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Human resource management and the COVID-19 crisis: implications, challenges, opportunities, and future organizational directions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 April 2021

Salima Hamouche*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Management, Canadian University Dubai, Dubai, UAE
*
Corresponding author. E-mail: salima.hamouche@cud.ac.ae
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Abstract

The COVID-19 has grandly shaken all organizations, creating a complex and challenging environment for managers and human resource management (HRM) practitioners, who need to find ingenious solutions to ensure the continuity of their companies and to help their employees to cope with this extraordinary crisis. Studies addressing the impact of this crisis on HRM are sparse. This paper is a general literature review, which aims at broadening the scope of management research, by exploring the impact of the COVID-19 on HRM. It identifies the main challenges and opportunities that have arisen from this new pandemic and it offers insights for managers and HRM practitioners into possible future organizational directions that might arise from these opportunities.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2021

Introduction

COVID-19 is an unprecedented health crisis that has strongly shaken the whole world, plunging it into great fear and uncertainty. It has heavily impacted economies, societies, employees, and organizations. This crisis has started first in the city of Wuhan (China), which has witnessed in December 2019 the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) that has known a fast spread propelling its status to a global pandemic on March 11, 2020, by the World Health Organization (WHO, 2020b).

Given the rapid spread of the COVID-19 virus, these countries have implemented several non-pharmaceutical measures intended to reduce its spread, such as social distancing. Lockdown measures have been imposed; people were quarantined; schools, universities, nonessential businesses, and non-governmental organizations have been temporarily closed; travels were restricted; flights were canceled; and mass public gathering as well as social events have been prohibited (Brodeur, Gray, Islam, & Bhuiyan, Reference Brodeur, Gray, Islam and Bhuiyan2020; Gourinchas, Reference Gourinchas2020).

Coupled with these measures, the COVID-19 outbreak had led to a significant slowdown in the world economic activities (Brodeur et al., Reference Brodeur, Gray, Islam and Bhuiyan2020; Gourinchas, Reference Gourinchas2020), triggering furloughs and layoffs (World Economic Forum, 2020), that led to the increase in the unemployment rate in many countries. The ‘Current G7 jobless totals vary widely, from 30 million in the United States to 1.76 million in Japan’ (Kretchmer, Reference Kretchmer2020). According to Gourinchas (Reference Gourinchas2020), COVID-19 has generated a situation where in a short period 50 percent or more of the workforce might not be able to work.

Trying to recover from this economic shock, companies have started reopening (Major & Machin, Reference Major and Machin2020), in the mid of this ongoing pandemic, under extraordinary rules and a new functioning (e.g., physical distancing in the workplace) (Shaw, Main, Findley, Collie, Kristman, & Gross, Reference Shaw, Main, Findley, Collie, Kristman and Gross2020) that no one can predict when it will end. Therefore, this pandemic has obviously led to the emergence of a complex and challenging environment for managers and human resource management (HRM) practitioners who needed to find ingenious solutions to sustain their company's business and to help their employees to cope with the challenges of this unprecedented situation. In this context, there are very few studies on the impact of COVID-19 on HRM, its challenges, and its potential opportunities for HRM in organizations, whereas managers and HRM practitioners need relevant information that will help them to go through this crisis effectively and efficiently, to be able to support their employees and to sustain their company's business. In fact, organizations are generally not sufficiently prepared to deal with crises when they occur (Wang, Hutchins, & Garavan, Reference Wang, Hutchins and Garavan2009). Whence the importance, for the scientific community, to support organizations by providing relevant information related to this new pandemic. Therefore, the principal goal of this research is to investigate the impact of COVID-19 on HRM, to identify the main challenges and opportunities, and to provide insights into future directions in HRM. From a scientific perspective, this paper aims at broadening the scope of management research, considering the scarcity of papers on this topic.

Methodology

This paper is a general literature review, with an informative purpose, that aims to examine recent and relevant literature which investigated the impact of COVID-19 on HRM. There are very few studies that have investigated this impact. Thus, we have started to search for articles which examined generally the relationship between COVID-19 and HRM, then we searched for articles that examined the impact of this pandemic specifically on each HRM function and practice, e.g., staffing (recruitment) and compensation. We searched for articles in Google Scholar, Ebsco, and Semantic Scholar using a combination of terms related to coronavirus OR COVID-19; Human resource management; HRM; pandemic and HRM functions (e.g., compensation and staffing). The search for articles was performed manually. We searched for articles published between December 2019 and February 2021. We have excluded epidemiological articles. The articles analyzed in this paper are all listed in the section ‘References.’

Literature review

Human resource management facing COVID-19: implications and challenges

HRM ‘is about how people are employed, managed and developed in organizations’ (Armstrong & Taylor, Reference Armstrong and Taylor2020: 3). It has been grandly impacted by COVID-19, generating significant challenges for managers and HRM practitioners. This impact and these challenges are explored in this section, in relation to strategic HRM and working conditions, as well as HRM functions, specifically, staffing, performance management, training and development, compensation management, safety and health management, and employees' relations. Each HRM function is discussed individually, however, they are interrelated. This suggests that any change in one HRM function will affect the other function (Mondy & Martocchio, Reference Mondy and Martocchio2016).

COVID-19 and strategic human resource management

Strategic HRM refers to the vertical connection between HRM functions and the organizational strategy as well as the horizontal consistency between HRM functions (Wright & McMahan, Reference Wright and McMahan1992). Its main purpose is to effectively utilize the human resources to serve the strategic needs of the organization (Chapman, Sisk, Schatten, & Miles, Reference Chapman, Sisk, Schatten and Miles2018; Navío-Marco, Solórzano-García, & Palencia-González, Reference Navío-Marco, Solórzano-García and Palencia-González2019; Schuler, Reference Schuler1992).

