HRM, Strategy, and Operational Performance Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio 2002 Human Resource Management, Strategy and Operational Performance in the Spanish Manufacturing Industry, M@n@gement, 5(3): 175-199. M@n@gement is a double-blind reviewed journal where articles are published in their original language as soon as they have been accepted. Copies of this article can be made free of charge and without securing permission, for purposes of teaching, research, or library reserve. Consent to other kinds of copying, such as that for creating new works, or for resale, must be obtained from both the journal editor(s) and the author(s). For a free subscription to M@n@gement, and more information: http://www.dmsp.dauphine.fr/Management/ © 2002 M@n@gement and the author(s). ISSN: 1286-4892 Editors: Martin Evans, U. of Toronto Bernard Forgues, U. of Paris 12 http://www.dmsp.dauphine.fr/Management/ http://www.dmsp.dauphine.fr/Management/ M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 175 Alberto Bayo-Moriones . Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio Universidad Pública de NavarraDepartamento de Gestión de Empresas eMail: abayom@unavarra.es Universidad Pública de Navarra Departamento de Gestión de Empresas eMail: jmerino@unavarra.es Human Resource Management, Strategy and Operational Performance in the Spanish Manufacturing Industry It is commonly accepted that the people working for a firm are one of its main assets and one of the factors in determining its progress. Workers’ qualities, attitudes and behaviour in the workplace, together with other factors, play an important role in determining a company’s success or lack of it. Although this type of resource is one over which companies do not have complete control, there do exist certain instruments to enable them to exert their influence on the quality and performance of the human capital on which they rely. The human resource management (HRM) practices that they adopt will have a vital influence in this area and thereby on the performance achieved by the firm. In recent years references have begun to appear in the literature regarding a series of HRM practices that are named high-performance, high-commitment or innovative, and are said to help firms to achieve significant improvements in performance. The aim of these practices is to achieve a more valuable workforce, by selecting and retaining the In recent years companies have begun to implement a series of human resource manage- ment (HRM) practices that are referred to in the literature as high-performance or high-com- mitment. Among others these practices include employee involvement, training and organ- isational incentive plans. In this study we attempt to determine how and to what extent the adoption of this type of practices affects the firm’s performance record. We focus specifically on the impact HRM has on operational performance. Moreover, we test if the impact of high- commitment practices on firm performance is contingent on the strategy followed by the firm. We try to detect possible differences in the relationship between HRM and the differ- ent kinds of operational results (efficiency, quality, and time). For this aim we use a database covering an initial sample of 965 factories each with a workforce of over 50 employees. We begin with a review of the literature before going on to present the descriptive statistics for the variables to be used and, finally, testing the relationship between HRM and operational performance through the estimation of several ordered probit models. Our results reveal the presence of a positive, statistically significant correlation between the adoption of high-com- mitment practices and improvements in quality and time-based performance. We also find that this effect is universal and not dependent on the strategy used by the firm. mailto:abayom@unavarra.es mailto:jmerino@unavarra.es M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 176 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio more highly skilled individuals, and to increase motivation in the exist- ing workforce by getting its members to adopt the firm’s objectives as their own. This is accompanied by structuring and organising tasks in such a way as to obtain the maximum benefit from the increased capacity and motivation thus achieved among the workers. These practices include, for example, the provision of training for the workers, broader job definitions and meticulous personnel selection processes. At the same time it is stated that these practices may not have the same effect in all firms. Potential benefits may depend on the type of strategy being employed in the firm; a particular strategy may enable a firm to draw more benefit from the behaviour and abilities generated by high-commitment practices. This study attempts to test the hypothesis that a firm’s style of person- nel management influences its operational performance. Thus it will be that firms implementing high-performance practices will register more outstanding improvements in results. We will also analyse the effect of HRM on firm performance to determine whether this is universal or contingent on the strategy of the firm. The environment in which we intend to test this hypothesis is the Span- ish industrial sector. Using an initial sample of close to 1,000 Spanish manufacturing plants we will try to discover whether findings in similar sectors in other parts of the world are also applicable to Spain. This study aims to offer an analysis of the relationship between HRM practices in the operational context and various performance mea- surements (efficiency, quality and time-based measures) both from the universal and the contingency perspective. We consider this to be a significant contribution of the article, in view of the general scarcity of empirical studies with this sort of focus, the few that exist applying mainly to the US context. In the next section we carry out a review of existing empirical findings regarding the connection between combinations of HRM practices and business results, while in the following one we explore the role of strat- egy in moderating the relationship between HRM and performance. We then devote a section to a brief explanation of the importance of operational results in factory management. We then define the research objectives of the article. The following section begins with a few remarks regarding data collection methods, before going on to define the variables to be used in our subsequent empirical analysis and defining the estimating framework. We then estimate the effect of personnel management on a plant’s performance and analyse the results obtained. We finish with a discussion of the main conclusions to be drawn from our study. HRM AND ITS IMPACT ON RESULTS Workers are key elements in the running of a firm and as such play an important part in the firm’s success in reaching its objectives. Human resources, taken to be «the pool of human capital under the firm’s con- trol in a direct employment relationship» (Wright, McMahan and M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 177 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance McWilliams, 1994: 304), can provide the firm with a source of compet- itive advantage with respect to its rivals. This is possible because of the series of requirements that the work- ers fulfil (Wright and McMahan, 1992; Wright et al., 1994). The first of these is the value added to the company’s production processes, the contribution made by each individual having its effect on the results obtained by the organisation as a whole. Also, since individuals are not all the same, their characteristics are in limited supply in the market. In addition, these resources are difficult to imitate, since it is not easy to identify the exact source of the competitive advantage and reproduce the basic conditions necessary for it to occur. Finally, this type of resource is not easily replaced; though short-term substitutes may be found, it is unlikely that they result in a sustainable competitive advan- tage anything like that provided by human resources. For a firm to find the human capital to provide it with a sustained com- petitive advantage is not just a matter of luck. It depends rather on the action the firm is prepared to undertake towards that end. It is through personnel management practices that firms try to obtain the human resources that will give them the advantage when it comes to holding their own against other companies. It is the human resources them- selves, however, and not the practices, that make up the source of competitive advantage. Personnel management practices do not qual- ify as sources of sustainable competitive advantage, since they are perfectly replaceable and quite likely to be copied by other firms. They are, nevertheless, necessary, not only for the firm’s human capital to develop but also to enable it to be employed in such a way as to ensure improvements in the company’s performance. If HRM practices help to create better human capital in the firm and, thereby, a sustained competitive advantage, it is reasonable to assume some sort of connection between the way in which personnel is managed and the results obtained by the firm. There are numerous empirical studies that