TY - JOUR
T1 - Structuring for innovative responses to human resource challenges: A skunk works approach
AU - Biron, Michal
AU - De Cieri, Helen
AU - Fulmer, Ingrid
AU - Lin, Veronica Cai-Hui
AU - Mayrhofer, Wolfgang
AU - Nyfoundi, Margarita
AU - Sanders, Karin
AU - Shipton, Helen
AU - Sun, James Jian Min
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Increasingly, organizations find that they need to be more flexible and innovative in responding to unexpected and emergent human resource (HR) issues affecting their members, such as outbreaks of infectious diseases (e.g., COVID-19) forcing massive transition to remote work, changes in industry landscape altering learning and development, and politically-driven global mobility regulations restricting people flow. Organizations have long utilized informal structures known as “skunk works”, flexible groups empowered to work rapidly with minimal management constraints, to address technological challenges. In this article, we aim to better understand when and how organizations similarly employ skunk works-like structures to help them deal with rapidly evolving HR-related challenges. We discuss three examples of organizations that have utilized this approach. We then integrate the learning insights from these examples to develop a framework supported by a set of research questions to guide future scholarship into HR skunk works. We emphasize that there are both benefits and drawbacks of innovative organizational structures for addressing HR challenges alongside regular, established ways of working.
AB - Increasingly, organizations find that they need to be more flexible and innovative in responding to unexpected and emergent human resource (HR) issues affecting their members, such as outbreaks of infectious diseases (e.g., COVID-19) forcing massive transition to remote work, changes in industry landscape altering learning and development, and politically-driven global mobility regulations restricting people flow. Organizations have long utilized informal structures known as “skunk works”, flexible groups empowered to work rapidly with minimal management constraints, to address technological challenges. In this article, we aim to better understand when and how organizations similarly employ skunk works-like structures to help them deal with rapidly evolving HR-related challenges. We discuss three examples of organizations that have utilized this approach. We then integrate the learning insights from these examples to develop a framework supported by a set of research questions to guide future scholarship into HR skunk works. We emphasize that there are both benefits and drawbacks of innovative organizational structures for addressing HR challenges alongside regular, established ways of working.
U2 - 10.1016/j.hrmr.2020.100768
DO - 10.1016/j.hrmr.2020.100768
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1053-4822
VL - 31
SP - 1
EP - 16
JO - Human Resource Management Review
JF - Human Resource Management Review
IS - 2
ER -