In order to ensure the achievement of the organizational goals in a time of crisis, strategic agility is required (Liu, Lee, & Lee, Reference Liu, Lee and Lee2020). Organizations need to be able to prepare and allocate their resources; to coordinate the needed mechanism; and to properly use the organizational resources and knowledge (Liu, Lee, & Lee, Reference Liu, Lee and Lee2020). In this context, the novelty and the complexity of the COVID-19 represent a significant challenge that might compromise the achievement of organizational goals. According to Baert, Lippens, Moens, Sterkens, and Weytjens (Reference Baert, Lippens, Moens, Sterkens and Weytjens2020), standard economic models in organizations are mainly trained to use data from ‘normal times’ perspective. Thus, it is challenging to make predictions related to ‘abnormal times.’ This might suggest that making predictions related to the company's business, e.g., the preparation and the allocation of resources might be a complex exercise. In fact, COVID-19 has generated uncertainty. Some authors go so far as to predict the COVID-19 endemic (Regmi & Lwin, Reference Regmi and Lwin2020) whereas many economists predict the outcomes of this pandemic will remain until 2021 (Akkermans, Richardson, & Kraimer, Reference Akkermans, Richardson and Kraimer2020). Currently, no one knows when this virus will end and if its consequences on the work patterns in organizations will be temporary or permanent (Bartik, Cullen, Glaeser, Luca, & Stanton, Reference Bartik, Cullen, Glaeser, Luca and Stanton2020), even after the recent development of different types of vaccines (Yu et al., Reference Yu, Wang, Goldman, Zangerl, Xie, Cao and Maida2021). Thus, performing strategic planning or implementing the initial one can be challenging for managers and HRM practitioners. In this case, most organizations were not able to provide their employees enough information about their management plan or their intended reactions toward the pandemic (Elsafty & Ragheb, Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020), whereas having clear workplace guidelines during hard times helps to reduce employees’ stress and to increase their motivation and confidence (Wong, Ho, Wong, Cheung, & Yeoh, Reference Wong, Ho, Wong, Cheung and Yeoh2020). The study by Elsafty and Ragheb (Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020) showed that access to information and the update related to the pandemic is associated significantly with employees' retention. Nonetheless, it might be difficult to achieve it if organizations are not able to get this information, especially when they are in a reactive and survival mode, due to the novelty of this pandemic. Although challenging, enhancing organizational resilience is crucial to ensure the sustainability of the organization in the COVID-19 era (Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen, & O'Mahony, Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021). In fact, despite the uncertainty generated by this pandemic, organizations need to develop ingenious practices that can help absorb and face disturbance that threatens their survival (Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021)

Working conditions

Working conditions represent ‘the core of paid work and employment relationships’ (ILO, 2020). They ‘cover a broad range of topics and issues, from working time (hours of work, rest periods, and work schedules) to remuneration, as well as the physical conditions and mental demands that exist in the workplace’(ILO, 2020). The COVID-19 crisis has drastically altered working conditions in organizations. Indeed, to ensure their business continuity, most organizations have moved to remote working, requiring their employees to work from home (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020a, Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b; Gourinchas, Reference Gourinchas2020; Koirala & Acharya, Reference Koirala and Acharya2020). For example, Google announced that its employees will continue working remotely until at least Summer 2021 whereas Twitter's employees were given the opportunity to work remotely indefinitely (Leonardi, Reference Leonardi2020). Notwithstanding, the category of employees working from home represents a small fraction of the overall workforce (Gourinchas, Reference Gourinchas2020), mainly because remote working is not suitable for manufacturing industries (Koirala & Acharya, Reference Koirala and Acharya2020) and it cannot be applied to all job positions (Bartik et al., Reference Bartik, Cullen, Glaeser, Luca and Stanton2020). In this context, there were two possible scenarios for companies whose nature of their business does not allow them to adhere to these types of working conditions. Either to require their employees to be physically present while respecting the measures of physical distancing (i.e., allow an interval of 2 min between individuals) and wearing personal protective equipment or to lay them off (Blustein, Duffy, Ferreira, Cohen-Scali, Cinamon, & Allan, Reference Blustein, Duffy, Ferreira, Cohen-Scali, Cinamon and Allan2020). The study by Adams-Prassl, Boneva, Golin, and Rauh (Reference Adams-Prassl, Boneva, Golin and Rauh2020) showed that employees whose job tasks cannot be performed from home are more likely to lose their jobs. In these circumstances, HRM practitioners are urged to identify the job positions that can be performed remotely, those which can be performed in the physical workplace, and those positions that need layoff due to the situation provoked by the pandemic. Therefore, these unexpected and drastic organizational changes represent significant challenges for managers and HRM practitioners. In addition, they might have significant implications on employees mental health (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020) and person–environment fit perceived by employees (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020) as well as the employee experience related to the job design, the workspace and interactions with their peers and managers (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020a).

Physical presence in workplaces has been maintained with rigorous protection measures (e.g., physical distancing and wearing protection masks) with the implementation of work schedules for different groups of employees (Akbarpour et al., Reference Akbarpour, Cook, Marzuoli, Mongey, Nagaraj, Saccarola and Yang2020). The principal challenge, in this case, is to ensure the respect of these protection measures and to plan work schedules that consider employees' context.

