human resource management; the road to professionalization in the

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© 2011 Page I Human Resource Management; The Road to Professionalization in the UK and USA Master’s thesis for Masters in Management, MA for Kingston University Supervising Professor: Dr. Kerstin Alfes, Academic MCIPD, Senior Lecturer, Department for Leadership, HRM and Organization Date: 9 th December 2011 Submission by: Bridget A Fanning, FCIPD, FCMI, SPHR

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Page 1: Human Resource Management; The Road to Professionalization in the

© 2011 Page I

Human Resource

Management;

The Road to

Professionalization in the UK

and USA Master’s thesis for Masters in Management, MA for Kingston University

Supervising Professor: Dr. Kerstin Alfes, Academic MCIPD, Senior Lecturer, Department

for Leadership, HRM and Organization

Date: 9th

December 2011

Submission by:

Bridget A Fanning, FCIPD, FCMI, SPHR

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© 2011 Page II

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

“There’s never been a better time to be in HR” (Brockbank and Ulrich, 2003, Pp.iii)

Twenty five years ago I embarked on my Human Resource Management journey starting my

career in Personnel in the UK National Archive. I have been challenged, stretched and

learned more than I ever could have envisioned at the beginning. I look forward to the next

twenty five years with eager anticipation – I believe there has never been a better time to be

in HR.

I would like to thank Dr Kerstin Alfes for her unwavering support, encouragement and

enthusiasm for my project. Working with Kerstin was invaluable and I could not have

achieved this dissertation without her advice and guidance.

I would like to thank the Fanning family in Guildford, Chris, Mel and Gracie for letting me

stay with them for the classes at Kingston and for their encouragement.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS…………………………………………………………………. II

TABLE OF CONTENTS……………………………………………………………………. III

INDEX OF TABLES / ILLUSTRATIONS………………………………………………... VI

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS………………………………………………………………. VIII

LIST OF APPENDICES……………………………………………………………………. X

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1. Scope of Study………………………………………………………………………… 1

1.2. Structure of Dissertation………………………………………………………………. 4

2. HISTORY OF HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT 6

3. THE HR ENVIRONMENT

3.1. The HR Environment………………………………………………………………….. 8

3.2. The External Environment impacting HR as a Profession……………...…………….. 8

3.2.1 Technology……………………………………………………………… 8

3.2.2 Globalization……………………………………………………………. 8

3.2.3 Regulation, Ethical and Socially Responsible Organizations…………… 9

3.2.4 Workforce Demographics……………………………………………….. 9

3.2.5 Increased Shareholder Value……………………………………………. 10

3.3. Implications of Business Challenges for HR as a Profession…………………………. 10

4. LITERATURE REVIEW – WHAT IS A PROFESSION

4.1. What is a Profession?...................................................................................................... 12

4.2. The Early Professions………………………………………………………………….. 12

4.3. Definition of a Profession……………………………………………………………... 13

4.4. Characteristics of a Profession………………………………………………………… 14

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4.4.1 Governing Body…………………………………………………………. 23

4.4.2 Code of Ethics & Discipline……………………………………………... 26

4.4.3 Independence…………………………………………………………….. 27

4.4.4 Certification & Education & Training…………………………………... 27

4.4.5 Legal Status……………………………………………………………… 29

4.4.6 Contribution to Society………………………………………………….. 29

4.4.7 Body of Knowledge……………………………………………………... 30

4.4.8 Research…………………………………………………………………. 31

4.4.9 Recognition……………………………………………………………… 32

4.5. Professionalization…………………………………………………………………….. 32

5. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 35

6. HR AS A PROFESSION IN THE UK AND USA

6.1. HR as a Profession…………………………………………………………………….. 39

6.2. HR as a Profession – Assessment of nine characteristics UK and USA………………. 44

6.2.1 HR Governing Bodies – UK and USA………………………………….. 44

6.2.2 HR Code of Ethics………………………………………………………. 50

6.2.3 HR Independence………………………………………………………... 51

6.2.4 HR Certification, Education & Training………………………………… 51

5.2.4.1 Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development - UK

5.2.4.2 Human Resource Certification Institute - USA

6.2.5 HR Legal Status…………………………………………………………. 58

6.2.6 HR Contribution to Society……………………………………………… 59

6.2.7 The HR Body of Knowledge…………………………………………….. 60

5.2.7.1 US HR Body of Knowledge

5.2.7.2 UK HR Body of Knowledge

6.2.8 HR Research……………………………………………………………... 63

6.2.9 HR Recognition………………………………………………………….. 63

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7. SUMMARY ASSESSMENT OF THE HR PROFESSION IN THE UK AND USA

7.1. The Road to Professionalization………………………………………………………. 65

8. CONCLUSIONS

8.1 Conclusions- Research Questions Addressed…………………………………………. 68

8.2 How is a profession defined?.......................................................................................... 68

8.3 What are its characteristics?............................................................................................ 69

8.4 What does a HR professionality continuum look like?................................................... 69

8.5 How do the UK and USA certify the attainment of professional standards?.................. 68

8.6 To what extent has HR developed as a profession in the UK and USA?....................... 71

8.7 Why being considered a profession is important to HR Professionals?......................... 71

8.8 The Implications of Professionalization for HR Practitioners………………………… 72

9. REFERENCES 74

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INDEX OF TABLES / ILLUSTRATIONS

Table No. Table Page

Table 1.1 Structure of Dissertation

4

Table 4.1 Authors Characteristics of a Profession

15

Table 4.2 Analysis of Nine Characteristics of a Profession

21

Table 4.3 The Nine Characteristics that identify a Profession

23

Table 5.1 The advantages and disadvantages of interviews and

questionnaires as a research methodology (Kumar, 2011)

38

Table 6.1 Is HR a Profession? – Summary of Literature Review

39

Table 6.2 Key Elements of HR Professional Associations Mission

Statements

46

Table 6.3 Governing Body Assessment of Geoffrey Millerson‘s Primary

and Secondary Characteristics

49

Table 6.4 Eligibility Requirements for the SHRM / HRCI Exams

55

Table 6.5 Weightings for both PHR and SPHR exams and Number of

Questions

56

Table 6.6 Pass Rate of PHR and SPHR Exams

56

Table 6.7 Characteristics of Training – Freidson, 2001

58

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Table 7.1 HR Professionality Continuum - The extent to which the HR can

be considered a profession in the UK and USA

65

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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

ABA American Bar Association

AMA American Medical Association

CCHRA Canadian Council of Human Resource Associations

CIPD Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development

Dr. Doctor

Ed. Edition

ERC Ethics Resource Center

Est‘d Established

et al et alii

EVA Economic Value Added

GPHR® Global Professional in Human Resources

HCI Human Capital Institute

HR Human Resource(s)

HRCI Human Resource Certification Institute

HRD Human Resource Development

HRM Human Resource(s) Management

HRPA Human Resource Policy Association

Http Hypertext transfer protocol

i.e. Is est

L&D Learning and Development

MVA Market Value Added

No. Number

PARN Professional Associations Research Network

PHR® Professional in Human Resources

Prof. Professor

QCF Qualifications and Credit Framework

SHRM Society for Human Resource Management

SPHR® Senior Professional in Human Resources

TQM Total Quality Management

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UK United Kingdom

USA United States of America

vs versus

www World wide web

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APPENDICES

Page

A. An Analysis of Elements Included in Various Definitions of Profession

(Millerson, 1964, Table 1.1)

83

B. History of Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development 84

C. History of the Society of Human Resource Management 85

D. Analysis of Assessment of Nine Characteristics from table 7.1 87

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1. INTRODUCTION

1.1 Scope of Study

The status of Human Resource Management (HRM) and its standing as a managerial

profession has been a recurring concern for practitioners over time. In recent years, a

normative discourse has developed which asserts that the path to improved status for HR

―professionals‖ involved reinvention of their role as ―business partners‖ and ―internal

consultants‖ promoting enterprise competiveness (Wright, 2008). Another view shared by

many authors is that HR professionals need to adopt the characteristics of the professions and

be more ―professional‖. This dissertation focuses on whether HR in the UK and USA can be

considered a profession. It has implications for the design and development of education for

HR practitioners and how they position themselves within their companies to support their

businesses. This dissertation will add to the debate as to whether HR can be considered a

profession and is grounded in the research of what a profession is. It will shift the debate

from whether HR is a profession or not to the debate of whether HR should be pursuing

professionalization and how it fits with the strategic business partner role. In addition it will

raise research questions for further exploration.

It does not explore whether the role of business partner / internal consultant serves to

undermine a cohesive occupational identity as a profession to ensure the dissertation stays

within a manageable length.

This dissertation explores HRM as a profession and is primarily concerned with the current

status of the HRM profession against a framework of an ideal type of professionalism in both

the UK and the USA. First the historical development of the profession is discussed, second

the implications of the environment on the HR profession is outlined, third the characteristics

of professional work are explained and finally the HRM profession is assessed against these

characteristics. The approach taken was to consider the professional standards in both

countries (UK and USA) and certification programs by means of a systematic literature

review and comprehensive review of the governing body websites.

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The UK and USA were taken for the analysis since the development of professional identities

is seen an Anglo-American phenomenon and much of the literature is focused on the UK and

USA (Friedson, 1994). In addition, the UK Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development

(CIPD) and the USA Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) are the oldest

professional organizations for HR Professionals founded in 1913 and 1948 respectively and

are the largest professional organizations in the world. Canadian Council of Human

Resources Associations (CCHRA) is the next largest with 41,000 members established in

1994.

This dissertation aims to answer the following research questions:

How is a profession defined?

What are its characteristics?

What does a HR professionality continuum look like?

How do the UK and USA certify the attainment of professional standards?

To what extent has HR developed as a profession in the UK and USA?

Why being considered a profession is important to HR Professionals?

There have been reviews of human resources as a profession and in these reviews the authors

have taken only a few of the characteristics of a profession created by themselves or they

have used one of the published models on professions. Dave Ulrich (1997) and Michael

Losey (1999) used their own frameworks of what a profession is to review the HR profession.

Chris Brewster et al (2000) compared the HR profession using Geoffrey Millersons 1964

framework, Gold and Bratton (2003) compared the HR profession using Hodson and

Sullivans (2012) framework and also used Friedson‘s (2001) framework but compared the

UK HR profession only. This dissertation is comprehensive since a thorough review of what

constitutes a profession was conducted before assessing whether HR could be considered a

profession or not. The nine characteristics identified of what constitutes a profession were

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then compared to the UK and USA HR profession. Published articles have either covered the

UK or USA but not completed a comparison of both.

This dissertation sets out to address this gap in research by conducting a comprehensive

analysis of what a profession is and then compares both the profession in the UK and USA to

this ideal. Finally there are conclusions to what extent HR has developed as a profession in

the UK and USA.

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1.2 Structure of Dissertation

Table 1.1 Structure of Dissertation

This dissertation is divided into eight chapters. The first chapter includes the description of

the scope of study, including the research questions to be answered. It continues with an

assessment of the gap in the research and literature addressing HR as a profession. In addition

it outlines the structure of the dissertation. Chapter two summarizes the history of HR.

Chapter three reviews the external environment impacting HR as a profession. Chapter four

Summary Assessment of the HR Profession in the UK and USA

Literature Review

What is a Profession?

HR as a Profession in the UK and USA

Chapter 7:

Chapter 4:

Chapter 5:

Chapter 2: History of HRM

The HR Environment

Chapter 3:

Chapter 8:

Conclusions

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 6:

Research Methodology

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examines what is a profession and includes definitions and identifies the characteristics of a

profession. Finally it discusses the journey of professionalization. Chapter five outlines the

research methodology chosen and why it was chosen over other methods. Chapter six reviews

the literature to examine the progress of HR as a profession in the UK and USA. Chapter

seven summarizes the assessment of HR as a profession in the UK and USA. Finally chapter

eight outlines the conclusions including whether HR as a profession is more developed in the

UK or USA.

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2. HISTORY OF HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT

For over 50 years, personnel managers have sought to move beyond their roles as welfare

officers and employment administrators to a more central and strategic position in the

running of the business organization (Wright, 2008). Until the 1980s, most organizations

used the term personnel management; from then on Human Resources Management (HRM)

became popular (Rudman, 2010).

In the past, it is argued, the personnel function was about welfare and remuneration, but now

it is centered on organizational reaction to changing environments with increases in

globalization and the use of technology and knowledge-based workers. This is affecting the

technical competency requirements of personnel practitioners and it is also having an impact

on where the personnel function fits into the organization as a whole. The literature clearly

states that personnel should be taking a more strategic role within organizations, and there is

research evidence that this is actually taking place (Brewster et al, 2000).

Historical analysis of the rise of the personnel function during the 20th

century highlights how

the function grew in popularity in response to changes in labor law, tight labor markets, and

employer and state concern over worker morale and productivity (Gospel 1992, Jacoby,

1985, Wright, 1995). During the 1970s and 1980s, the expansion of the services sector,

declining trade union density, and the growing importance of skilled technical employees

were also seen as contributing to the emergence of the personnel function (Kochan and

Cappelli, 1984, Kochan et al.1986). However, personnel management suffered in its status as

the ―poor cousin‖ of the managerial professions. As Legge (1978) has argued, personnel

managers were engaged in a ―vicious cycle‖ in which they were accorded a relatively low

status by senior and operational managers, failed to be involved in the firm‘s strategic

planning, and when personnel problems inevitably emerged, were hamstrung by the limited

resources they were accorded. The marginalization of the personnel function was also related

to its welfare work origins and concern with the ―human element‖, which conflicts with the

more hard-nosed approach of production and line managers (Legge 1978, Watson 1977).

Added to this, the difficulty of demonstrating personnel‘s contribution to the organizational

―bottom line‖ was a barrier to senior management acceptance (Legge 1978, Wright 1995).

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The low status of the personnel function was reflected in weak forms of professional

organization, which were incapable of controlling entry to personnel work or monopolizing

personnel expertise. Indeed, Watson (1977, 2002) notes the ambivalent attitudes of personnel

managers to the concept of professionalism, seeing themselves first and foremost as members

of the ―management team‖, although also willing to adopt a professional identity as an

additional means of advancement (Wright 2008).

As a domain of professional work, Human Resource Management (HRM) and its (UK)

professional association of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development have made

significant advances both in terms of the influence of some of the main ideas, the status of

HRM practitioners, and their professional organization, the CIPD. However, some doubts

remain as to the influence and status of HRM (Gold and Bratton, 2003).

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3. THE HR ENVIRONMENT

Every company operates in the context of external business realities. An effective HR

function has HR professionals who recognize external business realties and adapt HR

practices and allocate HR resources accordingly (Ulrich and Brockbank, 2005).

3.1 The HR Environment

Many human resource functions have been undergoing unprecedented changes in the last few

years; new HR visions are being formulated, innovative HR strategies implemented,

advanced HR information systems installed, HR structures redesigned, and HR processes

reengineered. To add higher value to their corporations, many HR functions are being driven

to lower HR costs, enhance the quality of HR services, and forge stronger linkages with

business needs (Schuler, 1990, Yeung, Brockbank, and Ulrich 1994, Yeung and Brockbank

1995).

