Strategic human resources,

innovation and

entrepreneurship fit

A cross-regional comparative model

Abstract

Purpose – Strategic human resource management (SHRM) is seen as crucial for innovation and

entrepreneurship in China. An empirical research was carried out to investigate main dimensions of

the model of human resources management (HRM), practices and their effects on organisational

performance in relation to innovation and entrepreneurship.

Design/methodology/approach – The research has two parts. The first part is a field survey on

human resource management practices and its main dimensions. The study was conducted in the

Chinese local companies and joint ventures across different partnerships. The second part is an

in-depth case-set analysis of Chinese entrepreneurship models from a strategic HRM perspective.

Findings – The results showed that both functional and strategic dimensions of HRM could be

identified which had differential effects upon organisational performance and that the most successful

local entrepreneurial firms were among the collective-based and globally-oriented ones.

Originality/value – This study demonstrated that the fit between strategic HRM practices,

innovation strategy and entrepreneurship model was significantly contributed to entrepreneurial

performance. A regional comparative model of SHRM and entrepreneurship was proposed for

sustainable business developments and organisational change.

Keywords Innovation, Human resource management, Organizational performance, China,

Entrepreneurs

Paper type Research paper

1. Introduction

Under the new challenges from China entering WTO, developing IT, promoting

organisational reform, and encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship in the recent

years, the focus of manpower practices has shifted from employee-level of personnel

management to the core-employee and managerial levels of strategic human resources

management (HRM) ( 2000; 2002). There has been an increasing

demand for more integrated strategies of HRM practices, innovation, and

entrepreneurship in Chinese organisations (2003).

Among recent developments in China, several significant changes need to be

noticed in order to understand the key issues in strategic HRM, innovation and

entrepreneurship. First, international entrepreneurship has become one of the major

approaches to business development. While international companies are increasingly

entering China with a figure of more than 450,000 foreign invested enterprises (FIEs),

the international entrepreneurship approach is an effective strategy not only for

expending new markets and introducing overseas funds and managerial skills for

enhancing competitiveness but also for more and more local companies to introduce

and recruit foreign knowledge-managers and technicians for their joint ventures and/or

key local facilities for their business development. Meanwhile, companies are

establishing their business branches overseas as a competitive entrepreneurship

strategy. So far, more than 6600 overseas ventures from Chinese companies were

formally established. Therefore, both strategic and cross-cultural HRM has become a

crucial supporting approach.

Second, technological innovation and entrepreneurial networking are among the

most popular strategies for business development in China through a variety of

cross-regional mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures, and business alliances. There is a

significant shift in mergers and acquisitions from the SOEs’ acquisition of private

companies in 2002, to the private company’s acquisition of SOEs in 2003. Many of them

incorporated with company-level technological innovations. However in many cases of

mergers, HRM was a bottleneck for effective integration. Therefore, strategic human

resource management (SHRM) strategies were urgently needed for supporting

organisational change, technological innovation and entrepreneurial development.

Third, for most of the Chinese firms, the secondary entrepreneurship

transformation is the main business-driven strategy in connection with

intrapreneurship, corporate entrepreneurship and strategic entrepreneurship (2003)

 However, among most Chinese companies, there is a lack of strategy-level

integration of SHRM with entrepreneurship and therefore the intrapreneurship was

often less effective in terms of sustainability (1999). Most of recent

studies called for strategic planning to be used to identify and improve those

organisational decisions and actions for integrating human resource functions into the

organisational and innovation strategy in order to support and implement the strategic

plan to achieve a competitive advantage (2002).

Because of the recent developments in international entrepreneurship, technological

innovation, multi-business strategy and intrapreneurship, strategic HRM becomes a

crucial approach for small and entrepreneurial firms in China. The purpose of this

study is to review recent research findings about the key dimensions of Chinese

entrepreneurship and to differentiate SHRM practices and their effects upon

organisational performance. Then a multi-level model of strategic HRM and Chinese

entrepreneurship is built on the basis of recent in-depth studies across regions and

ownerships.

