公司战略、员工留用和组织绩效:新西兰中小型企业的调节性中介研究

IF 4.6 3区 管理学 Q1 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR International Journal of Manpower Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.1108/ijm-10-2023-0633
Jarrod Haar, Stephen James Kelly
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的 有效的公司战略是保持财务业绩的关键,而战略、员工保留率和顶尖人才保留率之间的相互作用却很少被探讨。我们利用新西兰的中小型企业对假设进行了检验,这些企业被定义为拥有不超过 250 名员工的企业。我们利用波特竞争优势模型预测员工留任率(包括高端人才留任率),对企业战略进行了初步探索。研究 1(n = 208)将企业规模作为调节因素,发现企业战略与员工留任率之间存在直接的显著关系。接下来,我们探讨了企业战略对企业绩效的预测,并将员工留任作为中介,同时将企业规模作为中介,在研究 2(n = 474)和研究 3(n = 300,绩效时滞)中检验了中介模型。此类面板数据已变得越来越常见(例如,Haar 等人,2021a, b),Walter 等人(2019 年)最近的一项荟萃分析表明,此类面板数据与通过传统方式(即邮件调查)获取的数据并无不同。我们以新西兰私营中小型企业为研究对象,使用了不同行业和地理位置的高级管理人员。由于企业战略对留住员工的影响在文献中尚属未知,我们进行了研究 1(n = 208),以检验我们整体模型的初始部分。研究 2(n = 474)和研究 3(n = 300)测试了完整模型(包括组织绩效),其中研究 3 的组织绩效滞后一个月。研究结果所有直接效应假设都得到了支持,但企业规模与企业战略之间存在显著的交互作用,这表明规模较小而非规模较大的企业能够利用企业战略实现更优的留任效益。这与所有三项研究中的假设 5a 相悖。研究 2 和研究 3 支持调节中介假设,即规模较大的公司通过公司战略对公司业绩产生更强的间接影响,而员工保留则是公司战略对公司业绩影响的中介。最后,支配分析发现,质量差异化战略是所有研究和结果的关键战略。本研究的第一个管理启示是,中小型企业应深入了解可供其选择的战略方案,并更加重视所选战略方针的实施,从而从中受益。第二个管理意义与研究结果有关,研究结果表明,一般而言,留住员工,特别是留住高端人才,与公司战略和公司业绩呈正相关。鉴于留住员工的重要性和挑战性,尤其是在当前技能严重短缺的环境下,这些结果表明,中小型企业应考虑如何通过战略创造一个对员工有吸引力的组织环境,并支持更强的留住成果,以此作为推动留住员工和提高绩效的机制。首先,它对企业战略进行了研究,并通过不仅包括员工留任,还包括高层人才留任,扩展了对企业绩效的关注,在一定程度上响应了制定和完善绩效衡量标准的号召(Lieberman,2021 年)。其次,除了将留任率作为中介因素外,还将公司规模作为调节因素,并最终检验了调节中介模型。第三,我们进行了优势分析,以确定影响企业绩效和留任率的关键企业战略。最终,本文提出了以下问题:企业战略对新西兰中小企业绩效的作用是什么?
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Firm strategy, employee retention and organizational performance: a moderated mediation study of New Zealand SMEs

Purpose

An effective firm strategy is key to sustained financial performance, while interactions between strategy, employee retention and top talent retention have been seldom explored. We test hypotheses using New Zealand SMEs which are defined as having up to 250 employees. We initially explore firm strategy using Porters competitive advantage model predicting employee retention (including top talent), with study 1 (n = 208) using firm size as a moderator, finding a direct significant relationship from firm strategy toward employee retention. Next, we explore firm strategy predicting firm performance with employee retention mediating and include firm size as a moderator, testing a moderated mediation model in study 2 (n = 474) and study 3 (n = 300, with time-lagged performance).

Design/methodology/approach

There are no open databases holding NZ firms’ performance data and thus data was sourced from a Qualtrics survey panel. Such panels have become more common (e.g. Haar et al., 2021a, b) and a recent meta-analysis by Walter et al. (2019) showed that this type of panel data was no different from data sourced through conventional means (i.e. mail survey). We focused on NZ private sector SMEs using senior managers across a range of industries and geographic locations. Because the influence of firm strategy on employee retention remains unknown in the literature, we conducted study 1 (n = 208) to test the initial part of our overall model. Study 2 (n = 474) and study 3 (n = 300) tested the full model (with organizational performance), with study 3 having organizational performance time-lagged by one month.

Findings

All direct effect hypotheses are supported, although firm size interacted significantly with firm strategy showing smaller not larger-sized firms leverage firm strategy to achieve superior retention benefits. This was against hypothesis 5a in all three studies. Studies 2 and 3 supported the moderated mediation hypothesis, with firms of larger size having a stronger indirect effect from firm strategy on firm performance while employee retention mediated the influence of firm strategy on firm performance. Finally, dominance analysis found that a quality differentiation strategy was the key strategy across all studies and outcomes. We discuss the implications for organizations.

Practical implications

The first managerial implication from the study is that small and medium sized firms would benefit both from developing a deeper understanding of the strategic alternatives open to them and placing a greater emphasis on the implementation of their selected strategic approach. A second managerial implication relates to findings indicating that retention generally, and top talent retention specifically, is positively related to firm strategy and firm performance. Given the importance and challenges of staff retention, particularly in the current environment where there are significant skill shortages, these results suggest that small and medium sized business would benefit from considering how strategy can create an organizational environment that is attractive to employees and support stronger retention outcomes as a mechanism for driving both retention and performance.

Originality/value

The study makes three major contributions. First, it examines firm strategy and extends the focus on firm performance by including not only employee retention but also top talent retention, responding in part to the call to develop and refine performance measures (Lieberman, 2021). Second, beyond using retention as a mediator, firm size is included as a moderator and a moderated mediation model is ultimately tested. Third, we conduct dominance analysis to identify the key firm strategy that influences firm performance and retention. Ultimately, this paper asks: what is the role of firm strategy on New Zealand SME performance, and what influence does retention and relative firm-size play.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
11.40%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: ■Employee welfare ■Human aspects during the introduction of technology ■Human resource recruitment, retention and development ■National and international aspects of HR planning ■Objectives of human resource planning and forecasting requirements ■The working environment
期刊最新文献
Intersectional analysis of the labour market impacts of COVID on women with young children and in low-skilled jobs Intellectual capital as a driver of value creation in Serbian entrepreneurial firms Tax incentives for jobs: bang for the buck or wasted resources? Employment discrimination against transgender women in England Impact of green self-managed teams on firm’s performance: a moderating serial mediation model from an emerging market
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