3.2 The External Environment impacting HR as a Profession

3.2.1 Technology

Technology drives almost every aspect of the changing business environment. HR

professionals must be able to understand how people create new technologies that keep their

firms ahead of the competition and how technology is used within the HR function. To

contribute to management team discussions about technology, HR professionals need a

knowledge base about the current technological possibilities and a general vision about the

future role that technology might play in their firms (Ulrich and Brockbank, 2005).

The impact on technology on HR‘s work cannot be underestimated. The three most important

catalysts for change include 1) employee self-service through web-based portals, 2)

increasingly sophisticated call centers and 3) aggressive new entrants into the outsourcing

market (SHRM, 2002).

3.2.2 Globalization

Globalization occurs when goods and services, capital, information and people move across

national borders. Such movement is intensified and accelerated by technology. Competition

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from countries with lower labor costs may drive UK / USA businesses to develop a

competitive edge based on factors other than low price. Engineering products and services

that deliver more value to customers will require new knowledge, skills and tools for

employees and HR will assume responsibility for finding, developing, and retaining those

skilled employees (SHRM, 2011).

This globalization of industry structure and markets requires senior-level HR professionals to

further their competence-upgrading, so that they can understand the appropriate linkages

between global and country-specific business strategies and the strategic human resource

management practices that are most suitable in each country and/or regional operating

environment. Senior-level HR professionals require insight into the forces that share decision

making in the specific human resource practices needed in their organizations‘ various

country affiliates, as these practices will differ from local practices vis-à-vis parent HR

practices (Rosenzweig and Nohria, 1994).

As organizations become more global it can be argued that the need for standardization

within the profession is growing and arguably there is a shift towards convergence on what

an HR professional is and what is required to operate as a HR professional (Brewster et al

2000).

3.2.3 Regulation, Ethical and Socially Responsible Organizations

HR departments have traditionally been among the most regulated; they are heavily involved

in dozens of major legal issues that must be addressed if the company is to focus on issues

more germane to its competitiveness. In recent years, the highest profile discussion in the

area of regulation affecting HR and companies in general has revolved around the question of

ethics. The involvement of HR professionals relative to ethical issues is substantially

increasing (SHRM 2011). HR professionals as contributing members of the strategy team

must be aware of these forces (Ulrich and Brockbank, 2005).

3.2.4 Workforce Demographics

Workforce demographics that influence the pool of labor available to conceive, develop,

produce, distribute, and sell products and services are changing in turbulent ways.

Demographics likewise directly influence the demand for types and volumes of products and

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services. HR professionals need a grasp of basic global and domestic demographic trends –

and at the strategy table, they also need to have specific data to back up their assertions

regarding these trends. Five categories of demographic trends – declining workforce growth,

increasing age of the workforce, changing gender balance, increasing ethnic diversity, and

deteriorating family economic health – are most relevant for business discussions (SHRM,

2011).

Many of those born between 1977 and 1995 – Generation Y (the millennials) have entered

the workplace with different expectations that their parents (Rosethorn, 2009). Hirschman

(2006) states that the millennials are entering the workforce, bringing with them new

promises and challenges for HR, not to mention a whole new way of working. Given the

retiring baby boom generation an organization‘s future vitality is dependent on its ability to

attract, retain motivate and develop millennials (Espinoza, Ukleja, Rusch, 2010).

3.2.5 Increased Shareholder Value

The debate about whether corporations should serve only shareholders or whether they have a

responsibility to a wider group of stakeholders who are bound up in the structure and success

of corporations is a critical debate (Bing, Kehrhahn and Short, 2003). Measuring and

managing shareowner value creation has become one of the most important roles for

corporate management (Lawson and Limbrick, 1996).

Shareowner value creation has two key implications for competence building for senior-level

HR professionals. First, senior-level HR professionals need to be familiar with both measures

of value creation and what specific ―value drivers‖ within their respective businesses and

organization affect Economic Value Added (EVA) and Market Value Added (MVA).

Second, Senior Level HR professionals need to develop skills and perspectives as to how a

given or planned portfolio of HR initiatives (programs, practices, and processes) can enhance

the organization‘s economic value and, in turn, affect EVA and MVA (Tully, 1994).

3.3 Implications of Business Challenges for HR as a Profession

HR will have to learn to adapt to this environmental transformation. The new demands being

placed on HR staff are to develop leaders and more generally to recruit and retain a quality

workforce. Alongside this, there needs to be an increase in workforce productivity in the face

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of heightened competition, and so compensation then needs to be aligned with business

strategy. It then also becomes essential to develop employees in order to achieve the

organization‘s goals. Individual capabilities within the organization as a whole are becoming

more important than purely within a defined job, and hence, individuals are being recognized

as capable of influencing an organization‘s success (Brewster et al, 2000, Porter 1998).

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4. LITERATURE REVIEW – WHAT IS A PROFESSION?

Chapter two briefly discussed that historically the personnel function was about welfare and

remuneration, but now it is centered on organizational reaction to changing environments

(Brewster et al, 2000).Chapter three outlined this changing environment noting that an

effective HR function has HR professionals who recognize external business realties and

adapts HR practices and allocates HR resources accordingly (Ulrich and Brockbank, 2005).

Friedson has written extensively on the subject of professions. He states that (1994, P.15), ―in

order to think clearly and systematically about anything, one must define the subject matter to

be addressed by empirical and intellectual analysis. Theory cannot be developed if it is not

certain what is being talked about.‖ Therefore, before outlining the empirical analysis of the

literature on whether HR can be considered a profession or not, it is important to clarify

exactly what a profession is.

4.1 What is a Profession?

Experts are needed to provide services which the recipients are not adequately knowledgeable

to evaluate. How can clients be protected against incompetence, carelessness and

exploitation? If state control is unacceptable, as it was when the ideology of professionalism

first developed in nineteenth-century Britain and America, then control has to be vested in the

experts themselves. Hence the emphasis put by the professions on moral probity, service

orientation and codes of conduct (Eraut, 1994).

Professions are made up of particular categories of people that individuals seek advice and

services because they have knowledge and skills that they do not. A doctor for example can

recommend a course of treatment for an illness, a lawyer can advise on a course of legal

action. These judgments cannot be made by the individual being treated and often they

cannot judge the quality of the advice they received (Barker, 2010).

4.2 The Early Professions

The earliest professions are generally accepted to be the high status groups representing,

divinity, medicine and law (Elliott, 1972, Klass, 1961, Freidson, 1994, Eraut, 1994).

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The majority of authors on professions have been content to use medicine, law and theology

– the so-called ―learned professions‖ – as models or benchmarks. The learned professions

were the first ―true‖ professions to be widely recognized as such; they have continued to be

thought of as professions over a long period of time; they have identifiable characteristics of

a true profession (Nanda 2005).

The development and organization of the professions appear to be primarily an Anglo-

American phenomena having less significance to other developed countries. In Britain and

America occupations have mounted their own campaigns for recognition and protection,

whereas in Europe the state has been more active in the organization of training and

employment. It is no accident that the theoretical literature on the professions is almost

wholly Anglo-American (Friedson, 1994).

4.3 Definition of a Profession

Friedson (1994) states that much debate, going back at least as far as Flexner (1915), has

centered around how professions should be defined – which occupations should be called

professions, and by what institutional criteria. But while most definitions overlap in the

elements, traits or attributes they include, a number of tallies have demonstrated a persistent

lack of consensus about which traits are to be emphasized in theorizing (Millerson, 1964).

Terence Johnson (1972) defined a profession as a method of controlling work – one in which

an occupation rather than individual consumers or an agent or agency mediating between

occupation and consumers or an agent, exercises control over its work. And he emphasized

the role of power in establishing and maintaining such control (Freidson, 1994).

There is agreement on the general structure of a definition; namely, that a profession is an

occupation which has specified characteristics and no single characteristic can adequately

convey the idea of a definition. There is some disagreement as to what these characteristics

should be, and perhaps even more disagreement on the degree to which an occupation should

possess the specified characteristics (Horn, 1978).

Among those engaged in occupations which have not been widely accepted as professions

there is a strong drive to appear professional, if only because of their aspirations for status.

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The professional is believed to wear a badge of prestige, in effect, and this has inspired many

individuals and groups to seek the distinction (Horn, 1978). The members of occupational

groups self-consciously seek to elevate the status of their occupation by adopting the

characteristics of professionals (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

Summarizing the professionalism literature in 1964 Geoffrey Millerson defined a profession

as ―a profession involves a skill based on theoretical knowledge - The skill requires training

and knowledge - The professional must demonstrate competence by passing a test - Integrity

is maintained by adherence to a code of conduct - The service is for the public good - The

profession is organized.‖ (Millerson, 1964, P.4).

4.4 Characteristics of a Profession

Identifying professions by a set of characteristics is called the structural-functional approach,

the traits approach, or hallmarks approach. Not all sociologists agree that this approach is the

best way to understand the professions. Using a conflict approach, they contend that the

professions are merely the powerful occupations that are currently winning in the constant

struggle among occupations to control preferred types of work. Therefore the problem is not

which occupations are recognized as professions but, rather the process by which they gained

their recognition. Over time, people may come to change their perceptions about which

occupations are powerful (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

The majority of the literature focuses on the characteristics approach and so does this

dissertation. It identifies nine characteristics from the literature review and then the HR

profession is evaluated against them.

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Table 4.1 Authors Characteristics of a Profession

Table 4.1 presents a review of the literature in identifying the characteristics of a profession.

Alan A Klass, 1961, What is

a Profession

1) A profession inherits the ideas and ideals of a university;

scholarship and research with the single aim of excellence

2) A profession must acquire a statutory basis in the law of the

country.

3) The internal government of a profession must lie with its

own membership and it must be on the broadest possible

democratic basis.

4) Men and women of superior type with a common ideal of

service above gain, excellence above quality, self-expression

beyond pecuniary motive and loyalty to a professional code

about individual advantage.

Geoffrey Millerson, 1964,

The Qualifying Associations

(Page 4)

1) A profession involves skill based on theoretical knowledge.

2) The skill requires training and education

3) The professional must demonstrate competence by passing a

test

4) Integrity is maintained by adherence to a code of conduct

5) The service is for the public good

6) The profession is organized

Ronald C Horn, 1978, On

Professions, Professionals

and Professional Ethics

(Page 40)

1) A commitment to high ethical standards

2) A prevailing attitude of altruism

3) Mandatory educational preparation and training

4) Mandatory continuing education

5) A formal association or society

6) Independence; and, with reservations

7) Public recognition as a profession

Lord Benson, 1983, The

professions and community

1) The primary function of a profession is to give advice and

service to the community in a specialized field of learning.

2) A profession must have a governing body which represents it

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and has power of control and discipline over its members.

3) A professional persons first and particular responsibility is to

his client

4) The governing body must restrict entry to those with a

minimum standard of education.

5) The subsequent system of educating and training in both

theory and practice must be constantly updated and adapted.

6) A profession must impose on its members high standards of

conduct and performance.

7) The members must be, and be seen to be, in a position to be

independent – independent in mind and outlook.

Dave Ulrich 1997, Human

Resource Champions (Pages

17-19)

Professionals in other functional areas – physicians, attorneys,

engineers, psychologists, controllers, and so on – share the following

characteristics:

1) Focus on defined outcomes (for example, physicians commit

themselves to the Hippocratic oath and to healing).

2) A shared body of knowledge (for example, attorneys learn

the canon of law).

3) Essential competencies (for example, engineers have the

skills to build bridges, design machinery, or create

computers).

4) Ethical standards maintained by collegial jurisdiction (for

example, licensed psychologists must adhere to an

established set of ethical standards).

5) Clear roles (for example, controllers help monitor the

economic performance of their firms).

6) Outcome definition, knowledge, competencies, standards and

role criteria enable these occupations to be recognized and

accepted as professions.

Michael R. Losey, 1999,

Mastering the Competencies

The greatest human resource accomplishment, however, has been

the worldwide recognition that human resource management indeed,

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of HR Management. Human

Resource Management, Vol.

38, No 2, Pages 99-102

is a profession;

1) With a clearly defined body of knowledge, that means it can

be taught –

2) if it can be taught it can also be learned and tested.

3) Like other recognized professions, human resource

management has its own set of ethical standards.

Eliot Freidson, 2001,

Professionalism, the Third

Logic (Page 127)

1) Specialized work in the officially recognized economy that is

believed to be grounded in a body of theoretically based,

discretionary knowledge and skill and that it accordingly

given special status in the labor force;

2) Exclusive jurisdiction in a particular division of labor created

and controlled by occupational negotiation;

3) A sheltered position in both external and internal labor

markets that is based on qualifying credentials created by the

occupation;

4) A formal training program lying outside the labor market

that produces the qualifying credentials, which is controlled

by the occupation and associated with higher education; and

5) An ideology that asserts great commitment to doing good

work than to economic gain and to the quality rather than the

economic efficiency of work.

Ashish Nanda, 2004.

Professional Associations

Professionals follow norms of dignity, personal detachment,

altruism and client interest. To make the professional pledge

credible to clients, professionals organize in associations that ensure,

and thereby assure clients, that the professionals‘ conduct is

consonant with their pledge. Professional associations influence, and

often determine, the training that aspirants must undergo to qualify

as professionals. The education process does not end with the

aspirants becoming professionals. Professional associations ensure

that education and socialization are ongoing throughout the

professionals careers by requiring their members to take courses and

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classes regularly.

Cheetham, Graham. and

Chivers, Geoff. (2005).

Professions, Competence

and Informal Learning

(Page 7)

A synthesis drawn from a range of sources yield the following

composite list:

1) Confers status within Society

2) Organized (into some sort of professional body)

3) Learned i.e. requires prolonged and specialized training and

education.

4) Altruistic (orientated towards service, rather than profit)

5) Offers autonomy within job role

6) Is informed by an ethical code of some kind

7) Is non commercial

8) Collectively influential within society

9) Self-regulating

10) Collegial

11) Client focused

Rakesh Khurana and Nitin

Nohria, 2008. It’s Time to

Make Management a True

Profession

1) True professions have codes of conduct, and the meaning

and consequences of those codes are taught as part of the

formal education of their members

2) A governing body, composed of respected members of the

profession, overseas members compliance.

3) Require a formal education

4) A License to practice

Robert Schultze, 2008, What

does it mean to be a self-

governing regulated

profession?

Self-Governing professions exhibit three essential characteristics:

1) A unique combination of knowledge and skills.

2) A commitment to duty above self-interest or personal gain

3) Self-governance free from external interference.

Self regulating status is a privilege granted to a profession in order

to serve the public interest and comprises two essential aspects; the

authority to license and the ability to discipline licensees. It is the

role and responsibility of the self-governing profession to ensure

that admittance into the profession is guarded by strict standards of

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qualification and that members, once admitted, are governed by high

standards of competence and conduct. It is also the responsibility of

the self-governing profession to establish a program of continuing

professional development to ensure that members maintain a high

level of technical competence and professional conduct.

