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High Technolgy Industry Human Resources Role Model StructureHSU, MEI-HUI 08 September 2005 (has links)
The main topic of discussion of this research is about the functions and role-played by high-tech human resources employees and to confirm what are the key factors needed to assure success at the role they play? How to maximize human resources functions and role they play to achieve the goal of empowering the industry¡¦s added value and efficiency, this is to be the main consideration of a human resources expert personnel in self-improvement.
Ulrich¡¦s role vantage point was used in this research during observation, 4- role structure was applied and 20 appraisal standard tests were designed. Through experts¡¦ discussion and comparison to confirm the importance of 4 role structures, the order according to it¡¦s importance are the following: 1. Strategic human resources management 2. Employees contribution management 3. Company basic constructive management 4. Transformation and changes management.
The Analytical Hierarchy Process AHP was applied during the processing of this research, after sorting and organizing the experts¡¦ evaluation and comparison of each role structure, the result shows that,
1.In high-tech industry human resources role structure comparison, the strategic human resources management is the most importance with a highest importance value of 43.9%, the other structures value of importance are: Employees contribution management 21%, company basis constructive management 18.4% and transformation and changes management 16.7%. The results conform with Ulrich¡¦s (1997) view about the human resources experts¡¦ emphasis should shift from ¡§doing the things¡¨ to¡¨ achievable result¡¨.
2.Fitzenz (1993) thinks that the organization and human resources management can lead to high-performance results. It encourages people to join the organization it should join, continue to produce high production rate, long-term organization commitment and maintain the competitive edge, the result of this research also conforms to that opinion. In the high-tech industry where the competition is stiff, to be able to maximize the human resources cost is the greatest benefit. Employees¡¦ contribution management has always been the main important point at work, that¡¦s why it is next important to the strategic human resources management, it is worth for human resources personnel to pay more attention to.
3.This research¡¦s scope is only within the high-tech industry, it was found that the transformation and changing management¡¦s less important than the other 3 structure, it did not receive much attention contrary to the general opinion that high-tech industry demands more change. As a logical conclusion, due to difference in company life cycle, product life cycle, level of technical R&D, therefore the degree of these needs are not the same, moreover, changes needs the support of the higher management and a proper timing, also, it cannot be executed at the same time so it¡¦s actual level of importance was limited.
4.Human resources strategy must be in consolidated with the enterprise strategy this research matches several scholars¡¦ opinion. In the 20 items of evaluation standard, the most important structural phase is the strategic human resources management where 3 items were included in the first 5 items of the evaluation standard. The items included are: coordinating the human resources matters and operation strategy comparative importance 14.1%, cooperate with enterprise goal in setting the human resources strategy, comparative importance 11.5%, joining the drafting of business operations strategy, comparative importance8.2%, this only shows that strategic human resources management is the most crucial key structure phase.
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A study of Training Outsourcing of the High-Tech Industry~Hsin-Chu Science-Based Industrial Park as a sampleChen, Li-Hsiu 06 August 2003 (has links)
Nowadays, outsouring is quite popular and acceptable in business usage. In recent years, HR outsourcing has become a popular and known knowledge , and outsourcing on training is one of important strategies in HR outsourcing. However, the related academic research on the training outsourcing is as limited as a virgin field. Therefore, this study will evaluate if businesses use training outsourcing to achieve human resource flexibility and upgrade the organization performances, and to understand how the High-Tech Industry uses it and its affects . This study uses 40 data of Hsin-Chu Science-Based Industrial Park companies from both questionnaire form and interview survey in order to understand the usage status, usage reason, its problem and key successful factors of the training outsourcing on the High-Tech Industry.
