The impact of strategic human resources planning on the organizational performance of public shareholding companies in Jordan

  • Received November 25, 2019;
    Accepted February 14, 2020;
    Published March 13, 2020
  • Author(s)
  • DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.18(1).2020.19
  • Article Info
    Volume 18 2020, Issue #1, pp. 219-230
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Performance management (PM) is a common practice used by organizations to assess and manage employees’ work. Much of PM research is closely related to management practices. Corporations in the public and nonprofit sector continuously develop PM programs to ensure the sustainability of their organizations.
The study aims to analyze the impact of strategic human resources planning on the organizational performance of Jordanian public shareholding companies for senior management and functional unit managers (human resources, marketing, finance, and accounting). The researchers surveyed all the public shareholding companies registered with the Jordan Securities Commission (JSC) in 2019, wherein they found that only 60 companies applied strategic planning and human resources planning (HRP) together. Two hundred and twenty questionnaires were distributed in 52 companies surveyed, and 203 were adopted for statistical analysis. Several statistical methods were used, most notably the multiple regression analysis. The researchers found out a statistically significant impact of the strategic human resources planning (integration of HRP and strategic planning; strategic participation) on organizational performance. The results showed that adopting the strategic HRP dimensions leads to an increase in an organization’s overall productivity, employee satisfaction and reputation, as well as reduced operating costs. HR managers must understand the effectiveness of strategically designed HR practices across functions.

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    • Table 1. Demographics
    • Table 2. The constructs’ measurements: means, standard deviations, and reliability
    • Table 3. Hypothesis test results
    • Conceptualization
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
    • Data curation
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
    • Investigation
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Hosam Shrouf, Mohammed A. Abusweilem
    • Methodology
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
    • Project administration
      Shaker Al-Qudah
    • Validation
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Abdallah Mishael Obeidat, Mohammed A. Abusweilem
    • Writing – original draft
      Shaker Al-Qudah, Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
    • Formal Analysis
      Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
    • Funding acquisition
      Hosam Shrouf
    • Writing – review & editing
      Mohammed A. Abusweilem