When do employees cross boundaries? Individual and contextual determinants of career mobility
Open access
Date
2018Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
This study investigates the joint effects of individual characteristics and the labour market on career mobility. We propose that level of education, openness to experience, and a favourable labour market relate positively to employees crossing organizational, industrial, and occupational boundaries. Management programme alumni (N = 503) provided information through an online survey about their career histories, their level of education, and their openness to experience. Additionally, we used the unemployment rate as an indicator for yearly changes in the labour market. The results of our cross-classified multilevel analysis indicate that both individual characteristics and the labour market are determinants of career mobility. Level of education had a positive effect on organizational and industrial boundary crossing, and changes in the labour market related to organizational boundary crossing. Against our assumptions, openness to experience had no effect on career mobility, and none of the predictors were related to occupational boundary crossing. Our results demonstrate the importance of investigating career mobility from a boundary perspective combined with a focus on both individual and contextual characteristics. The dominance of education compared to personality and the difficulty of explaining occupational mobility open new research avenues and yield practical implications for employees, career counsellors, and organizations. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000274587Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
European Journal of Work and Organizational PsychologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisSubject
Career boundaries; career mobility; labour market situation; education level; openness to experience; cross-classified multilevel modelOrganisational unit
03356 - Grote, Gudela / Grote, Gudela
Funding
149696 - Reference groups as constraints and enablers in individual careers (SNF)
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Is cited by: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000446737
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