712 research outputs found
Employee Attitudinal Effects of Perceived Performance Appraisal Use
This research investigates how employee perceptions of performance appraisal use relate to employee satisfaction with the performance appraisal and with the appraiserâthe employeesâ immediate supervisor. Employee perceptions that appraisals were used for development positively associated with both attitudinal variables, after controlling for justice perceptions, performance, and demographics. Perceptions of PA use for evaluation did not show a significant relationship with either employee attitude. Implications of these findings are discussed
Employee Line of Sight to the Organizationâs Strategic Objectives â What it is, How it can be Enhanced, and What it Makes Happen
Employee_Line_of_SightWP01_06.pdf: 13661 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Evidence-based policy-making: ultimately a myth, but one we should believe in
In the era of Trump, is evidence-based policy-making dead? John Boswell argues that while EBPM is ultimately a myth, it is a useful one which plays an important role in democratic deliberation. It underpins and enables democratic contestation in a way that no other instrument has been able to do
Aligning Employees Through \u3ci\u3eLine of Sight\u3c/i\u3e
Aligning employees with the firmâs larger strategic goals is critical if organizations hope to manage their human capital effectively and ultimately attain strategic success. An important component of attaining and sustaining this alignment is whether employees have âline of sightâ to the organizationâs strategic objectives. We illustrate how the translation of strategic goals into tangible results requires that employees not only understand the organizationâs strategy, they must accurately understand what actions are aligned with realizing that strategy. Using recent empirical evidence, theoretical insights, and tangible examples of exemplary firm practices, we provide thought-leaders with a comprehensive view of LOS, how it is created, how it can be enhanced or stifled, and how it can be effectively managed. We integrate LOS with current thinking on employee alignment to help managers more effectively benefit from understanding human capital potential
When Stock Options Fail to Motivate: Attribution and Context Effects on Stock Price Expectancy
This study draws on attribution theory and literature from compensation and strategy to investigate executivesâ perceptions about their influence over the firmâs stock price. We define stock price expectancy as the extent to which executives feel that they can influence the firmâs stock price. Results from of a survey of 435 U.S. executives suggest that stock price expectancy is related to both attributional and contextual antecedents. Based on these findings we discuss implications for the extension of expectancy theory and the design and administration of incentive systems
A history of the air bridge denial program in Peru: the evolution, errors, and fallout of a covert United States-Peruvian counternarcotics air interdiction program, culminating with the 2001 mistaken shootdown of a missionary plane over the Amazon jungle
During the 1990s, the Governments of Peru and the United States established a
counternarcotics air interdiction program called Air Bridge Denial over the Peruvian Amazon.
During this program the United States Central Intelligence Agency conducted surveillance
missions over Peruâs coca growing regions, and passed suspicious aircraft location data to the
Peruvian Air Force, who would then intercept the suspected narcotrafficking aircraft and force
them to land or be shot down. The program was interrupted in 2001 following the accidental
shootdown of a missionary floatplane over Peru, which resulted in the deaths of two United
States citizens. This thesis examines the development, operations, and fallout of Air Bridge
Denial in Peru, including its patterns of errors, complexities and challenges such as binational
interoperability, bilingual communications failures, neglect of mandatory protocols, and poor
oversight. In examining the detailed history of Air Bridge Denial, this thesis strives to present
lessons learned for the development and implementation of any similar programs in the future.
Disclaimer: The views in this paper are strictly those of the author, and do not necessarily
reflect the official views of the U.S. Government, the Department of Defense, or any of its
agencies, nor the Olmsted Foundation. Moreover, all of the government sources used for this
thesis are from open source and unclassified public archives, and from sources readily available
to the public through open web searches and periodicals, including documents released under the
U.S. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). This is in fact an admitted limitation to the study, as
there may be additional government information, included classified archives, from both the U.S.
and Peru that might provide greater detail and insight. The author does not know this to be a fact
or not. The publicly available information at hand may at least help fill gaps in the historical
academic record surrounding the program, and open the door for continued study on the topic.Tesi
The Influence of Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment on Executive Withdrawal and Performance
This research examines the influence of job satisfaction and three dimensions of organizational commitment (i.e., affective, continuance, and normative) on the intention to leave, job search activity, performance, and leadership effectiveness of executives. Job satisfaction and the commitment dimensions were hypothesized to negatively predict the retention-related variables. Results generally supported the hypotheses. Job satisfaction had the strongest relationship, but both affective and continuance commitment showed an incremental effect even in the presence of job satisfaction. We also hypothesized that job satisfaction and affective commitment would positively and continuance commitment would negatively associate with general performance and leadership. As predicted, job satisfaction associated positively with performance, though not with leadership. Continuance commitment negatively associated with both performance and leadership
âYouâre Nobody âtil Somebody Loves Youâ: The Use of Job Search for Bargaining Leverage
The purpose of this research is to investigate a previously overlooked yet important objective for an employee engaging in job search â seeking alternative employment to obtain leverage against the current employer. We focus specifically on how employees conduct job search to obtain leverage, and then turn to the question of what motivates employees to adopt this objective. Using a sample of high-level managers, our results indicate the leverage-seeking job search predicts both preparatory and active search beyond the more traditional reason for engaging in job search (i.e., to change jobs). However, as expected, leverage-seeking search was a weaker predictor of the job search processes compared to searching to leave and was not significantly related to job satisfaction. Hierarchical level, perceived alternatives, financial independence, and the meaning attached to money significantly predicted leverage-seeking search, while compensation level, equity, and career plateau showed little effect. Implications for practice and future research on job search and employee retention more generally are discussed
Effects of Personality on Executive Career Success in the U.S. and Europe
The present study extended prior career success models by incorporating traits from the five-factor model of personality (often termed the Big Five ) and several dimensions of extrinsic (remuneration, ascendancy, job level, employability) and intrinsic (job, life, and career satisfaction) career success. The model examined both direct effects, and the mediating effects of an array of human capital and motivation variables derived from prior research. Data were collected from two large samples of American and European executives. Some results supported prior research: Extroversion related positively, and neuroticism negatively, to intrinsic career success across both the U.S. and European samples. Some results differed from expectations: (1) Conscientiousness was mostly unrelated to extrinsic success and negatively related to intrinsic success in both samples; (2) Agreeableness was negatively related to extrinsic success in both samples. Differences emerged between the European and American samples, in that: (1) Neuroticism associated with lower levels of extrinsic success for the American executives but not the Europeans; (2) Extroversion associated with higher levels of extrinsic success for the European executives, but not the Americans. For both samples, human capital and motivational variables associated predictably with career success, but seldom mediated the relationship between personality and career success
The Relationship Between Job Search Objectives and Job Search Behavior
This research expands the notion of âjob searchâ beyond traditional models of searching for an alternative yet similar job, arguing that motivations for search are varied. Specifically, we investigate whether search objectives associate with use of different search processes. A study of high-level managers found mixed support for the hypotheses
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