Richard Barker, 2010, No,

Management is Not a

Profession

1) A discrete body of knowledge for that field must be defined

and the fields boundaries must be established

2) Certification signals competence to consumers who would

benefit from it.

3) Professional bodies hold a trusted position, they have in

effect a contract with society at large. They control

membership in the professions through examination and

certification.

4) Maintain the quality of certified members through ongoing

training and the enforcement of ethical standards

CIPD 2011 Membership of the CIPD is the recognized benchmark of

professionalism in HR. The CIPD sets standards of entry and

requires a commitment to continuous professional development.

Members are required to adhere to the code of professional conduct

to ensure that standards are maintained and to safeguard the

reputation of the profession. The code was drawn up with the

profession for the profession.

SHRM. 2011, SHRM

Learning System, Society of

Human Resource

Management. (Pages 1-9

and 1-10)

In the mid 1960s, the American Society for Personnel

Administration (ASPA – now SHRM), along with a group from

Cornell University, asked the United States Department of Labor,

―What constitutes a profession?‖. Subsequent discussion among

scholars and regulators isolated five characteristics that separate a

profession from an occupation:

1) National Organization – To qualify as a profession, an

occupation must have a national organization as a recognized

common voice that can speak for its members and foster

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development of the field.

2) Code of ethics – A profession‘s code of ethics identifies

standards of behavior relating to fairness, justice,

truthfulness, and social responsibility.

1) Research – A profession has developed the practice of

applied research and encourages it use to develop the field.

2) Body of Knowledge – a discrete body of knowledge for that

field must be defined, and the field‘s boundaries must be

established. There must also be a reasonable consensus

within the field as to what the knowledge should consist of.

3) Credentialing – A profession must have a credentialing

organization that sets professional standards in the field.

In addition to the five characteristics of a profession noted here,

global competence has also assumed importance. As an increasing

number of enterprises become global in character, the differentiation

of a profession from an occupation is often characterized by a set of

consistent, recognizable global practices and global impact.

Randy Hodson, Teresa A

Sullivan, 2012, The Social

Organization of Work (Page

260)

Hallmarks of a Profession

1) abstract, specialized knowledge,

2) autonomy,

3) authority over clients and subordinate occupational groups,

and

4) a certain degree of altruism.

Millerson in 1964 created a table of all the literature to date and presented an analysis of

characteristics put forward by a number of different commentators. He used this table to

inform his thinking of what characteristics compose a profession. This table is in the

Appendices – table A. Millerson‘s definition is missing independence, legal status, research

and recognition which were agreed by only a few authors at the time. It is Horn‘s (1978)

definition that most closely matches the total nine characteristics; however, it is missing the

key factors of legal status and research.

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Table 4.2 Analysis of Nine Characteristics of a Profession

Table 4.2 presents an analysis of all the characteristics put forward by the authors in table 4.1

on the subject of professions.

Governing

Body

Code of

Ethics &

Discipline

Independence Certification,

Education &

Training

Legal

Status

Contribution

to Society

Body of

Knowledge

Research Recognition

Alan A Klass,

1961

Geoffrey

Millerson, 1964

Ronald C Horn,

1978

Lord Benson,

1983

Dave Ulrich,

1998

Michael Losey

1999

Eliot Freidson,

2001

Ashish Nanda,

2004

Graham

Cheetham and

Geoff Chivers,

2005

Rakesh

Khurana, Nitin

Nohria, 2008

Robert

Schultze, 2008

Richard Barker,

2010

CIPD, 2011

SHRM, 2011

Randy Hodson,

Teresa Sullivan,

2012

The above table shows that there is some agreement with authors about what a profession

should be. There is some consistency that a profession requires a governing body, a code of

ethics and disciplinary procedure, certification, education and training system and a body of

knowledge. There is less agreement about the requirement of independence and contribution

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to society. The characteristics of legal status, contribution to research and recognition are

agreed by two or three authors. However, where these characteristics are referred to they are

considered to be of paramount importance as to whether an occupation can be considered a

profession or not. For example, Klass (1961) argues that for an occupation to be considered a

profession it must have legal status and Ulrich (1998) argues that it must have a rich research

base.

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Table 4.3 The Nine Characteristics that identify a Profession

The literature review identified nine characteristics that define a profession:

Governing Body

Certification, Education &

Training

Body of Knowledge

Code of Ethics & Discipline

Legal Status

Research

Independence

Contribution to Society

Recognition

These are desirable characteristics of a profession. They are not absolute prerequisites,

because a) no established profession meets all the criteria perfectly, b) some unrecognized

occupations meet some or all of the criteria fairly well and c) there are considerable

differences in the degrees to which each criterion is met among the established professions

(Horn, 1978).

4.4.1 Governing Body

The role of the professional body may be instrumental in defining the body of knowledge and

enhancing the legitimacy of a field (Lounsbury, 2002, Tyson, 1999, Wiley, 2000).

Professional communities such as medicine, law and accounting, are highly organized as

communities – and practitioners are regulated by their governing professional body. ‗The

regulation of practitioners for the protection of the public is one of the most important

functions professional associations claim to provide‘ (Van Hoy 1993). In these cases,

‗association membership may be mandatory, association participation is extensive, and

formal interaction and communication are highly developed‘ (Greenwood et al, 2002),

(Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

A profession must have a governing body which represents it and has power of control and

discipline over its members (Benson, 1983).

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The professional association is intensely interested in the organization, curriculum, and

graduates of the professional schools. The American Bar Association (ABA), for example,

accredits law schools. In some states law graduates are eligible to become lawyers only if

they received a law degree from an ABA-accredited school. By accrediting, the professional

association seeks to ensure that the school teaches a core body of knowledge and skills and

that only qualified faculty conduct the training. Professional associations are often reluctant

to accredit new schools or to permit schools to enlarge their student bodies, usually citing

concerns over maintaining the quality of graduates (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

Millerson (1964, Pp. 28-29) argued that the four overarching goals of what he terms

―qualifying associations‖ are: a means of ensuring professional standards; an organized voice

of the profession; a means of extending educational, industrial and other facilities; and

making a contribution to wider society.

Professional associations have a legitimizing role to play in establishing a specialist body of

knowledge, regulating practice and providing a source of internal and external identity for

practitioners (Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

Geoffrey Millerson (1964) stated that there were primary and secondary characteristics of

governing organizations;

Primary Responsibilities:

1) To organize – this is the most fundamental aim of an association. Their

immediate aim is to gather together all those within a particular occupation, or all

persons with a particular interest. The organizing function extends beyond the

period of foundation. It is a continuous process, making members conscious of

being organized and receiving benefits. There needs to be a two way exchange

between organizers and membership. The association organizes to carry out other

aims: to qualify, to study, to protect.

2) To qualify – Tests of competence are necessary to build professional status, as

well as professional standards. Even then, examinations are not enough; the

qualification must be accepted inside the occupation, as good evidence of

knowledge and experience.

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3) To further study of a subject and communicate information obtained (research)–

In any organization, study facilities depend on many factors; available finance,

subject-matter, members‘ needs, alternative sources of information. Facilities can

involve; lectures and discussion meetings, study groups, conferences, conventions,

visits, library, museum, publication of a journal, books, pamphlets, etc.

4) To register competent professionals – Associations, which qualify members,

often maintain a register or publish a membership list, serving as a register of

those considered competent. The list of corporate members provides a useful

guide, for anyone wishing to employ specific professional services.

5) To promote and preserve a high standard of professional conduct – A real need

for a code of ethics depends on the nature of the professional task.

Secondary Responsibilities:

1) To raise professional status – Elevation of professional status might be mistaken

for the central object of many professional organizations. However, improvement

in status can only result from primary aims, viz. promotion of examinations,

enforcement of an ethical code.

2) To control entry into the profession – Unless there are legal restrictions on

practice, a professional association can seldom completely control entrance to the

profession.

3) To protect the profession and the public – Through insisting upon a qualified

membership, adhering to a common practice, controlled by an elected body drawn

from members, an association can present some guarantee of fair competition and

maintained concern over professional matters for the professional, and a possible

source of redress against unreasonable charges, or abuse of trust, for the lay

public. Limitations occur if the association is not connected with a closed

profession, or if disqualification from membership does not prevent further

practice.

4) To act as an interest or pressure group, on behalf of members – All

professional organizations can be assumed to act as the concerted voice of a

professional group.

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5) To encourage social activity and co-operation between professionals – Formal

and informal social contacts are important, if just to remind individual members,

without seeming to indoctrinate, that they belong to a corporate body which exists

for their benefit and well-being.

6) To provide welfare benefits – Some associations, especially those which qualify,

manage a benevolent fund, established by donations, to help necessitous members

or dependants of deceased members.

4.4.2 Code of Ethics & Discipline

In order to protect its clients and provide a service of the necessary quality, a profession must

impose on its members high standards of conduct and performance, above those required by

general law. The governing body must ensure that these standards are observed by applying

disciplinary sanctions if they are not (Benson, 1983).

Rules of conduct or practice and restrictions imposed by a profession should be designed not

to protect the interests of the members but should stand or fall on their capacity to protect the

interests of, or to enhance the level of service to, the public (Benson, 1983).

True professions have codes of conduct, and the meaning and consequences of those codes

are taught as part of the formal education of their members. A governing body, composed of

respected members of the profession, oversees members‘ compliance. Through these codes,

professional institutions forge an implicit social contract with other members of society: Trust

us to exercise control and exercise jurisdiction over this important occupational category. In

return, the profession promises, we will ensure that our members are worthy of your trust –

that they will not only be competent to perform the tasks they have been entrusted with, but

they will conduct themselves with high standards and integrity (Khurana and Nohria, 2008).

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4.4.3 Independence

A professional person‘s first and particular responsibility is to his client. The client should

receive from the adviser the same level of care and attention as the client would himself exert

if he had the knowledge and means (Benson, 1983).

The members must be, and be seen to be, in a position to be independent – independent in

mind and outlook and not under the dominance of persons or circumstances which would

interfere with their judgment. In exercise of this independence they must speak their minds

to, and on behalf of, their clients forthrightly without fear or favor when the occasion

demands (Benson, 1983).

Autonomy means that professionals rely on their own judgment in selecting the relevant

knowledge or the appropriate technique for dealing with the problem at hand. Professionals

justify their autonomy by their mastery of the knowledge base. Laypeople often accept this

autonomy because they assume that professional training is necessary to make decisions.

Professional standards limit autonomy to some degree. For example, a physician can use

experimental drugs or treatments only within certain well-defined limits but is free to choose

among accepted therapies (Dingwall, 2008).

4.4.4 Certification & Education & Training

The governing body must restrict entry to those with a minimum standard of education. The

subsequent system of education and training must be constantly updated and adapted so that

members can speak with knowledge and authority on the subjects within their field of

learning (Benson, 1983).

The occupations claiming to be professions have employed several modes of training and

preparation, often in combination. These include:

a period of pupilage or internship during which students spend a significant

amount of time (up to five years) learning their ―craft‖ from an expert;

enrolment in a ―professional college‖ outside the higher-education system;

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a qualifying examination, normally set by a qualifying association for the

occupation;

a period of relevant study at a college, polytechnic or university leading to a

recognized academic qualification; and

the collection of evidence of practical competence in the form of a logbook or

portfolio (Eraut,1994)

Hoyle (1975) wanted to differentiate between the status-related elements of (teachers‘)

professional work which he termed ―professionalism‖ and the knowledge, skills and

procedures used – for which he developed the term ―professionality‖. Hoyle‘s work led him

to develop a continuum which reflected his view of the range of professionality – a

continuum ranging from ―restricted‖ (at the lower end) to ―extended‖ professionality.

Professionality seems to be concerned with the knowledge, skills and procedures involved in

the practice of the occupation but what this definition does is identify the perspectives

involved and openly links these to professional practice (Bailey, 2011).

The labor market shelter characteristic of professionalism protects professionals from

competition by other occupations. In order to be truly effective, however, it must also protect

its members from each other – that is, protect itself from unrestrained competition among

members that would seriously threaten its cohesion as an occupation. Severe internal

competition can occur when there is considerable excess of practitioners over consumer

demand. This is likely to result in both a low average income for the profession as a whole,

and divisiveness created by significant differences between the lowest and highest income of

colleagues. A major source of protection from this possibility lies in restricting the supply of

practitioners, for when supply is not out of line with demand, virtually all practitioners can be

expected to gain a satisfactory, if not fully equal, income (Freidson, 2001).

An essential characteristic of professionalism lies in controlling the number of practitioners

entering the labor market by imposing stringent standards on admission to professional

school and requiring candidates to pass some sort of examination in order to obtain their

qualifying credential. Such control cannot be too stringent, however, because of the need for

students (Freidson, 2001).

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4.4.5 Legal Status

Klass (1961) argues that an essential element of a profession is legal status. A profession

must acquire a statutory basis in the laws of the country. For the profession to exist as a

recognizable group it is mandatory that the public grant to the professional body, by

legislative statute self-governing privileges.

Nearly all professions require licensing by the state, and only those who qualify with

educational credentials and by passing an examination can receive a license. There may be

additional requirements for periodically updating the license or for completing further

training. Most professions are protected by laws that make it illegal to practice without a state

license (Lawrence, 2004). Other professionals – such as scientists – although unlicensed, are

essentially unemployable without formal schooling credentials because employers will not

hire them. Either through licensing or through convincing employers to hire only trained

graduates, the profession can act collectively to restrict access to its knowledge base (Hodson

and Sullivan, 2012).

4.4.6 Contribution to Society

Professional bodies hold a trusted position. They have, in effect, a contract with society at

large: They control membership in the professionals through examination and certification,

maintain the quality of certified members through ongoing training and the enforcement of

ethical standards, and may exclude anyone who fails to meet those standards. Society is

rewarded for its trust with a professional quality that it would otherwise be unable to ensure

(Barker, 2010).

Altruism means concern for others. No one doubts that professionals seek an income from

their practice, but the characteristic of altruism implies that they officially see themselves as

having additional objectives. Most professions have codes of ethics that express the ideal

relationship among the professional, the client and the community. Altruism implies that the

professional will incur some self sacrifice to help the client. Altruism also involves the

profession‘s duty to use its knowledge for the public good. On the one hand, because the

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knowledge is important and is monopolized, the profession has the duty and responsibility to

preserve, enhance, and transmit it and to use it in the public interest. On the other hand, the

confidential knowledge gained about an individual client must not become public. The

second aspect of the profession‘s altruism is its advocacy of community service – called pro

bono public work among lawyers. This is professional work volunteered or performed for a

lower fee than is usually charged. Local professional associations often arrange for volunteer

services to be provided by their members. A local legal society may provide a legal aid clinic

or a local medical society may offer free health screenings or vaccinations to low-income

people. Professional associations may also sponsor hotlines, tape-recorded educational

messages, and informational materials with professional advice. The association encourages

individual professionals to donate their services to the poor or to nonprofit organizations

(Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

4.4.7 Body of Knowledge

For a professional body in any given field to function, a discrete body of knowledge for that

field must be defined, and the field‘s boundaries must be established. There must also be a

reasonable consensus within the field as to what the knowledge should consist of. The

boundaries and consensus for any profession will evolve over time but at any given moment

they can be defined – which is what enables formal training and certification. Certification

signals competence to consumers who would benefit from it (Barker 2010).

