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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Aim of the paper: The purpose of this paper is to examine human resources management practices (HRM practices) in small firms and to improve the understanding of the relationship between this kind of practices and business growth. This exploratory study is based on the resource-based view of the firm and empirical work carried out in two small firms by relating HRM practices with the firms’ results. 
 
Contribution to the literature: This is an in-depth study of HRM practices and its impact on performance growth in micro firms, isolating and controlling for most of the contextual and internal  variables  considered  in  the  literature  that  relate  HRM  to  growth.  Firm  growth analysis was broadened by the use of several dependent variables: employment growth and operational  and  financial  performance  growth.  Some  hypotheses  for  further  research  in identifying HRM practices in small business and its relation with firm growth are suggested. 
 
Methodology: Case study methodology was used to study two firms. The techniques used to collect data were semi-structured interviews to the owner and all the employees, unstructured observation at the firms’ facilities (during two days), entrepreneur profile definition (survey answer)  and  document  data  collection  (on  demographic  characterization  and  performance results).  Data  was  analyzed  through  content  analysis  methodology,  and  categories  derived from the interviews’ protocols and literature. 
 
Results  and  implications:  Results  revealed  that  despite  the  firms’  organizational characteristics  similarities,  they  differ  significantly  in  owners’  motivation  to  grow,  HRM practices  and  organizational  performance  and  growth.  Future  studies  should  pay  special attention to owner willingness to grow, to firms’ years of experience in business, to staff’s years of experience in their field of work and turnover. HRM practices in micro/small firms should  be  better  defined  and  characterized.  The  external  image  of  management  posture relating to longitudinal financial results and growth should also be explored.
Description
Keywords
 Small firms   Human resources management practices   Firm growth 
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
European Institute for Advanced Studies in Management; The European Council for Small Business and Entrepreneurship; University of Nordland
