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  6. An Empirical Investigation of the Predictors of Executive Career Success

An Empirical Investigation of the Predictors of Executive Career Success

File(s)
An_Empirical_Investigation_WP94_08.pdf (208.32 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/77095
Collections
CAHRS Working Paper Series
Faculty Publications - Human Resource Studies
ILR Working Papers
Author
Judge, Timothy A.
Cable, Daniel M.
Boudreau, John W.
Bretz, Robert D. Jr.
Abstract

The present study examined the degree to which demographic, human capital,motivational, organizational, and industry/region variables predicted executive career success. Career success was assumed to comprise objective (pay, ascendancy) and subjective (job satisfaction, career satisfaction) elements. Results obtained from a sample of 1,388 U.S.executives suggested that demographic, human capital, motivational, and organizational variables explained significant variance in objective career success and in career satisfaction. Particularly interesting were findings that educational level, quality, prestige, and degree type all predicted financial success. In contrast, only the motivational and organizational variables explained significant amounts of variance in job satisfaction. These findings suggest that the variables that lead to objective career success often are quite different from those that lead to subjectively defined success.

Date Issued
1994-04-01
Keywords
human capital
•
executive
•
career
•
success
•
pay
•
job
•
satisfaction
•
education
•
degree
Type
preprint

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