Organizational Support in Career Self-Management: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Career Self-Management
2.2. Organizational Support
2.3. Career Self-Management and Organizational Support
3. Methods
3.1. Eligibility Criteria
3.2. Procedure
4. Results
4.1. Study Characteristics
4.2. Instruments
4.3. Studies on Career Self-Management and Organizational Support
4.3.1. Career Self-Management and Human Resource Management Practices
4.3.2. Career Self-Management and Perceived Organizational Support
4.3.3. Career Self-Management and Leader–Member Exchange
5. Discussion
5.1. Theoretical and Practical Implications
5.2. Limitations
5.3. Future Research
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors and Year of Publication | Type of Publication | Method | Sample Population | Total Participants (N) Male (M) and Female (F) | Participants’ Age | Participants’ Education Level | Tenure in the Organization |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sturges et al. (2010) | Article | Cross-sectional survey | Workers from a “new” media company in the United Kingdom (established 7 years ago, representing the “new” career environment) | N = 257 F: 58% | 30 years old: 61% 30–39 years old: 35% 40 years old: 4% | 82% have higher education | = 1.79 years (SD = 1.40) |
Polanska (2016) | Master’s Thesis | Utilization of cross-sectional questionnaire data from the “5C” project | Self-employed workers or employees of organizations in Portugal (with at least 2 years of experience) | N = 351 M: 139 (38.6%) F: 221 (61.4%) | = 36.1 (SD = 10.94), with 70% of the sample being up to 40 years old | ---- | ---- |
Jung and Takeuchi (2018) | Article | Questionnaire with temporal lag (Time 2 after 6 months from Time 1 with a different questionnaire) | Employees of private manufacturing companies in Japan (with more than 100 employees) | Time 1 N = 664 M: 462 (69.6%) F: 202 (30.4%) Time 2 N = 364 M: 278 (76.4%) F: 86 (23.6%) | Time 1 = 30.6 years old (SD = 4.6) Time 2 = 30.7 years old (SD = 4.4) | Time 1 The majority have higher education Time 2 Majority (80.1%) have higher education | Time 2 = 7.5 years (SD = 5.2) |
Varela (2018) | Master’s Thesis | Cross-sectional survey | Employees of a bank in Portugal | N = 432 F: 50.7% | = 41.80 years old (SD = 12.02) | 87.5% attended higher education | =15.81 years (SD = 12.48) |
Yogalakshmi and Suganthi (2020) | Article | Cross-sectional survey | Workers in the IT industry in South India (designated as “talents”, with at least 2 years of experience in the organization and under 35 years of age) | N = 270 M:87% F:13% | = 29 years old | Highly skilled workers | Between 2 and 12 years |
Liu et al. (2022) | Article | Questionnaire with temporal lag (Time 2 after 1 month from Time 1 with a different questionnaire) | Workers from organizations in Southwest China across different industries and functional areas (organizations with at least 100 employees and established for at least 5 years) | Time 1 N = 663 Time 2 N = 571 F: 53.9% | Time 2 26–35 years old: 89.2% | Time 2 93.2% have 4 years or more of higher education | Time 2 >3 years = 66.7% |
Authors and Year of Publication | Variables and Their Assessment Instruments | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
CSM/CSMBs | POS | HRMPs/PHRMP | Others | |
Sturges et al. (2010) | Items adapted from measures developed by Sturges et al. (2002, 2005) Likert scale (1–7 points) | 5 items from the scale developed by Eisenberger et al. (1986) Likert scale (1–7 points) | ---- | LMX: LMX scale of 7 items (Liden and Graen 1980; Scandura and Graen 1984) Likert scale (1–4 points) LC: scale of perceived mastery and control developed from the 7-item Mastery Scale by Pearlin and Schooler (1978) Likert scale (1–7 points) |
Polanska (2016) | Career Aspirations Scale of 5 items developed by Tharenou and Terry (1998) Likert scale (1–7 points) | ---- | Measure with 11 items, where each item represents an HR practice Binary scale (Yes/No) | PE: Scale of Self-perceived Employability from the output-based approach, 3 items, developed by Janssens et al. (2003). Likert scale (1–7 points) OC: adaptation of the Affective Commitment Scale, 8 items, developed by Meyer and Allen (1984). Likert scale (1–7 points) |
Jung and Takeuchi (2018) | 8 items from the Individual Career Management Scale developed by Sturges et al. (2002) Likert scale (1–7 points) | Time 1 6 items from Eisenberger et al. (2001) Likert scale (1–7 points) | Time 1 13 items from the High-Performance Work Systems (HPWS) scale of 21 items, developed by Takeuchi et al. (2007) Likert scale (1–7 points) | Time 2 CS: Career Satisfaction Scale of 5 items, developed by Greenhaus et al. (1990) Likert scale (1–7 points) |
Varela (2018) | 5-item Career Aspirations Scale developed by Tharenou and Terry (1998) Likert scale (1–7 points) | ---- | A measure with 9 items, where each item represents an HR practice Likert scale (1–7 points) | EI: Scale of 16 items developed by Wong and Law (2002) Likert scale (1–7 points) WE: Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES)—short version of 9 items Likert scale (1–7 points) |
Yogalakshmi and Suganthi (2020) | Scale developed by Sturges et al. (2000, 2002) Likert scale (1–5 points) | 8 items from Eisenberger et al.’s (1986) scale Likert scale (1–5 points) | ---- | PE: Psychological Empowerment Scale, 12-item scale developed by Spreitzer (1995) Likert scale (1–5 points) AC: 6-item scale by Meyer et al. (1993) Likert scale (1–5 points) |
Liu et al. (2022) | Time 2 13 items from the 20-item Career Self-management Scale developed by Ma and Cheng (2010) Likert scale (1–5 points) | Time 2 8-item measure by Eisenberger et al. (2020) Likert scale (1–5 points) | Time 1 The developmental HR practices scale with 3 subscales: career development, training opportunities, and performance appraisal, developed by Kuvaas (2008) Likert scale (1–5 points) | Time 1 TL: 26-item scale from an adapted version of Li and Shi (2005) Likert scale (1–5 points) Time 2 OCB: 10-item OCB scale developed by Bachrach et al. (2007) Likert scale (1–5 points) |