Every occupation has its body of knowledge that its members master. What distinguishes the

professions is the type of knowledge that its members master – esoteric knowledge (known

only by a few). Not all esoteric knowledge is equally valuable, and people and societies vary

in the value accorded different knowledge. In general, the esoteric knowledge commanded by

professionals is considered important – even a matter of life or death – for the well-being of

individuals or groups (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

The knowledge base of a profession consists of three parts. The first part is theoretical

knowledge. This knowledge is often acquired in college. The second part of the knowledge

base is detailed, practical information that can be applied in serving a client. The professional

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must stay abreast of these developments to provide the best service to clients. Bar

associations, medical associations and other professional organizations frequently require

their members to update their practical information in annual continuing education. The third

part of the knowledge base – technique (or process) is the application of the knowledge base.

Knowing that something must be done is not enough – one must know how to do it.

Techniques are learned in an applied or clinical portion of a professional training program.

Technique can be learned or perfected during an apprenticeship to a more experienced

professional. The internship or residency after basic medical training is devoted to learning

techniques specific to an area of specialization (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

The advantages of having a framework of knowledge and skills (competency model) include

encouraging and supporting the development of professional knowledge and competence and

high standards of performance among personnel practitioners, and hence improving HR

credibility and professionalism. A framework can also provide guidance to professional

associations and other educational bodies for the development of people involved in the fields

of personnel management and development. It can act as a basis against which the

development needs of association members can be assessed, and can provide a basis for

syllabuses for education and training programs and publications. The framework can also act

as benchmark for HR professionals to compare their knowledge, skills and abilities with

those that their peers consider appropriate. And importantly, it is a means of providing a

focus within the increasingly complex field of personnel management (Brewster et al, 2000).

4.4.8 Research

Both the professional associations and the professional schools seek to expand and refine the

professionals knowledge base (Volti, 2008). The associations may lobby for public funding

of research to be conducted by the faculty of the professional schools. The results of the

research – new knowledge and techniques – reach the members through professional

journals. Professional associations or professional schools publish these journals – available

to members through subscriptions and specialized libraries. Formal continuing education is

provided through conferences, videos and audiocassettes, compact discs, web-based systems

and electronic mail (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

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4.4.9 Recognition

Horn (1978) states that public recognition is an element of a profession, although recognizes

it‘s limitations as with regard to how it is defined and measured and truly whether the ―public

at large‖ should decide whether it is a profession or not.

4.5 Professionalization

The professionalization process has been described as fundamental to increasing occupational

identity, status, standards and control (Lounsbury, 2002, Millerson 1964, Timperley and

Osbaldeston, 1975). At the same time, professionalization of an occupation entails the

prescription of acceptable standards of performance, controlling the body of knowledge from

which the professional practitioner will draw (Millerson, 1964). There is thus a clear role for

professional associations in this process (Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

Professionalization is the process by which an occupation undergoes transformation to

become a profession (Millerson, 1964).

Occupations can be ordered along a continuum from more professional to less professional

(Hodson and Sullivan, 2012) and this dissertation explores the characteristics of professions

and how Human Resource Management in the UK and USA compares against this

continuum.

However, even if one defines the traits constituting the end-point toward which the process is

assumed to be headed, how many of those traits and in what degree, must an occupation

display before it makes sense to talk of it as involved in a process of professionalization

rather than in a process of merely improving its economic or status position? (Friedson,

2001).

Hickson and Thomas (1969) argue that ―What is a profession‖ is sterile; the question should

be ―How professionalized in identifiable respects is a particular occupation‖. Indeed,

differentiation along a continuum is implicit in the assumed process of professionalization

over time. Professionalization is very likely to be a long drawn out process in which the early

starters hold an advantage over latecomers in the number of professional characteristics they

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can boast. Hickson and Thomas found a positive correlation with the age of the association

and the number of characteristics of the association (Hickson and Thomas, 1969).

Hodson and Sullivan (2012) state that professionalization can be understood as the effort by

an occupational group to raise its collective standing by taking on the characteristics of a

profession. It often takes the form of seeking to adopt the four hallmarks (Abstract -

specialized knowledge, Autonomy, Authority, Altruism) of the professions to a greater or

lesser extent, and it is usually initiated and maintained by the leaders of the occupation. The

first step in professionalizing is forming an organization or strengthening an existing one. The

professional association seeks to convince the general public, the state legislature, and

perhaps other professions that its claims to professional status are legitimate. Some

occupational groups are divided over the best way to achieve greater status, and they may

have several competing organizations, not all of which adopt professionalization as a

strategy. A second step is standardizing the body of knowledge that the members of the

occupation should have. This step requires developing courses of training and most

professionalizing groups seek to locate the training in universities. A professionalizing

occupation usually develops its own research program, journals and continuing education.

Developing the body of knowledge is not sufficient (Abbott 2001). The professionalizing

group must convince the public that the knowledge is important and that only those graduates

who complete the certification process should be assumed to possess the knowledge. The

association must develop a certification process or specify a credential required to be in good

standing. This credential might be a degree from an accredited school, passage of an

examination, or a state issued license (Friedson, 2001). Ideally, the professionalizing

association would like to convince a legislative body to mandate that workers in the

occupation be licensed or certified. Most occupational groups must negotiate their status with

the public and legal authorities for many years. Professionalizing occupations often adopt

codes of ethics and internal disciplinary procedures, but employers may not defer to these

procedures when an issue arises. Professionalizing associations may encourage their

members to be publicly visible and to donate their time and talent – both because that is

something that many professionals do and because it again brings their occupational group

before the public eye. Most professionalizing groups achieve autonomy and authority slowly

– if at all (Abbott, 2001).

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Perhaps the most significant obstacle to professionalization is the opposition of existing

professions, especially if the ―newcomer‖ occupation potentially threatens the control of a

well-established profession. Established professional associations often oppose efforts by

new professions to achieve a measure of autonomy or authority (Abbott 2001). A second

obstacle is the fact that most would-be professionals do not practice independently but work

for large organizations. The employing organization is especially likely to resist claims of

professional expertise that disrupt its operating procedures. A third obstacle to

professionalization is public skepticism. At a time when many occupational groups argue that

the public needs more experts to provide advice on more subjects, some consumers have

come to resent the professions (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

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5. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Research is a way of thinking; examining critically the various aspects of professional work,

understanding and formulating guiding principles that govern a particular procedure and

developing and testing new theories that contribute to the advancement of the profession.

Research is a process for collecting, analyzing and interpreting information to answer

questions. However, to qualify as research, the process must have certain characteristics; it

must be controlled, rigorous, systematic, valid and verifiable, empirical and critical (Kumar,

2011).

Controlled - In the social sciences external factors cannot be controlled so their impact is

attempted to be quantified.

Rigorous - The procedures followed to find answers must be relevant, appropriate and

justified.

Systematic - The procedures adopted follow a certain logical sequence. The different steps

cannot be taken in a haphazard way.

Valid and verifiable - The findings can be verified by others.

Empirical - Any conclusions drawn are based upon hard evidence gathered from information

collected.

Critical - The process adopted and the procedures used must be able to withstand critical

scrutiny. (Kumar, 2011).

This dissertation meets all the criteria above and is both a literature study and a qualitative

content analysis that summarizes research evidence from previous HR management related

publications and the HR governing body websites and literature in the UK and USA.

Literature research was performed by a computer-based search in databases as well as manual

searches. Books and journals on HR Management, HR as a profession and professionalism in

general were reviewed. An extensive search of the publications and websites of the CIPD,

SHRM, HCI and HRPA was undertaken and an analysis of the information was conducted.

A systematic literature review was undertaken. It is a means of evaluating and interpreting all

available research relevant to the research questions outlined in chapter one – Introduction.

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Systematic reviews aim to present a fair evaluation of a research topic by using a trustworthy,

rigorous, and auditable methodology. There are three phases of a systematic literature review:

planning the review, conducting the review and reporting the review. A systematic review

aims to provide an exhaustive summary of literature relevant to the research questions. The

first step of a systematic review is a thorough search of the literature for relevant papers. The

CIPD EBSCO website and Kingston University Icat search engine was used extensively to

search for books and journals on the topic of HR as a profession and also professionalism in

general. There is a comprehensive list of references in chapter nine. The titles and the

abstracts of the identified articles were checked against pre-determined criteria – HR as a

profession mentioned or professionalism in general - for eligibility and relevance.

Hemingway and Brereton (2009) state that a systematic review uses an objective and

transparent approach for research synthesis, with the aim of minimizing bias. While many

systematic reviews are based on an explicit quantitative meta-analysis of available data, there

are also qualitative reviews which adhere to the standards for gathering, analyzing and

reporting evidence. This dissertation is a qualitative content analysis since the articles were

qualitative in nature. This systematic review brings the same level of rigor to reviewing

research evidence as was used in producing that research evidence in the first place.

Systematic reviews seek to:

Identify all relevant published and unpublished evidence

Select studies or reports for inclusion

Assess the quality of each study or report

Synthesize the findings from individual studies or reports in an unbiased way

Interpret the findings and present a balanced and impartial summary of the findings

with due consideration of any flaws in the evidence.

Step one was defining the appropriate research questions. This required a clear statement of

the objectives of the review, the types of evidence or studies that will help answer the

question, as well as appropriate outcomes. These details were rigorously used to select

studies for inclusion in the review. (Hemingway and Brereton, 2009)

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Step two was searching the literature. The published and unpublished literature was carefully

searched for the required studies - institutional or technical reports, working papers,

conference proceedings, or other documents not normally subject to editorial control or peer

review were searched using EBSCO, Icat, search engines, databases and websites.

(Hemingway and Brereton, 2009)

Step three was assessing the studies. Once all possible studies were identified, they were

assessed for eligibility against inclusion criteria and full text papers were retrieved for those

that met the inclusion criteria. Following a full-text selection stage, the remaining studies

were assessed for methodological quality using a critical appraisal framework. Poor quality

studies were excluded. Of the remaining studies, reported findings were extracted into a table.

A list of included studies was then created. (Hemingway and Brereton, 2009)

Step four was combining the results. The findings from the individual studies were then

aggregated to produce a table. This aggregation of findings is called evidence synthesis. The

type of evidence synthesis is chosen to fit the types(s) of data within the review. (Hemingway

and Brereton, 2009)

Finally step five was placing the findings in context. The findings from this aggregation of an

unbiased selection of studies then need to be discussed to put them into context. (Hemingway

and Brereton, 2009)

Other research methods were also considered, however, the number of research studies that

had already been completed by others together with a search of the governing body websites

provided all the required information. The downside of this approach is that many of the

authors were biased in their findings on whether HR was a profession or not.

Interviews and questionnaires were also considered, however, the research questions could be

answered by research of the databases and websites. Table 5.1 outlines the advantages and

disadvantages that were considered when selecting a systematic literature review as the

research methodology. The dissertation was shared with many of the key authors from the

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literature review and they have engaged in the debate as to whether HR should be pursuing

professionalization.

Table 5.1 The advantages and disadvantages of interviews and questionnaires as a

research methodology (Kumar, 2011)

Advantages Disadvantages

Interview It is more appropriate

for complex situations

It is useful for collecting

in-depth information

Information can be

supplemented

Questions can be

explained

Interviewing has a wider

application

It is time consuming and expensive

The quality of the data depends upon

the quality of the interaction

The quality of data depends upon the

quality of the interviewer

The quality of data may vary when

many interviewers are used

The researcher may introduce his /

her bias.

Questionnaire It is less expensive

It offers greater

anonymity

Application is limited

Response rate is low

There is a self-selecting bias

Opportunity to clarify issues is

lacking

Spontaneous responses are not

allowed for

The response to a question may be

influenced by the response to other

questions

It is possible to consult others

A response cannot be supplemented

with other information

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6. HR AS A PROFESSION IN THE UK AND USA

6.1 HR as a Profession

An extensive review of the literature on Human Resource Management was undertaken and

in particular views of whether HR could be considered a profession. Table 6.1 is a summary

of this review and where appropriate includes what profession framework was used.

Table 6.1 Is HR a Profession? – Summary of Literature Review

Author and Article Year Summary of view of HR as

a Profession

Profession

Framework Used

Gibb, S. A big step forward

or a giant leap back? An

evaluation of the personnel

standards lead body (PSLB)

model of personnel

management. Occasional

paper no.6 ed. Department

of HRM, University of

Strathclyde.

1994 HR is not a profession – a

profession needs to be

qualified in order to practice

Not evaluated

Yeung, Arthur K.

Competencies for HR

Professionals: An Interview

with Richard E. Boyatzis.

Human Resource

Management, Vol. 35, No.

1. Pp. 119-131.

1996 HR practitioners have been

trying to create a sense of a

being a profession since the

1960s – a damaging process.

Not evaluated

Ulrich, Dave, Eichinger,

Robert W. Delivering HR

with an attitude. HR

Magazine.

1998 HR is not a profession –

needs to become more

professional.

Dave Ulrich‘s own

model

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Losey, Michael R.

Mastering the

Competencies of HR

Management. Human

Resource Management,

Vol. 38, No 2, Pp. 99-102.

1999 HR is a profession. Michael Losey‘s own

model

Brockbank, Wayne, Ulrich,

Dave, Beatty, Richard. HR

Professional Development:

Creating the Future

Creators at the University

of Michigan Business

School. Human Resource

Management. Vol.38. No.2.

Pp.111-118.

1999 Being a profession will not

come easily or quickly to

HR. The profession remains

haphazard and

indiscriminate.

Dave Ulrich‘s own

model

Armstrong, Michael. The

name has changed but has

the game remained the

same? Employee Relations.

Vol. 22. No. 6. Pp. 576-

593.

2000 HR continues to enhance its

standing as a profession.

Increasing professionalism

of HR advocated by CIPD

and he also advocates that

HR is a profession.

Not evaluated

Brewster, Professor Chris,

Farndale, Elaine, van

Ommeren, Dr Jos. HR

Competencies and

Professional Standards.

World Federation of

Personnel Management

Associations.

2000 Assess the extent of HR

professionalism by looking

at evidence of HR

practitioners career paths.

Applied Geoffrey

Millerson‘s (1964)

framework of what a

profession is.

Becker, Brian E., Huselid,

Mark A, Ulrich, Dave. The

2001 To serve as valuable

business partners and be

Dave Ulrich‘s own

model

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HR Scorecard. Linking

People, Strategy and

Performance. Harvard

Business School Press.

more professional – need to

define and measure

competencies.

Bing, John W. Kehrhahan,

Marijke, Short, Darren C.

Challenges to the Field of

Human Resources

Development. Advances in

Developing Human

Resources. Vol. 5, No.3,

Pp. 342-351.