2. Cross-cultural studies on SHRM practices under the Chinese settings

One important question is what the SHRM dimensions are and how they differentiate

across different nations and cultures. (2002) used a qualitative case

methodology and studied 12 multinational companies about the differentiation of their

HRM practices across different equity stake percentages of ownership forms with their

Chinese partners. They interviewed HRM directors from those companies by telephone

with semi-structured questionnaires. The focus of this interview research was on five

aspects of HRM practices: HRM functions, recruitment and selection, performance

appraisal, training development, and compensation. The results showed that there was

a diffusion of HRM practices across different ownership forms and there were few

variations across cases. The HRM functions in the MNE’s PRC operations had a high

strategic importance though integration of international HRM practice with the local

culture and entrepreneurial models might be still a further task for many MNEs and

local companies. In another recent study,  (2001) conducted

semi-structured interviews and a questionnaire survey and collected data among

managers from 63 manufacturing Chinese-Western joint ventures, concerning HRM

practices in terms of HR methods, recruitment criteria, professional training,

compensation and bonus, and criteria for promotion as well as the educational and

experience background of HR/personnel managers and MNC ownership. The results

showed that the HRM practices were considerably more similar to those of the MNCs

than to those of local manufacturing companies. Also the HRM practices were

dependent upon the establishment of joint ventures on the basis of existing Chinese

manufacturing operations.

In discussing about how resources could be managed more effectively, (2003)

 proposed a three-component model that can lead to a competitive

advantage: resource inventory (evaluating, adding, and shedding), resource bundling,

and resource leveraging. Apparently, some HRM practices are more related to the daily

operations while others are more linked with long-term effects on performance.

H1. Among most of HRM practices, there are mainly two dimensions: functional

HRM practices and strategic HRM practices. The former is more related with

the daily operations while the later is more linked with company-level

progress or organisational performance.

How do SHRM practices affect other aspects of organisational capacity and

performance?  (2000) used a database from the Chinese Ministry of Public Health

and demonstrated significant effects of external environment and internal capacities

on technology decisions among the Chinese state-owned enterprises. In fact, social

capital, especially relational capital based on “guanxi” provided a framework for

business dealings in many Asian countries particularly in China (2002). As

summarized in an interview study key success factors of multinational firms in China,

nine strategies were proved to be crucial: top management commitment strategy, solid

training and feasibility strategy, patience and persistence strategy, overseas Chinese

strategy, brand image strategy, wholly owned MNC strategy, partner search strategy,

trust strategy, and effective HRM strategy. Among them, the last one was of vital

source of competitive advantage.

H2. HRM practices are different across business ownerships and joint venture

partnerships which links with organisational performance indicators.

Apparently, HRM practices are somewhat different cross-cultures.(1996)

compared HRM practices in east-west joint ventures including companies such

as French-Polish, German-Czech, Swedish-Hungarian JVs, using extensive

semi-structured interviews with senior managers and other employees as well as

survey questionnaires and participant observations to measure strategy,

responsibility, communication, HRM practices and culture. The results showed that

there were similar positive effects of HRM and employees were satisfactory about

the training they have received but dissatisfied with salary in those joint ventures.

The authors see the need to create an environment in which local and foreign

employees can work effectively together.  (2000) also discovered

that culture as defined by the Hofstede’s cultural model had significant influence on

entrepreneurial potential. Specifically, internal locus of control orientation combined

with innovativeness is more likely in individualistic, low uncertainty avoidance

cultures than in collectivistic, high uncertainty avoidance cultures. Culture may

condition potential for entrepreneurship, generating differences across national and

regional boundaries.

3. Entrepreneurship and its relationship with technology innovation and

SHRM

The relationship between technology innovation, HRM and entrepreneurship has been

an active area of research. Many studies demonstrated that technology and HR are

closely linked for competitive advantage ( 2000;2004).

(1998) carried out a case study to examine how a leading American project

management firm responded to the competitive pressures through a process of

entrepreneurial change. The study concluded that the corporate human resource

functions could become entrepreneurial in integrating to line managers’ functions and

that the “design failure” of strategic HRM was the main reason for low competitive

conditions. There has been a dramatic shift in the focus of industrial R&D strategies

from general quality programs in 1980s and early 1990s to the re-engineering design

with synonymous downsizing, entrepreneurial planning and HR support. So SHRM

can be an important part of the technology innovation cycle ( 2002). As part of

technology innovation globally, the role of HRD in the process of international

technology transfer as an approach to international entrepreneurship was studied and

identified ( 1999). The results showed that in the process of the transfer,

human resource development plays a significant role in improving the effectiveness of

management technology and in achieving organisational objectives. However, we need

to clearly understand the impact of cultural differences for successfully transfer of

technology across cultures on HRD and management policies.  study (1999)

focused upon HRM practices and R&D innovation and noticed that short-term HRM

practices such as short contracts are negatively correlated with new-tech investment

whereas long-term and high-commitment HR practices are positively correlated with

investment in R&D and new technology. Many recent studies indicated that SHRM

could be an effective facilitator for both technological innovation and entrepreneurship.

