By: Atep Afia Hidayat
This article is a rewritten and expanded version of the original piece titled “Mengelola SDM: Belajar dari Lapangan Hijau,” by Atep Afia Hidayat. (https://www.kangatepafia.com/2013/12/mengelola-sdm-belajar-dari-lapangan.html)
Every human being, without exception, possesses human resources — a unique set of capacities, potentials,
and inner energy that form their personal excellence. Yet, as many thinkers have said, within every human head lies a sleeping giant: the brain — an organ of extraordinary potential that often remains underutilized. Much of humanity’s innate capability is dormant, waiting to be awakened and directed toward meaningful goals.1. Human Resources as an Integrated System
Human resources (HR) represent a complex system encompassing
physical, mental, emotional, intellectual, spiritual, and social dimensions.
Every cell in the human body is a biological resource that supports physical
performance, while the mind and emotions are the “engine” that determines
direction and quality of action.
Recent research by Gallup (2023) reveals that only 23% of
employees worldwide are actively engaged in their work. This means
that most people operate below their full capacity — an indication that modern
HR management must not only focus on technical competence but also on
psychological and emotional activation.
2. Learning from the Football Field
The football field offers a rich metaphor for understanding
human resource dynamics. In a team of eleven players, each represents a unique
unit of human capability — differing in skill, temperament, and function. Some
are skilled in offense, others in defense, and some serve as connectors who
manage the flow of play.
To score a goal, the team must coordinate seamlessly
— combining tactics, strategy, communication, and execution. This reflects the team
effectiveness model (Katzenbach & Smith, 2020), which highlights that
optimal team performance depends on aligned goals, clear roles, and
high-quality communication.
Similarly, the essence of Human Capital Optimization
(Ulrich, 2022) lies not in the individual’s talent alone but in the collective
orchestration of all human resources toward a shared vision. The football
field, therefore, is a living classroom for strategic collaboration.
3. Activating HR through Roles and Synergy
Within organizations, each person plays a role similar to
positions on a football team: the striker (innovator), the defender (risk
manager), and the midfielder (coordinator). The overall team performance
depends on how effectively these individuals carry out their roles and
complement one another.
This aligns with the Complementary Fit Theory
(Kristof-Brown et al., 2022), which emphasizes the importance of synergy
between individual traits and team needs. When differences are managed
constructively, diversity becomes an asset — not a barrier — to achieving
collective excellence.
4. The Leader as the Team Coach
Just as every football team needs a coach, every
organization requires leadership that can unify, motivate, and guide its
members toward common goals. An effective leader does more than give technical
orders; they inspire, mentor, and nurture trust within the team.
According to the Harvard Business Review (2024),
transformational leadership increases team performance by up to 35%
compared to transactional leadership. Such leaders act like coaches on the
field — orchestrating both strategy and morale, blending human energy with
organizational purpose.
5. From the Field to Real Life
What happens on the football field mirrors real life — in
families, communities, and workplaces. Each of us belongs to a larger “team,”
where collaboration, adaptability, and role awareness are essential.
When every family member, citizen, or employee recognizes
their role and uses their potential fully, collective synergy emerges. The goal,
in this broader sense, is not merely competitive victory but collective
performance that enhances well-being and shared success.
6. Conclusion
The green field teaches us that success is not defined
solely by individual brilliance but by how that brilliance is managed,
integrated, and directed toward a common purpose. The greatest challenge in
human resource management today is not the scarcity of human potential, but the
lack of activation and integration of that potential.
By adopting a more humanistic and collaborative approach, HR
management can evolve from merely managing labor to awakening human
capability as a strategic resource. From the football field, we learn this
timeless truth: true victory arises when every player understands their role,
works wholeheartedly, and awakens the sleeping giant within.
References
- Gallup.
(2023). State of the Global Workplace Report.
- Harvard
Business Review. (2024). Leadership in the Age of Collaboration.
- Katzenbach,
J. R., & Smith, D. K. (2020). The Wisdom of Teams: Creating the
High-Performance Organization. Harvard Business School Press.
- Kristof-Brown,
A. L., et al. (2022). Person–Environment Fit Theory: Applications in
Organizational Behavior. Annual Review of Organizational
Psychology.
- Ulrich,
D. (2022). Human Capability: Activating Human Capital for Performance
and Growth. McGraw-Hill Education.

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