探索志愿者离职原因、意向与行为

Exploring Volunteer Turnover Reasons, Intentions, and Behavior

GROUP & ORGANIZATION MANAGEMENT · 2024
被引 14 · 同刊同年前 8%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

通过混合方法分析澳大利亚紧急服务和童子军志愿者的调查数据,发现冲突、高要求、缺乏包容等七类离职原因,并考察这些原因如何预测离职意向和一年后的实际离职行为。

Abstract

Volunteer involving organizations (VIOs) play a vital role in many societies. Yet, turnover among volunteers remains a persistent struggle and VIOs still do not have a good understanding of why volunteers leave. In response, we employed a mixed-methods approach to explore why volunteers consider leaving. By coding textual responses of Australian State Emergency Services and Scouting volunteers ( n = 252 and 2235) on an annual engagement survey, we found seven overarching reasons to consider leaving these VIOs: Conflict, high demands and/or low resources, lack of fit, lack of inclusion, personal commitments and circumstances, poor communication and organizational practices, and poor leadership. When contrasted to the reasons that employees leave organizations for, the lack of inclusion and poor communication and organizational practices seem to be uniquely salient reasons that volunteers consider leaving for. Subsequently, guided by the Proximal Withdrawal States theory and using quantitative data from the Scouts sample, we investigated how reasons to consider turnover can predict turnover intentions and turnover behavior. First, volunteers in different withdrawal states cited different potential turnover reasons. For example, volunteers who ‘wanted to stay, but felt they had to leave’ cited personal commitments and circumstances more frequently than those in different withdrawal states. Second, we found that reasons to consider turnover explained little variance in turnover behavior one year later.

志愿者管理组织行为离职研究社会心理学