Little attention has been given in the literature to the effects of corporate restructuring on the career mobility and career perceptions of organizational "survivors." Employees remaining with the firm typically exhibit career mobility concerns since they anticipate that fewer job opportunities will exist, particularly within the managerial tier. Past research has neither compared actual career moves with employee perceptions of those moves, nor adequately emphasized perceptions of career mobility. This report examines the effects of a mid 1980s downsizing on sales and service employees in one General Motors division. Our results suggest that employee perceptions were rooted in past career path patterns. Because of this reliance on past behavior and the accuracy of their perceptions of past career movement, the majority continued to believe that they would advance in their careers. We discovered the longer an employee was associated with any given position, the less likely he/she was to anticipate future career movement (p<0.01). Perceptions of career mobility change only when employees are personally affected by the restructuring; ideological change for the majority of organizational members not only follows change in organizational structure, but actually lags behind it.
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Winter 1995
Labor|
January 31 2008
Reconciling Perceptions of Career Advancement with Organizational Change: A Case from General Motors Available to Purchase
Crysta Metcalf;
Crysta Metcalf
1
Department of Anthropology, Wayne State University
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Elizabeth Briody
Elizabeth Briody
2
Staff Research Scientist, Development Center
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Human Organization (1995) 54 (4): 417–428.
Citation
Crysta Metcalf, Elizabeth Briody; Reconciling Perceptions of Career Advancement with Organizational Change: A Case from General Motors. Human Organization 1 December 1995; 54 (4): 417–428. doi: https://doi.org/10.17730/humo.54.4.ntn3462501530822
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