deal with the influence of individual personnel management practices on different performance measurements. Among these we would find quality circles (Katz, Kochan and Gobeille, 1983), recruitment (Holzer, 1987), worker training (Bartel, 1994), prof- it-sharing schemes (Weitzman and Kruse, 1990) and information shar- ing (Morishima, 1991). Other investigations have attempted to examine the individual impact of not one but several of these practices. These would include investi- gations carried out by Kalleberg and Moody (1994), Delaney and Huselid (1996), Black and Lynch (2000; 2001), Cappelli and Neumark (2001), Harel and Tzafrir (1999) and Fey, Björkman and Pavlovskaya (2000). Finally, there are some studies that take a global perspective on the relationship between personnel management and performance, taking the view that practices are not applied separately but in con- junction with one another. Instead of looking at the impact of one spe- cific practice, they study the total joint effect of the way in which the dif- ferent aspects of personnel management are dealt with, particularly the adoption of high-performance practices. Studies such as those of Huselid (1995) and MacDuffie (1995) are among these. There are sev- M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 178 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio eral articles that offer an in-depth critical review of this literature. Among them we must mention those of Dyer and Reeves (1995), Becker and Gerhart (1996), Huselid and Becker (1996), Ichniowski , Kochan, Levine, Olson and Strauss (1996), Guest (1997), Whitfield and Poole (1997), and Becker and Huselid (1998). This last type of empirical studies, and here we would include our own, analyse a wide range of measurements. Among them we find, for example, such measurements of HRM performance as the ability to attract and retain employees (Kalleberg and Moody, 1994), manage- ment-worker relations (Wood and de Menezes, 1998), turnover (Huselid, 1995; Becker and Huselid, 1998; Wood and de Menezes, 1998), absenteeism (Wood and de Menezes, 1998; Hoque, 1999), workers’ commitment to the company (Hoque, 1999), job satisfaction among workers (Hoque, 1999) and indices that capture several of these outcomes (Liouville and Bayad, 1998). In addition to these, we also see measurements of financial results, which are an indication of the firm’s overall performance. Among others we might mention productivity (Ichniowski, 1990; Huselid, 1995), prof- itability (Huselid and Becker, 1996), customer satisfaction (Kalleberg and Moody, 1994), Tobin’s q (Ichniowski, 1990; Huselid, 1995) or the firm’s market value (Becker and Huselid, 1998). Finally, we find studies which, like ours, are concerned with analysing the effect of HRM on aspects of operational performance, such as the hours of labour required to manufacture a particular product (Arthur, 1994; MacDuffie, 1995), the percentage of programmed time that the production line is in operation (Ichniowski and Shaw, 1999; Ichniows- ki, Shaw and Prennushi, 1997), the defects rate (Arthur, 1994; Mac- Duffie, 1995) or the percentage of production that meets the required quality standards (Ichniowski and Shaw, 1999; Ichniowski et al., 1997). There are also works that take as their dependent variable indices that capture the firm’s overall performance in this area. These would include Liouville and Bayad (1998), who incorporate aspects such as defects costs, and Youndt, Snell, Dean and Lepak (1996), who include the degree of utilisation of equipment, minimisation of waste, product quality and in-time delivery. Broadly speaking, all the studies that address this issue, irrespective of the type of operational result on which they are focused, show the introduction of high-commitment HRM practices to have an impact not only on the plant’s productive system performance but also on business performance. THE MODERATING ROLE OF STRATEGY It has been underlined in the literature that, when adopting their HRM practices, firms must take into account the desirability of fit between these practices and firm strategy (Baird and Meshoulam, 1988). As a consequence, one of the main goals of strategic human resource man- agement is to ensure that HRM is integrated with the strategy and the strategic needs of the firm in order to gain competitive advantage (Wright and Sherman, 1999). Different ways of competing in the mar- M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 179 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance ket require different characteristics, behaviour and attitudes on the part of workers, and these differences are fundamentally the result of applying different HRM policies (Schuler and Jackson, 1987; Wright and McMahan, 1992). This contingency perspective leads to the expectation that the competitive strategy the firm pursues in the mar- ket moderates the relationship between HRM and performance (Tichy, Fombrun and Devanna, 1982; Miles and Snow, 1984; Schuler and Jackson, 1987). The literature, however, does not make it quite clear in what direction this mediation actually works. Miles and Snow (1984) argue that defender firms may, in their effort to achieve stability through efficien- cy, find it better to establish a long term relationship with their workers, by offering them job security, establishing internal labour markets and investing in their training. This would reduce the turnover of employ- ees, thereby making reactions on the part of the workforce easier to predict. In contrast to this, prospector firms have difficulty in investing in their workforce, since they can not be sure what type of demands they will have to make on them in the future, so they would not bene- fit from a high-commitment HRM approach. Schuler and Jackson (1987), Arthur (1992) and Youndt et al. (1996), using the categories established by Porter (1980) in as far as these can be compared to those of Miles and Snow, suggest the opposite relationship. Arthur (1992) claims that a cost leadership strategy is hardly likely to benefit from the introduction of innovative schemes in HRM. Firms attempting to compete on the market in this way will do everything they can to keep their costs to a minimum, a feat that is eas- ier to achieve via a traditional style of management. This enables stan- dardised goods to be produced through strict division of labour, there- by keeping costs low, since, by not requiring highly qualified personnel, it reduces the need for worker training. This makes employees easily replaceable, thereby eliminating the need for the firm to increase wages in order to keep them on. Nor, of course, can we ignore the sav- ings to be made from avoiding the costs involved in setting up and run- ning high-performance programmes. Those firms that choose to adopt a strategy of differentiation, on the other hand, must be flexible enough to adapt in order to meet the var- ious demands their clients may make on them (Arthur, 1992). In this state of affairs, rather than being responsible for a limited number of tasks, workers will be required to carry out a variety of activities and they are likely to find themselves in situations in which they must decide, of their own accord, how to proceed (Youndt et al., 1996). Ade- quate training is essential, if workers are to live up to this challenge. They must also be sufficiently motivated to make the choices that will serve the best interests of the firm. There is no question but that this can be better achieved via high-commitment HRM than through tradi- tional methods. Regarding the empirical evidence, Huselid (1995) finds limited evi- dence for the impact of HRM on performance contingent on competi- tive strategy. However, Hoque (1999) finds that the best-performing hotels are those that practise high-commitment management coupled M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 180 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio with a quality strategy. Similar results are reached by Youndt et al. (1996): human capital-enhancing systems have stronger effects when adopted together with a quality manufacturing strategy. OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE The subject of the measurement, evaluation and conceptualisation of operational performance in a company is a recurrent theme in the dif- ferent areas of the academic literature. One of the first general classi- fications, and one that has been widely used, is that of Venkatraman and Ramanujam (1986). They adopt a strategic management per- spective and focus on the measurement to establish a division between financial and operational performance, with the emphasis on the latter. Following a similar line, Kaplan and Norton (1992) believe that the traditional measurements of financial performance are no longer valid for today’s business demands. Therefore, they consider that operational measurements of management are needed when dealing with customer satisfaction, internal processes and activities directed at improvement and innovation in the organisation, which lead to future financial returns. Manufacturing performance, which encompasses part of the opera- tional performance previously mentioned, is commonly used in the field of operations management. This type of result takes into account the company’s performance in