From the returned questionnaires, we found that 100% of the companies implement ¡§Training¡¨ and 95% of the companies take training outsourcing, but also found that the degree of training of outsourcing is not so popular as its usage status and most of companies prefer to do it by themselves. In addition, we also found that the demand degree of training outsourcing is much higher on the specific profession course than management and general training. The result shows the companies are required to use outside vendors for specific profession. According to the result of statistic analysis, we examine Hypothesis 1 and find the amount of staff and revenue are positive related with training outsourcing and are also positively affected , so it shows if the business scope is smaller, the degree of the training outsourcing will be higher. The result of Hypothesis 2, Human Resource Flexibility also positively affect the training outsourcing, especially the functional
flexibility which meant as the degree of Flexibility is higher, the degree of training outsourcing will be also higher. The result of Hypothesis 3, training outsourcing is only positively affected to the organizational performance of ¡§ deducted Staff cost¡¨.
According to the result of the interviews, we found the main reason that high-tech industry uses training outsourcing is due to lack of interior professional speaker; to strength the learning opportunity and experience of staffs to get-in the required professional skill and knowledge from the outside provider and to improve the competition ability; to improve the training quality and no specific department to take charge of training. The main problems for training outsourcing are the contents of training cannot match with the staff¡¦s need, the factor of outside speaker and what the staff learned from outside course cannot practice on the jobs. The role of Human Resource people during outsourcing play the administration service role, and sometimes can also play the strategic role, but in just a few cases. So, the result shows the training outsourcing is not quite the important mission in a company and still in a low level job. The key factor to make outsourcing successful is the cooperation and profession from the outside vendor, the support of high-level manager, the contents to match with the business strategy and goal , and the contents can match with the need of staff and company.
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A Study on the Relationship between Training and Nonstandard Work Arrangement in High-Tech Industry ¡V A Case Study of Hsinchu Science-Based Industrial ParkLin, Chia-Yu 10 August 2003 (has links)
This research focuses on training bundles, nonstandard work arrangement and their relationship in high-tech industry, and the conclusions are listed as follows,
1. Training bundles and training effectiveness
Training practicability has a positive impact on employee productivity, company profitability, innovation and reduction of employee turnover rates. Training institutionalization has a positive impact on employee productivity and company profitability.
Rather than reducing employee turnover rates, training has the greater positive impact on employee productivity. Furthermore, larger organizations have higher level of training practicability.
2. Nonstandard work arrangement in high-tech industry
As the data showed, over 80% companies ever had nonstandard work arrangement in 2002, and in the companies that had such arrangement, fixed-term hires and subcontractors were mostly used. To adjust for business fluctuations and reduce administrative workload are first two reasons why companies use nonstandard work arrangement. Limited head count and personnel cost saving are also important factors to hire nonstandard workers. In particular, cost saving is the most important factor for companies to use subcontractors.
About the occupational structure, most nonstandard workers are either present in the position of administration or production. Only subcontractors are most present in the service occupations such as janitors, cleaners or caterers. With regard to personnel cost saving, compare to using dispatched workers, part-time workers and fixed-term hires are more helpful to reduce the personnel cost.
3. Training bundles and nonstandard work arrangement
The result indicates that the level of training bundles can not be the determinant of using nonstandard work arrangement. Besides, we found that organization size has a positive effect on using nonstandard work arrangement, fixed-term hires, dispatched workers and subcontractors.
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Globální trendy v high-tech průmyslu: případová studie Texas Instruments / Global trends in high-tech industry: Texas Instruments case studyVondrášek, Štěpán January 2009 (has links)
Work deals with global trends in high-tech industry which are mainly consolidation, concentrations and regionalization. It provides the definition of the high-tech industry, then focuses on specific sector - semiconductor industry. It describes the characteristics of the manufacturing process and workforce. A special part is devoted to government policies regards to the semiconductors research and development. The last part is devoted to a case study of the American company - Texas Instruments Inc. which has been playing the important role in the world semiconductor industry.
