1. Mergers and acquisitions as a human resource strategy
- Author
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Po‐Chien Li, Shih‐Chang Hung, and Bou-Wen Lin
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Sample (statistics) ,Strategic orientation ,Strategic human resource planning ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Mergers and acquisitions ,Strategic management ,Generalizability theory ,Operations management ,Human resources ,business ,Industrial organization ,Drawback - Abstract
PurposeThis paper investigates how a firm's human resource capability can affect the deployment and effectiveness of corporate mergers and acquisitions strategy.Design/methodology/approachMergers and acquisitions (M&A) is treated as a long‐term strategic orientation based on human resource advantage rather than a tactic to pursue short‐term goals. Using a sample of 267 US banking firms, the main and interaction effects of M&A intensity, HR capability, and in‐state propensity on four firm performance measures were examined.FindingsThe findings confirm that banking M&A could be very effective when the firm had high HR capability. Evidence was also found that HR capability had a direct impact on firm performance. Although in‐state M&A strategy was in general superior to out‐of‐state M&A strategy, a firm with excellent HR capability might narrow the performance difference between in‐state and out‐of‐state M&A.Research limitations/implicationsAn obvious drawback of using this sample of banking firms is that it raises questions about the generalizability of these findings to smaller financial firms and firms in other industries. This study considers firms having at least one M&A over a three‐year period, so we should not generalize our findings to those firms preferring to use internal growth strategies or greenfield start‐ups.Practical implicationsThe main message of this paper is that human resource capability is critical for M&A strategy to be effective.Originality/valueBy extending previous investigations which showed that M&A strategy and HR capacity should be independently treated, this study highlights the critical role of internal HR capability in performance implications of M&A strategy.
- Published
- 2006