High Performance Work Systems in the Tourism Industry: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Search Strategy
3.2. Eligibility Criteria and Selection Process
- Inclusion criteria: date of publication of papers (January 2019 to April 2024); language of publication (English or Spanish); type of publication (publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals); and sector of study (tourism).
- Exclusion criteria: type of publication (books, reports, doctoral theses, dissertations, final theses, master’s theses and opinion articles).
4. Results
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
6.1. Limitations and Directions for Future Research
6.2. Implications for Practice
- It is very important to create a work environment that promotes job satisfaction and employee engagement. Research indicates that these factors are key mediators that positively influence productivity and reduce rotation and absenteeism.
- Despite limited resources, family businesses could see benefits by strategically allocating their resources to HRM practices that have a proven impact. Investments in technologies that facilitate human resource management can also help maximize the use of available resources.
- Reducing emotional burnout through supportive organizational policies and improved working conditions is critical. Research shows that inhibiting emotional exhaustion and improving the work climate contribute to higher job performance.
- Prioritizing occupational safety and creating a safe work climate can reduce accident rates. Companies should implement practices that ensure the physical and psychological safety of their employees.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Search Equations in English | Search Equations in Spanish |
---|---|---|
1 | ‘Black Box’ AND (Rotation OR ‘Staff turnover’ OR absenteeism OR ‘work absenteeism’ OR productivity OR productiveness OR accident rate) AND (tourism OR ‘tourism sector’) | (tourism OR ‘black box’) AND (Rotación OR ‘Rotación de personal’ OR Absentismo OR ‘absentismo laboral’ OR productivity OR accidentabilidad) AND (turismo OR ‘sector turístico’) |
2 | ‘Black Box’ AND (Rotation OR ‘Staff turnover’ OR absenteeism OR ‘work absenteeism’ OR productivity OR productiveness OR ‘accident rate’) AND (tourism OR ‘tourism sector’) AND (‘High Performance Work Systems’ OR HPWS) | (‘caja negra’ OR ‘black box’) AND (Rotación OR ‘Rotación de personal’ OR Absentismo OR ‘absentismo laboral’ OR productividad OR accidentabilidad) AND (turismo OR ‘sector turístico’) AND (‘Sistemas de trabajo de Alto Rendimiento’ OR STAR) |
3 | (‘High Performance Work Systems’ OR HPWS) AND (Rotation OR ‘Staff turnover’ OR absenteeism OR ‘work absenteeism’ OR productivity OR productiveness OR ‘accident rate’) AND (tourism OR ‘tourism sector’) | (‘Sistemas de trabajo de Alto Rendimiento’ OR STAR) AND (Rotación OR ‘Rotación de personal’ OR Absentismo OR ‘absentismo laboral’ OR productividad OR accidentabilidad) AND (turismo OR ‘sector turístico’) |
Database | Search Language | Search Equation | Studies | Filtered Studies (January 2019–April 2024) | Studies Filtered by Type and Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WoS | English | 1 | 5 | 4 | 4 |
2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | ||
3 | 6 | 4 | 4 | ||
SCOPUS | English | 1 | 1471 | 1120 | 924 |
2 | 273 | 222 | 196 | ||
3 | 1288 | 1060 | 962 | ||
Spanish | 1 | 4 | 3 | 2 | |
2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||
3 | 13 | 8 | 5 | ||
Total | 3064 | 2425 | 2100 |
Reference | Country | Purpose | Design | Sample | ARPA Item | Main Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alsakarneh et al. (2024) | Jordan | Assess the impact of HRM practices on organizational performance with employee engagement as a potential mediator | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 237 employees from various tourism projects in Jordan | Work performance | There was a relationship between employee engagement and job performance, with the relationship being affected by the HR practices of recruitment and selection, training and development, remuneration and performance appraisal. |
Benítez-Núñez et al. (2024) | Spain | Analyze the role of stress factors in the relationship between HPWSs and employee outcomes in challenging contexts | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 202 hotel employees from Gran Canaria (Spain) | Rotation | Reducing stressful obstacles was an important mechanism through which HPWSs improved job satisfaction and reduced rotation intention. |
Hai and Park (2024) | China | Exploring which HPWS practices influence job performance the most | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 246 employees of hotels in China | Work performance | Job description was found to be important in predicting job performance, while job security boosts performance. |
Dorta-Afonso et al. (2023) | Spain | Analyzing the mechanisms through which HPWSs affect job satisfaction | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 202 hotel employees from Gran Canaria (Spain) | Work performance | There was a direct positive effect of HPWSs on job satisfaction, impacting job performance. |