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An Empirical Analysis of Patents Litigation and InnovationAdomian, Garrison R 01 January 2013 (has links)
This study provides an empirical analysis of patent litigation and innovation within high-tech firms. There is a significant drop in R&D over the course of the eleven year period of interest. However, the results do not show litigation causing a significant effect on R&D investments as either a percentage of revenue or a percentage change from year to year. Secondly, there was found to be a slight drop in percentage change of patents earned per year over time, but this was not found to be significantly caused by litigation. However there is strong evidence to support that increased litigation does cause the percentage of patents classified as utility patents to fall. Since this ratio of utility patents per total patents can be viewed as an indicator of innovative quality, this trend suggests that litigation does cause overall innovative quality of a firm’s efforts to diminish.
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The research of the high-tech industry Human Resource implementation after the issue of expenditure of employee bonus shares.Chen, Yung-lin 14 December 2010 (has links)
In 1984, in the background that the level of salary in Taiwan was far lower than Europe and America, UMC was the first company setting up the employee bonus shares as well as the allotment of stock dividends in order to allure the domestic and overseas elites. Afterwards, this mechanism has become the characteristic of Taiwan¡¦s electronic industry to appeal the talents . By 2007, the issue of expenditure of employee bonus shares emerged. Undoubtedly, the high technology industry, in which the employees benefitted the most from the system of employee bonus shares and the allotment of stock dividends, was the one being impacted the most. Therefore, every company took various measures to avoid the employees¡¦ leaving and maintain the company competitive in response to this situation. The system of expenditure of employee bonus shares has been conducted for 2 years since 2008. So the impacts of this mechanism have been presented and the influences of those responsive measures should have been in effect. What was the impact from the system of expenditure of employee bonus shares to Taiwan¡¦s high-tech industries indeed? What was the measure dealing with the human resources that each company took to reply this situation? Thus, this study took some Taiwan public high-tech companies and consultant companies famous for its specialization in employee salary and bonus as our case studies. Through the collection of these case studies, we found some common measures between these companies. Besides, to increase the practical value of this study, we analyzed the measures, the background factors, and all the impacts in details and in depth. In sum, we hope we could offer the directional guidelines for the development of innovative employee incentives and provide some advices to those companies encountering the problems in designing the reward system.
The findings were listed as below:
1. For the most companies, they did not take the timely measures in 2008. In the year of 2008, the global economic climate declined. Each company focused on the matters how to increase the sales and decrease the expenditures, so they viewed the leaving of employees as healthy and allowed. That was why they did not take timely measures for the system of expenditure of employee bonus shares. By 2010, due to the economic climate recovery, the sales of each company turned better and the companies started to plan the new reward mechanism to induce and keep those elites in house.
2. Those responsive measures only focused on the adjustment of the employee reward system, but other human resources practices did not change too much. Those respondents emphasized largely in the adjustment of the salary structure or other new design of the reward system; however, they did nothing to the side of the human resources.
3. The number of transfer is expected to increase largely in 2010. Because the economic climate and the income of each company are getting better, the respondents all anticipated they will be impacted by the increasing turnover rate of their employees. Similarly, recruiting talents from other corporations would get intense and the employees would start to search the opportunity to serve in other company. In addition, the human resources would leap over from one industry to another, because the incentive of the employee bonus shares in high-tech industry disappeared. As result, the high-tech industry may not be the first priority for a job. The brand power of the company, the operating status, the vision of the future, and even the individual growth for the employees could be the major indicators for a job.
To sum up, from the case studies in regard to the human resources practices in Taiwan¡¦s high-tech industry, we could find the system of expenditure of employee bonus shares did not bring the severe change to the human resources in Taiwan¡¦s high-tech industry. In fact, the hugest influence is that the high-tech industry is not so attractive as before anymore. In the future, competing for the human resources would not only limit to the high-tech industry, because other outstanding corporations from various industries and the foreign companies may lead to the flow of those elites moving between industries.
