Title: Employability and Career Success Across the LifeSpan
1Employability and Career Success Across the
Life-Span
- Age as moderator in the Relationship Between
Self- Versus Supervisor Ratings of Employability
and Career Success - Beatrice Van der Heijden, Maastricht School of
Management, Open University of the Netherlands,
University of Twente - Annet De Lange, University of Groningen, the
Netherlands - Evangelia Demerouti, Utrecht University, the
Netherlands - Claudia van der Heijde, University of Twente, the
Netherlands
2Introduction
- Employability (or career potential) is seen as a
prerequisite for career success (cf. Van der
Heijde Van der Heijden, 2006). - Far-reaching changes in the workforce (ageing and
dejuvenization) that necessitate further
empirical research on ageing and careers. - Career management only possible given a thorough
understanding of what constitutes ones
employability.
3Aims of the Study
- Firstly, to test the operationalization of
employability, and to investigate whether the
factor structure for self-reported versus
supervisor-rated employability is similar across
two age groups of workers (youngsters versus
over-forties). - Secondly, we examine the predictive validity of
employability in the light of objective career
success, using two sources of raters (employees
and their immediate supervisors).
4Aims of the Study
- Thirdly, this study aims to examine whether age
of the employee moderates the relationship
between self- and supervisor ratings of
employability, on the one hand, and objective
career success, on the other.
5Employability
- The continuous fulfilling, acquiring or creating
of work through the optimal use of competences
(Van der Heijde Van der Heijden, 2006).
6Five Dimensions of Employability
- Occupational Expertise
- Anticipation and Optimization
- Personal Flexibility
- Corporate Sense
- Balance.
7Career Success
- The accumulated interaction between a variety of
individual, organizational and societal norms,
behaviors, and work practices (Boudreau,
Boswell, Judge, 2001), and refers to real or
objective, and perceived or subjective
accomplishments of individuals in their work
lives.
8Multi-Rater or Multi-Source Ratings
- For example, from supervisors, peers,
subordinates, and customers, instead of relying
on appraisals from a single source. - The rationale behind this is that different
evaluation perspectives offer unique and valuable
information, and thus incremental validity to the
assessment of individual performance.
9Hypotheses
- We expect an equivalent factor structure of the
employability construct among the rater groups
(employees and supervisors), and we advocate the
comparability of the different rater group
scores. Moreover, in line with previous research,
we expect a similar factor structure across
different age groups of workers (Hypothesis 1).
10Hypotheses
- Employability is positively associated with
career success (Hypothesis 2 for self-rated, and
Hypothesis 3 for supervisor-rated employability).
11Hypotheses
- Age moderates the relationship between supervisor
ratings of employability and objective career
success. More specifically, we expect stronger
relationships between supervisor-rated
employability and career success of the
youngsters versus the over-forties (Hypothesis
4).
12Hypotheses
- Age moderates the relationship between
self-ratings of employability and objective
career success. More specifically, we expect a
relatively stronger relationship between
self-rated employability and career success for
the over-forties, compared to their younger
counterparts (Hypothesis 5).
13Explanations for the Moderating Effect of Age
- Negative stereotypical beliefs about older
workers (Boerlijst, Van der Heijden, Van Assen,
1993 Offerman Gowing, 1990). - Increased P-E fit for older workers (Watkins
Subich, 1995 Wright Hamilton, 1978).
14Methodology
- The employability measure in our model has been
filled in by both parties (employees and their
immediate supervisors), in order to enable us to
investigate the factor structure depending upon
rater source and age group, and for testing our
model hypotheses.
15Methodology
- In order to increase the validity of the
findings, instructions regarding cross-checking
as well as anonimity have been used (Mabe West,
1982).
16Methodology
- N 303 pairs of employees and supervisors
working at a large Dutch company producing
building materials (response rate was 91.8). - 83.5 male and 16.5 female employees.
- Mean age employees 41 years (sd 9.15).
- Mean organizational tenure employees 10.74 (sd
9.61).
17Methodology
- 95.0 male and 5 female supervisors.
- Mean age supervisors 43 years
- (sd 7.96).
18Measures
- Employability (1) occupational expertise (15
items) (2) anticipation and optimization (8
items) (3) personal flexibility (8 items) (4)
corporate sense (7 items) (5) balance (9 items).
19Measures
- Objective Career Success (Gattiker Larwood,
1986) (three single items) (1)
organization-specific objective hierarchical
success (2) overall objective hierarchical
success (3) current gross income.
20Results
- All employability measures demonstrated good
internal consistencies, for both groups of
raters. - The correlations between the supervisor-rated
employability dimensions are high, while these
are somewhat lower for the self-ratings.
21Results
- The agreement between self- and supervisor
ratings for the same employability dimension
ranges from .22 to .37. - Moreover, all supervisor ratings of employability
appear to be unrelated to objective career
success outcomes, which might indeed indicate
that possible moderators, like age, are involved.
22Results
- However, regarding the self-reported ratings of
employability, six out of the fifteen possible
correlations with the three objective career
success outcomes are significant but rather weak,
which again points to the influence of possible
moderators.