2003 Little evidence that HRD‘s

attempt to professionalize

have had an impact on the

key factor of

professionalization – the

degree to which HRD is

perceived as a legitimate

profession by others.

Authors own model

Gold, Jeff, Bratton, John.

The dynamics of

professionalization; whither

the HRM profession,

Conference Paper, Critical

Management Studies 2003

Stream 8 Human Resource

Management Phenomean –

HRM and beyond,

Lancaster University,

Lancaster 7-9 July.

2003 Might be considered to

possess specialized

knowledge, however, any

claim of autonomy, authority

and altruism is tenuous. HR

Practitioners have some way

to go to match the

professional status of

finance.

Applied Hodson and

Sullivan‘s (2012) four

hallmarks. Also applied

Friedson‘s (2001)

model of

professionalism to the

UK HR profession.

Farndale, Elaine, Brewster,

Chris. In search of

legitimacy: personnel

management associations

worldwide. Human

Resource Management

Journal. Vol. 15. No. 3 Pp.

33-48.

2005 HRM professionalism across

the globe evidence of a

search for legitimacy within

the profession. However,

there is no mandatory

requirement for specialists to

be certified (implying that

HR is not a profession).

Applied Geoffrey

Millerson‘s (1964)

framework of what a

profession is.

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Losey, Michael, Meisinger,

Susan R, Ulrich, Dave.

Conclusion: Reality, Impact

and Professionalism.

Human Resource

Management. Vol.44. No 2.

Pp.201-206.

2005 HR is a profession Authors own model

Harrison, Patricia.

Becoming a professional

human resource manager.

Conference paper – QMOD

Conference August,

Liverpool John Moores

University, Liverpool,

Pp.11-13.

2006 HR fairly new profession

recognized as such and

established.

Not evaluated

Dave Ulrich, Wayne

Brockbank, Dani Johnson,

Kurt Sandholtz, Jon

Younger. HR

Competencies. Mastery at

the Intersection of People

and Business.The RBL

Institute and the Society for

Human Resource

Management.

2008 HR is becoming a true

profession.

Dave Ulrich‘s own

model

Pilenzo, Ronald C. A New

Paradigm for HR.

Organization Development

Journal, Vol. 27. No. 3.

2009 No profession can exist

without the standardization

of its body of knowledge.

Therefore, until HR evolves

to the point where it can

develop similar standards

Ronald Pilenzo‘s own

model

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and practices, its claims of

being a profession are

unfounded and of little merit.

Cappelli, Peter. Is HR

Becoming a Profession?.

Human Resources

Executive Magazine. April

26, 2010.

2010 Career paths of HR

professionals becoming

more specialized implying

that HR is becoming more of

a profession.

Not evaluated

Bailey, Moira. Policy,

professionalism,

professionality and the

development of HR

practitioners in the UK.

Journal of European

Industrial Training. Vol.35.

No.5 Pp. 487-501.

2011 Considerable debate about

whether or not HR really is a

profession, but, it appears,

on balance, there is enough

evidence for HR to be a

contender as one of the ―new

professions‖. HR practitioner

deemed a ―professional‖

only tenuously.

Refers to Gold and

Bratton‘s (2003) work

and discusses Hoyles

professionality

continuum.

Hodson, Randy & Sullivan

Teresa A. The Social

Organization of Work.

Wasworth, Cengage

Learning.

2012 HR is a semi-profession –

has achieved some

characteristics of a

profession in a limited way.

Applied Hodson and

Sullivan‘s (2012) four

hallmarks of a

profession.

In summary there is much debate about the extent that HR is seen as a profession and the

literature review examines the issue of ―professionalism‖ and this debate. However, even the

most adamant of detractors admit that there has been much progress over the last decade.

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6.2 HR as a Profession – Assessment of nine characteristics UK and USA

In reviewing the development of HR as a profession the definition that will be used are all

nine characteristics:

Governing Body

Certification,

Education & Training

Body of Knowledge

Code of Ethics &

Discipline

Legal Status

Research

Independent

Contribution to

Society

Recognition

6.2.1 HR Governing Bodies – UK and USA

The HR profession is growing dramatically in numbers, global reach and scientific

sophistication. In the UK the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development is an

internationally recognized brand with over 135,000 members across 120 countries. (CIPD,

2011, website) The USA Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) is the world‘s

largest association devoted to human resource management. Representing more than 250,000

members in over 140 countries, the Society serves the needs of HR professionals and

advances the interests of the HR profession (SHRM, 2011, website). These are the two

leading Human Resource professional organizations in the world and the leading professional

body‘s for the UK and USA respectively. The history and development of the CIPD is

included in the Appendices, Table B and the history and development of SHRM is included

in the Appendices, Table C. In addition it is worth noting two further organizations in the

USA - the Human Capital Institute (HCI) - The Global Association for Strategic Talent

Management and the Human Resources Policy Association – the Association for Chief HR

Officers (HRPA).

HCI has over 190,000 members worldwide, and 2,000 new members join each month. Their

members are Strategic Human Resources, Recruitment and Staffing, OD/Learning and

Business Line executives who share the conviction that human capital is the only sustainable

competitive advantage in a global economy. HCI Members represent business, government,

the non-profit community and academia, and extend across recruitment, strategic human

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resources, organizational development, learning and development, and line management.

Member organizations include over 90% of the Fortune 500, as well every major federal

agency, and branch of the military (HCI, 2011, website). HCI is a for profit organization that

markets their members for various educational and consulting services.

The HR Policy Association is the lead public policy organization of Chief Human Resource

Officers from large employers. The Association brings together HR professionals at the

highest level of corporations not simply to discuss changes in public policy, but to lay out a

vision and advocate for competitive workplace initiatives that promote job growth and

employment security.

Membership: The HR Policy Association consists of over 325 of the largest

corporations doing business in the United States and globally. Collectively their

members employ more than 20 million employees worldwide and have a market

capitalization of more than $7.5 trillion.

Impact: Senior corporate officers participate in the Association because of their strong

interest in impacting the direction of HR policy and practices. Their objective is to

work together to use the combined power of the membership to act as a positive

influence to improve public policy, the HR marketplace, and the human resource

profession.

Uniqueness: There are literally hundreds of organizations representing various

segments of the human resource function. HR Policy Association focuses primarily on

the concerns of the most senior HR executive in Fortune 500 companies, and it is

these Chief Human Resource Officers who participate in the Association's activities

and drive its agenda.

History: HR Policy Association has been operating for more than four decades,

coming together in 1968 to address the tumultuous labor and civil rights issues that

were sweeping the workplace at that time. It has remained together ever since,

continuing to tackle new problems and emerging issues affecting senior human

resource executives.

The HR Policy Association is a non-profit organization formed under 501(c) (6) of the

Internal Revenue Code in the USA. Key practice areas include (but are not limited to): talent

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and workforce development, healthcare, executive compensation, labor law and labor

relations, wage and hour issues, employment discrimination, immigration, mandated leave

and retirement security. (HRPA, 2011, website)

The goal of chartered status of the CIPD was achieved in 2000. Gaining chartered status was

seen as a way of recognizing the professionalism, body of knowledge and practical

competence of HR Practitioners, increasing the requirement for people to be part of the

association in order to be able to practice, and increasing legitimacy among policy-makers in

government and elsewhere for consultation on the whole range of people issues and work

(Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

Table 6.2 Key Elements of HR Professional Associations Mission Statements

Chartered Institute of

Personnel and Development,

UK, Est‘d 1913 (CIPD, 2011,

website)

The mission of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and

Development is:

to lead in the development and promotion of good

practice in the field of the management and

development of people, for application both by

professional members and by their organizational

colleagues

to serve the professional interests of members

to uphold the highest ideals in the management and

development of people.

Society for Human Resource

Management, USA – Est‘d

1948 (SHRM, 2011, website)

SHRM is the global HR professional organization that

exists to:

Build and sustain partnerships with human resource

professionals, media, governments, non-

governmental organizations, businesses and

academic institutions to address people management

challenges that influence the effectiveness and

sustainability of their organizations and

communities.

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Provide a community for human resource

professionals, media, governments, non-

governmental organizations, businesses and

academic institutions to share expertise and create

innovative solutions on people management issues.

Proactively provide thought leadership, education

and research to human resource professionals,

media, governments, non-governmental

organizations, businesses and academic institutions.

Serve as an advocate to ensure that policy makers,

law makers and regulators are aware of key people

concerns facing organizations and the human

resource profession.

Human Capital Institute USA,

(HCI, 2011, website)

HCI is the global association for talent management and

new economy leadership, and a clearinghouse for best

practices and new ideas.

HCI Online Talent Communities offer a deep

reservoir of information, and a powerful platform

for informal learning, research and peer-to-peer

collaboration.

HCI provides rigorous, insightful analysis and

actionable reporting that helps decision-makers

move the needle and drive results. Their research

agenda focuses on the most critical and rapidly

evolving talent management practices and systems.

HCI Education is the only comprehensive

curriculum for strategic talent management and

leadership. HCI's certification and designation

programs are recognized worldwide for defining

excellence, and set the bar for strategic and practical

expertise.

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HCI Summits, Conferences, Executive Workgroups

and Private Events deliver thought leadership,

practical case studies, and opportunities to

collaborate with progressive colleagues and peers.

Human Resources Policy

Association, USA, Est‘d 1968

(HRPA, 2011, website)

HR Policy Association has been bringing together the Chief

Human Resource Officers of large corporations for more

than 40 years. There are hundreds if not thousands of HR

organizations, but what sets HR Policy Association apart

are the following:

An organization that brings together the top HR

executives from primarily Fortune 500 companies.

The primary attendees at HR Policy's main

membership meetings are the most senior human

resource executives of the Association's member

corporations. The number of senior corporate

executives who attend our membership meetings

typically exceeds 200 per meeting.

The Association's culture is one that goes beyond

simply networking and benchmarking; what brings

HR executives to our organization is an interest in

working collaboratively with their peers to develop

positive solutions to the most difficult problems

facing senior corporate human resource officers.

The Association routinely provides the most

comprehensive and timely analytical materials of

HR public policy trends. These insights provide

senior corporate decision makers with the tools

needed to assess the potential impact of the public

policy process and build effective strategies.

A desire to have the unique perspective of chief

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human resource officers properly represented in the

policy debates in Congress, the media, and the

public at large.

A strong interest in going beyond simply reacting to

change. The Association seeks to lay out a vision for

competitive workplace policies that promote job

growth and employment security.

Addressing issues of common concern and bringing the

collective weight of the membership to bear on the pressing

problems of the day have been hallmarks of the Association

since its formation in 1968.

A recent worldwide survey of personnel management associations found that, although

associations are active in establishing a specialist body of knowledge, regulating practice and

providing a source of internal and external identity for practitioners, there is a lack of

mandatory control and regulation across the profession, diluting the legitimacy accorded by

such activities (Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

As outlined earlier Millerson (1964) stated that there were primary and secondary

characteristics of professional governing bodies. Table 6.3 assesses the HR governing bodies

in the UK and USA against these primary and secondary characteristics.

Table 6.3 Governing Body Assessment of Geoffrey Millerson’s Primary and Secondary

Characteristics

Primary Secondary

organize qualify research register code of

ethics

raise

status

control

entry

protect pressure

group

socialize welfare

benefits

CIPD

SHRM

/ HRCI

HCI

HRPA

The CIPD and SHRM cover every primary criteria of what a governing body should be

according to Millerson‘s criteria and most of the secondary criteria. However, protect the

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profession and the public is not governed by these bodies nor is the provision of welfare

benefits. Neither the HCI or HRPA provide any further coverage of the criteria and are

missing elements of the primary characteristics.

6.2.2 HR Code of Ethics

The CIPD Code of Professional Conduct (CIPD, 2011, website) is particularly relevant to an

HR practitioner. The CIPD requires that all members commit to the code (CIPD, 2011,

website). The Code covers professional standards and behavior and as such affects the day to

day activities of the HR Practitioner. The code of conduct has been produced by the

professional body (CIPD) for HR Practitioners. It came about as a result of the institute

gaining the Royal Charter in 2000 (CIPD, 2003). This charter is the governing document of

the institute and together with the bye laws, sets out the powers of the institute. There are

clear guidelines for how a complaint can be brought as well as the procedure for hearings and

appeals and the power of the disciplinary panel (Bailey 2011).

SHRM believes as the world‘s largest human resource management association, they have a

responsibility to set and support ethical standards for the human resource profession. Their

bye laws (Section 3) state that, "The purposes of the Society shall be to promote the use of

sound and ethical human resource management practices in the profession…to be the voice

of the profession on human resource management issues …to facilitate the development and

guide the direction of the human resource profession …and to establish, monitor and update

standards for the profession." The original Code of Ethics was first developed in 1972 and

was last modified in 1989 to reflect their name change from the American Society for

Personnel Administration to Society for Human Resource Management. The Code was

written entirely by SHRM members and volunteer leaders with the assistance of the Ethics

Resource Center (ERC) and SHRM staff. Hundreds of members and leaders shared in the

process through focus groups and individual interviews representing a cross-section of their

membership, participation on code development teams, and by providing feedback on code

drafts. (SHRM, 2011, website).

Neither HCI or HRPA in the USA have a code of ethics program or policy that they require

their members to adhere to.

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6.2.3 HR Independence

Since the HR department paradoxically has to support both employee and management

needs, it faces a dilemma between emphasizing its specialist expertise in HRM theories and

practices and its ability to help an organization achieve its goals. These two principles may

sometimes be in conflict (Millerson, 1964).

There is also a risk of ―de-professionalization‖, which comes from the rising education level

of the clients the profession serves – in the case of HR, largely line management. Improving

levels of management education increasingly mean that the principles of HRM are widely

known outside the personnel department (Friedson, 1986, Sisson, 1993). Indeed, trends

towards HR rather than traditional personnel management encourage devolution of HRM

responsibilities to the line (Armstrong, 1995). Information technology is also facilitating the

process of information standardization, opening up access and removing some sources of

control while potentially building others (Sisson, 1993).

Corporate values are often stronger than professional values in influencing the values of HR

practitioners (Timerley and Osbaldeston, 1975, Wiley 2000). Because line managers are

involved in HRM and have their own theories on how best to manage, it is also difficult to

see the level of exclusivity required for HRM to be a true profession (Purcell and Ahlstrand,

1989), (Legge and Exley, 1975), (Farndale and Brewster, 2005).

6.2.4 HR Certification, Education & Training

Personnel practitioners recognized that to succeed in an increasingly competitive world they

had to become more professional and they were encouraged to do so by the Institute of

Personnel Management. They took account of new ideas and implemented new practices

because they were persuaded that they were appropriate (Armstrong, 2000).

In the development and training of HR practitioners, the assessment and certification of

learning plays an important role in the recognition of the professional experience, skills and

knowledge of individuals. Certification can form the criteria of association membership, and

can demonstrate an individual‘s adherence to standards and a commitment to staying abreast

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of new developments in the HR field. It is also a visual statement of professional status and as

such is a useful tool in career advancement (Brewster et al, 2000).

