Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization

As shy people have been reported to experience interpersonal and professional difficulties at work, this study examined the extent to which shy employees have lower perceptions of their career success and whether organizational socialization could favorably moderate the relationship between shyness...

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Main Author: Robert J. Taormina
Format: Article
Language:Bulgarian
Published: PsychOpen 2019-04-01
Series:Psychological Thought
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psyct.psychopen.eu/article/view/317
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spelling doaj-ff1ed436e33746c1b4fd296827b95f7f2020-11-25T01:23:37ZbulPsychOpenPsychological Thought2193-72812019-04-01121416210.5964/psyct.v12i1.317psyct.v12i1.317Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational SocializationRobert J. Taormina0Psychology Department, University of Macau, Macau, ChinaAs shy people have been reported to experience interpersonal and professional difficulties at work, this study examined the extent to which shy employees have lower perceptions of their career success and whether organizational socialization could favorably moderate the relationship between shyness and subjective career success. Questionnaires containing personality and socialization measures were given to 375 full-time employees. Confirming the hypotheses, t-test results revealed that shy (compared to non-shy) employees scored significantly lower on Subjective Career Success, Self-Confidence, and Emotional Intelligence; while scoring significantly higher on work-related Emotional Exhaustion. Regressions revealed that the four facets of organizational socialization (Training, Understanding, Coworker Support, and Future Prospects) all had significant moderating effects that yielded increases in the levels of Subjective Career Success for the shy employees. Implications for management are discussed.http://psyct.psychopen.eu/article/view/317shynesssubjective career successorganizational socializationmoderatorburnout
collection DOAJ
language Bulgarian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert J. Taormina
spellingShingle Robert J. Taormina
Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
Psychological Thought
shyness
subjective career success
organizational socialization
moderator
burnout
author_facet Robert J. Taormina
author_sort Robert J. Taormina
title Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
title_short Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
title_full Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
title_fullStr Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
title_full_unstemmed Helping Shy Employees with Career Success: The Impact of Organizational Socialization
title_sort helping shy employees with career success: the impact of organizational socialization
publisher PsychOpen
series Psychological Thought
issn 2193-7281
publishDate 2019-04-01
description As shy people have been reported to experience interpersonal and professional difficulties at work, this study examined the extent to which shy employees have lower perceptions of their career success and whether organizational socialization could favorably moderate the relationship between shyness and subjective career success. Questionnaires containing personality and socialization measures were given to 375 full-time employees. Confirming the hypotheses, t-test results revealed that shy (compared to non-shy) employees scored significantly lower on Subjective Career Success, Self-Confidence, and Emotional Intelligence; while scoring significantly higher on work-related Emotional Exhaustion. Regressions revealed that the four facets of organizational socialization (Training, Understanding, Coworker Support, and Future Prospects) all had significant moderating effects that yielded increases in the levels of Subjective Career Success for the shy employees. Implications for management are discussed.
topic shyness
subjective career success
organizational socialization
moderator
burnout
url http://psyct.psychopen.eu/article/view/317
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