In a study on the technological determinants of entrepreneurial behaviour,

(2002) applied a typology of technological regimes to examine the sources and

obstacles to entrepreneurial entry and noticed that innovation in technologies of

opportunities could be effectively associated with entrepreneurial behaviour by the

knowledge and HRM support. This characterisation of the dynamics of knowledge

accumulation proved to be crucial for enhancing the competitive advantages.

and  (2000) also found that for many fast growth SMEs, the main problem is

finding and retaining high-quality employees and that HRM approach in the pursuit of

quality is critical to success. What is the situation related to Chinese manufacturers?

In the recent years, there has been a shift of the focus of Chinese organisational reform

and changes from large-group and state-based business re-structuring to the high

innovative and entrepreneurial development. Especially, the nation-wide technological

innovations and organisational systems innovation call for more effective strategic

HRM support.  (2000) presented an exploratory model of competence and

performance from a survey in 72 companies. The results showed that marketing

competence was ranked high by Chinese managers while human resource competence

has been found to be significantly correlated with performance. Different kinds of

methodology were adopted in conducting research on dimensions of SHRM and

entrepreneurship ( 2002).

H3. Both functional and strategic HRM practices in turn influence their

effectiveness, especially the innovation performance.

4. Entrepreneurship models and its requirements for HRM support

Entrepreneurship has been one of the major relevant areas in human resources and

innovation. Under the Chinese context, entrepreneurial meant hard-working,

dedication and diligent ( 2000). So it was traditionally seen as part of local

culture. In the early 1970s and 1980s, many local farmers started their own business

“outside of” the central planning systems though these were mostly individual

business or collective township business. In the 1990s, a multi-ownership model of

enterprise systems transformation was developed among Chinese companies while in

the early 2000s, entrepreneurship became a focus of business development in the

country. As  (2002) pointed out, the Chinese small family firms made

important contributions to the acceleration of business development across the social

and industrial sectors as well as the geographic boundaries of the Pacific Rim. They

proposed five classifications of entrepreneurial class for the Chinese family business

community:

(1) bourgeois entrepreneurial with generational family business;

(2) solo-entrepreneurial with single owner-manager;

(3) marital (co-entrepreneurship with husband/wife as founders and managers);

(4) parento with parents and children in control; and

(5) geno with generations involving more relatives.

These kinds of entrepreneurship were configured by a two-dimension axis of family

participation-family development versus political market economy-business growth.

Another recent study by  (1998) on investment, opportunity choice and human

resources in new venture growth tested a path-based typology model of new venture

growth and human resource management for integrating important aspects of

entrepreneurship such as family labour or supervisory resources, empathetic

leadership style, and entrepreneurial teams. As to the performance, Motowidlo and

 (1990) categorized it into two dimensions: task performance and contextual

performance. The former is more based on how the short-term task objectives are

achieved whereas the latter refers to the dedication and extra efforts at work which

lead to long-term outcomes.

H4. Entrepreneurship could be categorized into two dimensions: functional versus

strategic HRM and individualistic versus collectivistic entrepreneurship.

Among the different types of entrepreneurship models, companies under

collective entrepreneurship has a closest link between strategic HRM and

organisational level performance whereas under individual entrepreneurship,

individual level performance indicators are more closely related to functional

HRM practices.

In reviewing the past decade of entrepreneurship research methods, Chandler and

 (2001) summarized a significant trend toward more multivariate analysis and

emphasis on reliability and validity in research methodology and called for the

development of more sophisticated theoretical models and more longitudinal research.

Also,  (2001) focused upon the level of analysis in

entrepreneurship research and suggested to use new-enterprise as a new level of

analysis and regard entrepreneurship as a broad research domain with more precisely

defined issues, concepts, and levels of analysis.

5. Study 1: Dimensions of SHRM and its models across joint venture

partnerships

5.1 Participants

This study was carried out among 97 local Chinese enterprises and international joint

ventures and the main purpose was to find out the characteristics of HRM practices

and their relationship with entrepreneurial performance. Among them, 358 managers

from 75 companies participated in the field survey from the five types of companies:

(1) Chinese-western joint ventures;

(2) Chinese-Japanese joint ventures;

(3) joint ventures with Hong Kong or Taiwan regions;

(4) Chinese state-owned enterprises; and

(5) Chinese township and private firms.