As for remote working, it seems that managers and HRM practitioners have faced major challenges. First, to ensure that employees working from home have the necessary tools to perform their job (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b; Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). Actually, remote working requires the availability of technological tools which will facilitate communication between employees and managers, such as Zoom, Microsoft remote desktop, team viewer, and Microsoft team (Prasad & Vaidya, Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020), that cannot be afforded by all organizations, considering that the financial capacity varies from one organization to another. Second, to ensure for the employees working from home effective communication, supervision, support, performance management, and a realignment of their compensation (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b). Moreover, HRM practitioners need to support managers who are leading remote teams for the first time (Caligiuri, De Cieri, Minbaeva, Verbeke, & Zimmermann, Reference Caligiuri, De Cieri, Minbaeva, Verbeke and Zimmermann2020). Finally, HRM practitioners need to take into consideration the fact that remote working might lead to employees' isolation due to the absence of interaction between employees, lack of peer advice, and lack of one-to-one communication which can be sources of stress that might undermine employees' mental health (Prasad & Vaidya, Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020). It can also be psychologically demanding for these employees considering the possibilities of family distractions and the multiple roles that they have to assume while working from home (Prasad & Vaidya, Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020). In addition, the increased use of information and communication technology (ICT) can lead to the perception of an everlasting urgency, generating possible expectations about the constant availability of employees (Molino et al., Reference Molino, Ingusci, Signore, Manuti, Giancaspro, Russo and Cortese2020). Working from home can lead, as well, to an increase in the volume of information treated by employees, considering that they regularly use their emails (Leonardi, Reference Leonardi2020). Some authors refer to a technostress related to the use of ICT, which has increased among employees working remotely (Molino et al., Reference Molino, Ingusci, Signore, Manuti, Giancaspro, Russo and Cortese2020). This can undermine the psychological health of employees, especially those who isolate themselves by choosing only emails as a means of communication.

Many HRM practitioners have implemented some activities to support their employees, such as creating virtual socialization activities, e.g., virtual lunch or coffee breaks (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020; Maurer, Reference Maurer2020). Undoubtedly, these practices help to support employees in this tough crisis while they are far from each other, and from their workplace (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). However, they also represent a great challenge for organizations, considering that besides being applied in a context of unexpected changes, these practices are new for employees and managers, who have not been previously trained or psychologically prepared for such changes, which may lead to an increase in their perceptions of person–environment misfit and dissatisfaction if they prefer the face-to-face interactions that they used to have prior to this pandemic outbreak (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020). Moreover, virtual interactions might affect the socialization process recognized for its importance to help employees acquire the tacit knowledge related to the organizational culture, and contributing to its development (Asatiani, Hämäläinen, Penttinen, & Rossi, Reference Asatiani, Hämäläinen, Penttinen and Rossi2021)

Staffing

Staffing refers to ‘ the process of attracting, selecting, and retaining competent individuals to achieve organizational goals’ (Ployhart, Reference Ployhart2006: 868, 868). It had been greatly impacted by COVID-19, which has reshaped its dynamic in organizations (Campello, Kankanhalli, & Muthukrishnan, Reference Campello, Kankanhalli and Muthukrishnan2020).

COVID-19 had mostly asymmetric impacts on industries (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b; Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020). Some industries were experiencing a sharp decline in their business (Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020) leading some of them to temporarily close their shops (Bartik et al., Reference Bartik, Cullen, Glaeser, Luca and Stanton2020), whereas other industries have seen their business flourishing during this pandemic (Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020). Therefore, the repercussions of COVID-19 on staffing differ from one organization to another.

In this context, organizations that were facing financial difficulties due to this pandemic have adopted downskilling by cutting back on recruitment of high-skill jobs more than low-skill jobs, to reduce their costs and try to sustain their business (Campello, Kankanhalli, & Muthukrishnan, Reference Campello, Kankanhalli and Muthukrishnan2020); they have frozen or cut back all their recruitment; or they have laid off their employees (Campello, Kankanhalli, & Muthukrishnan, Reference Campello, Kankanhalli and Muthukrishnan2020; Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020). Indeed, millions of people found themselves unemployed due to the COVID-19 outbreak (Blustein et al., Reference Blustein, Duffy, Ferreira, Cohen-Scali, Cinamon and Allan2020; Elsafty & Ragheb, Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020). Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Carlin, Carroll, Gupta, Rojas, Montenovo and Simon2020) pointed out that the employment activities have increased after the companies' reopening in some US states mainly due to the return to work of employees, after lockdown, to their physical workplace. Nevertheless, the reemployment probabilities diminish significatively for employees who stayed longer away from their workplace.

Laying off employees is not an easy decision for organizations, but it might be inevitable in times of crisis such as COVID-19. The main challenge of HRM practitioners, in this case, is to support managers and employees during this process and to offer proper information. However, it might not be easy in the context of uncertainty. Actually, all over the world, no one knows when this pandemic will end and if its consequences on organizations will be temporary or permanent (Bartik et al., Reference Bartik, Cullen, Glaeser, Luca and Stanton2020).

On the contrary, organizations that have expanded their business during the pandemic have faced other types of staffing challenges. Many of them have opted out for more flexible employment relationships and subcontracted work, such as temporary agency work, freelancers, and the gig economy (Spurk & Straub, Reference Spurk and Straub2020), due to uncertainty generated by COVID-19.

Indeed, these organizations have increased their recruitment (Akkermans, Richardson, & Kraimer, Reference Akkermans, Richardson and Kraimer2020; Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020), nonetheless, they found themselves facing the pressure of workforce shortage (Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020). In fact, how to recruit employees when people are afraid of contagion? How to select employees when it is not allowed to meet them face to face, due to the physical distancing measures? In these circumstances, these organizations had no other choice than to orient their practices toward virtual recruitment and selection methods (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020; Maurer, Reference Maurer2020), which might represent another significant challenge for HRM practitioners as well as job applicants. Not all individuals are comfortable using ICT tools. Also, HRM practitioners were not prepared for this type of unexpected change. Moreover, virtual selection methods might affect the ability of potential employees and employers to assess person–environment fit, which can have a negative impact on employees' productivity and retention (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020). Besides, the temporary character of flexible employment relationship posed the challenge of employees' retention.

