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Articles

Re-conceptualising talent management and development within the context of the low paid

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Pages 514-528 | Received 06 Dec 2013, Accepted 09 Jul 2014, Published online: 01 Sep 2014
 

Abstract

Those working in organisations have choices to make associated with not only the goods and services they produce but also their wider social and economic impact. The number of employees in low-skilled/low-paid jobs and the high proportion of companies adopting business strategies based on low-specification goods and services are a concern for many developed and developing economies. Addressing this problem is not traditionally the concern of Human Resource Development; however, we argue that through exploring the role that a wider, more balanced approach to Sustainable Talent Management and Development (S-TMD) may play within the context of the low skilled in the UK provides a crucial link to enhancing an organisation’s performance and responsibility to society. At the heart of this approach lies a shift to appreciate the collective endeavour of work practices, an enhanced role for stakeholders and identification of, and participation in skills ecosystems to support sustainable development. The paper identifies the opportunity for S-TMD to move from a predominantly individualist, managerial and unitarist understanding to one grounded in the value of tacit and embedded development processes undertaken to reflect a pluralist, multi-voiced approach to understanding of a skills ecosystem.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank our colleague at Leeds Beckett University, Tim Bickerstaffe for his contribution to an initial draft of this paper and the anonymous reviewers and editors for their insights and helpful suggestions.

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