TY - JOUR
T1 - Seeking stability in unstable employment
T2 - An exploratory study of temporary agency workers' career self-management
AU - Retkowsky , Jana
AU - Nijs, Sanne
AU - Akkermans, Jos
AU - Khapova, Svetlana
AU - Jansen, Paul
N1 - This research project is funded by Institute Gak. Reference number is 2018-971 - Psychologie van de flexibilisering.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Increasingly dynamic labor markets have caused a steep increase in nonstandard workers. This study focuses on agency temps who work via labor market intermediaries at client organizations. The short-term and frequently changing nature of their jobs creates uncertainty about their employment and personal stability. Based on an explorative qualitative interview study among 27 agency temps, we studied how agency temps self-manage their careers. Our study reveals that the precarious career environment and financial dependence on agency work make agency temps' career self-management different from existing depictions of career self-management in the literature. Specifically, we reveal that agency temps' career self-management engagement is relatively short-term and primarily reactive. We find that they focus on survival and stability as career goals, and they engage in four career behaviors: (1) moonlighting, (2) self-profiling, (3) compensatory career behavior, and (4) job search behavior. Subsequently, we identify two negative long-term outcomes of these career behaviors: (1) being locked-in and (2) experiencing resource loss during unemployment. Accordingly, this study contributes to the nascent literature on temporary agency work and career self-management by identifying career behaviors and consequences in a precarious and volatile context. Our findings can help career counselors and policy-makers safeguard the career self-management of agency temps.
AB - Increasingly dynamic labor markets have caused a steep increase in nonstandard workers. This study focuses on agency temps who work via labor market intermediaries at client organizations. The short-term and frequently changing nature of their jobs creates uncertainty about their employment and personal stability. Based on an explorative qualitative interview study among 27 agency temps, we studied how agency temps self-manage their careers. Our study reveals that the precarious career environment and financial dependence on agency work make agency temps' career self-management different from existing depictions of career self-management in the literature. Specifically, we reveal that agency temps' career self-management engagement is relatively short-term and primarily reactive. We find that they focus on survival and stability as career goals, and they engage in four career behaviors: (1) moonlighting, (2) self-profiling, (3) compensatory career behavior, and (4) job search behavior. Subsequently, we identify two negative long-term outcomes of these career behaviors: (1) being locked-in and (2) experiencing resource loss during unemployment. Accordingly, this study contributes to the nascent literature on temporary agency work and career self-management by identifying career behaviors and consequences in a precarious and volatile context. Our findings can help career counselors and policy-makers safeguard the career self-management of agency temps.
KW - Agency temps
KW - Career
KW - Career self-management
KW - Nonstandard work
KW - Temporary agency work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85154529504&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jvb.2023.103877
DO - 10.1016/j.jvb.2023.103877
M3 - Article
SN - 0001-8791
VL - 143
JO - Journal of Vocational Behavior
JF - Journal of Vocational Behavior
M1 - 103877
ER -