Synopses & Reviews
Managing People Across Cultures maps out the value of people issue in the organizations of today. It challenges us to ask key questions such as 'How did Human Resource Management (HRM) come to be and what genuine need is there for it?' and 'What should the future direction of HRM be?' Fons Trompenaars and Charles Hampden-Turner spell out their vision for what HRM must do to stay relevant to businesses today. Their view is that people management must embrace the values of entrepreneurship, i.e. agility, flexibility and innovation, to ensure its continued effectiveness. The authors also argue that workplaces have to become customized to grow and learn as its employees push the boundaries of learning and discovery. Functional barriers also need to be torn dowm. You will discover that the rightful place for HRMs is at the fountainhead of any business; the place where ideas are first generated and mobilized for action.
Synopsis
"Managing People Across Cultures is a cornerstone book in the Culture for Business series. Processes like job evaluation and reward systems are affected significantly by the cultural environment. Trompenaars shows what HR executives can do to reconcile cultural dilemmas.
Synopsis
Managing People Across Cultures tackles head on the following issues:
- The relationship between HRM and corporate culture
- Recruitment, selection and assessment
- How training managers can achieve strategic goals
- How HRM can facilitate problem-solving within teams
- Leadership development across cultures
- Varieties of culture shock
There are also role-play and simulation exercises designed to stimulate your understanding of the key issues.
Synopsis
Managing People Across Cultures maps out the value of people issues in the organizations of today. It challenges us to ask key questions such as ?How did Human Resource Management (HRM) come to be and what genuine need is there for it?? and ?What should the future direction of HRM be?? Fons Trompenaars and Charles Hampden-Turner spell out their vision for what HRM must do to stay relevant to businesses today. Their view is that people management must embrace the values of entrepreneurship i.e. agility, flexibility and innovation to ensure its continued effectiveness. The authors also argue that workplaces have to become customized to grow and learn as its employees push the boundaries of learning and discovery. Functional barriers also need to be torn down. You will discover that the rightful place for HRM is at the fountainhead of any business; the place where ideas are first generated and mobilized for action.
About the Author
FONS TRAMPENAARS is Director of Trompenaars Hampden-Turner (THT), an innovative centre of excellence in intercultural management. He is the world's foremost authority on cross-cultural management and is author and co-author of several books, including
Did the Pedestrain Die?, 21 Leaders for the 21st Century and the worldwide bestseller,
Riding the Waves of Culture.CHARLES HAMPDEN-TURNER is a Senior Research Associate at the Judge Institute of management, Cambridge University. He graduated from Cambridge and received his MBA and DBA from Harvard Business School. In the USA, he received both a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Rockefeller Humanitites Fellowship. he has recently been appointed Goh Tjoei Kok Distinguished Visiting Professor at Nanyang Business School, Singapore. He is author of eighteen books and widely recognised as one of today's key business thinkers.
Table of Contents
Introduction; Human Resource Management: A leading Force or a Palliative?
1. Human Resource Management and Corporate Culture.
2. Recruitment, Selection, and Assessment.
3. Training Managers to Attain Strategic Goals.
4. How HRM Can Facilitate the Problem-Solving Power of Teams.
5. Building a Learning Organization: A challenge to HR.
6. Leadership Development Across Cultures.
7. From Personal Diagnoses to Web-Based Assessments.
8. Steps Towards Resolving Dilemmas.
9. Creating an Assessment Center.
10. Varieties of Culture Shock.
Endnotes.
Appendices.
Bibliography.
Index.