According to some authors, employee retention might represent another major challenge for organizations in the current context of this pandemic (Elsafty & Ragheb, Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020; Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021). Elsafty and Ragheb (Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020) pointed out that during these hard times characterized by drastic and sudden changes, employment relationships might be damaged, leading to the possible dramatic decrease of employees' morale and an increase in turnover. Furthermore, according to Ngoc Su et al. (Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021) retaining and attracting qualified individuals represent a challenge for companies in the COVID-19 era, mainly because these individuals are often looking for job opportunities in sectors that were not negatively affected by this pandemic. In the same vein, Przytuła, Strzelec, and Krysińska-Kościańska (Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020) highlighted the importance to increase the engagement and the sense of belonging among employees, mainly the remote workforce during this period and beyond, to ensure organizational success, and prevent recruitment costs (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021).

Performance management

Performance management is ‘a continuous process of identifying, measuring, and developing the performance of individuals and workgroups and aligning performance with the strategic goals of the organization’ (Aguinis, Reference Aguinis2019: 8). It is crucial to ensure that employees' performance is aligned with the company's strategic goals (Ismail & Gali, Reference Ismail and Gali2017).

To sustain the company amid a crisis like COVID-19, employees are still required to maintain their good performance (Sembiring, Fatihudin, Mochklas, & Holisin, Reference Sembiring, Fatihudin, Mochklas and Holisin2020). However, it seems that the COVID-19 outbreak has also altered performance management in organizations. According to some authors, most organizations were overwhelmed by the challenges resulting from COVID-19, such as measuring employees' performance and the disruption in performance-based pay, that they have reduced or even abandoned performance management, due to the complexity and the novelty of this pandemic (Aguinis & Burgi-Tian, Reference Aguinis and Burgi-Tian2020). In fact, measuring employees' performance during this crisis can be challenging, considering the modification of the working conditions. Furthermore, there are many factors related to the COVID-19 outbreak that may influence employees' performance. In this context, the study by Prasad and Vaidya (Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020) reported that workplace isolation, lack of communication, family distractions, role overload, and occupational stress factors (role ambiguity, role conflict, career, and job-control), which have emerged due to COVID-19, mainly among employees working from home are significant predictors of employees' performance. Furthermore, employees' performance during remote working is also dependent on managers' understanding of how and what is required to manage a remote team (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b). Some authors argued that managers might not accept remote working because they might consider that it affects employees' performance negatively, which can lead to the adoption of micromanagement that can be perceived by employees as a lack of trust toward them (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b), which can create tension between them and their supervisor.

According to Aguinis and Burgi-Tian (Reference Aguinis and Burgi-Tian2020), it is crucial for organizations during this health crisis to maintain and strengthen their performance management process. They should communicate relevant information related to the company's strategic direction to their employees, to collect useful business data, and to provide feedback to them, which will help these organizations to retain their talents and to avoid legal suits. Ngoc Su et al. (Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021) added that the frequent appraising of employees' performance fosters their learning and sharing that can help organizations to win back their business. Considering the interrelation between HRM functions, the study by Sembiring et al. (Reference Sembiring, Fatihudin, Mochklas and Holisin2020) showed that compensation might have a significant impact on employees' performance in the COVID-19 era. Hence, the authors suggested that organizations should be more concerned about employees' total compensation (financial and non-financial), and its fairness to sustain and improve their performance during crises (Sembiring et al., Reference Sembiring, Fatihudin, Mochklas and Holisin2020). The main challenge, in this context, might be related to the financial capacity of the organization during this ongoing pandemic.

Training and career development

Training plays an important role in a period of crisis, such as pandemics (Devyania, Jewanc, Bansal, & Denge, Reference Devyania, Jewanc, Bansal and Denge2020; Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). It helps to develop the needed skills for employees (Akkermans, Richardson, & Kraimer, Reference Akkermans, Richardson and Kraimer2020); to increase the COVID-19 awareness, to reduce the risk of the virus spread, and to prevent mental health issues (Quaedackers et al., Reference Quaedackers, Stein, Bhatt, Dogan, Hoen, Nijman and Bogaert2020). It also helps to support employees in the process of transition toward remote working. In fact, not all employees have the proper digital skills to cope with these changes generated by the use of ICT, whence the necessity to train them on the utilization of ICT, which will help to facilitate their work and communication with their manager and peers while they are away from their workplace (Greer & Payne, Reference Greer and Payne2014). According to Przytuła, Strzelec, and Krysińska-Kościańska (Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020), organizations face the challenge of reskilling and upskilling their workforce to be able to deal with the requirement of new context of ‘ distance economy.’ In this case, the main challenge for HRM practitioners might be related to the development of a training program adapted to the new reality of the organization and the employees and to choose the proper training methods, considering physical distancing measures coupled with the necessity to have employees quickly operational to sustain the company business. This suggests that managers and HRM practitioners need to go beyond the traditional training methods. Devyania et al. (Reference Devyania, Jewanc, Bansal and Denge2020) recommended, in this case, to change employees' training programs in a way that ensures a long-term transition toward the new working practices.

The success of remote working is also dependent on managers' understanding of the virtual supervision of employees (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b). In this context, the HRM practitioners should play a strategic role by supporting and training these managers on how to manage a virtual team, to help them to overcome these difficulties and to cope with remote working challenges in order to be able to support their team members (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020).

