解析管理忧郁:过去形成的期望如何带入新工作

Unpacking the Managerial Blues: How Expectations Formed in the Past Carry into New Jobs

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 2020
被引 27
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究比较了巴黎地铁司机和站务员晋升为管理者后的体验,发现司机因过去对个人责任的期望过高而更易产生管理忧郁,站务员则因期望较低而适应良好。

Abstract

Becoming a manager is generally seen as a highly coveted step up the career ladder that corresponds to a gain in responsibility. There is evidence, however, that some individuals experience “managerial blues,” or disenchantment with their managerial jobs after being promoted. Although past scholarship points to individual differences (such as skills inadequacy) or the promotion circumstances (such as involuntary) as possible explanations for such blues, less is known as to how the expectations that people carry with them from past jobs—such as expectations about what responsibility entails—may shape their first managerial experience. To answer this question, we compare the experiences of supervisors coming from different jobs—that is, former Paris subway drivers (working independently and impacting the lives of others) and station agents (working interdependently with limited impact on others’ lives)—that left them with distinct sets of expectations around responsibility. Drawing on interviews and observations, we find that former drivers developed a deep sense of “personal” responsibility. After promotion, their perceived managerial responsibility paled in comparison with their expectations of what it felt like to have personal responsibility, leading the majority to experience managerial blues. In contrast, former agents had few expectations of what responsibility entailed and reported no disenchantment once they joined the managerial ranks. Overall, we show how imprinted expectations shape people’s future managerial experiences, including their managerial blues, and discuss the implications of our findings for literatures on job mobility and job design.

管理学组织行为学职业流动工作设计社会心理学