4 resultados para HRM

em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal


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We examine volunteer satisfaction with HRM practices, namely recruitment, training and reward in NPOs and attitudes regarding the appropriateness of these practices. The participants in this study are 76 volunteers affiliated with four different NPOs, who work in hospitals and have direct contact with patients and their families. Analysing aggregate results we show that volunteers are more satisfied with training, and consider the training strategies to be very appropriate. After identifying differences between organisations we discover that in some organisations volunteers are satisfied with rewards but they have negative attitudes regarding the appropriateness of the recognition strategies. We also identify the volunteers who are the most and the least satisfied.

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Dissertação apresentada no Instituto Superior de Contabilidade e Administração do Porto para a obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Auditoria ORIENTADOR: DOUTORA MARIA CLARA DIAS PINTO RIBEIRO

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O presente estudo tem como principal objectivo caracterizar as práticas de Gestão de Recursos Humanos mais desenvolvidas em pequenas e médias empresas (PME’s) portuguesas. Para melhor contextualizar a realidade objecto de estudo, tomou-se como ponto de partida a abordagem teórica sobre as diferentes fases evolutivas do conceito e conteúdo da GRH e, consequentemente, a sua caracterização no nosso país. Adicionalmente, é analisado o papel que o departamento de recursos humanos assume no desenvolvimento da GRH no interior das PME’s através da disseminação que faz das suas diferentes práticas, previamente identificadas a partir da revisão de literatura analisada. Foi identificado um conjunto de 21 práticas de GRH como as mais comummente desenvolvidas em contexto organizacional. Conclui-se que as PME’s apresentam pouca intensidade no desenvolvimento de práticas de GRH, ao mesmo tempo que se apresentam como limitadoras do grau de intervenção do departamento de RH, no desenvolvimento dessas práticas.

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Aim of the paper: The purpose of this paper is to examine human resources management practices (HRM practices) in small firms and to improve the understanding of the relationship between this kind of practices and business growth. This exploratory study is based on the resource-based view of the firm and empirical work carried out in two small firms by relating HRM practices with the firms’ results. Contribution to the literature: This is an in-depth study of HRM practices and its impact on performance growth in micro firms, isolating and controlling for most of the contextual and internal variables considered in the literature that relate HRM to growth. Firm growth analysis was broadened by the use of several dependent variables: employment growth and operational and financial performance growth. Some hypotheses for further research in identifying HRM practices in small business and its relation with firm growth are suggested. Methodology: Case study methodology was used to study two firms. The techniques used to collect data were semi-structured interviews to the owner and all the employees, unstructured observation at the firms’ facilities (during two days), entrepreneur profile definition (survey answer) and document data collection (on demographic characterization and performance results). Data was analyzed through content analysis methodology, and categories derived from the interviews’ protocols and literature. Results and implications: Results revealed that despite the firms’ organizational characteristics similarities, they differ significantly in owners’ motivation to grow, HRM practices and organizational performance and growth. Future studies should pay special attention to owner willingness to grow, to firms’ years of experience in business, to staff’s years of experience in their field of work and turnover. HRM practices in micro/small firms should be better defined and characterized. The external image of management posture relating to longitudinal financial results and growth should also be explored.