Besides training, COVID-19 has posed significant challenges related to career development in organizations. According to some authors, COVID-19 has led to a grand career shock (Akkermans, Richardson, & Kraimer, Reference Akkermans, Richardson and Kraimer2020; Baert et al., Reference Baert, Lippens, Moens, Sterkens and Weytjens2020). The study by Baert et al. (Reference Baert, Lippens, Moens, Sterkens and Weytjens2020) based on the analysis of the impact of COVID-19 on career outcomes and aspiration among a panel of 3,821 employees, showed that due to the COVID-19 crisis, employees were afraid of losing their job in the near future. In addition, some of them expected to miss out on a promotion that they should have received if this crisis has not happened.

Compensation management

Compensation management refers to the intrinsic and extrinsic rewards that employees receive for performing their job. It encompasses monetary (base pay/bonuses) and non-monetary rewards (employee benefits) (Martocchio, Reference Martocchio2017). Compensation can influence employees' motivation, performance (Safuan & Kurnia, Reference Safuan and Kurnia2021; Sembiring et al., Reference Sembiring, Fatihudin, Mochklas and Holisin2020), and retention (Elsafty & Ragheb, Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020). The study by Elsafty and Ragheb (Reference Elsafty and Ragheb2020) showed that financial benefits such as bonuses during COVID-19 are associated significantly with employees' retention.

As a reaction to the COVID-19 outbreak, some countries have implemented governmental policies to provide financial support for employees and organizations during this health crisis and to encourage them to comply with the stay-at-home orders. For instance, in the USA, the federal government has enacted the temporary paid sick leave, allowing private and public sectors employees 2 weeks of paid sick leave for isolation, treatment related to COVID-19, taking care of a member of their family infected by COVID-19, and childcare caused by the school or daycare closure (Andersen, Maclean, Pesko, & Simon, Reference Andersen, Maclean, Pesko and Simon2020). Short-time compensation, also known as part-time jobs, has also been adopted to sustain the economy while protecting business and employees' jobs. It consists of offering employees a temporary reduction in the number of their working hours which will help organizations that are experiencing a decrease in the level of demand, to retain their employees and to avoid layoffs (Giupponi & Landais, Reference Giupponi and Landais2020). These measures alter compensation strategies and policies within organizations. Furthermore, they might create a complex and challenging environment for managers and HRM practitioners. According to some authors, paid sick leave might lead to an increase in employees' absence in the workplace (Maclean, Pichler, & Ziebarth, Reference Maclean, Pichler and Ziebarth2020). But at the same time, it helps to prevent employees' presenteeism when they are sick (Schneider, Reference Schneider2020). Additionally, this type of government's policies, such as paid sick leave, help to increase their implementation in industries where employees have never got such benefits (Maclean, Pichler, & Ziebarth, Reference Maclean, Pichler and Ziebarth2020), which suggest that managers and HRM practitioners need to think about the way to sustain them to avoid losing employees' motivation after the pandemic. In this context, Przytuła, Strzelec, and Krysińska-Kościańska (Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020) referred to the importance of intrinsic motivation to retain employees, e.g., increasing employee autonomy.

Furthermore, compensation management can be particularly challenging in workplaces where the risk of contamination is very high, for example in hospitals. In this context, the level of compensation offered to employees may be questioned, to know if it is high enough considering the level of risk that these employees encounter daily (Hecker, Reference Hecker2020). According to Hecker (Reference Hecker2020), individuals use to select jobs based on their risk tolerance in return for more compensation for higher risks. Generally, the employer's intervention is oriented toward the necessary control of hazards to be able to recruit individuals for job positions with higher risks. Hence, in case of a high level of risk associated with the job position without sufficient compensation, many employees might decide to leave the organization (Hecker, Reference Hecker2020).

Safety and health management

Employers are responsible for the protection of their employees while they are working. They must ensure that the workplace is free from any hazard that may psychologically or physically harm them or cause their death. COVID-19 has generated a new workplace hazard (Hecker, Reference Hecker2020) that represents a significant source of stress for employees (Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Main, Findley, Collie, Kristman and Gross2020) and a significant challenge for managers and HRM practitioners (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). The impact on employees' health varies based on the working environment and the employee's occupational role (Brooks, Dunn, Amlôt, Rubin, & Greenberg, Reference Brooks, Dunn, Amlôt, Rubin and Greenberg2018). Two main challenges can be identified in this context: how to control the spread of the virus and to protect employees from contagion and how to develop the employees' awareness about the importance to respect the prevention measures implemented in the workplace. The WHO has provided guidelines for organizations to ensure the protection of their employees (WHO, 2020a), nonetheless, controlling employees' behavior might be challenging, considering that some people may ignore self-isolation instructions (Gourinchas, Reference Gourinchas2020).

The recent development of vaccines against COVID-19 has brought the light of hope all over the world, but it has also generated two additional new challenges for organizations, specifically the management of the vaccination campaign in the workplace as well as their capacity to sponsor it and cover its costs (Rothstein, Parmet, & Reiss, Reference Rothstein, Parmet and Reiss2021), considering the financial difficulties that they have witnessed due to this pandemic.

