http://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/services/Feed ${session.getAttribute("locale")} 5 Global talent management: exploring talent identification in the multinational enterprise http://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Repository/uon:12288 In recent decades, interest in talent management has continued to grow among practitioners, consultants and academics. Conceptual development and subsequent empirical analysis has been limited and struggled to keep pace with the plethora of management consultancy reports in the area. More recently, global talent management has come to the fore due to the increasing importance and challenges multinational enterprises (MNEs) face in satisfying their talent demands. This paper analyses the operationalisation of the talent identification stage in global talent management. In so doing, we find that the use of talent pool segmentation is becoming a popular means of identifying and managing talent. However, MNEs face a number of challenges in ensuring that it is an effective system. 2012-12-18T04:10:27.693Z ]]> More than new bottles? Exploring the who and how of talent management in multinational companies http://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Repository/uon:9080 Interest in talent management (TM) continues to grow amongst practitioners, consultants and academics. Yet, conceptual development and empirical evidence remains limited and struggling to keep pace with the multitude of consultancy reports. This paper incorporates an exploratory case study in conjunction with large scale survey evidence from 260 multinational companies in Ireland to establish how TM is operationalised in practice. The survey results showed TM was far from being universally applied among all MNCs although significant numbers have systems in place. The case study, regarded as a best practice TM case in the consultancy literature, shows that talent pool segmentation according to the abilities and competencies of employees are utilised rather than firstly identifying pools of positions and then finding individuals. Additionally and consistent with over half of the MNEs surveyed, the case firm identify talented employees other than leadership or managerial talent but also their key technical, functional employees. 2011-09-28T06:50:01.943Z ]]>