Human Resource Management (HRM) is the business science that studies how organizations acquire, develop, motivate, and retain their people. It treats employees not only as a cost but as a source of value, skill, and innovation. HRM’s role is to align individual capabilities and motivations with organizational goals, ensuring that human potential is managed as systematically as financial or physical capital.


Core Functions

  1. Recruitment and Selection
    • Workforce planning, job design, talent acquisition.
    • Assessment methods: interviews, tests, simulations.
  2. Training and Development
    • Onboarding, skills training, leadership development.
    • Career pathing and succession planning.
  3. Performance Management
    • Goal-setting, appraisals, feedback systems.
    • Linking individual results to organizational objectives.
  4. Compensation and Benefits
    • Pay structures, incentives, bonuses.
    • Non-monetary benefits: healthcare, pensions, work-life balance.
  5. Employee Relations
    • Labor law compliance, union negotiations, conflict resolution.
    • Building engagement, culture, and trust.
  6. Health, Safety, and Well-Being
    • Compliance with occupational standards.
    • Initiatives for employee wellness and resilience.

Major Branches


Methods


Theoretical Foundations


Role in Knowledge

As a business science, HRM provides:


Distinction


In the Logos Framework

HRM spans Purpose, Moment, and Value:

It is the science of people in organizations: dividing roles, structuring incentives, and integrating individual lives into collective enterprise.