that involve employees are generally assumed to be less effective in more hierarchical societies where employees’ values are not aligned with such practices. In this study, we challenge this assumption by developing a theory that differentiates between the symbolic and instrumental aspects of involvement work systems and proposing that their symbolic impact will be more pronounced in egalitarian societies, whereas their instrumental impact will be more pronounced in hierarchical societies. In particular, we draw on the symbolic action perspective and theories on culture to test the relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness by incorporating organizational climate of participation and national cultural differences in power distance. Using multi-source, multilevel data from 260 facilities of a multinational company operating in 22 countries, we found that the mediated relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness through climate of participation (i.e., the symbolic impact) was stronger among facilities located in lower power distance societies. On the other hand, the direct relationship between involvement work systems and operational effectiveness (i.e., the instrumental impact) was stronger in higher power distance societies. Overall, our study resolves a seeming cultural dilemma with regard to how involvement work systems operate cross-culturally.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2008
This study examines the relationship between cultural distance and the use of parent country expa... more This study examines the relationship between cultural distance and the use of parent country expatriates in the wholly-owned US subsidiaries of 52 multinational corporations. This study also investigates the link between the use of expatriates and subsidiary performance as a function of cultural distance. Testing hypotheses based on transaction costs theory, our results suggest that firms rely on a greater number of parent country expatriates when they are culturally distant from the subsidiary (i.e. the United States). This study further demonstrates the bounded rationality problem faced by multinational corporations: cultural distance moderates the relationship between expatriate staffing and subsidiary performance such that a higher ratio of parent country expatriates is related to lower subsidiary performance, particularly in cases when cultural distance is high.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2009
Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most ... more Staffing key management positions at host country subsidiaries is a strategic challenge for most MNEs. While previous research in this domain explored the antecedents of MNE subsidiary staffing decisions, strategic outcomes of different staffing patterns (e.g., using parent, host, or home country nationals) have been mostly overlooked. Drawing from the resource-based view of the firm, we develop a theoretical model that explains the links between different strategies for staffing key management positions in host country subsidiaries and the performance of those subsidiaries in their host markets and within their MNE networks. Further, we propose contingencies that moderate the relationship between subsidiary staffing strategy and host country and MNE network performance.
Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organ... more Grounded in knowledge-based theories of the multinational corporation (MNC) and building on organizational learning literature, this paper develops and tests a model of MNC subsidiaries'
Strategic human resource management research has mostly gravibted towards financial measura of pe... more Strategic human resource management research has mostly gravibted towards financial measura of performance in order to assess the effectiveness o f human rcsource management initiatives. In this paper, we argue that focusing on organizational performance mainly fmm financial stakeholdm' perspective is no longer suficient. We discuss Ihe implicarims ofglohalitation, changing nature o f work and the need to satisfy multiple stakeholders on how we measut the effectiveness of human rersoum management systems. We provide examples from several reach streams h a t focus an stakeholders other than shareholdas as their main oulcnme o f in~erest.
This exploratory study examines how expatriate management practices differ with respect to three ... more This exploratory study examines how expatriate management practices differ with respect to three international management strategies (local, centralised or global) in 27 mature multinational corporations. In particular, this study examines the categories of expatriate assignments, the strategic integration of expatriate assignments into leadership development and the types of human resource practices that firms utilise to manage expatriates. Results indicate that organisations differentially assign expatriates based on the firm's respective international management strategy. Firms with a global management strategy made greater use of developmental expatriates, had a greater number of senior managers with expatriate experience and had a stronger focus on leadership development through expatriation. Firms did not differ with respect to their use of expatriate management practices based on their international management strategy.
International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, Aug 1, 2010
This study explores cross-cultural and individual differences in predicting employer reputation a... more This study explores cross-cultural and individual differences in predicting employer reputation as a driver of organizational attraction. Controlling for occupational and generational differences, this study examines the importance of employer reputation when choosing an employer among graduate engineering students in nine countries. At the cultural level, the impact of two cultural syndromes of individualism vs collectivism and verticalness vs horizontalness is examined. At the individual level, the influence of their ...
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Papers by Saba Colakoglu