BusinessWeek has proclaimed Lawler one of the top six gurus in the field of management, and Human Resource Executive called him one of HR’s most influential people. Workforce magazine identified him as one of the twenty five visionaries who have shaped today’s workplace over the past century. Professor Lawler is the author and co-author of over 43 books.His most recent works include Management Reset: Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness, Useful Research: Advancing Theory and Practice, Achieving Excellence in HR Management: An Assessment of Human Resource Functions, Talent: Making People Your Competitive Advantage, and Built to Change: How to Achieve Sustained Organizational Effectiveness. It was wonderful to hear him speak about what HR should and could be doing differently; his work, his research. It is hard to captured all that he has done in a short interview. But here are the questions I had to ask the guru.Abhijit Bhaduri: You would have been an HR professional. But became an academic and wrote 43 fabulous books that HR people have read. How have you seen the HR professional’s opportunity for contribution to business success evolve over the years?Ed Lawler: HR has slowly but surely moved from being a largely administrative function to being a contributor to organizational performance in multiple ways. In some corporations, it has the ability to influence and change strategy as a result of senior HR executives who understand the business and business strategy. Unfortunately, this is a relatively rare situation. In most cases, HR works to implement the business strategy by being sure that the talent and the HR systems that an organization have will line up with what it needs to be able to do in order to implement the business strategy. My recent research study with John Boudreau, now published as a book titled, Effective Human Resource Management: A Global Analysis, goes into this issue in considerable detail. We also compare data from multiple countries. Interestingly enough, major countries do not differ greatly in the degree to which HR is a strategic player. To mention three geographies we looked at, it is about the same in India, the United States, and Europe.Overall, I think HR still has a long way to go in terms of being a key strategic player in business organizations. There is enormous opportunity, however, for it to make a big difference in how effective an organization is. Human capital continues to grow in its importance and organizational change also has become more important. The world is changing rapidly and organizations need to adapt. Many of the things they need to do to adapt involve changing the skills, behavior, and involvement of employees. Abhijit Bhaduri: Was there ever a phase in industry when you felt that you would have enjoyed being a practitioner?Ed Lawler: I considered being a practitioner when I graduated from college, and that was a long time ago. Since then I have never had a great desire to be in anything more than a researcher and consultant who gives advice to corporations on issues of human capital and organization design. In short, I have never looked back.
Day: August 31, 2012
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The Ed Lawler Interview