Kloutsiniotis et al. (2023) | Greece | Investigate the role of transformational leadership in work engagement and its effect on productivity and customer service | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 459 employees of 13 Greek 4 and 5-star hotels | Work performance | Transformational leadership was found to impact on employees’ trust in their managers and help create a climate of social trust; both factors, in turn, influence work engagement, leading to higher productivity. |
Yin (2023) | China | Investigating HPWSs on employee job performance and reviewing previous research and making suggestions for future research directions | Review | Previously published studies on the subject (without specifying a number) | Work performance | A relationship between HPWSs and job performance is observed, mediated by employee job involvement, satisfaction, organizational support, commitment, value consistency, inhibition of emotional exhaustion and reduction of counterproductive behaviors. |
Cizreliogullari and Babayigit (2022) | Cyprus | Investigating the effects of psychological capital on HPWSs and job satisfaction levels | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 400 immigrant employees from 18 hotels in Northern Cyprus | Work performance | The mediating role of psychological capital between HPWSs and job satisfaction on job performance was identified. |
Kaushik and Mukherjee (2022) | India | Conducting a systematic review, consolidating the available literature and proposing a scope for future research | Systematic review | A total of 12 studies | Rotation | A negative relationship was observed between HPWSs and employee rotation intention due to greater flexibility and autonomy granted by HPWS practices. |
Mansour et al. (2022) | Canada, Germany and France | Examining how the psychosocial safety climate mediated the relationship between HPWSs and AMO | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 1664 employees of flight attendants in Canada, Germany and France | Work performance | There was a direct relationship between HPWSs and AMO practices, and the HPWSs that improve AMO directly and positively influence the psychosocial safety climate, improving employee performance. The sense of physical safety mediated the relationship between HPWSs and accident rate. |
Unur and Arasli (2022) | Norway | Understanding how leadership and HPWSs affect absenteeism | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 427 employees in tourism organizations in Norway | Absenteeism | An indirect relationship between HPWSs and absenteeism, mediated by job security and leadership, was identified. |
Dorta-Afonso et al. (2021) | Spain | Examine the underlying mechanisms within black boxes that link HPWSs to well-being and performance | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 494 hotel employees from Gran Canaria (Spain) | Work performance | HPWSs were found to influence motivation, organizational commitment, job satisfaction and quality of life, impacting on better job performance. |
Yang et al. (2021) | United States | Examine which HPWS practices impact on performance | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 5290 employees of 180 independent franchise hotels in North America | Work performance | A relationship between HPWSs and work performance was observed, mediated by collective behavior. |
Gosnell et al. (2020) | United Kingdom | Empirically identify the impact of HPWS practices with an increase in productivity of highly skilled employees | Prospective randomized experimental (8-month field study) | A total of 335 aviation captains | Work performance | It was found that the relationship between HPWSs and a higher job performance was mediated by performance monitoring, goal setting, job satisfaction and commitment to the organization. |
Kloutsiniotis and Mihail (2020a) | Greece | Conduct a theory-based qualitative review of the HPWS approach in the field of tourism and hospitality management | Review | A total of 28 published studies | Overall current status of the subject | A significant gap was identified in the progress of HPWS research in tourism and the hotel sector. |
Kloutsiniotis and Mihail (2020b) | Greece | Investigate which variables vary between HPWSs and job performance through the development of social climate and fairness | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 448 employees of 10 hotels in Greece | Work performance | There was a positive relationship between the HPWS and the development of a climate of fairness and service in the company, positively influencing work engagement and leading to higher productivity. |
Karadas and Karatepe (2019) | Romania | Investigate the potential mediators operating in the black box between HPWSs and employee outcomes | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 282 employees in international 4 and 5-star chain hotels in Romania | Work performance | Both psychological capital and work engagement were found to intervene in the black box between HPWSs and job performance. |
Ruiz et al. (2019) | Spain | Analyze the effect of HPWSs and total quality management on performance | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 129 employees in the tourism sector in Spain | Work performance | There was a direct relationship between HPWSs and employee job performance, which occurred through increased participation in decision making, training, performance appraisal and incentive compensation. |