In devising a scheme of certification it is important that the scheme allows individuals to

demonstrate that their knowledge, skills and experience in a generalist or specialist role in

HRM and / or HRD are sufficient to meet the criteria for professional competence. This can

entail the demonstration of professional experience and / or the passing of a written

comprehensive examination to meet pre-set requirements (Brewster et al, 2000).

Both the CIPD and SHRM through HRCI run their own certified courses of study or

recognize courses run by other institutions. Such courses are different to the training

programs offered, as they often involve a number of modules, and have an assessment

process that can result in the award of a certificate.

6.2.4.1 Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) – UK

In the UK, the CIPD is the professional association as well as the certifying and awarding

body. The CIPD has its own professional standards that have been developed through

multiple stakeholders, and which have been mapped against the UK national standards. The

certified courses of study run by the CIPD have been in place for 40 years.

Certification is awarded based on either experience and / or examination. CIPD qualifications

are available at Advanced, Intermediate and Foundation level, and students can study awards,

certificates and diplomas at each of these levels. Most CIPD qualifications provide the

underpinning knowledge towards CIPD professional membership (Associate, Chartered

Member or Chartered Fellow).

CIPD's Foundation level qualifications are for those who want to acquire a wide range of

relevant practical skills in HR and development. They can choose to follow a HR or learning

and development (L&D) pathway and they also have the opportunity to study individual

foundation level awards to either start or top up their HR and L&D knowledge.

Set at level 3 UK Qualifications and Credit framework (QCF), CIPD Foundation certificates

and diplomas also give a professionally recognized qualification and the knowledge towards

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CIPD Associate professional membership. CIPD's Intermediate level qualifications are

designed for those who:

aspire to work in HR and want to study a recognized undergraduate level qualification

work in a HR support role and want to progress their career by developing their

knowledge and skills at a higher level.

Set at undergraduate level, Intermediate qualifications will develop the students ability to

evaluate the effectiveness of different HR models and practices, and increase the

understanding of the external factors that impact upon HR activities and organizations.

Whilst building expertise in their chosen HR specialist subjects, they will also develop their

planning, analytical and problem solving skills.

CIPD Intermediate certificates and diplomas provide a professionally recognized

qualification and the knowledge towards CIPD Associate professional membership. CIPD's

Advanced level qualifications are for those aspiring to become effective HR practitioners -

whether working as managers or consultants in generalist or specialist roles.

The concept of continuing professional development (CPD) has existed for some

considerable time, but has enjoyed a recent increase in profile due mainly to the current and

fast changing and competitive occupational climate (Friedman and Woodhead, 2008). This

increase in profile has been promoted by the Professional Associations Research Network

(PARN) which is a body with members from the UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia and Kenya

representing a wide range of professions and has a mission to ―increase the profile of issues

relating to professionals, professionalism and professional bodies, through research and

networking with the aim of determining and promoting professional good practice‖ (PARN,

2011).

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6.2.4.2 Human Resource Certification Institute (HRCI) USA

In the USA, the HR credentialing body (HRCI) is separate from the HR association – SHRM.

This means that the HRCI runs a voluntary program, and it is not accredited by anyone, nor

does it accredit any programs that use its body of knowledge content outline. Equally there is

no membership scheme and it does not run any courses: it purely assesses and certifies the

knowledge of HR practitioners. This certification scheme has been in place since 1976

(Brewster et al 2000).

Complementary to the work of the HRCI, SHRM provides certification preparation courses

of study, and these have been running since 1988. These courses are available in different

modes of study, primarily on a part-time or in-company basis.

The certification scheme is intended for those currently working in the HR field. There are

three possible designations: Professional in HR (PHR®), Global Professional in HR (GPHR

®)

and Senior Professional in HR (SPHR®

). The assessment structure is based on having

achieved the prerequisite HR experience – table 6.3 and passing a multiple-choice exam. This

examination is based on the technical and operational aspects of HR at the Professional level,

and on strategic and policy issues in HR at the Senior Professional level. The examinations

themselves are based on 225 multiple-choice questions tested over a period of four hours. For

the certificate to be awarded, candidates must agree to abide by the SHRM code of ethics and

the HRCI Model of Professional Excellence (Brewster et al, 2000).

HRCI has been certifying HR professionals for more than 33 years and more than 108,000

certified HR professionals in more than 70 countries and territories have received and

successfully maintained their HR credentials from HRCI. Their exams test both knowledge

gained from HR experience, as well as HR business practices, policies and procedures that

professionals are expected to know.

In addition, they offer a California-based certification that augments the PHR and SPHR

certifications. This certification focuses on HR knowledge specific to California HR laws and

practices (HRCI, 2011, website).

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The learning system materials and the HR Certification Institute exam are based on a body of

knowledge that reflects the HR Certification Institute‘s most recent study of the HR

profession. The body of knowledge lists the responsibilities typically held by PHRs and

SPHRs and the knowledge required to fulfill these responsibilities. The knowledge is specific

to certain topic areas but may also be core knowledge – knowledge that applies to many

aspects of the practice of HR. (The SHRM learning system, 2011).

The eligibility requirements varies for the exams, and the focus of the certification levels is

quite different; the Institute therefore recommends two to four years of experience for the

PHR exam and six to eight years for the SPHR exam.

Table 6.4 Eligibility Requirements for the SHRM / HRCI Exams (SHRM Learning

System, 2011)

PHR®

SPHR®

1 year of demonstrated exempt-level (not

hourly employment) HR experience with a

master‘s degree or higher

4 years of demonstrated exempt-level HR

experience with a master‘s degree or higher

2 years of demonstrated exempt-level (not

hourly employment) HR experience with a

bachelor‘s degree

5 years of demonstrated exempt-level HR

experience with a bachelor‘s degree

4 years of demonstrated exempt-level (not

hourly employment) HR experience with less

than a bachelor‘s degree

7 years of demonstrated exempt-level HR

experience with less than a bachelor‘s degree

Table 6.5 illustrates the differences in the weightings for each exam and shows the number of

questions that are in each of the functional areas.

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Table 6.5 Weightings for both PHR and SPHR exams and Number of Questions.

(SHRM Learning System, 2011)

Functional Area PHR®

Weighting

PHR®

Questions

SPHR®

Weighting

SPHR®

Questions

Strategic Business Management 12% 27 29% 65

Workforce Planning and Employment 26% 59 17% 38

Human Resource Development 17% 38 17% 38

Total Rewards 16% 36 12% 27

Employee and Labor Relations 22% 49 18% 41

Risk Management 7% 16 7% 16

Table 6.6 shows the pass rates of the PHR® and SPHR

® exams.

Table 6.6 Pass Rate of PHR® and SPHR

® Exams (SHRM Learning System, 2011)

Exam Date PHR Pass Rate SPHR Pass Rate

May /June 2010 56% 50%

December 2008 / January 2009 59% 54%

May / June 2008 60% 54%

December 2007 / January 2008 63% 57%

May / June 2007 61% 58%

December 2006 / January 2007 63% 55%

The pass rates show that nearly half of all test takers fail the tests and this is one way that

SHRM and HRCI control the numbers of certified professionals and maintain standards.

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There are a wide variety of definitions of Continuing Professional Development CPD but,

according to the UK CIPD - those involved in the ―management and development of people‖

(CIPD, 2009), CPD is ―the conscious updating of professional knowledge and the

improvement of personal competence through an individual‘s working life‖ (CIPD, 2007). In

other words CPD is about continuously updating professional knowledge, personal and

professional skills and competencies. (Bailey 2011). However, CPD participation by

professionals, including HR professionals appears to be erratic (Friedman and Phillips, 2001),

(Farmer and Campbell, 1997). CPD is broader than conventional training courses – it should

include formal and informal experiences (Eraut, 1994).

Table 6.7 Freidson (2001) states that in ideal-typical professionalism, the training of recruits,

like the other elements of the ideal type, are fully under the control of the occupation. It

largely takes place outside of the labor market and takes place in a school and the school is

attached to institutions of higher education. Training is controlled and conducted by members

of the occupation and those who do the training are more or less full-time teachers. The

faculty of the ideal-typical profession school is expected not only to teach but also to active in

the codification, refinement and explains of the occupations body of knowledge. Both the UK

and USA are the same with regards to this assessment of the characteristics of training. It

shows that in comparison to the ideal type there is a medium proportion of training in school,

teachers are usually members of the occupation and there is medium training on the job.

Teachers are sometimes full-time, however in both research and university affiliation they are

consistent with the ideal type for professions.

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Table 6.7 The assessment of the UK and USA Characteristics of Training according to

Freidsons,(2001) ideal type

Characteristics of training Profession UK USA

Proportion of training in school High Medium Medium

Teachers members of the occupation Always Usually Usually

Primary training on the job Seldom Medium Medium

Full-time teachers Usually Sometimes Sometimes

Teachers do research Yes Yes Yes

University affiliation Yes Yes Yes

6.2.5 HR Legal Status

Both the CIPD (UK) and SHRM (USA) produce clear guidelines relating to how complaints

should be made, and it is apparent that the process is formal. Interestingly, although the CIPD

and SHRM can expel any individual from membership of the institute, they do identify that

they have no power to ―stop a practitioner practicing‖ (CIPD) and SHRM imply this by

stating that ―Discipline may include any or all of the following: requirement to take education

courses, written reprimand, requirement of written apology, suspension or expulsion from

SHRM membership, ban from holding office in, or speaking at events of, SHRM or its

chapters and state councils.‖ (SHRM, 2011). It does not state that they can stop a practitioner

practicing. This is a factor which could, arguably, undermine calls to view HR as a

profession. As Freidson (2001) highlights if codes of ethics are to be used in claims for

professionalism, such codes must be vigorously enforced. All this begs the question

―realistically, how much influence then does the code exert on the HR practitioner‘s

professional practice?‖ As a result of the ultimate sanction of expulsion having little or no

effect in terms of stopping an individual practicing the impact (if any) could be perceived as

negative. Is it a case of ―it doesn‘t matter what I do anyway‖? This is another important

difference from the more traditional professional relationship when entry to a profession was

often restricted (Marquand, 2004) necessitating a ―license to practice‖ (Bailey 2011).

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6.2.6 HR Contribution to Society

Both UK (CIPD) and the USA (SHRM and HRPA) have extensive lobbying capabilities as

part of their governing bodies and actively advocate for their members to get involved in the

legislative process.

The CIPD website states ―Public policy at the CIPD exists to inform and shape debate,

government policy and legislation in order to enable higher performance at work and better

pathways into work for those seeking employment. ―The CIPD is the leading UK

independent voice on workplace performance and skills. Their views are informed by

evidence from 135,000 members responsible for the recruitment, management and

development of a large proportion of the UK workforce. They draw on their extensive

research and the expertise and experience of their members on the front-line to highlight and

promote new and best practice and produce practical guidance for the benefit of employers,

employees and policy makers. On a macro-economic scale, their expertise and the data they

gather from their membership gives them an unrivalled capacity to accurately forecast labor

market trends and to consider the impact of employment legislation across all sectors and

sizes of organization.

The CIPD website encourages their members to get involved and they publish articles about

parliamentary activity relevant to the HR profession and news about CIPD policy

publications and engagement.

SHRM understands how vital member participation is to advancing the views of the

profession on Capitol Hill or in state legislatures. The SHRM Advocacy Team initiative is

designed for HR professionals to participate and influence federal/state public policy and

regulatory efforts.

The SHRM website states ―As an advocate for the HR community, it is important that you

keep your elected officials informed on how public policy issues can affect employees,

employers, and the HR profession as a whole.‖ (SHRM, 2011, website).

SHRM‘s website has a comprehensive section that highlights the public policy issues

SHRM‘s Government Affairs team advocate for on Capitol Hill and in certain state

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legislatures. They provide resources to read about the HR issues SHRM is advancing in the

states and in Washington.

HR Policy Association is the lead public policy organization of Chief Human Resource

Officers from large employers. The Association brings together HR professionals at the

highest level of corporations not simply to discuss changes in public policy, but to lay out a

vision and advocate for competitive workplace initiatives that promote job growth and

employment security. The purpose of the HR Policy Association is to lobby Washington for

changes in public policy and legislation. (HRPA, 2011,website).

6.2.7 The HR Body of Knowledge

Another important part of the process of professionalization is standardizing the body of

professional human resource management knowledge and competencies that members of the

profession should know and possess. Developing national standards help to increase the

HRM professional‘s status and authority with line managers in the organization (Gold and

Bratton, 2003).

Gold and Bratton (2003), using Hodson and Sullivan‘s view on body of knowledge as

outlined earlier – theoretical knowledge, practical knowledge and processes – state HRM

professionals normally have a foundation of theoretical knowledge in industrial psychology,

sociology and employment law. The second dimension of the HRM‘s professional knowledge

base is detailed occupation related information or know-how applied in the work setting. This

part of the knowledge base includes specific information related to the key HRM functions of

HRM, including HR planning, recruitment and selection, appraisal, rewards management and

training and development. The third dimension of the knowledge base, processes, is how

HRM professionals accomplish what they do. (Squires 2001). These can involve problem

solving, negotiating, communicating and training processes. HRM processes are learned in

post-graduate applied courses or informally in the workplace. The knowledge base of the

HRM profession is constantly expanding and the professional must stay abreast of current

developments (Gold and Bratton, 2003).

Pilenzo (2009) in his article ―the New Paradigm for HR‖ states that English-speaking

countries are some of the only countries that award college degrees in human resources.

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In general, HR professionals, especially in the USA, tend to have a narrow and functional

view of the use of human capital and how it can be leveraged in the context of a business

enterprise. This view also influences the determination of competencies and qualifications for

those who work in this field. Thus, it would appear this if HR professionals are to fulfill their

role (as viewed by C-suite executives) all the more reason why the design of HR career paths

should be broadened, and even include a rotation through line operations. While some

companies are actually doing this, most are not and rely on colleges and universities and

professional societies to produce the kind of HR executives they need. The HR body of

knowledge should be expanded to include operational expertise and performance standards

(Pilenzo, 2009).

6.2.7.1 US HR Body of Knowledge (Weinberg, 2009)

What should an HR practitioner know – and be able to apply – to be considered a competent

HR generalist? This is the fundamental question the HR Certification Institute seeks to

answer through its practice analysis study, an extensive research program specifically

designed to define and update the US HR body of knowledge.

The HR field is dynamic and constantly changing. Consequently, the knowledge

requirements must reflect these changes. The practice analysis process keeps HR knowledge

requirements both relevant and contemporary.

To set standards for the credentialing of a profession, the relevant body of knowledge must

first be defined. The US HR body of knowledge is the foundation upon which the PHR and

SPHR program is built. From this body of knowledge, test specifications are developed. In

turn, these specifications are used as a blueprint for the PHR® and SPHR

® exams. Exam

items are developed to measure the knowledge requirements that reflect the topics in the test

specifications.

