- Rowena Lancelot & Dr. Francis Michael Yambao
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17311368
- GAS Journal of Arts Humanities and Social Sciences (GASJAHSS)
This study investigates human
resource management (HRM) strategies for retaining senior and foreign employees
in workplaces characterized by age and cultural diversity. Employing a mixed-methods, predominantly qualitative
design, the research draws on 10 interviews with managers, HR professionals,
senior employees (aged 50+), and foreign workers, plus four focus groups with
frontline staff and community stakeholders across four SMEs in Angeles City,
Pampanga, Philippines. Data were analyzed via thematic analysis (Braun &
Clarke, 2006) complemented by a cross-case synthesis to identify patterns
across organizational contexts. Five core HRM strategies emerged as pivotal to
retention: (1) inclusive leadership and psychological safety; (2) structured
onboarding and language/cultural support; (3) targeted mentoring and
sponsorship for seniors and foreigners; (4) flexible work arrangements and
transparent career pathways; and (5) culturally competent performance management
and feedback. The study also highlights enablers and barriers, including
leadership commitment, resource constraints in SMEs, language diversity, and
local cultural norms (e.g., respect for authority, collectivism). Age and cultural diversity shape what
retention means in Angeles City. An
aging local workforce brings deep organizational knowledge and reliability but
may have different health needs and work preferences. A growing foreign
presence adds global perspectives and specialized skills but introduces
language and cultural integration challenges. Effectively combining these
realities requires HRM that explicitly acknowledges differences, mitigates
biases, and builds pathways for meaningful contributions from all groups.
These five HRM strategies are
interdependent levers that, when tailored to Angeles City’s age and cultural
diversity landscape, can significantly improve retention of senior and foreign
employees. Inclusive leadership sets the tone; structured onboarding and
language/cultural support lower entry barriers; targeted mentoring preserves
knowledge and accelerates growth; flexible arrangements and clear career paths
reduce frustration and disengagement; and culturally competent performance
management ensures fairness and motivation. Together, they help build a
resilient, high-performing, and globally capable workforce in Angeles City.
Practical implications for SME HR practitioners include low-cost interventions (buddy systems, bilingual onboarding materials, cross-cultural coaching) and scalable career-development tracks. Theoretically, findings advance inclusive leadership theory, aging workforce scholarship, and foreign integration literature by illustrating how context shapes the effectiveness of HRM practices. Limitations include regional focus and reliance on self-reported data; future research should test the proposed framework across additional regions, sectors, and with triangulated quantitative indicators (e.g., turnover by age and origin, performance outcomes).