Abstract

The literature on the role of intellectual capital on the development of an economy, industry or business is well established (Carnevale and Smith 2013, Lauzikas and Miliute 2017, Kavurmaci 2018, Koehorst et al. 2019, Schoff and Ito, 2019, Koehorst et al. 2019, and etc.). However, the scarcity of holistic transdisciplinary studies regarding factors/ conditions that are critical to unleash the potential of human resources, such as HR Management innovation (Gonera and Pabst 2019, Lee et al. 2019, and etc.), innovation culture (Isaacs et al. 2019, Halim et al. 2019, Sull et al. 2019, Lauzikas and Mokseckienė 2013, Lauzikas and Miliute 2019a, and etc.), creative leadership (Abdi et al. 2018, Jin et al. 2019, Collett et al. 2019, and etc.), modern technologies (Deloitte 2019, Lee et al., Kim et al. 2019, and etc.), new collaboration forms (Kane et al. 2019, Isaacs and Ancona, 2019, Lauzikas and Miliute 2019b, and etc.), social value-added (Wikhamn 2019, Marwede and Herstatt 2019, and etc.) calls for the untapped research potential in the area of Human Resource Management innovation, based on the development stage and peculiarities of cultural and social norms of an economy. The purpose of the present publication is to identify the key drivers of human capital-driven high-tech industries and understand how the Human Resource Management department could help strengthen competitive advantages of high-tech companies in South Korea and Lithuania. The research question is what Human Resource Management innovations are necessary to realign the innovation culture with a specific cultural/ social context and a corresponding economic/ business development stage in order to improve companies’ competitive position in light of digital transformation of the market. The qualitative semi structured expert interviews led to assumptions and results which explain how human capital links the culture and innovation and why the percentage of commercialized creative ideas in South Korean companies is higher than in Lithuanian companies. In spite of practical and value adding implications and recommendations to both top management and experts of Governmental policies and programs, a more extensive quantitative research should be provided in the next articles of the same series to feel better the global market trends and understand demographic characteristics that affect the organizational behaviour patterns and HRM decisions.

Highlights

  • It is impossible to imagine the research on Human Resource Management effects on business sustainability without an adequate attention towards HR innovations, in particular with regards to HR strategies, according to Armstrong and Brown (2019), the topic of human resource management (HRM) impacts on sustainable companies' performance has not been dealt with in depth in order to deliver practical and value-adding implications to both research and business

  • Successful innovation commercialization process should be based on the previous experience and contain a set of rules that are clear at every organizational unit, for each employee and stakeholder along with intellectual property protection tactics and creative leaders appointed

  • A well-established innovation culture is critical in a country-driven by intellectual capital, while HRM innovations should liaise culture with strategy as well as support sales, research and international collaboration

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Summary

Introduction

It is impossible to imagine the research on Human Resource Management effects on business sustainability without an adequate attention towards HR innovations, in particular with regards to HR strategies, according to Armstrong and Brown (2019), the topic of HRM impacts on sustainable companies' performance has not been dealt with in depth in order to deliver practical and value-adding implications to both research and business. The experts of the Culture is Digital June 2019 Progress Report, prepared by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the UK, go one step deeper and relates innovation culture to big data management (in particular, to data collection and analysis); secondly, describe the situation of digital culture and digital skills and only overview the progress in innovation processes (including a set of factors, such as the R&D culture and performance, Innovation and Audience Labs, Immersive Fellowships, Production and Technology) Such a holistic innovation ecosystem is backed by relevance of modern technologies. Drawing attention to digital culture calls for new innovative techniques within the HR Departments, along with enhancement of creativity and competences that are adapted to digital environments

Supply of Human Capital and Modern Technology
Sustainability via Innovative Human Capital Techniques
Methodology
Findings
Conclusions and Recommendations
Full Text
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