1 research outputs found
The impact of work-related values and work control on the career satisfaction of female freelancers
Using the job demands-resources theory incorporating a job-crafting perspective to develop a set of hypotheses, this study contributes to the self-employment and freelancing literature by examining whether female freelancers use their agency to mobilize their personal resources (i.e. work-related values) to craft their work resources (i.e. workâcontrol indicators: work autonomy and time-spatial flexibility) to achieve more career satisfaction. Our structural partial least squares model (Nâ=â203) shows that the work-related value âintrinsically rewarding workâ prompts two motivational processes that affect career satisfaction: one running directly to âcareer satisfactionâ and one through âwork autonomyâ. Although the value âworkâlife balanceâ is positively associated with greater âtime-spatial flexibilityâ, this does not affect career satisfaction. Moreover, we find negative associations between the value âfinancial securityâ, on the one hand, and the two work resources, on the other hand. Hence, the value financial security is negatively related to work autonomy towards career satisfaction. We conclude that female freelancersâ multiple, oftentimes blended values compete with one another, implying that achieving meaningful work, workâlife balance and financial independence simultaneously is difficult in female freelancersâ careers. We discuss the studyâs implications for future research and advocate labourâmarket stakeholders (e.g. freelancers, freelancersâ networks, career coaches, temporary work agencies, unions, local and national governments, educational institutions and public and private organizations) to partner in developing value-based career strategies and policies that account for less linear career paths in increasingly flexible and individualized markets and truly support (female) workers developing portfolios that better match with their multiple work-related values on a long-term basis