Title: Employment Decisions
1Employment Decisions
2Job Search
- Formal Processes (information networks)
- Informal Processes (social networks)
3Social Networks
- Traditional Networks
- Formal Social Networks
- Informal Networks
4Traditional Social Networks Organizations
- animal rights groups
- charities
- civic, fraternal, service, and professional
organizations - companies
- employer associations
- environmental organizations
- humanitarian and peace organizations
- interfaith organizations
- international organizations
- intellectual property organizations
- magical organizations
- political parties
- postal organizations
- professional sports leagues
- religions
- research institutes
- self-help organizations
- terrorist groups
- trade unions
- youth organizations
- Non-profit organization
5Civic organizations
- 1 Agricultural Organizations
- 2 Civic and Political Organizations
- 3 Consumer Organizations
- 4 Fraternal and Service Organisations
- 5 Environmental Organizations
- 6 Ethnic Organizations
- 6.1 African-American
- 6.2 Finnish-American
- 6.3 Greek-American
- 6.4 Hispanic-American
- 6.5 Italian-American
- 6.6 Jewish-American
- 6.7 Norwegian-American
- 6.8 Polish-American
- 7 Hereditary Lineage Organizations
- 8 Men's Organizations
- 9 Recreational Organizations
- 10 Religious Organizations
- 11 Women's Organizations
- 12 Veterans' Organizations
- 13 Youth Organizations
- 14 Professional Organizations
6Fraternal and Service Organizations
- Optimists
- Orange Order Order of Scottish Clans
- Quota
- Red Cross
- Rotary International
- Royal Neighbors of America
- Royal Templars of Temperance
- Ruritan
- Samaritans
- Shriners
- Native Sons of the Golden West
- Twilight Club
- Volunteers of America
- Woodsmen of the World
- Aid Association of Lutherans
- Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic
Shrine - American Association of University Professors
- Ancient Order of Foresters
- Ancient Order of United Workmen
- Apex
- Canadian Order for Home Circles
- Chautauqua Institute
- Civitan
- Dramatic Order Knights of Khorassan
- Eagles
- Eastern Star
- Benevolent Protective Order of Elks
- Fraternal Forestry
- Freemasonry
- Hull House
- Independent Order of Foresters
- Jaycees
- Kiwanis
- Knights of the Golden Eagle
- Knights of the Maccabees
- Knights of Pythias
- Ku Klux Klan
- Lions Clubs International
- Masons
- Modern Brotherhood of America
- Moose Lodge
- Improved Order of Red Men
- Odd Fellows
- National Haymakers Association
7Strength of Weak Ties
- Granovetter found that most people find jobs
through personal contacts. - How did you find most recent job?
8Social Networks
9Social Networks 2
10Next Generation Social Networks
- FriendSurfer
- FriendFinder
- Friendsync
- Everyone'sConnected
- Ringo
- MySpace
- NetPlaya
- Yafro
- Hi5
- Huminity
- Pal Junction
- Chia Friend
- Buddy Bridge
- Tickle
- Eurekster
- Friendzy
- Friends of Friends
- Impersonals
- Hipstir
- Friend-nets
- Friendster
- Orkut
- Tribe.net
- SixDegrees (offline)
- Business-nets
- LinkedIn
- Ryze (offline)
- ecademy
11Job Search Sites Formal Search with New
Technology
- Monster.com
- Yahoo! HotJobs
- CareerBuilder
- Etc.
12Instant Messaging
- Unix Talk
- IRC
- ICQ
- Yahoo
- AOL AIM
- MSN
13Will the Web Replace Place?
- Question What does physical proximity have the
web doesnt?
- Question What does the web have that physical
proximity doesnt?
14Factors that Affect Job Choice
- Knowledge of job
- Match with skills
- Match with desires
- Wage
- Location
15Journey to Work Time and Home Value by Ring
16Gravity Model
- Hypothesis The interaction between two places
decreases with distance, but increases with the
size of the two places. - There is more interaction between Minneapolis and
St. Paul than Minneapolis and Chicago, despite
the fact that Chicago is bigger. - Similarly there is more interaction between
Minneapolis and Chicago than Minneapolis and Los
Angeles. - However, there is more interaction between
Minneapolis and Los Angeles than Minneapolis and
Las Vegas, despite the fact that Las Vegas is
closer.
17Illustration of Gravity Model
18Gravity Math
- Where
- Tij Trips from i to j
- Oi Productions of trips at origin i
- Dj Productions of trips at destination j
- Ki, Kj balancing factors solved iteratively
19f(Cij)
- For auto
- For transit
- Where
- Cija peak hour auto travel time between zones i
and j and - Cijt peak hour transit travel time between
zones i and j.
20Testing the Gravity Model
- It is hypothesized that living in an area with
relatively high jobs accessibility is associated
with shorter trips, as is working in an area of
relatively high housing accessibility. - (the doubly-constrained gravity model)
21Data
- MWCOG Household Travel Survey (1987-88)
- 8,000 households and 55,000 trips
- Accessibility Measures
22Jobs and Housing Accessibility and Commuting
Duration
- In the gravity model implicitly being tested
here, average commute to work time is determined
by three factors - 1) a propensity (choices) function which relates
willingness to travel with travel cost or time,
(individual demand) - 2) the opportunities (chances) available at any
given distance or time from the origin, (market
supply) and - 3) the number of competing workers. (market
demand) - Propensity f ( tij , Income, Mode, Gender... )
- It is hypothesized that this underlying
preference is relatively undifferentiated based
solely on location.
23Geographic Factors
- 1) distance between the home and the center of
the region (Di0) (the zero mile marker at the
ellipse in front of the White House), - 2) distance between workplace and the center
(Dj0), - 3) accessibility to jobs from the home (AiE),
- 4) accessibility to other houses from the home
(AiR), - 5) accessibility to other jobs from the workplace
(AjE), - 6) and accessibility to houses from workplace
(AjR).
24Chart 1 Summary Hypotheses
- Trip-End
- Home-End Work-End
- (Origin) (Destination)
-
--------------------------------------------------
---------- - Accessibility AiE AjE
- to Jobs negative positive
- Accessibility AiR AjR
- to Houses positive negative
- Distance Di0 Dj0
- from Center positive negative
25Elasticities of Travel Time with respect to
Accessibility
AUTO COMMUTERS AUTO COMMUTERS TRANSIT COMMUTERS TRANSIT COMMUTERS
VARIABLE ELASTICITY VARIABLE ELASTICITY
AiEa -0.22 AiEt -0.12
AiRa 0.19 AiRt 0.05
AjEa 0.24 AjEt -0.25
AjRa -0.25 AjRt 0.07
Di0 0.25 Di0 0.31
Dj0 -0.16 Dj0 -0.09
26Dependent Variable Travel Time to Work
27Conclusions
- Location matters, important explanatory variable,
but - Ignores self-selection process - creating more
high density housing wont create more young or
old who wish to live in those high density urban
areas. - Information matters, people cant take a job they
dont know about. - Social networks, both formal and informal,
provide information informal - People choose to join and participate in networks
they are rewarded for - Informat networks and placeless networks are
rising compared with older place-based formal
networks (Rotary, Lions Clubs, etc.) - Other formal informationnetworks traditional and
new media (classifieds, job search sites) remain
important. - Where you work relative to where you live will
determine how much peak travel you undertake, and
thus is critical in understanding travel demand.