A field-structured interview was conducted among HR managers and supervisors at

25 international joint ventures and 22 local companies in China. They were asked

to describe the most frequently used HR practices in their companies in relation to

technological innovation and organisational changes.

5.2 Measurement

A check-list scale of HRM practices was then developed. Each practice item is scored 1

and scaled by 1-5 points to measure the degree of application. The total score of each

practice is 20. Twenty-two HR managers and supervisors generated a list of 56 typical

HR practices which are categorized into ten areas of HR practices. Table I presents the

ten-category list of HR practices.

Also, a five-point scale of HRM practice check-list was developed with a scale of

organisational performance by the following seven indicators:

(1) Market performance: How does the company have a higher market share

compared with other companies in the similar industrial sector?

(2) Profitability: How is this company profitable in comparison with other

companies in the similar industrial sector?

(3) Competitiveness: How is this company competitive in comparison with other

companies in the similar industrial sectors?

(4) Task accomplishment: What is the company’s task fulfilment compared with

other companies in the similar industrial sectors?

(5) Personnel turnover: How high is the personnel turnover in this company

compared with other companies in the similar industrial sectors?

(6) Employee satisfaction: How do employees satisfy in comparison with

employees in other companies in the similar industrial sectors?

(7) Innovation performance: How is the performance under technological and

managerial innovation in comparison with other companies in the similar

industrial sectors?

These indicators of organisational performance were first tested by industrial bureau

officials, using both ratings and coding from the business performance. These ratings

and coding were highly correlated and proved to have high internal consistency

reliability, average correlation coefficients was 0.86.

5.3 Main results

The analysis showed that there were significant differences in human resource

practices across five types of companies. Using factor analysis and in-depth interview,

the ten categories of HRM were grouped into two key dimensions: functional human

resources and strategic human resources. Tables II and III present the means for ten

HRM practices and the two dimensions of HRM.

Table II shows the differences in means across the five kinds of ownership: Chinese

State companies, Chinese township (private) companies, western joint ventures,

Japanese joint ventures and Taiwan/HK overseas joint ventures. As we can see from

the results, among the four kinds of ownerships and partnerships, European and

American joint ventures and Chinese local companies had generally higher level in HR

practice indicators whereas joint ventures with Japanese and Hong Kong/Taiwan

partnerships had generally lower level of HRM practices. The HRM practices among

SOEs were among the intermediate level. Across the ten HR practices, however,

significant differences were found among long-term HRM practices such as career

development packages, quality control activities and corporate culture development

activities as well motivational systems. With these HR practices, same tendency was

shown with Euro/US joint ventures and local companies having a significantly higher

scores. Across various of HR practices, SOEs showed higher level of those HR

indicators of performance appraisal, quality control and team development, Euro/US

firms were good at selection and quality control activities, Japanese firm were higher in

terms of quality control and performance.

Chinese township companies had more practices in job requirements while Chinese

state-owned companies used very fewer test instruments. Again, both Chinese

township companies and Japanese joint ventures had more formal HRM practice

especially in terms of orientation training and results evaluation. Western joint

ventures were similar to Chinese township companies. It is important to note that the

sub-samples of the township companies were those large and more productive

township firms around Wenzhou area, the hometown of Chinese entrepreneurship

firms (both township and private companies).

The results showed that the use of performance appraisals in the Chinese companies

focused more on positions and the whole company, whereas performance appraisal in

the joint ventures was more focused on actual performance. The results of career

development and promotion further informed that both western joint ventures and

Japanese joint ventures had more HR practices in terms of regular promotion, new

opportunities and turnover while the Chinese state-owned companies appear relatively

weak on these career development aspects of HRM.

In terms of compensation practices, Chinese township companies showed lower

level of practices in regularity and formality while other joint ventures had more

formal practices, with Japanese joint ventures again revealing higher means. The

results showed that the Taiwan and Hong Kong joint ventures had the lowest level of

employee participation whereas both western- and Japanese-joint ventures had the

highest levels of participation in management. In the Chinese state-owned enterprises

and township companies, although the formality of participation, the trade union

organisation, and the knowledge of the company were all relatively high, actual

participation was low. Quality control was formal in both Japanese and township firms

and relatively low in the Chinese state-owned companies and western joint ventures.