The end result of this research is a set of assurances that PHR® and SPHR

® certifications are:

Based on a set of well-defined knowledge requirements

Current and able to respond to rapid changes in the field

Based on ―real-life‖ human resource management practices

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Focused on important knowledge and not trivial matters

The US HR body of Knowledge is constantly changing. Consequently, the HR certification

Institute‘s research ensures that the test specifications and exams reflect current HR

knowledge and practices.

6.2.7.2 UK HR Body of Knowledge (CIPD website 2011)

CIPD is an awarding body for HR qualifications. Over 13,000 students join their programs

each year to enhance their knowledge on the latest theory, case studies and insights into best

practice HR. Most CIPD qualifications provide the underpinning knowledge towards CIPD

professional membership (Associate, Chartered Member or Chartered Fellow).

In 2010 the CIPD launched the CIPD HR Profession Map which is a comprehensive view of

how HR adds the greatest sustained value to the organizations it operates in, now and in the

future. It combines the highest standards of professional competence with the closest

alignment to organizational goals, to deliver sustained performance.

It captures what HR people do and deliver across every aspect and specialism of the

profession and it looks at the underpinning skills, behavior and knowledge that they need to

be most successful. It also creates a clear and flexible framework for career progression,

recognizing that both HR roles and career progression vary. The CIPD Profession Map paints

a comprehensive multi-dimensional picture of the profession across 10 professional areas, at

four different levels. Transition points between the four levels have been mapped,

highlighting the eight key behaviors needed to operate as effective HR professionals. The

work is based on extensive research and consultation with senior HR professionals in all

sectors, with Chief Executives and academics. (CIPD, 2009). Jackie Orme, CEO of the CIPD

stated ―the map gives the rigor to ensure HR professionals and employers alike can be

confident that a CIPD qualification delivers not just the capabilities needed for today, but the

capacity to adapt to the growing demands that will be placed on the profession in the future.‖

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6.2.8 HR Research

Often, the HR profession is influenced by fads and clever ideas that are not grounded in

research. As the HR Profession becomes more of a discipline and science, fads will be

replaced by decision rules grounded in research. These decision rules will guide the

profession to have the impact it desires (Ulrich et al, 2008).

All four governing bodies in both the UK and USA - CIPD, SHRM, HCI and HRPA - invest

substantially in research. They partner with thought leaders on key HR topics and make the

research available to their members.

6.2.9 HR Recognition

Both the CIPD and SHRM have considered it necessary to launch wide ranging public

relations campaigns about the status of the profession, implying that there are a number of

misconceptions about HR and its reputation – explicitly stated by the representatives of the

governing bodies explaining why the campaign is necessary. The CIPD states that the CIPD

is a recognized benchmark of professionalism within the field of HR.

The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) conducted a public relations

campaign in July 2004 to increase visibility of the HR Profession. The campaign aimed to

increase the profession‘s visibility with non-HR business leaders, thought leaders and public

policy-makers (HR Magazine, July 2004). In 2010 SHRM extended this campaign and called

it ―We Know Next‖. (SHRM, 2011, website).

(SHRM, 2010) ―We Know Next‖ is a resource for business executives, policy-makers and

thought leaders interested in finding out more about the trends shaping the future of work—

and about HR‘s vital role in anticipating and managing these changes.

The effort to demonstrate that HR knows ―what‘s next‖ is a natural outgrowth of a previous

SHRM campaign to advance the HR profession, says William Maroni, SHRM‘s chief global

communication and external relations officer. ―The HR profession hasn‘t received the

recognition it deserves, especially as the profession has evolved and expanded to address

more business and strategic issues,‖ he said. ―There‘s a general lack of understanding about

HR and the value that HR brings to any organization.‖

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The ―We Know Next‖ public awareness campaign has two main target audiences:

Executive-level business leaders, including the C-suite and other top business leaders.

Policy-makers, including officials in Washington and thought leaders around the

country.

SHRM wants these groups to take a fresh look at the increasingly strategic profession and

what it can offer to business leaders. (SHRM, 2010, website).

The UK‘s CIPD has launched a campaign ―the Truth about HR‖ to educate and attract people

to the HR profession. The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) has

launched a new drive to challenge misconceptions about HR and attract new talent to the

profession. "Think HR. Think Again" aims to raise the profile of the profession and attract

graduates from all disciplines, including those who would not previously have considered a

career in HR. The campaign is supported by a new careers website featuring profiles of real

people in HR, day-in-the-life case studies, videos and advice on careers. Visitors can

download a free guide, "The truth about HR", which offers advice on pursuing a career in the

profession, as well as brochures and posters.

Georgina Kvassay, HR strategy adviser at the CIPD, says: "We conducted research into

graduate perceptions of HR in late 2009 and it highlighted that the three words most

associated with HR were 'dull', 'bureaucratic' and 'repetitive'. "There's a real lack of

understanding of what HR is, and of what the value of a career in HR is and where it can take

you. There's also a lack of clarity around the skills needed to be successful in HR, and a need

to attract a more diverse range of people into the profession. The website, guide and brochure

will help inform and tackle negative perceptions head on, representing an important first step

in a long campaign to shift perceptions." (CIPD, 2010).

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7. SUMMARY ASSESSMENT OF THE HR PROFESSION IN THE UK AND USA

7.1 The Road to Professionalization

Table 7.1 HR Professionality Continuum - The extent to which the HR can be

considered a profession in the UK and USA

Whether an occupation can be classed as a profession or not is not a yes or no answer but a

continuum. The road to professionalization is a journey that takes time, the traditional

professions would rate highly on all nine dimensions of a profession and have been granted

legal status i.e. they require the permission of the governing body to practice and without that

permission they can‘t practice, for example, lawyers, doctors.

The human resources profession is semi professional in so far as it scores highly on many of

the nine dimensions of what constitutes a profession but not highly on everything, in

particular they do not require a license to practice and expulsion from the governing body

would not prohibit the individual practicing. There is a comprehensive outline of the Analysis

of Assessment of Nine Characteristics from table 7.1 in the Appendices – Table D.

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The UK has a cohesive governing body that covers all levels of HR from the most senior

executives to students and speaks with one voice to the community at large. The award of

Chartered status in the UK in 2000 has put the governing body on the same path as

accountants and other professions. However, in the USA the governing bodies‘ are

fragmented, SHRM clearly being the largest in terms of membership but they cannot argue

that they speak with one voice for the whole profession. As well as SHRM, there is the

Human Resource Policy Association, for the most senior HR executives, Human Capital

Institute for Strategic HR Executives, the Human Resource Planning Society and many more.

In summary the UK is rated highly for its governing body but the USA is rated low since

their governing bodies are fragmented and there is not one professional association that has

the credibility to represent the Human Resources profession in its entirety.

Both the USA and UK rate relatively highly on a code of ethics. Both countries main HR

governing bodies have a code of ethics and a discipline process for failure to meet the code.

How vigorously these are enforced however is a matter of debate and would need further

research. In addition expulsion from either governing body would not inhibit the individuals

capability to practice – this is covered under legal status.

The code of ethics in both the USA and UK gives the HR profession some independence but

the majority of HR professionals work in industry in house rather than private practice such

as lawyers and work for their employer master. It is therefore difficult for the HR profession

to remain independent. In addition since the code of ethics and legal status is linked to the

ability to be independent, i.e. failure to follow the code would result in career ending

expulsion then this also impacts that independence.

There are extensive certification and training programs in both the US and UK, however, in

the UK these programs lead to the chartered designated status and take a number of years of

study and are post graduate qualifications. In the USA while many HR Professionals have

masters degrees these are separate to the SHRM qualifications that are awarded through

HRCI and give the designated letters. These exams take just a few days of study and months

preparation and require no undergraduate qualifications, just exempt (professional) level HR

experience.

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As noted earlier in both the UK and USA it is not a requirement to be a member of the

governing body to practice unlike with more traditional professions such as doctors and

lawyers.

The USA lobbies extensively in government on employment legislation and in particular the

HR Policy Association represents employers in lobbying in Washington. SHRM also has an

active voice and represents the HR profession rather than the voice of employers, as the

HRPA. The CIPD takes part in the government process and speaks regularly on behalf of its

members to Society at large but it is not as extensive as that in the USA.

Both the USA and UK have a clear body of knowledge. In the UK this is represented by both

the professional route to qualification exams and the CIPD HR Profession Competency

Model. The USA has the HRCI body of knowledge that awards the SHRM qualifications but

it does not have one comprehensive competency model that the profession would recognize

as its competency model. SHRM has adopted the Dave Ulrich model but it is not widespread

in use in companies with many choosing to have their own competency models. However,

SHRM has been making an investment over the past few years to develop a competency

model, separate and apart from the Ulrich model.

Both the USA and UK provide extensive research to their field through their governing

bodies and published academic papers. However, this research doesn‘t necessarily lead to

further credibility of the profession with it continued to be criticized for not being business

enough or analytical.

Finally both the UK and USA have held substantial public relations campaigns about the

profession and what it entails, however, in doing so the governing bodies admitted that the

reputation and understanding of HR as a profession was lacking.

In summary the HR Profession is on the road to professionalization but is not there yet. There

needs to be one governing body speaking with one voice that has professional credibility in

the USA and in both the UK and the USA there needs to be further exploration and need for

the profession to have legal status and a license to practice.

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8. CONCLUSIONS

8.1 Conclusions- Research Questions Addressed

The Human Resource Management – The Road to Professionalization in the UK and USA

dissertation set out to answer the following questions:

How is a profession defined?

What are its characteristics?

What does a HR professionality continuum look like?

How do the UK and USA certify the attainment of professional standards?

To what extent has HR developed as a profession in the UK and USA?

Why being considered a profession is important to HR Professionals?

The answers to these questions have been articulated in the main body text and what follows

here is a summary response to each question.

8.2 How is a profession defined?

There is a broad sociological debate on what is a profession and how it can be defined. The

high status ―true‖ professions are law, medicine and divinity and they have the identifiable

characteristics of a true profession. It is against these that the others can be judged. There is

agreement on the general structure of a definition; namely, that a profession is an occupation

which has specified characteristics and no single characteristic can adequately convey the

idea of a definition. Identifying professions by a set of characteristics is called the structural-

functional approach, the traits approach, or hallmarks approach, however, not all sociologists

agree that this approach is the best way to understand the professions. The majority of the

literature focuses on the characteristics approach and this dissertation has taken the structural-

functional approach.

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8.3 What are its characteristics?

There is some disagreement as to what these characteristics should be, and perhaps even

more disagreement on the degree to which an occupation should possess the specified

characteristics. However, there is some consistency that a profession requires a governing

body, a code of ethics and disciplinary procedure, certification, education and training system

and a body of knowledge. There is less agreement about the requirement of independence and

contribution to society. The characteristics of legal status, contribution to research and

recognition are only agreed by a couple of authors.

This dissertation took nine characteristics to review HR as a profession:

Governing Body

Certification,

Education & Training

Body of Knowledge

Code of Ethics &

Discipline

Legal Status

Research

Independence

Contribution to

Society

Recognition

These are desirable characteristics of a profession. They are not absolute prerequisites,

because a) no established profession meets all the criteria perfectly, b) some unrecognized

occupations meet some or all of the criteria fairly well and c) there are considerable

differences in the degrees to which each criterion is met among the established professions

(Horn, 1978).

8.4 What does a HR professionality continuum look like?

Table 6.1 HR Professionality Continuum - The extent to which the HR can be considered a

profession in the UK and USA was developed following the research for this dissertation. It

shows those factors in HR that are low professional indicators, semi-professional indicators

and high professional indicators in both the UK and USA. There is a comprehensive outline

of the Analysis of Assessment of Nine Characteristics from table 6.1 in the Appendices –

Table D.

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8.5 How do the UK and USA certify the attainment of professional standards?

In the UK, the CIPD is the professional association as well as the certifying and awarding

body. Certification is awarded based on either experience and / or examination. CIPD

qualifications are available at Advanced, Intermediate and Foundation level, and students

can study awards, certificates and diplomas at each of these levels. Most CIPD qualifications

provide the underpinning knowledge towards CIPD professional membership (Associate,

Chartered Member or Chartered Fellow).

In 2010 the CIPD launched the CIPD HR Profession Map. The CIPD Profession Map paints a

comprehensive multi-dimensional picture of the profession across 10 professional areas, at

four different levels. Transition points between the four levels have been mapped,

highlighting the eight key behaviors needed to operate as effective HR professionals. It

captures what HR people do and deliver across every aspect and specialism of the profession

and it looks at the underpinning skills, behavior and knowledge that they need to be most

successful. The work is based on extensive research and consultation with senior HR

professionals in all sectors.

In the USA, the HR credentialing body (HRCI) is separate from the HR association – the

Society for Human Resource Management – SHRM. This means that the HRCI runs a

voluntary program, and it is not accredited by anyone, nor does it accredit any programs that

use its body of knowledge content outline. Equally there is no membership scheme and it

does not run any courses: it purely assesses and certifies the knowledge of HR practitioners.

Complementary to the work of the HRCI, SHRM provides certification preparation courses

of study, available in different modes of study, primarily on a part-time or in-company basis.

The certification scheme is intended for those currently working in the HR field. There are

three possible designations: Professional in HR (PHR®), Global Professional in HR (GPHR

®)

and Senior Professional in HR (SPHR®

). The assessment structure is based on having

achieved the prerequisite HR experience and passing a multiple-choice exam.

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8.6 To what extent has HR developed as a profession in the UK and USA?

One of the most important factors in defining a profession is the governing body. The UK has

one cohesive governing body for the HR Profession – the CIPD, however, in the USA this is

fragmented and therefore less representative and less powerful than if it was one governing

body operating together. It is for this reason that HR as a profession is more advanced in the

UK than in the USA. The main governing body, SHRM is not influential or powerful enough

as the body that represents the HR profession with its most senior incumbents being

represented by the HRPA.

HR in both the UK and USA is an occupation undergoing professionalization. It is on the

road to professionalizing, however, much needs to be done to gain recognition of HR to

practice either by legal statute or through employers only hiring those who have the

designated letters representing their qualifications.

8.7 Why being considered a profession is important to HR Professionals?

There is much debate in the literature about the status of HR professionals and their

contribution to the business. There are two avenues advocated for improving the status of HR

professionals – one is the much written about HR business partner role and the other is

achieving professional status for those in HR occupations. There has been much progress in

the status of HR professionals over the last few years. Professional identity for HR

practitioners is perceived as a route into organizational status and prestige, enhancing an

individual‘s own sense of self-worth (Ribeiro and Cabral-Cardoso, 2003, Legge, 2005,

Brockbank and Ulrich, 2002). Professional status is clearly desired by HR practitioners, as

evidenced through the formation and activities of professional bodies in the field (Farndale

and Brewster, 2005). Among those engaged in occupations which have not been widely

accepted as professions there is a strong drive to appear professional, if only because of their

aspirations for status. The professional is believed to wear a badge of prestige, in effect, and

this has inspired many individuals and groups to seek the distinction (Horn, 1978). The

members of occupational groups self-consciously seek to elevate the status of their

occupation by adopting the characteristics of professionals (Hodson and Sullivan, 2012).