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A Study on the Relationship between KSFs of High-tech Start-ups and Counseling Resources of Incubation Centers - A Case Study of EPED CompanyLiang, Yu-Ming 16 February 2011 (has links)
In order to relieve small and medium enterprises (SMEs) from the predicament of inadequate capital and immature technology in the beginning of new ventures as well as to realize sustainable business development, Taiwan gevernment has been heavily investing in many universities to set up incubation centers in the hope to provide start-ups abundant resources with the help of academic institution¡¦s counseling expertise; therefore, the cost and risk for start-ups in the beginning of new venture and R&D phase can be reduced and more sound and competitive SMEs could be incubated under the tutelage of incubation centers.
The study mainly discusses the relationship between key success factors (KSFs) of high-tech start-ups and the counseling resources from incubation centers. Firstly, the study establishes the structure of empirical study based on the collection and discussion of domestic and foreign literatures. Since the counselling clients of incubation centers majorly consist of start-ups, the study adopts in-depth interviews to investigate these start-ups via case study. By organizing and analyzing the in-depth interviews with start-ups, the study tries to investigate the relationship between two fundimental dimentions of resources from incubation centers and enterprise characteristics, as well as the performance and competitiveness in start-ups.
The objectives of this sudy are to:
1.Understand how incubation centers utilize the relevant resources from government to nurture start-ups.
2.Investigate how the resource platform of incubation center guides the KSFs of high-tech start-ups.
3.Evaluate what the three dimensional roles of resources, innovation, and values play in the competitive strategy of high-tech start-ups, and find out the KSFs therein and their future prospects.
4.Understand how start-ups and entrepreneurship influence the success of the business.
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A Study of the Relationship of Human Capital, Culture of Organization Learning, Knowledge Management and R&D Performance of High-tech Industry.Ko, Li-Hsia 19 January 2007 (has links)
The approach of the age of knowledge economy and prosperous growth of IT makes knowledge become one of the most important core resources. The knowledge is also organizations' key point of seeking for survival and development. Knowledge economy emphasizes on transferring ¡§knowledge¡¨ into ¡§profit¡¨ instead of knowledge itself. Therefore, knowledge application is more essential than knowledge possession. At rapid digital age, knowledge management becomes key point of core competence. Hence, this study, knowledge management as variables, will discuss if knowledge management will upgrade the achievement of R&D performance of human capital and organizational culture.
This study used questionnaire. This study used convenience sampling to select 1,517 high-tech industries as subjects from Taiwan Industrial Park Directory (published by Taipei County Exhibition Hall, 2005) and the appendix of high-tech industry yearbook (published from 2002 to 2005) as population. Valid questionnaires were 140 copies. This study used LISREL for data analysis and the result are listed as following:
1. Investment in human capital management helps efficiently improve R&D performance. The functional activities of human resources, such as recruit, maintenance and encouragement, connect organizations with employees effectively. Enhancement of employees' contribution, promise and encouragement strengthen value and uniqueness of human resources and also produce remarkable progress of R&D performance.
2. Execution of organizational culture, including participation, strategic vision which aids to organization's evolution, team work and organizational structure, helps to improve significantly for R&D performance.
3. Promotion and execution of knowledge management play as important mediators in organizations. The efficiency of R&D performance in human capital and organizational culture will be enhanced through the mediation caused by execution of knowledge management.
4. The amount of enterprises' employees makes diversity of performance of human capital and knowledge management. The enterprises that own 2,000 employees and above have more remarkable performance in human capital and knowledge management than the enterprises that own fewer employees. It means, large-scale enterprises have more competence because of more cost reduction, which improves quality of products and customer services. Regarding knowledge management, different amount of enterprises' employees also makes diversity of employees' knowledge creation and collection. The result of this study indicates that large-scale enterprises are more capable of invention and acquiring latest knowledge.
