Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- 1 What Works at Work: Overview and Assessment
- 2 Diffusion and Performance of Modular Production in the U.S. Apparel Industry
- 3 Modular Production: Improving Performance in the Apparel Industry
- 4 The Participatory Bureaucracy: A Structural Explanation for the Effects of Group-Based Employee Participation Programs on Productivity in the Machined Products Sector
- 5 Methodological Issues in Cross-sectional and Panel Estimates of the Link between Human Resource Strategies and Firm Performance
- 6 The Adoption of High-Involvement Work Practices
- 7 The Effects of Total Quality Management on Corporate Performance: An Empirical Investigation
- 8 Implementing Effective Total Quality Management Programs and Financial Performance: A Synthesis of Evidence from Quality Award Winners
- 9 Public Policy Implications
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- 1 What Works at Work: Overview and Assessment
- 2 Diffusion and Performance of Modular Production in the U.S. Apparel Industry
- 3 Modular Production: Improving Performance in the Apparel Industry
- 4 The Participatory Bureaucracy: A Structural Explanation for the Effects of Group-Based Employee Participation Programs on Productivity in the Machined Products Sector
- 5 Methodological Issues in Cross-sectional and Panel Estimates of the Link between Human Resource Strategies and Firm Performance
- 6 The Adoption of High-Involvement Work Practices
- 7 The Effects of Total Quality Management on Corporate Performance: An Empirical Investigation
- 8 Implementing Effective Total Quality Management Programs and Financial Performance: A Synthesis of Evidence from Quality Award Winners
- 9 Public Policy Implications
- Index
Summary
Many managers are frustrated by a bewildering array of advice about what works in the workplace. In 1995 the National Center for the Workplace and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation sponsored a conference on the links between workplace practices and organizational performance. This volume presents revised versions of five papers from that conference, coupled with two invited chapters, an introductory chapter, and a concluding one that outlines obstacles to diffusion and draws out lessons for public policy.
The introductory chapter (by the editors and Thomas A. Kochan) reviews the problems researchers face in identifying the effects of workplace practices. With these cautions in mind, it then summarizes the literature on such practices. Results show that systems of innovative human resource management can have large effects on business performance. Success comes not from any single innovation, but from a coherent system encompassing pay, training, and employee involvement. Finally, although a majority of contemporary U.S. businesses have adopted some innovative work practices, only a small percentage have adopted a coherent new system.
This volume contributes to a growing consensus about effective workplace practices. It combines detailed studies of single industries (automobile assembly, apparel, and machine tools) with cross-industry studies of financial performance. The chapters are among the very best on the adoption and effects of innovative workplace practices. The research described here has better measures of both workplace practices and organizational performance than does most past research. In addition, most of the chapters analyze data spanning many years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The American WorkplaceSkills, Pay, and Employment Involvement, pp. viiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000