reaching its basic objectives, that is, productivity, quality and service. There are several studies which aim to establish a classification of this kind of results (Corbett and Van Wassenhove, 1993; Neely, Gregory and Platts, 1995; Filippini, Forza and Vinelli, 1998). For example, Corbett and Van Wassenhove’s model considers three dimensions of performance: cost or efficiency, quality and time. Efficiency refers to the best possible use of all available resources in order to maximise output. This results in low cost products thanks to the reduction of waste and enables the factory to give value to cus- tomers. Traditionally quality has been defined in terms of conformance to spec- ification and hence quality-based measures of performance have focused on issues such as the number of defects produced and the cost of quality. With the advent of total quality management (TQM) the emphasis has shifted away from conformance to specification and moved towards customer satisfaction. In either case, firms must obtain high levels of quality performance in order to improve or, at least, main- tain their level of competitiveness. The first dimension of time-based performance is reliability. This means fulfilling delivery commitments. On-time deliveries may have a significant impact on customer satisfaction, which makes it an issue to be taken seriously in operations management. The second time-relat- ed dimension refers to the speed of production processes, which is fre- quently measured as the time elapsing between materials reception and delivery of product to the customer. One of the main goals of just- M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 181 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance in-time (JIT) and other production planning and control systems (e.g., Optimised Production Technology) is to improve the flow of production processes, in order to respond more rapidly to customer demands. RESEARCH OBJECTIVES As we have explained above, both the theoretical and empirical litera- ture suggest that the way in which the employees of a plant are man- aged has a significant impact on its performance. Organisational suc- cess can be largely explained by the HRM practices that have been applied. Companies that have implemented a bundle of high-perfor- mance work practices, in other words, a HRM system aimed at improv- ing people’s capabilities and motivation, outperform rivals that have not done so. It has also been indicated that some literature additional- ly emphasises the mediating role of strategy in the link between HRM and performance. We have also stated that operational performance measures are the most effective means of assessing how a factory has been managed. In this article we intend to analyse the impact of high-commitment practices on operational results. We understand that, according to the literature quoted earlier, the most immediate and direct effects of HRM in a factory should be on manufacturing performance, as financial results can be affected by other variables that cannot be controlled from an operations management point of view. This article aims to contribute to the literature in several ways. First of all, it attempts to ascertain whether the impact that high-commitment management is found to have on firm performance in other countries also holds in Spain. We investigate whether high-performance work practices lead to better performance. Secondly, we also test the con- tingency hypothesis of the relationship between HRM and perfor- mance in the Spanish context. Thirdly, we focus specifically on the impact HRM has on operational performance, using a large sample of manufacturing establishments. Finally, we examine data to discover whether there is any difference in the relationship between HRM and the different types of operational results. We try to assess whether high-performance work practices are a useful means for factory man- agers to achieve all of their various manufacturing goals or if their effect varies for each individual measure of operational results. METHODOLOGY DATA The Spanish manufacturing industry constitutes the scope of our study. The concept of manufacturing industry is clearly defined in the National Classification of Economic Activity (NACE), which includes all the manufacturing industries (from code 15 to code 37) with the excep- tion of oil refining and the treatment of nuclear fuel (code 23). M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 182 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio Fixing the unit of analysis was an important matter to settle. Two possibilities were initially open to us: we could choose either the company or the plant as the focus of our study. We opted for the lat- ter, basing our choice on the fact that in the industrial sector, the plant is the business unit of most strategic importance for the imple- mentation of the practices that would be considered in our study. These practices are adopted in the plant, and therefore, it is at this level where problems arise and where the results must be analysed. Moreover, the answers to the different questions raised are expect- ed to be more reliable when taken from the plant; since the knowl- edge of these issues is greater even if only because of greater prox- imity. Another aspect of the field of application to be determined was the size of the plants. The industrial plants included in our sample employ 50 or more workers. This limit has been used in other stud- ies relating to this area (see Osterman, 1994). It serves to cover a wide spectrum of the population employed in Spanish industry. It also simplifies the fieldwork. Following these criteria, the population consisted of 6,013 plants. The aim was to achieve a sample of 1,000 units, stratified according to sector and size. The larger-size stratum was represented at 50% in the sample design. For the two remaining size strata, a fixed number of 30 interviews was allocat- ed to each sector; the rest of the interviews being allocated among sectors proportionally. The sample allocated to each of the strata within a sector was also distributed proportionally. A random selec- tion of plants was taken from each stratum for interview. The sur- vey was based on a questionnaire that was made up, pre-tested, and then modified in different ways to form the final questionnaire. The questions on HRM refer to blue-collar workers. The fact that we refer to a specific group of workers creates problems, as far as the generalisation of the results to other professions is concerned. However, by limiting the type of job considered, we are better able to compare the different units we have studied, as there can be several significantly different internal labour markets within a given company. As we had foreseen from the start, most of the questionnaires (more than three quarter, in fact) were filled in by either the plant manager or the production manager. The questionnaire covered different issues, all linked to production. It was meant to be answered by someone with a broad understanding of both the organisational aspects of the plant and the technical side, though knowledge of the latter was less crucial. Nevertheless, the com- plexity of the questionnaire did not mean it could not be understood by any of the plant managers with knowledge of the areas under study. After making 3,246 telephone calls to make the necessary appoint- ments, 965 valid interviews were conducted. This represents a response rate of 29.72% and constitutes the initial sample for which we have information. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 183 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance MEASURES OF VARIABLES MEASURING HIGH-COMMITMENT HRM PRACTICES A look at the different empirical studies to be found in the literature dealing with high-commitment HRM practices soon reveals a lack of unanimity surrounding the practices that ought to be included under this general heading. It sometimes even happens that practices con- sidered by some authors to be synonymous with high-performance HRM systems, are taken by others to be more closely related to tradi- tional personnel management systems. For the purpose of the present study, the choice of practices to be included in the category of high-commitment management was made with various points in mind. We first turned our attention to those prac- tices most often included in investigations into innovations in HRM. A second consideration involved the restrictions imposed upon us by the questionnaire we were using; we could obviously only include in our study those practices about which we had data. Taking these details into account, we included the practices that were most often men- tioned in the literature and that also figured in our database. We then added a number of other variables which, though absent from other studies, appeared to us to fit into the management philosophy we wished to investigate. The use of employees already working for the organisation to fill vacancies further up in the hierarchy is a variable common to all the different studies of high-performance HRM practices. Respondents were asked to show on a scale of one to five how many of their current supervisors and skilled technicians had previously had jobs on the shop floor. This scale has been