Hr strategies Key concepts and terms


Implementing HR strategies



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3 - HR Strategies

Implementing HR strategies
All too often, 80 per cent of the time spent on strategic management is devoted to designing 
strategies and only 20 per cent is spent on planning their implementation. It should be the 
other way round. It is necessary to plan with implementation in mind.
Because strategies tend to be expressed as abstractions, they must be translated into pro-
grammes with clearly stated objectives and deliverables. It is necessary to avoid saying, in effect: 
‘We need to get from here to there but we don’t care how.’ Getting strategies into action is not 
easy. Too often, strategists act like Mr Pecksmith who was compared by Dickens (1843) to ‘a 
direction-post which is always telling the way to a place and never goes there’.
The term ‘strategic HRM’ has been devalued in some quarters; sometimes to mean no 
more than a few generalized ideas about HR policies, at other times to describe a short- 
term plan, for example, to increase the retention rate of graduates. It must be emphasized 
that HR strategies are not just programmes, policies, or plans concerning HR issues that 
the HR department happens to feel are important. Piecemeal initiatives do not constitute 
strategy.
The problem with strategic HRM as noted by Gratton et al (1999) is that too often there is a 
gap between what the strategy states will be achieved and what actually happens to it. The 


60 Human Resource Management
factors they identifi ed as contributing to creating this say/do gap between the strategy as 
designed and the strategy as implemented include:
the tendency of employees in diverse organizations only to accept initiatives they per-

ceive to be relevant to their own areas;
the tendency of long-serving employees to cling to the status quo;

complex or ambiguous initiatives may not be understood by employees or will be per-

ceived differently by them, especially in large, diverse organizations;
it is more diffi cult to gain acceptance of non-routine initiatives;

employees will be hostile to initiatives if they are believed to be in confl ict with the 

organization’s identity, eg downsizing in a culture of ‘job-for-life’;
the initiative is seen as a threat;

inconsistencies between corporate strategies and values;

the extent to which senior management is trusted;

the perceived fairness of the initiative;

the extent to which existing processes could help to embed the initiative;

a bureaucratic culture, which leads to inertia.

Barriers to the implementation of HR strategies
Each of the factors listed by Gratton et al (1999) can create barriers to the successful imple-
mentation of HR strategies. Other major barriers include failure to understand the strategic 
needs of the business, inadequate assessment of the environmental and cultural factors that 
affect the content of the strategies, and the development of ill-conceived and irrelevant initia-
tives, possibly because they are current fads or because there has been an ill-digested analysis 
of best practice that does not fi t the organization’s requirements. These problems are com-
pounded when insuffi cient attention is paid to practical implementation problems, the impor-
tant role of line managers in implementing strategies, and the need to have established 
supporting processes for the initiative (eg, performance management to support performance 
pay).
Approaches to implementation
An implementation programme that overcomes these barriers needs to be based on:
a rigorous preliminary analysis of the strategic needs of the business and how the strat-

egy will help to meet them;


HR Strategies 61
a communication programme that spells out what the strategy is, what it is expected to 

achieve and how it is to be introduced;
the involvement of those who will be concerned with the strategy, eg line managers, in 

identifying implementation problems and how they should be dealt with;
the preparation of action plans that indicate who does what and when;

project managing the implementation in a way that ensures that the action plans are 

achieved.
HR strategies – key learning points

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