Well-being-oriented HRM configurations : diffusion, contingencies and outcomes
Purpose: While current human resource management (HRM) research on the relationship between HRM and employee well-being has focused on performance-oriented HRM (e.g. high-performance work practices), scholars have called to broaden the perspective and to explore HRM practices that are indeed well-being-oriented. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the empirical diffusion of well-being-oriented HRM configurations, the conditions in which these are used, and their associations with health, happiness and relational well-being. Design/methodology/approach: Analyses are based on a probabilistic subsample of 1,364 employees in Germany. Employee data are used, since individual employees' perceptions of HRM practices are crucial for understanding the effects of HRM on employee well-being. Configurations of well-being-oriented HRM practices are identified using latent class analysis. Findings: Findings show that (1) employees experience diverse configurations of well-being-oriented HRM practices, which differ in their investment levels and the specific practices used; (2) these configurations are contingent on organizational-level and individual-level characteristics and (3) these configurations have diverse associations with different well-being dimensions. Importantly, configurations characterized by higher investments are not always associated with higher well-being, and the highest well-being is associated with a configuration based on high investment in well-being-oriented HRM focused on support from supervisors. Originality/value: This exploratory paper is the first to analyze configurations of well-being-oriented HRM practices. By focusing on well-being-oriented HRM it complements previous research which usually addresses how HRM systems designed to enhance performance affect employee well-being.
Year of publication: |
2020
|
---|---|
Authors: | Hauff, Sven ; Guerci, Marco ; Gilardi, Silvia |
Published in: |
Evidence-based HRM: a Global Forum for Empirical Scholarship. - Emerald, ISSN 2049-3983, ZDB-ID 2694217-3. - Vol. 8.2020, 3 (14.05.), p. 253-271
|
Publisher: |
Emerald |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Guerci, Marco, (2022)
-
Exploring necessary conditions in HRM research : Fundamental issues and methodological implications
Hauff, Sven, (2019)
-
Sustainable HRM and class-based inequality
Guerci, Marco, (2023)
- More ...