Both the CIPD and SHRM have been undergoing campaigns to have HRM recognized as a

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© 2011 Page 72

profession. Other authors have seen the process of professionalization of HR as a harmful

process that detracts from their role as business partners (Yeung, 1996).

8.8 The Implications of Professionalization for HR Practitioners

The implications of professionalization for HR practitioners are significant for the design and

education of HR professionals and how they position themselves within their companies to

support their businesses.

Are they similar to other professions within the organization that serve the company but also

are held to the standards of practice of their profession such as lawyers and accountants? or

are they general managers who should follow the needs of the business without regard to

their professions code of ethics? Is HR education more about a process of discovery that is

learned rather than taught? or is it about mastering a set body of knowledge?.

Barker (2010) states that business education is more about acquiring the skill of integration

and decision making across various functional areas, groups of people and circumstances

than about mastering a set body of knowledge. It takes place in the minds of the students

rather than in the content of program modules. Professional education enables an individual

to master the body of knowledge deemed requisite for practice. It is about taking an

individual with little or no knowledge to becoming qualified. But business education is

typically post-experience, meaning that participants are not novices. An MBA program offers

them an opportunity to share, conceptualize, and better understand workplace experiences; to

build on the skill of working with others; to open up new career opportunities. To admit only

students with little or no work experience, as the professions normally do, would be to

misunderstand the nature and purpose of the learning experience. A second difference is that

although professional education is concerned exclusively with the individual, a quality

business education depends in a distinctive way on the peer group. Thus no given candidate

can be effectively evaluated independent of all the other candidates. Because a student at

business school has a direct impact on the learning of others, the strongest class is likely to be

the strongest combination of individuals. This is because business education is not about

mastering a body of knowledge (Barker, 2010).

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There are those commentators who argue that HR as a profession should have its own

standards, qualifications and ethics. This would presumably allow HR professionals to refuse

to do things that the senior management team of the organization asked them to, if they went

beyond accepted HR standards (in the same way that legal or financial experts might). There

are those who argue that the effective HR specialist should have the skills to be able to act in

the HR arena as necessary to enable the senior management team to fulfill whatever strategic

direction they have chosen (Brewster et al, 2000). Are these two roles compatible or are they

mutually exclusive?

The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the extent that HR in the UK and USA has

developed as a profession. It did not set out to identify whether the pursuit of

professionalization was desirable for HR practitioners and how this pursuit aligns with the

role of strategic business partner. Further research is needed to explore whether HR should be

pursuing professionalization and how it fits with the business partner role. Suggested research

questions are;

Should HR be pursuing professionalization and be held to the standards of practice of their

profession?

Is HR similar to general management and should follow the needs of the business without

regard to their professions code of ethics?

Is HR education more about a process of discovery that is learned rather than taught? or is it

about mastering a set body of knowledge?.

Are the roles of HR business partner and HR professionalism compatible or are they mutually

exclusive?

The road to professionalization for HR practitioners is a journey that takes time. This

dissertation has shown that HR is on this journey. The question that remains is should it be?

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© 2011 Page 74

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Table A An Analysis of Elements Included in Various Definitions of Profession

(Millerson, 1964, Table 1.1)

Sk

ill

Ba

sed

on

Th

eore

tica

l

Kn

ow

led

ge

Req

uir

ed

Ed

uca

tio

n a

nd

Tra

inin

g

Co

mp

eten

ce

Test

ed

Org

an

ized

Ad

heres

to C

od

e o

f

Co

nd

uct

Alt

ru

isti

c S

ervic

e

Ap

pli

ed

to

Aff

air

s o

f

Oth

ers

Ind

isp

en

sab

le P

ub

lic

Servic

e

Lic

en

sed

Co

mm

un

ity

Sa

ncti

on

Defi

nit

e P

rofe

ssio

na

l

Cli

en

t R

ela

tio

nsh

ip

Fid

ucia

ry C

lien

t

Rela

tio

nsh

ip

Best

Im

parti

al

Serv

ice

Giv

en

Loya

lty t

o C

oll

eag

ues

Defi

nit

e C

om

pen

sati

on

(fee o

r f

ixed

ch

arg

es)

Bowen

Carr-Saunders

& Wilson

Christie

Cogan

Crew

Drinker

Flexner

Greenwood

Howitt

Kaye

Leigh

Lewis &

Maude

Marshall

Milne

Parsons

Ross

Simon

Tawney

Webbs

Wickenden

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Table B History of Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development

Founded 1913, 34

members

Welfare Workers‘ Association – 50 attendees participated in the

conference ―an association of employers interested in industrial

betterment and of welfare workers engaged by them‖ (Millerson, 1964.

P.76)

1917 Central Association for Welfare Workers (Industrial) – seven

independent associations united together. (Millerson, 1964. P.76)

1919, 700

members

Welfare Workers Institute – amalgamated with associations for men.

(Millerson, 1964. P.76)

1924 Institute of Welfare Workers. (Millerson, 1964. P.76)

1931 Institute of Labor Management. (Millerson, 1964. P.76)

1939 Institute of Personnel Management. (CIPD factsheet, 2011).

1955 Introduced restricted entry into full membership by examination and

introduced an education scheme which could be run externally by

colleges in preparation for the national exam. (CIPD factsheet, 2011)

1994 The Institute of Personnel and Development was formed through the

merger of the institute of Personnel Management with the Institute of

Training and Development. (CIPD factsheet, 2011)

2000 Granted the Royal Charter – Chartered Institute of Personnel and

Development

2011 135,000 members, across 120 countries, including 50,000 chartered

members

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Table C History of the Society of Human Resource Management (A History of Human

Resources, SHRM’s 60 year Journey)

Founded 1948, 28

members

American Society for Personnel Administration (SHRM website, 2011).

A national organization to represent the personnel profession. The goal

was to provide continued professional development opportunities,

promote national networking, and to generally advance the interests of

the profession.

1964 Was a volunteer organization until 1964 when the first Executive

Director was hired.

1969 6,696 members

1975 ASPA Accreditation Institute was formed and offered the certification

examination.

1979 28,471 members

1989 Society for Human Resource Management. 48,388 members.

1990 Accreditation Institute renamed to Human Resource Certification

Institute.

1992 The Institute for International Human Resources (IIHR) is created as a

division of SHRM.

1994 60,000 members

1997 The North American Human Resource Management Association

(NAHRMA) is established.

1999 131,571 members

2002 The board adopts a new dual mission to ―Serve the Professional‖ and

―Advance the Profession‖.

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2005 The US Chamber of Commerce recognizes SHRM as one of 25 largest

US associations and one of the 100 fastest growing.

2011 250,000 members in 140 countries.

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Table D Analysis of Assessment of Nine Characteristics from Table 6.1

GOVERNING BODY

UK USA

Positive Professional Indicators

CIPD Growth from 120,000

members to 135,000 members from

2004 to 2011.

Cohesive organization that

represents all HR professionals

Founded in 1913

Annual membership required and

includes subscription to Personnel

Management Magazine – enables

two way ongoing communication

with members

The CIPD manages the HR

qualification process

Membership of the CIPD requires a

minimum level of education.

Capability exists for student

membership.

Has research capability and makes

research available to members.

Designated letters for those who

pass qualification and experience

Positive Professional Indicators

SHRM Growth from 180,000 members

to 250,000 members from 2004 to

2011.

Founded in 1948

SHRM - Annual membership required

and includes subscription to Human

Resource Magazine – enables two way

ongoing communication with members

SHRM in association with the Human

Capital Institute award the HR

professional qualification.

SHRM manages the HR qualification

process.

Designated letters for those who pass

qualification and experience

requirements.

Membership list published.

Manages the Code of Conduct, first

draft published in 1972.

Actively involved in promoting the HR

profession through many mechanisms

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requirements.

Membership list published.

Manages the Code of Conduct –

CIPD redrafted May 2011.

Actively involved in promoting the

HR profession through many

mechanisms – conferences, publicity

campaigns, qualifications, ethical

codes etc..

Elected body of representatives

drawn from members.

Acts as an interest and pressure

group on behalf of members.

Encourages social activity and co-

operation between professionals.

– conferences, publicity campaigns,

qualifications, ethical codes etc..

Elected body of representatives drawn

from members.

Examinations have only a 50% pass

rate – a way of controlling entrants into

the profession and maintaining

standards.

SHRM and HRPA act as an interest

and pressure group on behalf of

members. HRCI do not.

Encourages social activity and co-

operation between professionals

Low Professional Indicators

Limited control of entry into the

profession – does limit accredited

centers only for sitting

examinations.

Does not provide welfare benefits.

Low Professional Indicators

Fragmented professional associations –

SHRM, HCI, HRPA and others

Membership of SHRM does not

require any HR professional

qualification. Does not insist on

qualification.

Limited control of entry into the

profession – does limit accredited

centers only for sitting examinations.

Fragmented membership does not

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speak with one voice.

Does not provide welfare benefits.

CODE OF ETHICS

UK USA

Positive Professional Indicators

CIPD has a published Code of

Ethics.

Formal education on code through

professional examinations.

Has a published disciplinary process

and sanctions.

Code of Conduct written to protect

the interests of the public.

Annual certification of Code of

Conduct through annual

membership.

Positive Professional Indicators

SHRM comprehensive Code of Ethics

Formal education on code through

professional examinations.

Has a published disciplinary process

and sanctions.

Code of Conduct written to protect the

interests of the public.

Annual certification of Code of

Conduct through annual membership.

Low Professional Indicators

CIPD Code of Conduct difficult to

enforce- does not prevent practice.

Low Professional Indicators

HRPA and HRC no published code of

ethics for members.

SHRM Code of Conduct difficult to

enforce - does not prevent practice.

Professional training on code not

required to become a member.

Acknowledgement of code is required.

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INDEPENDENCE

UK USA

Positive Professional Indicators

Can rely on own judgment in

selecting the relevant knowledge

and or appropriate technique for

dealing with the problem at hand.

Positive Professional Indicators

Can rely on own judgment in selecting

the relevant knowledge and or

appropriate technique for dealing with

the problem at hand.

Low Professional Indicators

Not always clear who the client is –

employer or employee.

Works for the employer and is

associated with their values and

codes of ethics – loyalty to employer

– does not have ―protected

independent status‖.

Low Professional Indicators

Not always clear who the client is –

employer or employee.

Works for the employer and is

associated with their values and codes

of ethics – loyalty to employer – does

not have ―protected independent

status‖.

CERTIFICATION, EDUCATION, TRAINING

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

CIPD restricts entry to those with a

minimum standard of education.

CIPD requires experience as well as

qualifications.

University link to professional

qualifications.

Qualifications certified by CIPD and

High Professional Indicators

Qualifications certified by HCI and

sometimes taught at Universities.

SHRM requires experience as well as

qualifications.

Qualifications certified by HCI and

sometimes taught at Universities.

Formalized continuing professional

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taught at Universities.

Requires a continuing professional

education log as part of professional

membership and upgrades.

Does have a recognized competency

framework of knowledge, skills and

abilities. Implemented in 2010.

CIPD a recognized academic degree

level qualification.

Does restrict entry to those with a

minimum standard of education.

development is part of the certification

process every three years.

Low Professional Indicators

Does not have mandatory continuing

professional development – strongly

encouraged and expected as part of

the code of ethics.

Does not require a log book of

experience, or collection of evidence

of practical competence in the form

of a logbook or portfolio.

Low Professional Indicators

Does not require a log book of

experience, or collection of evidence of

practical competence in the form of a

logbook or portfolio.

Does not have a recognized framework

of competencies in which to assess

knowledge, skills and abilities against

at all levels – leverages Dave Ulrichs

model 2007.

The professional HR academic

qualifications are not under the control

of SHRM but individual universities.

SHRM not a recognized academic

qualification.

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Minimal education and experience

level required for entrance to

examinations.

LEGAL STATUS

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

none

High Professional Indicators

none

Low Professional Indicators

HR profession does not have a

statutory basis in the laws of the

country.

Requires no licensing to practice by

the State.

Expulsion from the Institute does

not prevent practice.

Low Professional Indicators

HR profession does not have a

statutory basis in the laws of the

country.

Requires no licensing to practice by the

State.

Expulsion from the Institute does not

prevent practice.

CONTRIBUTION TO SOCIETY

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

Active in legislative matters with one

voice through CIPD.

High Professional Indicators

Active in legislative matters through

SHRM and HRPA.

Low Professional Indicators

Limited charity or pro-bono work.

Low Professional Indicators

Active in legislative matters through

SHRM and HRPA.

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BODY OF KNOWLEDGE

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

CIPD launched a comprehensive HR

competency model in 2010 – a

national standard of what knowledge

and behaviors a HR Professional

should possess.

There is a standardized curriculum

through the CIPD that can be

training and tested for.

Both classroom courses and

professional experience is required to

achieve professional status.

Masters degrees are available in HR

through universities.

Associate, Chartered member and

Chartered Fellow certification

High Professional Indicators

SHRM requires continuing

professional education to maintain

their designated letters every three

years. Evidence is required or

alternatively members have to site the

HRCI test again.

There is a body of knowledge that can

be trained and tested through HRCI.

Both classroom courses and

professional experience is required to

achieve professional status.

Masters degrees are available in HR

through universities.

PHR®

GPHR®

and SPHR®

designations for certification.

Low Professional Indicators

HR does not monopolize the

knowledge – line managers are also

trained on management techniques

and many responsibilities are

devolved to the line.

College degree in HR not required to

practice – HR practitioners come

Low Professional Indicators

HR does not monopolize the

knowledge – line managers are also

trained on management techniques and

many responsibilities are devolved to

the line.

College degree in HR not required to

practice – HR practitioners come from

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from a wide variety of disciplines.

Continuing professional education is

mandated by the CIPD in the code of

conduct but there is no mechanism to

enforce it.

a wide variety of disciplines.

Does not have a HR competency

model – leverages Dave Ulrich‘s

(2008) model, but it is not adopted

nationally.

Fragmented governing bodies leads to

fragmented body of knowledge – it is

not standardized.

RESEARCH

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

Extensive academic journals,

magazines, conferences available.

High Professional Indicators

Extensive academic journals,

magazines, conferences available.

Low Professional Indicators

Criticism of the profession of not

being analytical enough

HR is practiced on an interpretive

basis – ―whatever works for you or

your organization‖

Low Professional Indicators

Criticism of the profession of not

being analytical enough

HR is practiced on an interpretive

basis – ―whatever works for you or

your organization‖

RECOGNITION

UK USA

High Professional Indicators

Public relations campaign 2010 –

―Ask HR‖

High Professional Indicators

Public Relations campaign in 2004 and

again in 2010 – ―We Know Next‖.

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Low Professional Indicators

Need felt to publicize the advantages

of HR as a profession because of

general misconceptions of what HR

is.

Low Professional Indicators

Need felt to publicize the advantages

of HR as a profession because of

general misconceptions of what HR is.