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2018 | nr 4 | 83--92

Article title

Implications of humanistic management for the employer and the employed

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Humanistic management may be among the latest buzzwords, but the older generation maintains that it knew all about it all along. Some of them had practised it at the workplace. It is all about workplace dignity. By giving it a fancy name, Generation Z is only reinventing the wheel. Upon interaction with the respondents selected for the study, the researcher concludes that humanistic management can help reduce attrition and raise employee productivity. As a result, the employer can become more price-competitive and quality-competitive at the workplace. Thus, the outcome is a virtuous cycle of enhanced productivity, enhanced competitiveness and reduced training costs. But what piqued the curiosity of the researcher was why, to this day, humanistic management remains an exception and not the rule, across the employer community. This is because employers placed more faith in authoritative managers than in individual workers and group dynamics. They ignored interpersonal relationships. They failed to acknowledge the value of dignity in the economics and management space! This amounts to being wise to the penny and foolish to the pound. At best, it may lead the employee to churn out products at the same dreary pace for the rest of his/her work life. For all one knows, the employee concerned may be capable of delivering more but no thanks to absence of humanistic management, the employee concerned is seldom motivated to excel himself/herself at the workplace. Humanistic management dispels the notion that productivity level is the same across employees.

Year

Volume

Pages

83--92

Physical description

Bibliogr. 4 poz.

Contributors

author
  • Ramaiah Institute of Management, Bengaluru, India

References

  • 1. Arora, B., & C, K.S. (2013). Antecedents to Humanistic Management Approach in India: The Role of Family Businesses. In S. Khan, & W. Amann, World Humanism. Humanism in Business Series. London: Palgrave Macmillan. Retrieved from https://link.springer.com/ chapter/10.1057/9781137378491_12.
  • 2. McGuire, D., Cross, C., & O’Donnell, D. (2005). Why Humanistic Approaches in HRD Won’t Work. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 131-137.
  • 3. Mele, D. (2003). The challenge of humanistic management. Journal of Business Ethics, 77.
  • 4. Wooten, L.P., & Crane, P. (2004). Generating Dynamic Capabilities through a Humanistic Work Ideology. American Behavioral Scientist, 848-866.

Notes

Rekord pochodzi z bazy danych BazTech.

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.baztech-dfc3de61-75fe-48d5-a087-bca3c3f350ca
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