Management by objectives is more formal in the Japanese companies and township

companies whereas it was very low in the Taiwan and Hong Kong enterprises.

Corporate culture development practices were shown to be at a similar level

across-partnership, except that western and Japanese joint ventures had more

emphasis on company vision.

5.4 Relationships between organisational performance and HRM practices

The results showed that there is a close relationship between the HRM practice

indicators evaluated by HR managers and the organisational performance

independently rated by industrial bureau officials. Figure 1 presents the results of

multiple regression analysis of the effects of both functional and strategic HRM on

organisational performance.

Figure 1 presents the relationships between the different HRM practices and

performance. As it is shown, the higher levels of functional HRM practices lead to

superior performance on all seven indicators. At this stage of development, functional

HRM seemed playing a crucial role on general performance whereas strategic HRM

affected more innovation performance and task accomplishment. The results largely

supported the hypothesis that functional and strategic HRM practices influenced

organisational performance.

6. Study 2: SHRM, innovation and entrepreneurship modelling

The development of HRM practices has been closely related to innovation and

entrepreneurship activities in Chinese companies. However, there is a lack of models

for representation of the relationship between SHRM, innovation and entrepreneurship

strategies. An in-depth multi-case study was conducted to investigate the models of

Chinese entrepreneurship and innovation as it is related to key dimensions and HRM.

Field structured interview was carried out among CEOs and HR managers from

24 local companies in the Yangtze Delta Region (Zhejiang, Shanghai and Jiangsu

provinces). Altogether 52 people were interviewed. The interview guide includes

questions relating to key issues in entrepreneurship. Here are the main questions:

(1) General background of business development and services.

(2) What are the context, process and key events of the business development?

(3) What are the key KSAOs for successful and failure of the business?

(4) HRM practices and business strategies in the context of Chinese culture?

(5) How do innovative activities facilitate and enhance entrepreneurship?

(6) What are the entrepreneurial performance in relation to HRM and innovative

strategies?

6.1 Wahaha group growth: International entrepreneurship model

Many successful companies in China adopted an international entrepreneurship model,

i.e. developing new business ventures through joint-venturing with foreign firms and

competing well-known international brands through similar business approach and

strategy.We interviewed CEO and HR managers of the famous local company Wahaha

group. Transferred and grown from a small and local nutritional food school factory,

the Wahaha group has now more than 10,000 employees and is ranked as No. 1

beverage producer in China. With a progressive cross-regional entrepreneurial

strategy, 40 subsidiary companies across 16 provinces or cities in China are developed

by Wahaha group with approaches of acquisitions, mergers, JVs and alliance

partnerships. Two kinds of important international entrepreneurial actions were made

in the last ten years by the Wahaha group: one action was to develop five subsidiaries

of Danone Group joint venture (1996) with a cross-regional corporate culture strategy;

the other was to produce so-called “Future Cola” (2000) to compete with multinationals

such as Coca Cola with a national brand strategy. We therefore proposed that the

Chinese international entrepreneurship model may represent a combination of local

ownership with international approach to culture and national/international business

strategies.

6.2 Hengdian group growth: Multi-business entrepreneurship and intrapreneurship

model

The field study also focused upon how already-successful-local companies started their

second-round of entrepreneurship through business innovation and strategic HRM.

One example was the Hengdian group located in Zhejiang province. Our interview

revealed that the company was developed from a small countryside village factory

producing silk products. Now it has more than 37,900 employees who are working in

30 subsidiaries, three overseas subsidiaries, and six international joint ventures. Two

key components of Hengdian group’s international entrepreneurship were mostly

reported during the interview:

(1) a four “J core values” approach of joint-venture entrepreneurship with overseas

companies and local community: joint-venture with other firms, joint-ownership

with community, joint welfare with townships, and joint-shareholding with

employees which created a collective entrepreneurship platform for innovative

business development;

(2) intrapreneurship (developing new ventures) by internationalisation HR

strategy: 36 foreign managers and technicians (knowledge workers) were

hired to work in their new start-ups and subsidiaries.

These practices have brought into the group innovative managerial practices and

technology transfer.

6.3 Lenova group and Haier group: Transformational entrepreneurial model

The field interview showed that most of Chinese collectively-owned enterprises are

under transformation into shareholding or multiple-ownership systems with

entrepreneurial approaches to start their new business, renew their HR strategies

and develop high-performance culture. Both Lenovo group (IT sector) and Haier group

(Home appliances sector) are among the most successful collectively owned

entrepreneurial firms in our interview sample. Field interview showed that there

were four significant entrepreneurial features from those collectively owned

companies:

(1) High growth, usually started from a small group-based collective firm and

quickly grew into a group with several thousands of employees with rapid

business.