COVID-19 is not only a physical health risk, but it also represents a significant risk for individuals' mental health (Brooks et al., Reference Brooks, Webster, Smith, Woodland, Wessely, Greenberg and Rubin2020; Chen, Ning, Yu, Huang, Li, & Luo, Reference Chen, Ning, Yu, Huang, Li and Luo2020; Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020; Qiu, Shen, Zhao, Wang, Xie, & Xu, Reference Qiu, Shen, Zhao, Wang, Xie and Xu2020). It might be psychologically demanding for employees who work from home, who can feel isolated and torn between their work and their private life (Prasad & Vaidya, Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020). Moreover, employees who are required to be physically present in the workplace might return to work with the fear of contracting the virus or transmitting it to their family (Tan et al., Reference Tan, Hao, McIntyre, Jiang, Jiang, Zhang and Luo2020), which might increase their level of stress as well as the risk of mental health issues (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020), especially for employees who were facing high psychological demands at work, prior to the pandemic (Quaedackers et al., Reference Quaedackers, Stein, Bhatt, Dogan, Hoen, Nijman and Bogaert2020), or those who have a high-risk job position, e.g., healthcare workers (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). The main challenge for managers and HRM practitioners, in this context, is to identify the risk factors and to implement the proper prevention measures in the workplace, including for employees working from home (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020).

Employment relationship

Employment relationship refers to ‘the connection between employees and employers through which individuals sell their labor’ (Budd & Bhave, Reference Budd and Bhave2010). From a labor law perspective, COVID-19 has created important challenges for employees and employers (Biasi, Reference Biasi2020; Sagan & Schüller, Reference Sagan and Schüller2020). Due to the lockdown and mandatory closure of business both were not able to accomplish their contractual obligations (Biasi, Reference Biasi2020). In fact, the challenges resulting from COVID-19 have transformed the traditional relationship between the employee and his employer (Leighton & McKeown, Reference Leighton and McKeown2020; Spurk & Straub, Reference Spurk and Straub2020). Work from home has been implemented in different countries and companies (Spurk & Straub, Reference Spurk and Straub2020). Hence, the traditional boundaries of the world of work have disappeared (Leighton & McKeown, Reference Leighton and McKeown2020). In this context, COVID-19 has positioned the government as a planner more than a regulator (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020), which is challenging for organizations that need to adapt government plans and regulations to their organizational context, while taking into consideration the needs of their employees (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020).

Considering the novelty of this pandemic, most countries do not only rely on existing regulations. They have amended, over a short and a prompt period, several labor laws (Sagan & Schüller, Reference Sagan and Schüller2020), to support employers and to protect employees (Alhambra, Reference Alhambra2020; Mangan, Reference Mangan2020; Sachs, Reference Sachs2020; Sagan & Schüller, Reference Sagan and Schüller2020). The main challenge was how to protect employees while ensuring the continuity of the economy (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020). Some countries have adopted laws to structure and temporarily prohibit collective layoff in organizations (Biasi, Reference Biasi2020). For example, in Italy, a decree law has been issued to prohibit organizations from initiating a collective layoff procedure for a period of 60 days (Biasi, Reference Biasi2020). Furthermore, various legal measures and laws have been adopted to support employees during the lockdown and closure of schools, e.g., employees were given paid leave to take care of their children. The main challenge is the fact that it is still unclear when countries can declare the ‘end’ of this pandemic (Spurk & Straub, Reference Spurk and Straub2020). This represents a critical challenge for determining the proper period of protection needed by employees, which might undermine the relationship between organizations, employees, and their representatives (Biasi, Reference Biasi2020). COVID-19 is an exceptional crisis that has generated extraordinary measures. In some countries, e.g., in France, remote working is voluntary and cannot be imposed by employers (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020), however, as in many other countries the current situation has led employers to impose this mode of working on employees whose job position can be performed from home (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020). The main challenge, in this case, is the fact that disputes might arise between employers and the employees who had not been offered the possibility to work from home or have contracted COVID-19 at the workplace (Sachs, Reference Sachs2020). In fact, in case of a lack of contractual agreement, it is possible, according to Sagan and Schüller (Reference Sagan and Schüller2020), to question the consistency of the employers with the labor laws.

Currently, with the recent development of COVID-19 vaccines, the main challenge for organizations from an employment relationship perspective is the management of the vaccination campaign in terms of costs and application, while ensuring compliance with the country regulations (Rothstein, Parmet, & Reiss, Reference Rothstein, Parmet and Reiss2021). This development also raises the question about the ability of the employer to impose it on their employees. According to Rothstein, Parmet, and Reiss (Reference Rothstein, Parmet and Reiss2021), the adoption of a rigid, coercive approach could intensify the reluctance of the individuals who are not sure yet about the vaccine. These authors suggested that organizations should educate their employees about the benefits of vaccination and should facilitate it, for example by offering time off for employees for vaccination purposes, rather than imposing it (Rothstein, Parmet, & Reiss, Reference Rothstein, Parmet and Reiss2021).

Opportunities, future organizational directions, and insights into HRM interventions

COVID-19 has posed grand challenges for managers and HRM practitioners, but it has also opened the door to opportunities worth knowing and understanding, that can help organizations to direct their future actions. Indeed, according to Demirkaya and Aydın (Reference Demirkaya and Aydın2006), a crisis might create unexpected opportunities for organizations. In this section, we will discuss these opportunities while linking them to the potential future directions in HRM.

COVID-19 has challenged organizations' creativity and innovation and has urged discussions about the future of work (Hite & McDonald, Reference Hite and McDonald2020). It has accelerated the disruption of HRM as well as the implementation of scenarios expected for the future (Hite & McDonald, Reference Hite and McDonald2020). Moreover, it has pushed organizations to rethink their HRM strategies and to go beyond the traditional models of managing human resources, by positioning new information technology as an essential partner to survive and to ensure the sustainability of their business. In this context, new legislation has been adopted in different countries to support organizations in this sudden and unexpected transformation. For example, Germany has adopted new legislation to introduce the possibility of video conferencing in two areas (Sagan & Schüller, Reference Sagan and Schüller2020), to support the implementation of remote working in organizations.

