Abstract

Orientation: The world of work is evolving at an alarming rate, and human resource (HR) practitioners need to familiarise themselves with the future of human resource management (HRM) in order to add value to their organisations.Research purpose: This article presents South African HR practitioners’ views about the future and the role of HRM in the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) from a qualitative perspective.Motivation for the study: Human resource practitioners play a central role in the 4IR, but theories on how their role is enacted remain insufficient.Research approach/design and method: A qualitative survey design was used to study the views of 105 HR practitioners affiliated with the South African Board of People Practices. Three open-ended questions were sent to participants by means of a SurveyMonkey link. Deductive and inductive coding were used to thematically analyse the data.Main findings: The following themes were identified: technology-driven, data-driven, ethically driven, change driven, business-driven, human–machine collaboration and presilience.Practical/managerial implications: South African HR practitioners should be prepared for the future world of work. If these HR practitioners are not technology-driven, data-driven, ethically driven, change driven, business-driven, human–machine collaboration and presilient, they may have difficulty to add value to the organisation in the 4IR.Contribution/value-add: This study extends the body of knowledge about the future world of work and the role of HRM in South Africa by founding that HR practitioners must have presilience and respect ubuntu. The study also extends contemporary scholarship by using an open-ended qualitative review design to investigate the future of HRM in South Africa during the 4IR.

Highlights

  • The pace of transformation in the business landscape has made it mandatory for the human resource (HR) role within the organisation to evolve, adapt and adjust to the demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) (Thomas, Kureshi, Suggala, & Mendonca, 2020)

  • This study extended the body of knowledge http://www.sajhrm.co.za about the future of HR, in terms of presilience

  • The researcher followed the thematic analysis approach to analyse the data collected (Tesch, 1990). This involved searching for phrases and words that appeared to be the same based on the literature on the future of human resource management (HRM)

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Summary

Introduction

The pace of transformation in the business landscape has made it mandatory for the human resource (HR) role within the organisation to evolve, adapt and adjust to the demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) (Thomas, Kureshi, Suggala, & Mendonca, 2020). This is relevant within the South African organisational context (Bothma, 2019; Patel, 2019). Presilience as a theme contributed to new knowledge regarding the future of HR This approach presented an important methodological advancement to obtain rich data for future studies in the field.

Literature review
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