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Managing individual career aspirations and corporate needs: A study of software engineers’ willingness to accept intra-organizational mobility opportunities

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Mignonac, Karim (LIRHE, Université des Sciences Sociales)
  Author Herrbach, Olivier
JOURNAL:
  Journal of engineering and technology management: JET-M, 20(3), 205 - 230.
YEAR: 2003
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): Intra-organizational mobility, Career anchors, Engineering professionals, Career paths
DISCIPLINE: Business/Management
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-398-555 (Last edited on 2005/02/23 02:14:40 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Managing engineering professionals is critical in high-tech corporations. Typically this leads to hiring a large pool of engineers to benefit from their varied technical skills and to buffer against environmental change. Intra-organizational mobility becomes a means both to develop engineers’ skills and to manage careers in the lean organization era, with limited upward mobility opportunities. Corporate priorities may conflict with individual needs, however, although the former should include engineers’ own career aspirations. This study of software engineers working in a large French electronics firm examines the impact of several individual variables on engineers’ willingness to accept various internal mobility opportunities. The findings reveal that mobility involving a major functional change is linked to individuals’ career anchors, while mobility closest to their current job is mostly influenced by job satisfaction variables. Managerial implications of these findings are then discussed.
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