Therefore, the normality that seems to be emerging for the moment in workplaces is the implementation of remote working. However, it is earlier, according to some authors, to confirm that all organizations which have adopted remote working will continue to adopt it in the future, beyond COVID-19 (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b). They are probably reviewing the effectiveness of this work organization before taking their decision, considering that they have implemented it for the first time. Therefore, they do not know yet how it can affect employees' performance and productivity (Aitken-Fox et al., Reference Aitken-Fox, Coffey, Dayaram, Fitzgerald, Gupta, McKenna and Wei Tian2020b). However, it seems according to a recent report published by McKinsey Global Institute which assessed the lasting impact of COVID-19 on labor demands, occupations, and workforce skills in eight countries (China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States) that remote work, as well as virtual meetings, will continue but less intensely than at the peak of COVID-19 (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021).

Despite its challenges, remote working offers employees the opportunity to have flexible working hours, save commuting time, foster job control, and experience the use of new ICT (Prasad & Vaidya, Reference Prasad and Vaidya2020). In addition, it offers companies the opportunity to optimize the use and save the costs of their resources, e.g., office space. Actually, business sectors in some countries, for example in Korea, see growth opportunities in non-contact industries which encompasses telecommunication, remote support solutions, and online education (Liu, Lee, & Lee, Reference Liu, Lee and Lee2020).

Moreover, COVID-19 offers opportunities for organizations to develop the autonomy of their employees, upgrade their digital competencies, and broaden the perspective of their competencies' development. Besides, this pandemic has positioned new technology as a strategic partner for organizations. It has helped to sustain businesses and to shorten the distance between employees and their employers while ensuring their safety. It has fostered the creativity of managers and HRM practitioners and it has facilitated the transition from traditional face-to-face socialization methods to virtual ones, e.g., virtual meetings, lunches, and coffee breaks (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020). It has also helped to sustain staffing in organizations while respecting physical distancing measures.

The new technology has also supported the management of safety and health in workplaces. It has helped to implement the decision to keep the employees at home and to protect them from the risk of infection, while they keep on working for the organization. It has also supported healthcare professionals, e.g., psychologists who have continued to help the population through telehealth systems while respecting physical distancing measures. In China, for instance, mental health services have been provided, during the pandemic, using various channels such as hotlines, online consultations, online courses (Gao et al., Reference Gao, Zheng, Jia, Chen, Mao, Chen and Dai2020), and telemental health services (Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Snoswell, Harding, Bambling, Edirippulige, Bai and Smith2020). According to Lund et al. (Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021), COVID-19 may accelerate the adoption of automation and artificial intelligence (AI) in sectors with high levels of human interaction, such as medical care and personal care (e.g., gyms and hair salons). Hence, it is crucial for organizations to get to grips with ICT and to make it accessible to all its members, in order to be able to sustain their business during extraordinary crises. Some authors insisted on the importance of using AI for HRM during a period of a health crisis and recommended using it as an effective tool to prevent disruptions in operations and management practices while ensuring physical distancing and the protection of employees (Devyania et al., Reference Devyania, Jewanc, Bansal and Denge2020). In the same vein, Liu, Lee, and Lee (Reference Liu, Lee and Lee2020) recommended the development of predictive models, which takes into account the risk factors and the uncertainties in the proactive scheduling and planning of supply, which might help decision makers to create various dynamic scenarios that can be automatized with the use of AI. The use of new technology also supports data analytics that can help HRM practitioners to optimize and improve HRM functions and practices in organizations, such as workforce planning, recruitment, and talent management (AM, Affandi, Udobong, & Sarwani, Reference AM, Affandi, Udobong and Sarwani2020), during this pandemic and beyond.

Identifying the opportunities generated by COVID-19 can help HRM practitioners to develop the proper HRM interventions and future actions. Nevertheless, it is important to take into account the fact that organizations all over the world are still witnessing the pervasive effect of this pandemic that does not seem to end quickly. Undoubtedly, the enhancement of organizational resilience is required. In this context, organizations need to be able to develop innovative responses to effectively absorb and face disturbance that threatens their survival (Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021). HRM practitioners should work in collaboration with managers and employees to transform the challenges brought on by COVID-19 into opportunities, to rethink their HRM functions and practices, e.g., compensation and performance management, and to adapt them to the employees' new working conditions generated by the COVID-19 crisis. According to Przytuła, Strzelec, and Krysińska-Kościańska (Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020), organizations need to lay new foundations, by redefining the new trends in HRM practices. In fact, after almost more than 1 year of new functioning based mostly on remote work, organizations need to re-evaluate their context, compare the new trends in HRM generated by this unexpected crisis, and assess their applicability.

Considering the unpredictability of the current situation and the high level of doubt surrounding its end, organizations should opt out to move toward a hybrid workplace model (AM et al., Reference AM, Affandi, Udobong and Sarwani2020; Kaufman, Lovich, Bailey, Messenböck, Schuler, & Shroff, Reference Kaufman, Lovich, Bailey, Messenböck, Schuler and Shroff2020; Przytuła, Strzelec, & Krysińska-Kościańska, Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020), flexible enough to allow a quick and efficient adaptation of the organization to the requirements of this new situation and beyond. HRM practitioners need to adapt job positions and focus on job redesign within the organization. Lund et al. (Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021) suggested, in this case, emphasizing necessary tasks and activities related to a job rather than the whole job to increase the organizations' operational flexibility as well as agility. Employees should receive the necessary organizational support to acquire the skills needed during this pandemic and beyond, coupled with the development of career pathways offering possibilities of upward mobility (Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021) and enhancing their employability. Such interventions should have a positive impact on employees' motivation and retention as well as the reduction of the costs related to recruitment (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021). Some authors go so far as to suggest that organizations should reinvent themselves by the integration of entrepreneurship competencies among their employees, to help them to learn how to adjust themselves to the uncertainty that can be generated by an unexpected crisis and to thrive in a dynamic environment (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020; Liu, Lee, & Lee, Reference Liu, Lee and Lee2020). The field of entrepreneurship might help employees to explore, to evaluate, and to exploit opportunities that occur in a dynamic and unstable environment, considering that this field is based on exploration, evaluation, discovery, and the capacity to transform challenges brought on by an ambiguous context into opportunities (Carnevale & Hatak, Reference Carnevale and Hatak2020).

