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Article
Publication date: 5 May 2021

Stephen Baglione, Louis Tucci, William Smith and Joanne Snead

This study forces respondents to tradeoff between invasive human resource practices and salary.

Abstract

Purpose

This study forces respondents to tradeoff between invasive human resource practices and salary.

Design/methodology/approach

Respondents evaluated 16 calibration profiles to estimate a conjoint model among four categories: pre-employment, employment at the office, employment outside the office, and salary. Each profile included one level from the four categories.

Findings

In a study of mostly full-time employees, conditions at work were paramount. Salary was second followed closely by pre-employment monitoring. Monitoring outside of the office was a distance last.

Practical implications

In a tight employment market, salary may not be the deciding selection factor for employment.

Originality/value

Employee monitoring is advancing dramatically and making human resource activities commonplace and invasive. This study forces respondents to confront these practices and determine whether salary can compensate for their acceptance.

Details

American Journal of Business, vol. 37 no. 2
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1935-5181

Keywords

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