Friday, 6 March 2015

Self-control trumps work motivation in predicting job search behavior

an article by Pieter E. Baay, Denise T.D. de Ridder, Tanja van der Lippe and Marcel A.G. van Aken (Utrecht University, The Netherlands) and Jacquelynne S. Eccles (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) published in Journal of Vocational Behavior Volume 85 Issue 3 (December 2014)

Abstract

Current labour market entrants face an increasingly challenging job search process. Effective guidance of job seekers requires identification of relevant job search skills.

Self-control (i.e., the ability to control one’s thoughts, actions, and response tendencies in view of a long-term goal, such as finding employment) is assumed to be one such relevant job search skill. The current study is the first to empirically assess the importance of self-control in the job search process. This is compared to the role of motivation, which is generally considered a crucial predictor of job searching.

Based on a sample of 403 Dutch prospective vocational training graduates, we found that higher levels of self-control were related to higher levels of preparatory job search behaviour and job search intentions half a year later, shortly before labour market entrance. Self-control was a significantly stronger predictor of job searching than work motivation.

Moreover, relations between self-control and job searching were largely independent of motivation, which may suggest that job-seekers benefit from self-control through adaptive habits and routines that are unaffected by motivation.

We propose that job search interventions, which traditionally focus on strengthening motivation, may benefit from a stronger focus on improving self-control skills.


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