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Recente dinâmica espacial da indústria de alta tecnologia = uma tipologia baseada na intensidade de P&D e no desempenho comercial / Recent spatial dynamics of high-tech industry : a taxonomy based on R&D intensity and trade performanceRauen, Andre Tortato, 1980- 18 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: André Tosi Furtado / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Geociências / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-18T11:35:31Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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Previous issue date: 2011 / Resumo: No passado recente, a produção de alta tecnologia era exclusividade de países de alta renda per capita. Contudo, a moderna possibilidade de fragmentar a produção permitiu que países de baixa renda per capita passassem a também produzir bens de alta tecnologia, mesmo quando estes bens são considerados novos. Observa-se que países de alta renda per capita e de elevada capacitação tecnológica executam atividades de maior complexidade enquanto países de baixa renda per capita, com baixos salários e alguma força de atração, executam atividades intensivas em mão de obra. Este trabalho tem então, por objetivo, apresentar e compreender as macrodinâmicas subjacentes a essa nova e intrincada geografia econômica. Para tanto, o mesmo se apoia na teoria do ciclo de vida do produto, complementada pela perspectiva da fragmentação da produção e pela teoria evolucionária do comércio exterior. Com base nestas abordagens teóricas, foi possível observar que a partir das duas últimas décadas do século XX empresas de alta tecnologia de países desenvolvidos passaram a deslocar sua produção para países em desenvolvimento, com baixos salários. Enquanto a produção e o consumo se deslocaram, a tecnologia ainda permanece concentrada. Identificou-se ainda que, mesmo na existência de forte estímulo ao deslocamento da produção, este só ocorre na ausência de sistemas de inovação capazes de estimular a produção interna. Analogamente, a atração de atividades fragmentadas da produção de alta tecnologia, por parte de países de baixos salários, ocorre apenas quando os governos nacionais executam ativas e efetivas políticas públicas para tal. Depois de compreendidas as forças que atuam no sentido de moldar a atual geografia da alta tecnologia, identificaram-se quatro grupos de países, quais sejam: (i) países de liderança tecnológica superavitários; (ii) países de liderança tecnológica deficitários; (iii) países seguidores tecnológicos superavitários e; (iv) países seguidores tecnológicos deficitários / Abstract: In the past, the high-tech production was exclusive made in high per capita income countries. But, currently, this kind of production is also made in low per capita income countries. This change happened due to the possibility of production fragmentation. In this context, countries with high technology intensities focus on the production of complex components and R&D. On the other hand, countries with low technology intensities focus on the assembling or on the production of simple components. Based on these premises, this doctoral thesis aims to understand the geographical macrodynamics related to this new international division of labor. To achieve this objective, the product life cycle theory, the production fragmentation perspective and the evolutionary theory were used. Based on these theoretical approaches, it was observed that the manufacture and consumption of high tech products has started a process of dispersion through different countries in the globe, including low income ones, and that, at the same time, technology development of these high tech products have remained concentrated in the high income countries. It was also possible to observe that the displacement of production, from the high per capita income countries to the low per capita income countries, could be diminished through the establishment of strong national industrial/innovation policies. Analogously, the attraction, by low per capita income countries, of fragmented production relies on the presence of these same policies. Finally, in this new international division of labor, it was identified four different groups of countries: (i) surplus technology leaders; (ii) deficit technology leaders; (iii) surplus technology followers; and (iv) deficit technology followers / Doutorado / Politica Cientifica e Tecnologica / Doutor em Política Científica e Tecnológica
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Rozmiestnenie a konkurencieschopnosť hi-tech priemyslu v EÚ / Location and competitiveness of hi-tech industry in EUKrošlák, Peter January 2011 (has links)
The aim of my master's thesis is to assess the influence of research support of European Union on location and competitiveness of European high-tech industry. After defining high-tech industry according to OECD and ČSÚ (Czech statistical office) follows a part dealing with different forms of support of EU for high-tech industry, while the focus is also on volume and efficiency of invested money. I try to analyze the location with regard to European support and Porter's diamond theory. Since high-tech industry is usually concentrated in clusters, which are rather abundant in Europe as well, the focus is only on a few selected regions. Last part compares European competitiveness with that of other OECD members and developing countries based on data from OECD and Eurostat.
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