1. Career success is not always an outcome: its mediating role between competence employability model and perceived employability
- Author
-
Juan I. Venegas-Muggli, Cristobal Merino, Jesús Yeves, and Mariana Bargsted
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Medical education ,Higher education ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050209 industrial relations ,Employability ,Structural equation modeling ,Test (assessment) ,0502 economics and business ,Institution ,Psychology ,business ,Socioeconomic status ,Competence (human resources) ,050203 business & management ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common ,Career development - Abstract
PurposeCareer success has been understood as an outcome of career goals, achievement and employability resources. Recent research has enlightened its potential effect on career decisions and perceived employability. This paper aims to test the role of career success in the relationship between competence employability and perceived employability.Design/methodology/approachAn online survey was answered by 1,087 graduates from a large nonselective higher education institution that enrolls a significant number of first generation and lower socioeconomic background students. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the mediating role of career success, as was proposed.FindingsSubjective career success partially mediates the relationship between competence employability model and perceived employability. However, objective career success was not related to perceived employability.Research limitations/implicationsThe study made use of a cross-sectional design, which hinders the identification of causal direction.Practical implicationsFor training and education, both employability competences and subjective career success are resources to enhance in order to promote employee's personal beliefs about obtaining and maintaining employment.Originality/valueThis study combines different employability approaches, and their relationship with career success, considering subjective and objective career success as relevant personal resources that could impact self-perceptions and foster career behaviors. Testing the utility of these theoretical models on a group that has been underrepresented in career development studies is also relevant, particularly, the use of gain spiral concept from Conservation of Resources theory.
- Published
- 2021