transformed into a scale from 0 to 1 to create the variable Promotion. Another factor that encourages workers’ identification with the firm is their confidence in being able to keep their jobs. The Security variable equals the percentage of permanent employees. The criteria applied in the selection and recruitment of new workers give some indication of how the firm is being run, since they reveal what type of qualities and behaviour is being sought after in candidates for jobs in the firm. The binary variable Selection tells us whether one of the two main factors considered when selecting and taking on new workers gives priority to personality characteristics or the ability to work as part of a team and learn new skills, rather than focusing on higher qualifications and a closer match between the technical require- ments of the job and the abilities and technical skills possessed by the candidate. The effort made by the firm to train its workers also serves as an indi- cation of its concern for the future of its workforce. Training is equal to 1 if some workers have received any formal training within the past year. As for the content of that training, Grouptrain equals the percentage of hours of training provided by the firm devoted to teamwork and prob- lem solving techniques. There are several issues relating to wage systems that must be includ- ed. Wagelevel is a binary variable that indicates whether the workers’ M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 184 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio average wage is above the average for the same type of workers in the same sector and the same region. Plantinc shows whether or not the plant uses for the majority of its workers incentive schemes based in any way on its operations or financial performance. Knowpay indicates whether the main factor in determining the majority of workers’ wages is their level of professional skill, as opposed to other criteria, such as the nature of their job or their length of service in the firm. Several of the aspects included refer to the nature of the job. On the one hand, there is the existence of autonomous work teams, which is measured by the variable Team. The use of job rotation among shop- floor workers is captured by the variable Rotation, which takes values from a scale of 0 to 1 (the initial values obtained from the questionnaire were based on a scale of 1 to 4). Self-inspection by the majority of workers as a quality management technique is represented by the Selfins dichotomous variable. Respondents were asked in the inter- view to indicate on a scale of 0 to 10 the degree to which their work- ers were allowed to plan and organise their own work. The variable Autonomy is the outcome of dividing these initial values by 10 and therefore assumes values between 0 and 1. Specific action designed to increase the participation of workers in the running of the firm may take the form of schemes to collect individual suggestions or the creation of groups of workers to meet periodically in order to identify problems related with their work and propose pos- sible solutions. These two instruments are reflected in the binary vari- ables Suggestion and Groups, respectively. The use of methods to allow communication to take place between workers and company management is an issue that needs to be taken into account when dealing with the attempt to get workers to identify with the firm. While periodic meetings with employees in order to inform them about company issues creates a downward flow of communication, conducting surveys in which employees are asked about their degree of job satisfaction sets up a flow of com- munication in the opposite direction. This type of action is captured by the variables Meetings and Surveys. Opendoor, meanwhile, indi- cates whether or not the firm has organised open-days in an attempt to involve employees and the surrounding community and to create links between the workers’ private environment and the firm that employs them. Table 1 contains the most relevant descriptive statistics for the sev- enteen HRM practices that we have defined as high-performance. This table shows that the adoption of the different practices in Spanish industry varies considerably. As far as diffusion is concerned, at one extreme we find training in teamwork and problem solving techniques and plant incentives, in which application is the least intense. Two fur- ther practices, with a diffusion limited to around 20%, and both con- tributing to increasing worker involvement, are, first of all, surveys to detect job satisfaction and, second, the organisation of open days. Meanwhile, only a quarter of the plants interviewed included workers’ level of knowledge and skills when fixing the basis for their wages. Moreover, workers are given very little autonomy in their jobs. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 185 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance M e a n .6 7 .8 0 .0 7 .4 2 .1 2 .2 5 .4 7 .4 7 .9 0 .2 5 .3 9 .5 7 .5 9 .2 1 .1 9 .6 7 .8 0 S .D .† .3 0 .4 0 .1 3 .4 9 .3 2 .4 3 .5 0 .2 9 .3 1 .2 9 .4 9 .5 0 .4 9 .4 1 .3 9 .4 7 .2 1 1 .0 3 .0 1 .0 5 .0 1 .0 3 -. 0 7 * .0 6 -. 0 1 -. 0 2 .0 1 .0 3 .0 4 .0 2 .0 4 .0 4 .0 5 2 .2 9 ** * .0 5 .0 8 ** .0 9 ** * .1 1 ** * .1 5 ** * .0 6 * .0 8 ** .2 8 ** * .2 9 ** * .3 3 ** * .1 7 ** * .1 5 ** * .0 7 ** .1 5 ** * 3 .1 2 ** * .1 0 ** * .0 2 .1 1 ** * .1 2 ** * .0 2 .0 4 .2 0 ** * .1 0 ** * .1 2 ** * .1 5 ** * .1 0 ** * .1 1 ** * .0 8 ** 4 .0 4 .0 3 -. 0 1 .0 7 * -. 0 5 .0 0 .0 9 ** .0 1 .1 0 ** * .0 9 ** .0 3 .0 1 .0 8 ** 5 -. 0 5 .0 2 .0 8 ** .0 7 * .0 7 * .1 1 ** * .0 5 .1 0 ** * .1 2 ** * .0 6 * .0 1 .0 0 6 -. 0 4 .0 3 .0 1 -. 0 2 .0 3 .0 1 .1 0 ** * .0 5 .0 1 -. 0 4 .0 4 7 .0 6 * .0 5 .2 2 ** * .1 8 ** * .0 9 ** * .1 4 ** * .1 5 ** * .1 4 ** * .0 3 .0 0 8 .0 3 .0 5 .1 1 ** * .0 1 .1 3 ** * .0 7 * .0 8 ** .0 1 .0 5 9 .0 4 .0 3 .1 0 ** * .0 9 ** * .1 0 ** * .0 7 ** -. 0 1 .0 2 1 0 .1 9 ** * .1 5 ** * .1 2 ** * .1 5 ** * .0 9 ** .0 2 .0 1 11 .2 9 ** * .3 4 ** * .3 2 ** * .2 3 ** * .0 3 .0 3 1 2 .3 4 ** * .2 4 ** * .1 7 ** * .0 7 ** .0 7 * 1 3 .2 8 ** * .2 2 ** * .0 9 ** * .0 7 * 1 4 .2 8 ** * .1 0 ** * -. 0 1 1 5 .0 4 .0 5 1 6 .0 7 * V a ri a b le 1 . P ro m o tio n 2 . T ra in in g 3 . G ro u p tr a in 4 . W a g e le ve l 5 . P la n tin c 6 . K n o w p a y 7 . Te a m 8 . R o ta tio n 9 . S e lfi n s 1 0 . A u to n o m y 11 . G ro u p s 1 2 . S u g g e st io n 1 3 . M e e tin g 1 4 . S u rv e y 1 5 . O p e n d o o r 1 6 . S e le ct io n 1 7 . S e cu ri ty T a b le 1 . M e a n , st a n d a rd d e vi a tio n , a n d c o rr e la tio n m a tr ix f o r H R M p ra ct ic e s (N = 7 5 8 ) † : st a n d a rd d e vi a tio n ; ** *: p < .0 1 ; ** : p < .0 5 ; *: p < .1 0 . M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 186 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio At the other extreme, we have self-inspection by the workers of the qual- ity of the products they manufacture. This is common practice in 90% of the plants interviewed. There is also very widespread provision of some kind of formal training for production workers (80% of the sam- ple) and a high proportion of permanent employees. Though to a more moderate extent, we should also mention the widespread application of personality-based criteria in personnel selection processes, as well as frequent use of internal promotion in order to fill posts as job vacan- cies occur within the organisation. Highly relevant observations can be made from the associations between the different practices and how they interrelate. A close look at the correlation table will provide some very interesting information in this respect. As was to be expected, the correlation coefficients are overwhelmingly positive, and among the negative only one is signifi- cantly distinct from 0. In all, of the 136 coefficients that make up the matrix, only eleven are negative. It can be seen how some of the practices considered possess an indi- vidual diffusion profile that falls far wide of the trend followed by most of the rest. This casts serious doubts on the theory that high-commit- ment practices are implemented in such a way as to remain consistent with one another. However, this phenomenon may also be interpreted as an indication of error in the theoretical definition of the practices that make up the subject of our investigation. In other words, it may be that some of the practices included fail to complement the rest. In relation to this issue, there is evidence to suggest that paying work- ers above the going rate, providing them with job security, rewarding them for their knowledge and offering them internal promotion are practices that have very little connection with other aspects of high- commitment management. The case of the Promotion variable is par- ticularly remarkable, in that it fails to register even a single positive cor- relation significantly distinct from 0 with any of the remaining sixteen practices analysed. This echoes the results obtained in Becker and Huselid (1998) and points to the need for further theoretical investiga- tion into the relationship of this feature of internal labour markets and the rest of the HRM system. When there is a great number of practices to be analysed, as in the case in hand, the investigator is faced with two possible ways of eval- uating the degree to which HRM can be considered to be based on high-commitment. The first of these involves taking the variables refer- ing to the use of individual practices and creating an index that mea- sures the extent to which high-performance employment practices are being applied (e.g., Wood and Albanese, 1995; Pil and MacDuffie, 1996; McNabb and Whitfield, 1999). The second option is to classify firms according to their level of application of the whole set of practices under consideration (Arthur, 1992). It is thus possible to opt for a more or less continuous measurement or for using a nominal variable. For the purposes of the present study, we will apply both options, since this will help in ascertaining whether the results obtained are robust in rela- tion to the procedure used to evaluate the way in which human resources are managed. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 187 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance The index we intend to use for the present study is the sum of the sev- enteen variables defining high-commitment practices taking place in the establishment; this will be labelled HRMindex. In order to group the plants according to the degree to which they have introduced high-commitment practices into their management of human resources, we classify them by means of cluster analysis. We begin by carrying out an agglomerative analysis using a Ward hierar- chical procedure and the square of the Euclidean distance. From this we are able to deduce that the optimum number of groups to be formed is 2. Taking the results of this first analysis as our initial cen- troids, we then perform a non-hierarchical cluster analysis using two groups. This process gives two groups. Table 2 shows the number of plants in each group, the mean value in each group for the variables and the statistical significance of the chi-squared statistic. Judging from the fre- quencies of the different HRM practices examined, the first of the groups is the one that can be classed as containing the firms where high-performance HRM practices have been introduced. The second group, meanwhile, is made up of plants that continue to practise tradi- tional methods of personnel management, placing the emphasis on strict control of workers’ actions. HRMgroup is a binary variable that takes a value of 1 when the plant belongs to the first group taken from the cluster analysis, that is, plants that include high-commitment prac- tices in their HRM, and a value of 0 otherwise. Table 2. Association between HRM practices and groups resulting from cluster analysis Variable 1. Promotion 2. Training 3. Grouptrain 4. Wagelevel 5. Plantinc 6. Knowpay 7. Team 8. Rotation 9. Selfins 10. Autonomy 11. Groups 12. Suggestion 13. Meeting 14. Survey 15. Opendoor 16. Selection 17. Security N Mean .67 .80 .07 .42 .12 .25 .47 .47 .90 .25 .39 .57 .59 .21 .19 .67 .80 758 Mean Group 1 .69 .96 .10 .46 .31 .28 .58 .50 .93 .31 .65 .83 .91 .36 .30 .72 .81 415 Mean Group 2 .65 .60 .05 .37 .07 .20 .33 .43 .85 .18 .07 .25 .21 .04 .06 .62 .78 343 Chi-2 p-value .042 .000 .000 .016 .000 .010 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .002 .044 M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 188 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio It can be clearly seen how the first group includes most of the plants where the adoption of the seventeen practices considered is most intense. Moreover, it must also be emphasised that differences between the two groups are always significant, although on two of the variables, Promotion and Security, the difference is not quite as marked as on the rest. These findings coincide reasonably closely with the conclusions drawn from our previous analysis of correlation in the implementation of these practices. OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES It is important to explain the two characteristics of the measurements of performance we have used in this study. First of all, they measure the degree of improvement in the different performance indicators of the plant in the last three years. The different manufacturing perfor- mance dimensions, which are measured in absolute terms, depend largely on the technology being used and type of process being under- taken at the plant. Therefore, it becomes difficult to establish compar- isons when the data are obtained from a group of heterogeneous plants, even when the sector is introduced as a control variable. The other noteworthy characteristic is the subjectivity of the information used. Results of a subjective nature are often used in research on organisations. Some studies have demonstrated a strong relationship between objective and subjective measures of financial performance. This may serve as a justification for the use of this kind of performance (Dess and Robinson, 1984; Venkatraman and Ramanujam, 1987; Powell, 1995). The indicator for efficiency (cost performance) used here is Efficiency; this refers to improvement in the percentage of productive hours in relation to the total number of hours of direct presence of the work- force. It reflects waste and inefficiency in the productive system and identifies unproductive time resulting from organisational problems (lack of material, breakdowns, problems with quality, etc.). The two indicators of improvement in quality performance correspond to a definition of product quality as conformance with specifications and they are defined as the percentage of defective products. Quality1 measures improvement in the percentage of defective finished prod- ucts, that is, the number of defective finished units divided by the total number of finished units manufactured in the plant. Quality2 measures improvement in the percentage of defective unfinished products, that is, it refers to the percentage of defective units that have been detect- ed in the intermediate stages of the manufacturing process, and not at the end of it. We also use two indicators for time performance. Time1 indicates the improvement in the percentage of delivery dates fulfilled, which is a typical measurement of punctuality, and considered a basic aspect of customer service. Time2 indicates improvement in the reduction of the time taken from the moment the material is received to the moment the product is delivered to the customer. This serves as an indicator of pro- cess speed (lead time). The five performance variables are discrete variables. They take a value of 0 for plants whose manufacturing results have not improved M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 189 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance in the last three years, 1 for those whose results have improved slight- ly and 2 for those whose results have improved greatly. CONTROL VARIABLES The first control variable is the size of the plant, measured by the nat- ural logarithm of the number of employees that work in the factory (Lnsize). This is a common means of measuring establishment size. Technology has great significance in any attempt to explain the opera- tional results achieved by the plant. Technical features are measured by the variable Automation, which aims to capture the degree of automation in the plant. The questionnaire enquired after four techni- cal features that were felt to be directly related to the degree of automation: namely, robots or programmable automatons, automatic materials storage and retrieval systems, computer integrated manu- facturing and computer networks for the processing of the plant’s pro- duction data. By applying factor analysis to these four variables, a sin- gle factor is obtained with an eigenvalue greater than 1, which accounts for just over 47% of the variance. The factor loadings on these variables are greater than .44. Automation is defined as the average of the four variables mentioned. Competitive pressure can force firms into striving to improve opera- tional performance if they wish to survive in the market or maintain and improve their financial results. The level of competition being faced by the firm is captured by the variable Competition. This uses a scale of 1 to 5 to assess the evolution of competition levels over the last three years in the sector in which the plant operates. A score of 1 on this scale indicates a large decrease, whereas a score of 5 represents a large increase. Qualassur is a binary variable that assesses whether the plant has set up a quality assurance system. It reveals whether the factory is follow- ing a quality strategy by establishing organisational routines aimed at preventing defective products from reaching the customer. Finally, Strategy is a variable defining the relative importance attached by the management of the plant to the question of quality in compari- son to cost; when both quality and cost are given the same importance Strategy takes a value of 100. Table 3 shows the average and standard deviation of the dependent variables, control variables and HRMgroup and HRMindex. It also shows the correlation between HRMgroup, HRMindex, performance variables and control variables. This table enables us to see how the plants included in the sample remain at intermediate levels of automation, though slightly below the exact mid-point. However, the plants that participated in the study claimed that the competition they had to face had increased over the three years previous to the interview. It is also worth mentioning the effort that is going into increasing quality assurance at the plants, since 71% of the manufacturers claim to have set up systems to deal with this. As was to be expected, the vast majority of the plants report improve- ments in the different plant performance areas considered, that is, effi- ciency in the use of resources, quality, and the speed at which they M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 190 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio Mean 4.88 4.18 3.48 .71 161.79 .81 .82 .83 .90 1.01 .44 7.86 S.D.