Jean Frantz Ricardeau Registre and Tania Saba
This paper aims to elucidate the keys transformations of human resources (HR) tasks amid the age of artificial intelligence (AI).
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to elucidate the keys transformations of human resources (HR) tasks amid the age of artificial intelligence (AI).
Design/methodology/approach
This paper synthesizes recent theoretical and empirical research on the topic of AI and human resource management to establish a typology of AI-based HR tasks.
Findings
HR jobs will revolve around three types of tasks in the age of AI: mechanical, thinking and feeling.
Originality/value
AI radically changes HR function and it becomes essential for organizations to clearly define the purpose of using AI, its role and the context of its use in tasks. Strategic value of the HR function will lie in its future reorientation toward feeling tasks. HR managers need to possess the knowledge, skills and abilities to adapt to these tasks and ensure the responsible use of AI.
Details
Keywords
Tania Saba, Joana Vassilopoulou, Eddy Ng and Mustafa Ozbilgin
Marie-Eve Dufour, Tania Saba and Felix Ballesteros Leiva
In the context of population aging, retirement has become a central issue in academic, professional and government discourse. A consensus can be seen to be emerging around the…
Abstract
Purpose
In the context of population aging, retirement has become a central issue in academic, professional and government discourse. A consensus can be seen to be emerging around the idea of postponing retirement in favor of promoting active aging. From this perspective, the purpose of this study, using work-role attachment theory and met expectations theory, is to focus on the pre-retirement period and aims to better understand how certain individual factors and expectations explain the planned age of retirement.
Design/methodology/approach
An online survey was administered in 2015 to employees aged 45 and over working at a Canadian firm in the high-technology sector.
Findings
The results show that career commitment, attachment to work and expectations relating to workplace adjustments prior to retirement were positively associated with planned retirement age, whereas expectations relating to professional development showed a negative association with this variable.
Practical implications
This study fits into a line of research focusing on the end-of-career period and sheds light on the decision to retire by looking closely at the impact of employment conditions and human resource management practices on this decision. In a labor market context marked by high numbers of workers aged 55 and older, combined with the increasingly critical need for skilled labor and considering the expectations of workers leading up to their retirement could help to better plan these workers' end-of-career period.
Originality/value
Many studies have examined the characteristics of retirees after retirement. The authors’ study is one of the few that examines the aspirations of workers between the ages of 45 and 55 who are still employed but are beginning to consider their retirement plans, including the decision to continue working longer. Its originality also lies in combining work-role attachment theory and met expectations theory.
Details
Keywords
Tania Saba, Mustafa Ozbilgin, Eddy Ng and Gaëlle Cachat-Rosset
Adnane Belout, Shimon L. Dolan and Tania Saba
Focuses on new trends that have been identified for Canadian human resources (HR): the emergence of new roles for HR; new forms of partnerships, particularly in the…
Abstract
Focuses on new trends that have been identified for Canadian human resources (HR): the emergence of new roles for HR; new forms of partnerships, particularly in the labor‐management relations; globalizations in daily HR operations; work life issues; programs to tackle the shifting demographics; pressure to effect downsizing and cope with mergers and acquisitions; and pressures to demonstrate its usefulness to the organisation.
Details
Keywords
Victor Y. Haines and Tania Saba
Because the low participation rate of women in international management is problematic, this study seeks to identify which international mobility policies and practices appear to…
Abstract
Because the low participation rate of women in international management is problematic, this study seeks to identify which international mobility policies and practices appear to be most responsive to the needs of women. Based upon 337 responses to a questionnaire survey, the results show significant gender differences on five career‐related international mobility policies and practices. While career support has been recognized as an important condition of expatriate success, the study results suggest that this form of support is critical for encouraging women to accept international assignments. No significant gender differences were found on family‐supportive international mobility policies and practices. Financial support received generally high importance ratings by both women and men.
Details
Keywords
Victor Y. Haines, Tania Saba and Evelyne Choquette
This study aims to explore how the motivational construct of intrinsic motivation for an international assignment relates to variables of interest in international expatriation…
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to explore how the motivational construct of intrinsic motivation for an international assignment relates to variables of interest in international expatriation research.