23Preliminary Analyses
- Males had relatively higher objective career
success scores compared with the females. - Both males and females had higher scores for the
number of promotions in entire career compared
with the number of organization-specific
promotions.
24Preliminary Analyses
- Tenure was positively related to organizational
promotions, and negatively to overall promotions. - Given the outcomes of previous studies, we
decided to include gender, educational
qualification, and tenure as control variables in
the subsequent analyses (see also Ng, Eby,
Sorensen, Feldman, 2005).
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26Multi-Group Confirmatory Factor Analyses (CFA)
- We compared the fit of the two-factor model with
the fit of alternative models, including a model
with only one latent factor (employability), and
two-factor models in which, respectively, the
factor loadings, error variances, correlation
between the factors, and the factor variances
were constrained to be equal in both age groups.
27Results
- The two-factor model had a satisfactory fit.
Moreover, all indicators had a significant
loading on the respective factor for both the
younger and the older employees. - More importantly, this model appeared to fit
significantly better compared with the one-factor
(employability) model, supporting a similar
factor structure across the two rater groups,
that is, employees and their immediate
supervisors.
28Results
- Constraining, respectively, the factor loadings,
error variances, correlation between the factors,
and the factor variances to be equal for both
younger and older employees did not result in a
significantly worse fit compared with the
two-factor model with free parameters.
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30Results CFA
- Hypothesis 1 is confirmed The factor structure
is indeed equivalent for both age groups.
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32Results SEM analyses
- Self-reported employability was positively
related to overall promotions. This provides
partial support for Hypothesis 2. - Supervisor-rated employability was significantly,
but negative, related to overall promotions. This
implies that Hypothesis 3 is to be rejected.
33Results Multi-Group SEM for the Younger Employees
- Self-reported employability was significantly and
positively related to both overall promotions and
current gross income. - The supervisor ratings were positively related to
current gross income.
34Results Multi-Group SEM for the Younger Employees
- Gender was negatively related to both self- and
supervisor ratings of employability, as well as
to income, with females having lower scores
compared to males. - Educational qualification and organizational
tenure, however, were positively related to
supervisor ratings of employability.
35Results Multi-Group SEM for the Younger Employees
- Moreover, organizational tenure appeared to be
positively related to the amount of
organization-specific promotions.
36Results Multi-Group SEM for the Older Employees
- Self-reported employability was positively
related to overall promotions, while supervisor
ratings were negatively related to overall
promotions. - All other structural relationships appeared to be
non-significant.
37Results Multi-Group SEM for the Older Employees
- Moreover, organizational tenure was negatively
related to both supervisor and self-rated
employability, and positively to
organization-specific promotions.
38Implications Multi-Group SEM
- Hypothesis 4 (stronger positive relationships
between supervisor-rated employability and career
success of the youngsters versus the
over-forties) is partly supported. - Hypothesis 5 (relatively stronger relationship
between self-rated employability and career
success for the over-forties, compared to their
younger counterparts) is to be rejected.
39Outcomes and Implications of the Psychometric
Analyses
- Our results confirmed a two-factor model
(self-reported employability and supervisor-rated
employability), comprising five employability
indicators.
40The Relationship between Employability and
Objective Career Success
- For self-reported employability, the hypothesis
is partly supported. - However, in case the supervisor ratings were
used, we have found a negative relationship with
overall promotions, which is contradictory to our
assumptions.
41The Relationship between Employability and
Objective Career Success
- It might be that an instrumental style of
leadership plays an important role (Boerlijst,
Van der Heijden, Van Assen, 1993). - In case of high employee career potential,
supervisor restrains the employee from moving to
another job or to another field.
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43Outcomes and Implications of the Test of the
Career Success Enhancing Employability Model
Moderated by Age
- Highly different results have been found for the
over-forties compared to the youngsters. - Possibly, our results reconfirm our ideas
regarding the prevalence of age-related
differences in supervisory attitudes towards
their employees (see Van der Heijden, 1998).
44Outcomes and Implications of the Test of the
Career Success Enhancing Employability Model
Moderated by Age
- It is conceivable that for the over-forties in
particular, the instrumental style of leadership
plays an important role (Boerlijst, Van der
Heijden, Van Assen, 1993).
45Limitations and Recommendations for Further
Research
- Possibility of response set consistencies as all
data have been collected using questionnaires. - Cross-sectional approach implies need for further
research to address the issue of causality.
46Limitations and Recommendations for Further
Research
- Generalizability to other occupational settings
and/or other countries has to be investigated.
47Practical Implications
- Human Resource policies should be rooted into a
so-called conservation model instead of the
long-adhered depreciation model (Yeats, Folts,
Knapp, 2000). - Especially, the employees immediate supervisor
should bear responsibility to enhance life-long
learning.
48Practical Implications
- With an age-conscious HRM policy, that is aimed
to guide the amount of employability, ageing does
not need to pose a threat. - The employability instrument (Van der Heijde
Van der Heijden, 2006) has high practical value
in the light of enhancing life-long career
success.