and Philadelphia-organizations that spanned the sectors of health, arts and culture, education, family/human services, youth/recreation, united charities, membership, and community foundations. In the first book-length analysis of findings from the project, authors Rikki Abzug and Jeffrey Simonoff h
One size does not fit all: Managing IT employees' employment arrangements
β Scribed by Jayesh Prasad; Harvey G. Enns; Thomas W. Ferratt
- Book ID
- 102261501
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 176 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0090-4848
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
As alternative employment arrangements proliferate within the information technology (IT) function, it becomes increasingly important to understand the impact of these arrangements on IT employees. A prevalent notion in the IT literature is that these employees are homogeneous in their work values and that they prefer similar employment arrangements. Given the inefficiency of designing individual employment programs, we advocate a middle ground between the two extremes of individualized employment arrangements and βone size fits all.β We conducted two studies. The first study developed an individual's work values profile as a psychological construct. It used a national sample of IT employees to validate a simple, heuristic procedure that was successful in classifying about 80% of the sample into three work values profiles.The second study demonstrated the use of work values profiles for understanding how employment arrangements differentially influence employee satisfaction. It applied the validated procedure to a single organization in order to demonstrate the general applicability of the procedure and to show that it provides researchers and HR professionals with better insights than the assumption that all IT employees are alike. Β© 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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