Design/methodology/approach
Questionnaire data from 331 employed business school alumni of a high‐ranking Canadian MBA program was analyzed. The sample consisted of respondents from a wide variety of industries and occupations, with more than half of them in marketing, administration or engineering.
Findings
Higher intrinsic motivation for an international assignment was associated with greater willingness to accept an international assignment and to communicate in a foreign language. Externally driven motivation for an international assignment was associated with perceiving more difficulties associated with an international assignment. Intrinsic and extrinsic motivations for an international assignment were, however, associated with comparable reactions to organizational support.
Originality/value
Drawing from self‐determination theory, this study explores the distinction between authentic versus externally controlled motivations for an international assignment. It underscores the need to pay more attention to motivational constructs in selecting, coaching, and training individuals for international expatriation assignments. It extends a rich tradition of research in the area of motivation to the international assignment arena.
Details
Keywords
Victor Y. Haines and Tania Saba
This study seeks to examine the identity‐relevant stress proposition according to which events occurring in highly‐salient identity domains have a greater impact on psychological…
Abstract
Purpose
This study seeks to examine the identity‐relevant stress proposition according to which events occurring in highly‐salient identity domains have a greater impact on psychological well‐being than events occurring in less salient identity domains. The aim of the study is to integrate identity theory into occupational stress research by investigating the proposition that the lack of verification of a salient role identity will be associated with higher levels of emotional exhaustion.
Design/methodology/approach
Using a questionnaire methodology, data were obtained from full‐time, permanent, human resource professionals from multiple organizations.
Findings
As predicted, the lack of verification that occurs when an employer denies a professional the opportunity to engage in the responsibilities associated with a salient role was associated with more emotional exhaustion. Moreover, in a way consistent with identity theory, both role prestige and affective commitment to the profession moderated this relationship, providing additional support for the identity‐relevant stress proposition.
Originality/value
Identity theory offers a valuable perspective for work stress research, one that appears to be especially applicable to highly professionalized occupations.
Details
Keywords
Victor Y. Haines, Salima Hamouche and Tania Saba
In response to the conclusions of a meta-analysis of career success studies (Ng et al., 2005), the purpose of this paper is to expand the range of variables being examined as…
Abstract
Purpose
In response to the conclusions of a meta-analysis of career success studies (Ng et al., 2005), the purpose of this paper is to expand the range of variables being examined as predictors of career success by weaving the person-organization fit and external marketability perspectives into current career success frameworks.
Design/methodology/approach
A survey was administered in partnership with an association of human resource professionals located in Canada. The questionnaire was transmitted electronically to human resource professionals. The final sample included 546 full-time, permanent, human resource professionals from multiple organizations.
Findings
Confirmatory factor analysis supported the measurement model. In the final structural model, external marketability exerted a significant direct effect on career success. Person-organization fit was strongly associated with organizational sponsorship. Organizational sponsorship, in turn, exerted a significant effect on subjective career success.
Originality/value
This study contrasted and tested two theoretical perspectives on career success. The mediated indirect association between person-organization fit and career success provided support for the rationale of the sponsored mobility model of social advancement. The direct association between external marketability and career success suggests that success can be achieved even without organizational sponsorship on the basis of expressions of one’s human capital.
Details
Keywords
Stéphane Brutus and Elizabeth F. Cabrera
This study investigates the relationship between personal values and feedback‐seeking behaviors. Feedbackseeking behaviors, or the way by which individuals in organizations…
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between personal values and feedback‐seeking behaviors. Feedbackseeking behaviors, or the way by which individuals in organizations actively seek information about their performance, has recently become an important research topic in the management literature. However, the large majority of this research has been conducted in the United States. This study aims to test the relationships between the personal values of a multinational sample and feedback‐seeking behaviors. An integrated set of hypotheses regarding the influence of values on feedback seeking are outlined and tested empirically using samples from Canada, China, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United States. As predicted, results indicate that significant aspects of feedback seeking were related to personal values. The perceived cost of feedback seeking, the clarity of the feedback from others, and the use of feedback‐seeking behaviors were all linked to personal values. The study also uncovered substantial variations in feedback‐seeking behaviors across nations. The implications of these findings for research on feedback‐seeking behaviors and for feedback practices are discussed.