† .85 2.36 .89 .45 85.59 .71 .70 .70 .72 .75 .50 2.48 1 .318*** -.036 .280*** .012 .103** .095** .109*** .065 .110*** .226*** .287*** 2 .041 .296*** .081** .138*** .164*** .211*** .126*** .255*** .293*** .350*** 3 .011 -.004 .027 .053 .016 -.007 .061 .004 -.033 4 .059 .141*** .217*** .208*** .138*** .193*** .314*** .347*** 5 -.028 .006 .006 -.005 -.002 .045 -.034 6 .405*** .457*** .506*** .288*** .114*** .127*** 7 .797*** .491*** .286*** .197*** .208*** 8 .540*** .372*** .183*** .214*** 9 .356*** .200*** .150*** 10 .207*** .217*** 11 .747*** Variable 1. Lnsize 2. Automation 3. Competition 4. Qualassur 5. Strategy 6. Efficiency 7. Quality1 8. Quality2 9. Time1 10. Time2 11. HRMgroup 12. HRMindex Table 3. Mean, standard deviation, and correlations between results variables, control variables, HRMgroup and HRMindex (N = 758) †: standard deviation; ***: p<.01; **: p<.05; *: p<.10. complete the different stages in the productive cycle. Analysis of the correlation matrix brings us to the conclusion that no incompatibilities are present in the performance attaining processes in the different areas of operations management at the plant. Plants that have improved their performance in one of the three areas considered are more likely also to have improved in the remaining areas. Table 3 also offers a simple profile of the plants that have opted to introduce high-commitment. The larger the size of the plant, the greater the likelihood of its introducing this type of practices. Likewise, in the area of technology, there is clear evidence to show that these tend to be plants with more highly automated processes, and where it will be more usual to find quality assurance schemes in progress. ESTIMATION FRAMEWORK Given the nature of our dependent variables, the question of whether HRM leads to differences in operational results will be tested by estimat- ing ordered probit models (Maddala, 1983). For each dependent variable three different models are constructed. The first of these includes only control variables, the second incorporates the HRMgroup variable and its interaction with Strategy and the third substitutes HRMgroup with the HRMindex variable, which is our other measurement of the prevalence of high-performance HRM practices, also including the interaction term. To deal with the multicollinearity problems of the multiplicative interaction terms we have made a linear transformation known as “centering”, in which the mean value for a variable is subtracted from each score (Mac- Duffie, 1995). By using two variables to measure the adoption of high-per- formance practices, we aim to obtain a clearer picture of the impact that such practices have on plant performance. Although in our estimations we control by activity sector through eleven dummy variables, the coeffi- cients do not appear in the corresponding tables. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 191 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance RESULTS Tables 4, 5 and 6 show results for the ordered probit models estimat- ed to examine the determinants of plant performance. Table 4 is an analysis of the efficiency of the production system, Table 5 deals with quality and Table 6 with time-related performance. EFFICIENCY Table 4 shows the results of the ordered probit models estimated for improvement in efficiency, measured in terms of changes in the pro- portion of productive hours over the total number of hours of direct labour. Though the model proves significant, results are not entirely satisfactory, owing to the low pseudo-R2 value. Out of all the control variables included, both the level of automation and the installation of quality assurance systems register coefficients significantly distinct from 0. These, therefore, are factors that enhance the capacity of a manufacturing plant to improve the efficiency of its production processes. The decrease in significance of the Qualassur variable in the second and third models was to be expected, in view of its strong correlation with HRMgroup and HRMindex. In the second model it can be seen how the fact of belonging to the high-commitment HRM practitioners group enhances a factory’s efficiency results, though not to a significant degree. Results obtained on model 3, in contrast, show that if the level of application is measured in terms of the intensity of practices adopted (HRMindex) we see the emergence Table 4. Ordered probit analysis for efficiency performance Constant Lnsize Automation Competition Qualassur Strategy HRMgroup HRMgroup × Strategy HRMindex HRMindex × Strategy Pseudo-R2 Chi-square Log L N b† -.8279** .0989 .0489** .0235 .2324** -.0244 6.7 40.16*** -661.27 662 s.e.‡ .403 .064 .020 .051 .109 .056 b -.8152** .0860 .0448** .0217 .2106* -.0131 .1338 -.0021* 7.7 45.97*** -658.36 662 s.e. .4034 .065 .020 .051 .113 .057 .099 .001 b -.9993** .0829 .0432** .0255 .1955* -.0149 .0357* .0004 7.7 45.87*** -658.41 662 s.e. .409 .066 .020 .051 .113 .058 .021 .001 †: parameter estimate; ‡: standard error; ***: p<.01; **: p<.05; *: p<.10. Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 192 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio of a positive and significant impact on improvements in efficiency. The interaction term is significant only in model 2, although not with the expected sign. For the case in hand, therefore, we are unable to draw any definite conclusions regarding the relationships analysed. QUALITY Table 5 shows the results of the ordered probit models estimated for the two variables that capture the plants’ quality performance. The first three models refer to Quality1, i.e., changes in the percentage of prod- uct defects, while the remaining three refer to Quality2, i.e., changes in the percentage of processing defects. All six models are statistically significant and give a substantially better overall impression than those obtained when attempting to explain manufacturing efficiency. As in the previous table, both the level of automation and the installa- tion of quality systems have a strong influence on the firm’s progress in the pursuit of quality. The two factors have a similar type of effect on the firm’s capacity to improve the quality of its products. In the case of Quality1, however, a significant impact is also brought about by the evolution of the firm’s competitive position in the market. It would appear that plants feeling themselves exposed to increasing competi- tion are forced to improve the quality of the final products that they take to market. For both product and processing defect rates, it is apparent that HRM practices being implemented help to explain the evolution of the plant’s quality performance. In the case in hand, results remain conclusive whatever method is used to measure the implementation of high-com- mitment practices. The explanatory capacity of the two models increases by introducing the HRMgroup variable; a similar effect also takes place with the HRMindex variable. The implementation of high- commitment HRM practices in a factory has a beneficial effect on reducing the defect rate. However, the interaction terms are significant in none of the models; therefore, the existence of complementarities between strategy and the adoption of HRM practices is disregarded in explaining quality performance. TIME-BASED PERFORMANCE Table 6 shows the results of the ordered probit models estimated to explain trends over the last three years in the two indicators used to evaluate speed of action, which are the percentage of on-time deliver- ies and the time that elapses between receiving the materials and delivering to the client. It can be seen that all six models are significant and help to explain the variables being analysed. Once again we find that quality assurance systems and high levels of automation in product processing help firms to achieve improvements in time-based performances. In the case of Time2 it is also possible to see the effect of competition on the results obtained by the firms in this respect. Plants that come under higher levels of competitive pressure make a greater effort to reduce the time that elapses between receiv- M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 193 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance T a b le 5 . O rd er ed p ro bi t a na ly si s fo r qu al ity p er fo rm an ce C o n st a n t L n si ze A u to m a tio n C o m p e tit io n Q u a la ss u r S tr a te g y H R M g ro u p H R M g ro u p × S tr a te g y H R M in d e x H R M in d e x × S tr a te g y P se u d o -R 2 C h i- sq u a re L o g L N b † -. 5 3 8 1 .0 0 6 8 .0 6 1 4 ** * .0 9 8 9 * .4 7 6 1 ** * -. 0 2 7 6 1 2 .7 7 6 .4 3 ** * -6 2 5 .5 0 6 5 4 s. e .