Besides, the pivotal role of the new information technology during the pandemic should urge managers and HRM practitioners to explore effective ways to integrate it into HRM and adapt it to the context of their organization. Moreover, they need to identify the specific training needs, as not all employees, including managers, have the proper technological competencies. The involvement of employees is required to ensure the success of this organizational change. Additionally, sustaining communication with them should help to reduce their stress and increase their trust in the organization (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020).

Furthermore, employees should be given the possibility to work remotely with the flexibility to choose when and where to work (Kaufman et al., Reference Kaufman, Lovich, Bailey, Messenböck, Schuler and Shroff2020; Przytuła, Strzelec, & Krysińska-Kościańska, Reference Przytuła, Strzelec and Krysińska-Kościańska2020), without limiting the workspace to their home. However, organizations should provide the possibility to schedule a flexible presence in the office to keep the employees connected to their workplace, by ensuring the presence of efficient health and safety measures and facilitating access to vaccination. Considering the blur surrounding private and professional life boundaries, managers should communicate and discuss with their employees the expectations of the organizations in terms of performance. In this regard, managers, supported by HRM practitioners, should review and realign the performance management system in order to adapt the performance objectives to the new reality of organizations and employees (AM et al., Reference AM, Affandi, Udobong and Sarwani2020). They should provide continuous feedback that will enhance learning and sharing among employees and foster organizational flexibility, agility as well as employees' motivation and retention (Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021). They should also develop wellbeing programs that aim at protecting employees' mental health, and providing solutions adapted to the needs of every employee, in terms of resources and social support (Hamouche, Reference Hamouche2020). Managers should discuss with their employees the different scenarios of work schedules adapted to the requirements of the current situation. Also, with the support of HRM practitioners, managers should increase employees' awareness about the necessity to disconnect from work when it is required to prevent mental health issues.

In this context, rebuilding the organizational culture is needed to facilitate the adoption of flexible work arrangements and the transition toward a hybrid working model (AM et al., Reference AM, Affandi, Udobong and Sarwani2020; Ngoc Su et al., Reference Ngoc Su, Luc Tra, Thi Huynh, Nguyen and O'Mahony2021). Moreover, developing and maintaining a cohesive culture that supports employees' connections and interactions is required (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Madgavkar, Manyika, Smit, Ellingrud, Meaney and Robinson2021), to encourage social support and collaboration among employees, particularly those working remotely. In fact, virtual interactions might affect the socialization process, the acquisition of tacit knowledge related to the organizational culture (Asatiani et al., Reference Asatiani, Hämäläinen, Penttinen and Rossi2021). This led some authors to recommend the development and implementation of a digital organizational culture handbook, which should be made available to employees working remotely through the organization's intranet, to provide toolkits that support and vehicles symbolic aspects of the organizational culture, such as values (Asatiani et al., Reference Asatiani, Hämäläinen, Penttinen and Rossi2021).

Contribution and practical implications for organizations

In the business world, crises are inevitable. However, no one can predict a crisis with the magnitude of COVID-19, which has accelerated the disruption of traditional methods of HRM and has created significant challenges for managers and HRM practitioners, who were not fully equipped in terms of information, resources, and competencies to cope with the complexity and the novelty of this pandemic.

Besides these challenges, COVID-19 has opened the door to opportunities that organizations should know to be able to properly direct their future actions in HRM. This paper is a general literature review that provides relevant and useful information which can help managers and HRM practitioners to understand the main challenges and opportunities related to COVID-19. The insights provided in this paper into the future directions in HRM should help them to develop an intervention plan adapted to the needs of their organizations and employees.

Conclusion and future research

The contribution of this paper should, however, be considered in light of some limitations. First, our research is a general literature review with an informative purpose, which might suggest that there is a possibility of a subjective selection of literature. Notwithstanding, the databases that we have used (Google Scholar, Ebsco, and Semantic Scholar) provide the most cited articles. Besides, the purpose and the informative character of this paper do not require a systematic review of the literature. Second, during writing this paper, COVID-19 is still present. Therefore, it is not possible to identify accurately the long-term challenges and opportunities. Future research should be directed toward longitudinal analysis to identify these challenges and opportunities.

Conflict of interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Dr. Salima Hamouche is an assistant professor, corporate trainer, and consultant at Canadian University Dubai. She graduated from Industrial Relations School, University of Montreal (Canada), with a PhD and a master's degree in Industrial Relations with a major in human resource management. Dr. Salima Hamouche has strong academic background and practical experience in human resource management. She has been practicing human resource management for more than 12 years, as an HR consultant, human resource director, general director, human resource manager, and talent acquisition specialist in small and large organizations, in different sectors of activities (industrial, services, and education) and multinational companies. She made several presentations at scientific conferences and she led corporate training and workshops in different public and private companies. Dr. Salima Hamouche was sitting for several years on boards of directors in Canada, as administrator and vice president.

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