Abele AE, Spurk D (2009)
Publication Language: English
Publication Status: Accepted
Publication Type: Journal article, Original article
Publication year: 2009
Original Authors: Abele-Brehm Andrea E., Spurk Daniel
Publisher: Wiley
Book Volume: 82
Pages Range: 803-824
Journal Issue: 4
The present research is concerned with the direction of influence between objective and subjective career success. We conducted a prospective longitudinal study with five waves of measurement that covered a time span of 10 years. Participants were professionals working in different occupational fields (N = 1,336). We modelled the changes in objective success (income, hierarchical position), in other-referent subjective success (subjective success as compared to a reference group), and in self-referent subjective success (job satisfaction) by means of latent growth curve analysis. Objective success influenced both the initial level and the growth of other-referent subjective success, but it had no influence on job satisfaction. Most importantly, both measures of subjective success and both their initial levels and their changes had strong influences on the growth of objective success. We conclude that the ‘objective success influences subjective success’ relationship is smaller than might be expected, whereas the ‘subjective success influences objective success’ relationship is larger than might be expected. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
APA:
Abele, A.E., & Spurk, D. (2009). How do objective and subjective career success interrelate over time? Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 82(4), 803-824. https://doi.org/10.1348/096317909X470924
MLA:
Abele, Andrea E., and Daniel Spurk. "How do objective and subjective career success interrelate over time?" Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 82.4 (2009): 803-824.
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