Sobaih et al. (2019) | Egypt | Examine the influence of psychological contract compliance on the relationship between HPWSs and work outcomes. | Analytical observational prospective | A total of 36 employees of 36 hotels in the Red Sea tourist region (Egypt) | Work performance | The relationship between HPWSs and job performance was found to occur through the psychological contract, increasing job satisfaction and organizational citizenship behavior. |
Reference | Items CASP Checklist for Cohort Studies | Result | |||||||||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | ||
Alsakarneh et al. (2024) | yes | partially | yes | yes | no | cannot tell | yes | no | yes | yes | partially | yes | Moderate |
Benítez-Núñez et al. (2024) | yes | yes | yes | yes | partially | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Hai and Park (2024) | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | cannot tell | yes | yes | Moderate |
Dorta-Afonso et al. (2023) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Kloutsiniotis et al. (2023) | yes | yes | yes | yes | partially | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Cizreliogullari and Babayigit (2022) | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Mansour et al. (2022) | yes | yes | yes | yes | partially | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Unur and Arasli (2022) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Dorta-Afonso et al. (2021) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Yang et al. (2021) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Kloutsiniotis and Mihail (2020b) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Karadas and Karatepe (2019) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Ruiz et al. (2019) | yes | yes | yes | yes | partially | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Sobaih et al. (2019) | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | Low |
References | Items CASP Checklist for Systematic Review | Result | |||||||||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | ||||
Kaushik and Mukherjee (2022) | yes | yes | yes | no | cannot tell | A negative relationship was observed between HPWSs and employee rotation intention due to greater flexibility and autonomy granted by HPWS practices. | Imprecise. Lack of critical quality assessment and absence of confidence metrics (such as intervals) limit accuracy. | partially | yes | cannot tell | Moderate | ||
References | Items CASP Checklist for Randomized Controlled Trial | Result | |||||||||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |||
Gosnell et al. (2020) | yes | yes | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | yes | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | Low | |
References | Items CASP Checklist for Qualitative Studies | Result | |||||||||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | ||||
Yin (2023) | yes | cannot tell | yes | cannot tell | cannot tell | cannot tell | cannot tell | cannot tell | yes | yes | Moderate | ||
Kloutsiniotis and Mihail (2020a) | yes | yes | yes | cannot tell | yes | cannot tell | cannot tell | yes | yes | yes | Low |
Inputs (HPWS Practices) | Processes (Mediators/Moderators) | Outputs (ARPA Items) |
---|---|---|
Recruitment and selection | Job satisfaction, job involvement, commitment, job security | Productivity, absenteeism |
Training and development | Motivation, perceived fairness, emotional exhaustion inhibition, value consistency | Productivity, turnover intention |
Performance appraisal and feedback | Leadership (authentic, transformational), organizational support, trust, participation in decision making | Productivity, absenteeism |
Remuneration and incentive systems | Organizational citizenship behavior, psychological capital, goal setting, autonomy | Turnover intention, job performance |
Occupational safety and psychosocial practices | Psychosocial safety climate, physical safety perception | Accident rate |
Job design and clarity | Job description clarity, role understanding | Performance, satisfaction |
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Montañés-Sanchez, J.; Sánchez-Fernández, M.D.; Soares, J.R.R.; Ramón-Cardona, J. High Performance Work Systems in the Tourism Industry: A Systematic Review. Adm. Sci. 2025, 15, 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15060195
Montañés-Sanchez J, Sánchez-Fernández MD, Soares JRR, Ramón-Cardona J. High Performance Work Systems in the Tourism Industry: A Systematic Review. Administrative Sciences. 2025; 15(6):195. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15060195
Chicago/Turabian StyleMontañés-Sanchez, Javier, María Dolores Sánchez-Fernández, Jakson Renner Rodrigues Soares, and José Ramón-Cardona. 2025. "High Performance Work Systems in the Tourism Industry: A Systematic Review" Administrative Sciences 15, no. 6: 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15060195
APA StyleMontañés-Sanchez, J., Sánchez-Fernández, M. D., Soares, J. R. R., & Ramón-Cardona, J. (2025). High Performance Work Systems in the Tourism Industry: A Systematic Review. Administrative Sciences, 15(6), 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15060195