Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study

This study examines how job quality and performance management influence career initiative in the workplace. Based on signaling theory and the notion of internal fit in performance management and HRM, we argue that performance management with a learning orientation further enhances career initiative...

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Main Authors: Marc Van Veldhoven, Luc Dorenbosch, Anouk Breugelmans, Karina Van De Voorde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-08-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017721734
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spelling doaj-6ddedda5d45c4b48a1b4daa2593044412020-11-25T02:50:11ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402017-08-01710.1177/2158244017721734Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor StudyMarc Van Veldhoven0Luc Dorenbosch1Anouk Breugelmans2Karina Van De Voorde3Tilburg University, The NetherlandsDe Baaningenieurs, Amsterdam, The NetherlandsTilburg University, The NetherlandsTilburg University, The NetherlandsThis study examines how job quality and performance management influence career initiative in the workplace. Based on signaling theory and the notion of internal fit in performance management and HRM, we argue that performance management with a learning orientation further enhances career initiative, whereas performance management with a results orientation constrains it. Combining the two performance management types is expected to diminish career initiative. In addition, we expect the positive effect of job quality to be contingent upon the performance management types. A total of 772 employees working in the (public) service industry or manufacturing industry and nested within 53 work units rated their job quality (job variety and job autonomy) as well as career initiative. Line managers from these work units rated the performance management types practiced. Results indicate that job variety and learning-oriented performance management positively relate to career initiative. The positive relationships between learning-orientated performance management, job variety, and career initiative are weakened when line managers simultaneously practice results-oriented performance management. These findings underline the need to focus on how performance management orientations and job quality combine to influence career initiative.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017721734
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marc Van Veldhoven
Luc Dorenbosch
Anouk Breugelmans
Karina Van De Voorde
spellingShingle Marc Van Veldhoven
Luc Dorenbosch
Anouk Breugelmans
Karina Van De Voorde
Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
SAGE Open
author_facet Marc Van Veldhoven
Luc Dorenbosch
Anouk Breugelmans
Karina Van De Voorde
author_sort Marc Van Veldhoven
title Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
title_short Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
title_full Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
title_fullStr Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Relationship Between Job Quality, Performance Management, and Career Initiative: A Two-Level, Two-Actor Study
title_sort exploring the relationship between job quality, performance management, and career initiative: a two-level, two-actor study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2017-08-01
description This study examines how job quality and performance management influence career initiative in the workplace. Based on signaling theory and the notion of internal fit in performance management and HRM, we argue that performance management with a learning orientation further enhances career initiative, whereas performance management with a results orientation constrains it. Combining the two performance management types is expected to diminish career initiative. In addition, we expect the positive effect of job quality to be contingent upon the performance management types. A total of 772 employees working in the (public) service industry or manufacturing industry and nested within 53 work units rated their job quality (job variety and job autonomy) as well as career initiative. Line managers from these work units rated the performance management types practiced. Results indicate that job variety and learning-oriented performance management positively relate to career initiative. The positive relationships between learning-orientated performance management, job variety, and career initiative are weakened when line managers simultaneously practice results-oriented performance management. These findings underline the need to focus on how performance management orientations and job quality combine to influence career initiative.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017721734
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