(2) Team-based, mostly transformed from collective-systems to shareholding firms

with entrepreneur team development.

(3) Multi-business, largely diversified business models and new forms of

organisations.

(4) Cross-regions, commonly adopted cross-regional business models to expand

their competitiveness and innovativeness.

6.4 Family business: Wenzhou individual entrepreneurship model

This is mainly based on of family business in areas of garments, mechanical

components, chemical products, and shoes. Functional HR are most popular in

Wenzhou with an emphasis on product marketing while generally recruiting

knowledge workers from cross-regions to support rapid business development. As we

interviewed CEOs and HR managers/supervisors from four key firms there, it was

noticed that although the Wenzhou model was widely seen as the Chinese

entrepreneurial model, it is shifting toward an innovative version of corporate

entrepreneurship and introducing more strategic HRM practices especially for core

employees. While many Wenzhou firms have invested in the western region of China,

many local firms in Chongqing area have hired foreign knowledge workers and

adopted more SHRM practices in terms of group packages and training.

6.5 Township entrepreneurship: Suzhou collective model

This model was formed during 1970s when township enterprises were flourishing

near Suzhou area near Shanghai. Most of Suzhou enterprises were collectively

owned and using lots of collective entrepreneurship approach, i.e. starting new

business through collectively-oriented HR strategies. However, in the recent years,

there is a clear trend of moving toward strategic HRM and multi-ownership.

Figure 2 summarizes the interview study by a two dimensional model of

entrepreneurship and SHRM practices. As we can see, the first dimension is individual

entrepreneurship versus collective entrepreneurship and the second dimension is

functional HRM versus strategic HRM. Eight models of entrepreneurship and strategic

HRM are presented in Figure 2.

Multiple regression analysis showed that among companies under individual

entrepreneurship model, individual performance such as operational employee

turnover, task accomplishment and individual satisfaction was significantly affected

by functional HRM practices such as recruitment on turnover ðb ¼ 20:14; p , 0:05Þ;

performance appraisal on task performance ðb ¼ 0:16; p , 0:05Þ; and reward/

compensation on satisfaction ðb ¼ 0:31; p , 0:01Þ: Among companies under collective

entrepreneurship, strategic HRM practices affected significantly the organisational

level performance indicators such as core employee turnover ðb ¼ 20:23; p , 0:01Þ;

leadership performance ðb ¼ 0:24; p , 0:01Þ and career satisfaction ðb ¼ 0:20;

p , 0:01Þ which functional HRM practices had marginal effects on performance

indicators. However, if we take technological innovation indicator as a joint predictor,

the relationship between HRM practices and performance indicators are largely

enhanced.

7. Conclusion

The results of the above-two studies largely supported or modified the four

hypotheses. The results showed that there are mainly two dimensions among HRM

practices in most Chinese companies: functional HRM practices and strategic HRM

practices. The former proved to be more related with most of performance indicators

while the later was more linked with innovation performance and task accomplishment

across levels. Also, HRM practices showed to be differentiated across business

ownerships and joint venture partnerships particularly among strategic HRM such as

career development, team compensation, quality control activities and corporate

culture. Both functional and strategic HRM practices significantly influence

organisational effectiveness, especially the innovation performance by strategic

HRM. Entrepreneurship could be categorized into two dimensions: functional versus

strategic HRM and individualistic versus collectivistic entrepreneurship. Among the

different types of entrepreneurship models, companies under collective

entrepreneurship has a closest link between strategic HRM and organisational level

performance whereas under individual entrepreneurship, individual level performance

indicators are more closely related to functional HRM practices.

These results have several important implications to HRM strategies, innovation

and entrepreneurship. First, team- and career-based strategic HRM practices have

long-term effects on organisational performance among the Chinese companies.

Second, culture plays a crucial role in formulating HRM practices such as team and

corporate culture activities. Third, collective entrepreneurship modelling is more

suitable to the Chinese context of both manpower and business development. Fourth,

technological innovation could moderate the effects of HRM on entrepreneurship. In

this aspect, more empirical research and case study are underway to find out the key

mechanism in relation to the rapid growth of the Chinese entrepreneurship.


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