‡ .3 5 7 .0 5 9 .0 2 1 .0 5 1 .1 0 8 .0 5 4 b -. 5 9 2 4 * -. 0 1 9 6 .0 5 11 ** .1 0 3 6 * .4 1 8 2 ** * -. 0 1 5 4 .3 0 2 3 ** * -. 0 0 0 1 1 4 .1 8 5 .8 3 ** * -6 2 0 .8 0 6 5 4 s. e . .3 5 7 .0 6 0 .0 2 1 .0 5 1 .1 11 .0 5 5 .0 9 9 .0 0 1 b -. 8 7 7 9 ** -. 0 3 1 6 .0 4 5 8 ** .1 0 8 2 ** .4 1 2 4 ** * -. 0 1 7 2 .0 6 9 4 ** * -. 0 0 0 1 1 4 .4 8 7 .8 3 ** * -6 1 9 .8 0 6 5 4 s. e . .3 5 9 .0 6 0 .0 2 1 .0 5 1 .1 11 .0 5 4 .0 2 1 .0 0 1 † : p a ra m e te r e st im a te ; ‡ : st a n d a rd e rr o r; * ** : p < .0 1 ; ** : p < .0 5 ; *: p < .1 0 . M o d e l 1 M o d e l 2 M o d e l 3 b -. 5 1 4 7 .0 5 3 8 .0 8 7 0 ** * .0 4 0 0 .4 3 0 9 ** * -. 0 2 3 8 1 2 .6 7 6 .8 1 ** * -6 3 1 .0 5 6 5 9 s. e . .3 6 4 .0 6 1 .0 2 1 .0 5 0 .1 0 9 .0 5 6 b -. 5 3 4 8 .0 4 2 9 9 .0 7 9 9 ** * .0 4 2 5 .3 8 5 5 ** * -. 0 1 3 7 .2 2 3 0 ** -. 0 0 0 2 1 3 .4 8 2 .0 5 ** * -6 2 8 .4 3 6 5 9 s. e . .3 6 5 .0 6 1 .0 2 1 .0 5 0 .1 11 .0 5 7 .0 9 9 .0 0 1 b -. 8 2 6 7 ** .0 3 0 0 .0 7 2 9 ** * .0 4 9 2 .3 6 6 2 ** * -. 0 1 4 3 .0 6 6 5 ** * -. 0 0 0 1 1 4 .2 8 7 .3 2 ** * -6 3 5 .0 6 6 5 9 s. e . .3 6 8 .0 6 1 .0 2 1 .0 5 0 .1 11 .0 5 6 .0 2 1 .0 0 1 M o d e l 1 M o d e l 2 M o d e l 3 Q u a lit y1 Q u a lit y2 M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 194 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio T a b le 6 . O rd er ed p ro bi t a na ly si s fo r tim e- ba se d pe rfo rm an ce C o n st a n t L n si ze A u to m a tio n C o m p e tit io n Q u a la ss u r S tr a te g y H R M g ro u p H R M g ro u p × S tr a te g y H R M in d e x H R M in d e x × S tr a te g y P se u d o -R 2 C h i- sq u a re L o g L N b † -. 2 0 6 6 .0 3 5 6 .0 5 9 2 ** * .0 2 3 2 .3 11 2 ** * .0 0 4 7 9 .3 5 7 .6 0 ** * -6 8 0 .6 2 6 7 5 s. e .‡ .3 6 6 .0 6 0 .0 2 0 .0 4 9 .1 0 5 .0 5 3 b -. 2 4 8 7 -. 0 1 4 6 .0 4 6 3 6 ** .0 2 8 7 .2 3 7 9 ** .0 1 8 4 .3 8 6 0 ** * -. 0 0 0 8 1 0 .7 7 4 .3 0 ** * -6 7 2 .2 7 6 7 5 s. e . .3 7 1 .0 6 1 .0 2 0 .0 5 0 .1 0 6 .0 5 5 .0 9 6 .0 0 1 b -. 4 8 1 3 -. 0 1 0 5 .0 4 7 8 ** .0 2 9 1 .2 5 5 4 ** .0 1 8 3 .0 5 7 8 ** * .0 0 0 2 11 .8 6 6 .8 3 ** * -6 7 6 .0 0 6 7 5 s. e . .3 7 8 .0 6 1 .0 2 0 .0 5 0 .1 0 6 .0 5 5 .0 2 0 .0 0 0 2 † : p a ra m e te r e st im a te ; ‡ : st a n d a rd e rr o r; * ** : p < .0 1 ; ** : p < .0 5 ; *: p < .1 0 . M o d e l 1 M o d e l 2 M o d e l 3 b -. 4 5 4 0 -. 0 0 2 9 .1 1 8 8 ** * .0 9 2 7 * .3 4 0 6 ** * -. 0 1 3 5 11 .8 1 0 0 .2 6 ** * -7 0 1 .9 0 7 0 2 s. e . .3 5 3 .0 5 7 .0 2 1 .0 4 9 .1 0 2 .0 4 9 b -. 4 9 9 0 .0 1 4 9 .1 0 8 4 ** * .0 9 6 7 * .2 7 4 3 ** * -. 0 0 0 8 .3 1 8 7 ** * .0 0 0 1 1 2 .9 11 1 .7 4 ** * -6 9 6 .1 6 7 0 2 s. e . .3 5 5 .0 5 7 .0 2 1 .0 5 0 .1 0 3 .0 5 0 .0 9 4 .0 0 1 b -. 7 4 4 2 ** -. 0 2 1 9 .1 0 5 4 ** * .1 0 0 2 ** .2 8 0 7 ** * -. 0 0 9 2 .0 6 0 8 ** * -. 0 0 0 1 1 3 .1 1 0 9 .8 5 ** * -6 9 7 .1 0 7 0 2 s. e . .3 6 6 .0 5 8 .0 2 1 .0 5 0 .1 0 3 .0 5 0 .0 2 0 .0 0 0 2 M o d e l 1 M o d e l 2 M o d e l 3 T im e 1 T im e 2 M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 195 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance ing materials at the start of the production cycle and the moment when the product finally reaches the client, irrespective of whether or not they accompany this with action in the technological area. The conclusion that emerges yet again is that the way workers are man- aged has its effect on a plant’s performance. The impact of HRMgroup and HRMindex on both dependent variables is highly significant and, as with the quality results, the explanatory capacity of the models increases noticeably with the introduction of these variables. The implementation of innovative practices in the area of HRM leads not only to an increase in the percentage of on-time deliveries but also to a reduction of the amount of time the firm takes to manufacture the product and deliver it to the client. Again, the interaction terms do not show any significant coefficient in the different models estimated. CONCLUSIONS This study enables us to confirm that the way in which human resources are managed influences a company’s performance. Gener- ally speaking, our findings support the hypothesis that by using high- performance HRM systems, organisations can improve their chances of reaching objectives as long as they do not lose sight of other aspects, mainly of a technological nature, the explanatory capacity of which is considerable. These findings coincide largely with those of researchers into this issue in other contexts. It can not be said, however, that the impact of high-commitment HRM practices used is significant in all of the three measurements of manu- facturing performance analysed. When it comes to efficiency, for example, we can not be absolutely certain that the development of high-performance HRM practices in the plant noticeably increases the likelihood of improvements, since results differ depending on how the implementation of such practices is measured. In the case of quality and time-based performance, however, there is conclusive evidence that high-commitment work practices can bring about substantial improvements in company performance. Our findings also show that the strategy of the firm does not play any intermediate role between high-commitment management and perfor- mance. The positive effects of adopting high-performance practices for companies are equally significant both for firms that base their strate- gy on cost and for companies that give priority to quality in managing the factory. The recommendations for managers that derive from our results are straightforward. Our findings encourage managers strongly to imple- ment in their firms high-commitment practices in their management of human resources. These practices elicit behaviours and develop com- petencies in employees in such a way that they give rise to a series of benefits in terms of better outcomes, both in quality and time. One of the limitations of this study is a result of the context in which the empirical analysis was carried out. The fact that we have focused on the manufacturing industry, with the wide range of activities which that M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 196 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio implies, and have concentrated on only one group of employees, albeit the largest, means that our conclusions can not be made applicable to all professions and sectors. One of the shortcomings of this study is that cross section analysis, whilst revealing the type of association that exists between variables, does not provide any clear account of the causal relationships. It is not absolutely clear from the results of the study whether there is a causal relationship or a concomitant one. This issue might, therefore, be worthwhile exploring in any possible future investigation using panel data. In subsequent studies we intend to look further other issues that have not been dealt with in this one. One of these is the possibility of a com- plementary relationship between the practices comprised in high-com- mitment management. Although we have looked on the system as a whole and not on individual practices, it is worth looking into the ques- tion of how these practices are interrelated and in what way this affects company performance. This analysis could reveal the importance of internal consistency in the field of personnel management. We also consider interesting to be able to analyse more deeply the use of other operational indicators different from those used in this article. In this effort a balanced scorecard approach would be extremely use- ful in determining the effect of high-commitment management on the performance of the factory. It will also be necessary to ascertain how far HRM practices comple- ment other areas of plant management different from strategy. While our findings support the theory of the universal impact of these prac- tices and rejects the contingency hypothesis on strategy, it remains to be seen whether the extent of the positive effect of high-commitment management depends on other decisions taken in the factory. The degree to which HRM complements strategy and technology will require special attention. Endnote. The authors would like to thank Fundación BBVA, Government of Navarre and the Spanish Ministry of Education (PB 98-0550) for financial support. Alberto Bayo-Moriones is a lecturer of Organization and Human Resource Manage- ment at Universidad Pública de Navarra, where he earned his Ph.D. His main research interests are payment by results and high-commitment management systems. Other research interests include the impact of HRM practices on performance and the HRM implications of quality and operations management. Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio is a professor of Organization and Operations Manage- ment at Universidad Pública de Navarra. He received his Ph.D. from Universidad Públi- ca de Navarra. His research interests are Quality Management, Human Resource Man- agement and its relationship. Other research interests include innovation management, cooperation and other issues in Operations Management. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 197 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance ■ Arthur, J. B. 1992 The Link between Business Strategy and Industrial Relations Systems in American Steel Minimills, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 45(3): 488-506. ■ Arthur, J. B. 1994 Effects of Human Resource Systems on Manufacturing Performance and Turnover, Academy of Management Journal, 37(3): 670-687. ■ Baird, L., and I. Meshoulam 1988 Managing Two Fits of Strategic Human Resource Management, Academy of Management Review, 13(1): 116-128. ■ Bartel, A. P. 1994 Productivity Gains from the Implemen- tation of Employee Training Programs, Industrial Relations, 33(4): 411-425. ■ Becker, B., and B. Gerhart 1996 The Impact of Human Resource Man- agement on Organizational Perfor- mance: Progress and Prospects, Academy of Management Journal, 39(4): 779-801. ■ Becker, B. E., and M. A. Huselid 1998 High Performance Work Systems and Firm Performance: A Synthesis of Research and Managerial Implications, in G. Ferris (Ed.), Research in Person- nel and Human Resources Manage- ment, Vol. 16, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 53-101. ■ Black, S. E., and L. M. Lynch 2000 What’s Driving the New Economy: The Benefits of Workplace Innovation, NBER Working Paper Series, no. 7479, Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research. ■ Black, S. E., and L. M. Lynch 2001 How to Compete: The Impact of Work- place Practices and Information Tech- nology on Productivity, Review of Eco- nomics and Statistics, 83(3): 434-445. ■ Cappelli, P., and D. Neumark 2001 Do “High Performance” Work Practices Improve Establishment-Level Out- comes?, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 54(4): 737-775 ■ Corbett, C., and L. Van Wassenhove 1993 Trade-offs? What Trade-offs? Compe- tence and Competitiveness in Manu- facturing Strategy, California Manage- ment Review, 35(4): 107-122. ■ Delaney, J. T., and M. A. Huselid 1996 The Impact of Human Resource Man- agement Practices on Perceptions of Organizational Performance, Academy of Management Journal, 39(4): 949-969. ■ Dess, G. G., and R. B. Robinson, Jr. 1984 Measuring Organisational Performance in the Absence of Objective Measures: The Case of the Privately-held Firm and Conglomerate Business Unit, Strategic Management Journal, 5(3): 265-273. ■ Dyer, L., and T. Reeves 1995 Human Resource Strategies and Firm Performance: What Do We Know and Where Do We Need to Go?, Interna- tional Journal of Human Resource Management, 6(3): 656-670. ■ Fey, C. F., I. Björkman, and A. Pavlovskaya 2000 The Effect of Human Resource Manage- ment Practices on Firm Performance in Russia, International Journal of Human Resource Management, 11(1): 1-18. ■ Filippini R., C. Forza, and A. Vinelli 1998 Trade-off and Compatibility between Performance: Definitions and Empirical Evidence, International Journal of Pro- duction Research, 36(12): 3379-3406. ■ Guest, D. E. 1997 Human Resource Management and Performance: A Review and Research Agenda, International Journal of Human Resource Management, 8(3): 263-276. ■ Harel, G. H., and S. S. Tzafrir 1999 The Effect of Human Resource Man- agement Practices on the Perceptions of Organizational and Market Perfor- mance of the Firm, Human Resource Management, 38(3): 185-200. ■ Holzer, H. J. 1987 Hiring Procedures in the Firm: Their Economic Determinants and Out- comes, in M. M. Kleiner, R. N. Block, M. Roomkin and S. W. Salsburg (Eds.), Human Resources and the Perfor- mance of the Firm, Madison, WI: Industrial Relations Research Associa- tion, 243-274. ■ Hoque, K. 1999 Human Resource Management and Performance in the UK Hotel Industry, British Journal of Industrial Relations, 37(3): 419-443. ■ Huselid, M. A. 1995 The Impact of Human Resource Man- agement Practices on Turnover, Pro- ductivity, and Corporate Financial Per- formance, Academy of Management Journal, 38(3): 635-672. ■ Huselid, M. A., and B. E. Becker 1996 Methodological Issues in Cross-Sec- tional and Panel Estimates of the Human Resource-Firm Performance Link, Industrial Relations, 35(3): 400- 422. ■ Ichniowski, C. 1990 Human Resource Management Sys- tems and the Performance of U.S. Manufacturing Businesses, NBER Working Paper Series, no. 3449, Cam- bridge, MA: National Bureau of Eco- nomic Research. ■ Ichniowski, C., and K. Shaw 1999 The Effects of Human Resource Man- agement Systems on Economic Perfor- mance: An International Comparison of U.S. and Japanese Plants, Manage- ment Science, 45(5): 704-721. REFERENCES http://papers.nber.org/papers.html http://papers.nber.org/papers.html M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 198 Alberto Bayo-Moriones and Javier Merino-Díaz de Cerio ■ Ichniowski, C., K. Shaw, and G. Prennushi 1997 The Effects of Human Resource Man- agement Practices on Productivity: A Study of Steel Finishing Lines, Ameri- can Economic Review, 87(3): 291-313. ■ Ichniowski, C., T. A. Kochan, D. Levine, C. Olson, and G. Strauss 1996 What Works at Work: Overview and Assessment, Industrial Relations, 35(3): 299-333. ■ Kalleberg, A. L., and J. W. Moody 1994 Human Resource Management and Organizational Performance, American Behavioral Scientist, 37(7): 948-962. ■ Kaplan, R. S., and D. P. Norton 1992 The Balanced Scorecard—Measures that Drive Performance, Harvard Busi- ness Review, 70(1): 71-79. ■ Katz, H. C., T. A. Kochan, and K. R. Gobeille 1983 Industrial Relations Performance, Eco- nomic Performance, and QWL Pro- grams: An Interplant Analysis, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 37(1): 3-17. ■ Liouville, J., and M. Bayad 1998 Human Resource Management and Performances: Proposition and Test of a Causal Model, Human Systems Man- agement, 17(3): 183-192. ■ MacDuffie J. P. 1995 Human Resource Bundles and Manu- facturing Performance: Organizational Logic and Flexible Production Systems in the World Auto Industry, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 48(2): 197-221. ■ Maddala, G. S. 1983 Limited-Dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ■ McNabb, R., and K. Whitfield 1999 The Distribution of Employee Participa- tion Schemes at the Workplace, Inter- national Journal of Human Resource Management, 10(1): 122-136. ■ Miles, R., and C. Snow 1984 Designing Strategic Human Resource Management Systems, Organizational Dynamics, 13(1): 36-52. ■ Morishima, M. 1991 Information Sharing and Firm Perfor- mance in Japan, Industrial Relations, 30(1): 37-61. ■ Neely, A., M. Gregory, and K. Platts 1995 Performance Measurement System Design: A Literature Review and Research Agenda, International Jour- nal of Operations & Production Man- agement, 15(4): 80-116. ■ Osterman, P. 1994 How Common is Workplace Transforma- tion and Who Adopts It?, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 47(2): 173-188. ■ Pil, F. K., and J. P. MacDuffie 1996 The Adoption of High-Involvement Work Practices, Industrial Relations, 35(3): 423-455. ■ Porter, M. E. 1980 Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors, New York: Free Press. ■ Powell, T. C. 1995 Total Quality Management as Competi- tive Advantage: A Review and Empiri- cal Study, Strategic Management Jour- nal, 16(1): 15-37. ■ Schuler, R. S., and S. E. Jackson 1987 Linking Competitive Strategies with Human Resource Management Prac- tices, Academy of Management Execu- tive, 1(3): 207-219. ■ Tichy, N. M., C. J. Fombrun, and M. A. Devanna 1982 Strategic Human Resource Manage- ment, Sloan Management Review, 23(2): 47-61. ■ Venkatraman, N., and V. Ramanujam 1986 Measurement of Business Perfor- mance in Strategy Research: A Com- parison of Approaches, Academy of Management Review, 11(4): 801-814. ■ Venkatraman, N., and V. Ramanujam 1987 Measurement of Business Economic Performance: An Examination of Method Convergence, Journal of Man- agement, 13(1): 109-122. ■ Weitzman, M. L., and D. L. Kruse 1990 Profit Sharing and Productivity, in A. S. Blinder (Ed.), Paying for Productivity: A Look at the Evidence, Washington DC: The Brookings Institution, 95-140. ■ Whitfield K., and M. Poole 1997 Organizing Employment for High Per- formance: Theories, Evidence and Poli- cy, Organization Studies, 18(5): 745-764. ■ Wood, S., and M. T. Albanese 1995 Can We Speak of a High Commitment Management on the Shop Floor?, Journal of Management Studies, 32(2): 215-247. ■ Wood, S., and L. de Menezes 1998 High Commitment Management in the U.K.: Evidence from the Workplace Industrial Relations Survey, and Employ- ers’ Manpower and Skills Practices Sur- vey, Human Relations, 51(4): 485-515. ■ Wright, P. M., and G. C. McMahan 1992 Theoretical Perspectives for Strategic Human Resource Management, Jour- nal of Management, 18(2): 295-320. ■ Wright, P. M., G. C. McMahan, and A. McWilliams 1994 Human Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage: A Resource- Based Perspective, International Jour- nal of Human Resource Management, 5(2): 301-326. ■ Wright, P. M., and W. S. Sherman 1999 Failing to Find Fit in Strategic Human Resource Management: Theoretical and Empirical Problems, in P. M. Wright, L. D. Dyer, J. W. Boudreau and G. T. Milkovich (Eds.), Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management, supplement 4, Stamford, CT: JAI Press, 53-74. M@n@gement, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, 175-199 199 Human Resource Management, Strategy, and Operational Performance ■ Youndt, M. A., S. A. Snell, J. W. Dean, Jr., and D. P. Lepak 1996 Human Resource Management, Manu- facturing Strategy, and Firm Perfor- mance, Academy of Management Jour- nal, 39(4): 836-866.