Authors and Year of Publication | Main Results |
---|---|
Sturges et al. (2010) | Significant evidence was not found that POS is positively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs within the organization (networking and visibility behaviors); however, it was observed that POS is negatively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs outside the organization (mobility behaviors). LMX are positively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs within the organization, specifically in terms of visibility behaviors but not regarding networking behaviors, and negatively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs outside the organization. No evidence was found that being female is positively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs within or outside the organization. The relationship between gender and CSM appears to be moderated by POS in the opposite direction expected; that is, women are more favorable than men to engage in networking and visibility behaviors at lower levels of POS. However, no significant evidence was found regarding mobility behaviors, despite being in the expected direction. The relationship between gender and CSM appears to be moderated by LMX, with women being more favorable than men to engage in networking behaviors at higher levels of LMX. However, no evidence was found regarding visibility behaviors and behaviors directed towards mobility. No evidence was found that having an internal locus of control is positively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs within the organization; however, it was observed that having an internal locus of control is negatively related to career advancement-oriented CSMBs outside the organization. The relationship between locus of control and CSM appears to be moderated by POS, with holders of an internal locus of control being more favorable than holders of an external locus of control to engage in networking and visibility behaviors at high levels of POS. However, no significant evidence was found regarding behaviors directed towards mobility. The relationship between locus of control and CSM appears to be moderated by LMX in the opposite direction expected, with holders of an internal locus of control being more favorable than holders of an external locus of control to engage in networking behaviors at low levels of LMX. However, no evidence was found regarding visibility behaviors and behaviors directed towards mobility. |
Polanska (2016) | HRMPs are positively related to CSMBs. CSMBs and HRMPs are positively related to perceived employability. The effect of HRMPs on perceived employability is partially mediated by CSMBs. CSMBs and HRMPs are positively related to organizational commitment. The effect of HRMPs on organizational commitment is partially mediated by CSMBs. |
Jung and Takeuchi (2018) | CSM is positively related to career satisfaction. PHRMP and POS are positively related to career satisfaction. Existence of a synergistic effect of CSM and PHRMP on career satisfaction in young workers and compensatory effect in middle-aged workers. Existence of a synergistic effect of CSM and POS on career satisfaction in young workers and compensatory effect in middle-aged workers. |
Varela (2018) | PHRMPs are positively related to CSMBs. The relationship between PHRMP and CSMBs is mediated by managers’ emotion regulation and work engagement. |
Yogalakshmi and Suganthi (2020) | POS and psychological empowerment are positively related to CSM. CSM is positively related to affective commitment. The relationship between POS and affective commitment is partially mediated by CSM. The relationship between psychological empowerment and affective commitment is mediated by CSM. |
Liu et al. (2022) | HRMPs were positively related to CSM and organizational citizenship behavior. The relationship between HRMPs and CSM is partially mediated by transformational leadership. The relationship between HRMPs and organizational citizenship behavior is partially mediated by transformational leadership. The relationship between transformational leadership and CSM is moderated by POS, being more positive for higher levels of POS. The relationship between transformational leadership and organizational citizenship behavior is moderated by POS, being more positive for higher levels of POS. The mediating effect of transformational leadership in the relationship between HRMPs and CSM is moderated by POS, with the effect being stronger for higher levels of POS. The mediating effect of transformational leadership in the relationship between HRMPs and organizational citizenship behavior is moderated by POS, with the effect being stronger for higher levels of POS. |
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Martins, M.; Taveira, M.d.C.; Magalhães, F.; Silva, A.D. Organizational Support in Career Self-Management: A Systematic Literature Review. Adm. Sci. 2024, 14, 286. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14110286
Martins M, Taveira MdC, Magalhães F, Silva AD. Organizational Support in Career Self-Management: A Systematic Literature Review. Administrative Sciences. 2024; 14(11):286. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14110286
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartins, Mariana, Maria do Céu Taveira, Flávio Magalhães, and Ana Daniela Silva. 2024. "Organizational Support in Career Self-Management: A Systematic Literature Review" Administrative Sciences 14, no. 11: 286. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14110286
APA StyleMartins, M., Taveira, M. d. C., Magalhães, F., & Silva, A. D. (2024). Organizational Support in Career Self-Management: A Systematic Literature Review. Administrative Sciences, 14(11), 286. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14110286