The Role of Psychological Contracts in Recruitment and Retention - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

The Role of Psychological Contracts in Recruitment and Retention

Description:

how the accuracy of information provided (by both organizations and individuals) ... Time 1 Survey (At hiring) Data collected on: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:315
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: PhD8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Role of Psychological Contracts in Recruitment and Retention


1
The Role of Psychological Contracts
inRecruitment and Retention
  • William H. Turnley
  • Kansas State University
  • Military Personnel Research Conference
  • June 5, 2002

2
Introduction
  • Recent Recruitment and Retention Challenges
  • Strong economy
  • Low unemployment
  • Propensity of high school graduates to enter
    college
  • Why study psychological contracts?
  • Increasingly important in defining the
    employment relationship

3
Psychological Contracts
  • consist of the beliefs employees hold regarding
    the terms and conditions of the exchange
    relationship between themselves and their
    organizations
  • define what individuals expect to contribute to
    the organization and what they expect to receive
    in return

4
Prior Research on Psychological Contracts
  • Has generally focused on two areas
  • the changing nature of the psychological contract
    and the decline of mutual loyalty between
    employees and employers
  • consequences of psychological contract breach on
    employees work attitudes and behaviors

5
Goals of this Research Project
  • This research focuses on several issues related
    to the development and maintenance of
    psychological contacts
  • how psychological contracts are formed (promises
    communicated by various sources)
  • the extent to which applicants distort
    information about themselves in the recruitment
    process
  • how the accuracy of information provided (by both
    organizations and individuals) impacts
    motivation, commitment, turnover, and performance
  • how the attributions that individuals make when
    their psychological contracts are breached impact
    their reactions to such occurrences

6
Study 1 Brief Overview
  • A longitudinal study that examines how
    psychological contracts develop during the
    recruitment process and the extent to which
    psychological contract fulfillment impacts
    employees attitudes and behaviors during the
    initial year of employment
  • Approach
  • Recently graduated university students were
    initially surveyed after having accepted a job
    but before they had started to work.
  • These same individuals will be surveyed after
    they have completed their first year of work.

7
Study 1 Brief Overview (continued)
  • Time 1 Survey (At hiring)
  • Data collected on
  • Implicit and explicit promises made by
    organizational agents
  • How the promises were communicated
  • The extent to which individuals distorted info
    about themselves
  • Perceptions of person-job fit
  • Time 2 Survey (Approximately 1 year later)
  • Data to be collected on
  • Extent of psychological contract breach
  • Employment history (promotions, raises,
    transfers, turnover)
  • Employee motivation, commitment, and performance

8
Study 1 Brief Overview (continued)
  • Status
  • Time 1 data has been collected from
    approximately 150 individuals.
  • Time 2 data collection will begin later this
    summer.

9
Study 2 -- Objectives
  • Examine Antecedents of Psychological Contract
    Breach
  • Individual Differences
  • Relationship Quality
  • Supervisor-Subordinate Similarity
  • Examine psychological contracts for
  • African-Americans
  • Hispanic-Americans
  • Examine Consequences of Psychological Contract
    Breach
  • In-Role Performance
  • Extra-Role Performance

10
Study 2 - Procedure
  • Approach
  • Surveyed existing supervisor-subordinate dyads
  • Samples chosen to provide access to
    African-American and Hispanic-American
    respondents
  • Two Samples
  • PhD Project Participants
  • 138 respondents (29 response rate)
  • 69 African-American, 31 Hispanic-American
  • 62 Female
  • County Government in New Mexico
  • 109 respondents (25 response rate)
  • 70 Hispanic-American, 30 Caucasian
  • 57 Female

11
Model
  • Individual
  • Differences
  • Psychological Performance
  • Relationships Contract In-role
  • Breach Performance
  • Extra-role
  • Similarity Performance

12
Antecedents of Psychological Contract Breach
  • Individual Differences
  • Affective Disposition
  • Equity Sensitivity
  • Relationship Quality
  • Perceived Organizational Support
  • Leader-Member Exchange
  • Similarity
  • Supervisor-Subordinate Demographic Similarity

13
Individual Differences
  • Affective Disposition
  • H1 Negative affective disposition will be
    positively related to the perception of PCB.
  • - H1 supported.
  • Equity Sensitivity
  • H2 Benevolent individuals will be less likely
    than entitled individuals to perceive PCB.
  • - H2 supported.

14
Relationship Quality
  • Perceived Organizational Support
  • H3 Perceived organizational support will be
    negatively related to the perception of PCB.
  • - H3 supported.
  • Leader-Member Exchange
  • H4 In-group members will be less likely than
    out-group members to perceive PCB.
  • - H4 supported.

15
Supervisor-Subordinate Similarity
  • Relational Demography
  • - Similarity Attraction Paradigm
  • H5 Mixed gender dyads
  • - H5 not supported.
  • H6 Mixed race dyads
  • - H6 only partially supported.
  • H7 Age difference
  • - H7 not supported.

16
Outcomes of Psychological Contract Breach
  • Social Exchange Theory
  • In-role Work Performance
  • H8 Psychological contract breach will be
    negatively related to in-role performance.
  • - H8 supported.
  • Extra-role Work Performance
  • H9 Psychological contract breach will be
    negatively related to the performance of
    organizational citizenship behaviors.
  • - H9 supported.

17
Implications
  • Individual personality differences matter
  • Relationship quality matters at multiple levels
  • Organizational level
  • Supervisor-Subordinate level
  • Supervisor-Subordinate relational demography
    generally does not matter
  • However, the subordinates gender and race do
    matter
  • Women and racial minorities are more likely to
    perceive pcb
  • Both in-role and extra-role work performance is
    negatively impacted by psychological contract
    breach
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com