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Career self-management: Its nature, causes and consequences
Authors:Zella King
Affiliation:Department of Management, School of Business, University of Reading, Whiteknights, P.O. Box 218, Reading RG6 6AA, UK
Abstract:In a recent special issue [Journal of Vocational Behavior 59 (2001) 284], scholars noted that the field of vocational psychology needs a better understanding of career self-management. This article proposes a conceptual framework of career self-management, based on Crites’ [Vocational Psychology, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1969] model of vocational adjustment. It argues that people use three types of career self-managing behavior (positioning, influence, and boundary management) as adaptive responses to career development tasks. These behaviors are used to respond to or eliminate thwarting conditions or career barriers, and thereby lead to vocational adjustment. Suggested determinants of this behavior are self-efficacy, desire for control, and career anchors. Career self-management can enhance perceptions of control over the career, leading to career satisfaction, but it may also be associated with negative outcomes and maladjustment. The framework is suggested to apply both to bounded ‘organizational’ careers and to more flexible, improvised careers. The article concludes by considering the implications for research and practice.
Keywords:Career self-management   Vocational psychology   Vocational adjustment   Personal control   Carrier barriers   Positioning behavior   Influence behavior   Boundary management
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