Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa

Orientation: The study focuses on understanding labour turnover trends amongst African Black senior managers in South Africa. There is a perception that turnover amongst African Black senior managers is higher than average. There is also a perception that African Black senior managers are only mo...

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Main Authors: Khanyile C.C. Nzukuma, Mark Bussin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-11-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/360
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spelling doaj-e64143e6787a4a8095d58ff713e5638e2020-11-24T21:59:52ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2011-11-0191e1e1210.4102/sajhrm.v9i1.360225Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South AfricaKhanyile C.C. Nzukuma0Mark Bussin1Department of Industrial Psychology and People Management, University of JohannesburgDepartment of Industrial Psychology and People Management, University of JohannesburgOrientation: The study focuses on understanding labour turnover trends amongst African Black senior managers in South Africa. There is a perception that turnover amongst African Black senior managers is higher than average. There is also a perception that African Black senior managers are only motivated by financial rewards when considering job change. Research purpose: The study focused on understanding why African Black senior managers have a propensity to change jobs and how organisations can resolve the trend. Motivation for the study: To develop a better understanding of the push and pull factors for African Black senior managers in organisations. Research design, approach and method: The research was conducted in two phases, namely as part of a qualitative study and a quantitative study: Creswell (2003) refers to this approach as triangulation. The target population was African Black senior managers on the database of a large Human Resources Consultancy, The South African Rewards Association and the Association of Black Actuaries and Investment Professionals (ABSIP) (n = 2600). A total of 208 usable responses were received. Main findings: The main findings and contribution to the field of study was that African Black senior managers do not trust organisations with their career development. They would rather take control of their own career development by moving from organisation to organisation to build their repertoire of skills and competence. They want to be in charge of their careers. This finding has profound implications for organisations employing African Black managers in the senior cadre. Practical/managerial implications: Managers of African Black senior managers need to create attractive employee value propositions that address the main findings. Contribution/value-add: The research shows that African Black senior managers generally seek corporate environments that encourage a sense of belonging and with a clear career growth plan.https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/360African Black senior managersjob hoppinglabour turnoverorganisationsretentionpush and pull factorsjob hopping
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khanyile C.C. Nzukuma
Mark Bussin
spellingShingle Khanyile C.C. Nzukuma
Mark Bussin
Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
African Black senior managers
job hopping
labour turnover
organisations
retention
push and pull factors
job hopping
author_facet Khanyile C.C. Nzukuma
Mark Bussin
author_sort Khanyile C.C. Nzukuma
title Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
title_short Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
title_full Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
title_fullStr Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Job-hopping amongst African Black senior management in South Africa
title_sort job-hopping amongst african black senior management in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Orientation: The study focuses on understanding labour turnover trends amongst African Black senior managers in South Africa. There is a perception that turnover amongst African Black senior managers is higher than average. There is also a perception that African Black senior managers are only motivated by financial rewards when considering job change. Research purpose: The study focused on understanding why African Black senior managers have a propensity to change jobs and how organisations can resolve the trend. Motivation for the study: To develop a better understanding of the push and pull factors for African Black senior managers in organisations. Research design, approach and method: The research was conducted in two phases, namely as part of a qualitative study and a quantitative study: Creswell (2003) refers to this approach as triangulation. The target population was African Black senior managers on the database of a large Human Resources Consultancy, The South African Rewards Association and the Association of Black Actuaries and Investment Professionals (ABSIP) (n = 2600). A total of 208 usable responses were received. Main findings: The main findings and contribution to the field of study was that African Black senior managers do not trust organisations with their career development. They would rather take control of their own career development by moving from organisation to organisation to build their repertoire of skills and competence. They want to be in charge of their careers. This finding has profound implications for organisations employing African Black managers in the senior cadre. Practical/managerial implications: Managers of African Black senior managers need to create attractive employee value propositions that address the main findings. Contribution/value-add: The research shows that African Black senior managers generally seek corporate environments that encourage a sense of belonging and with a clear career growth plan.
topic African Black senior managers
job hopping
labour turnover
organisations
retention
push and pull factors
job hopping
url https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/360
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