Unpacking the Managerial Blues: How Expectations Formed in the Past Carry into New Jobs

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 1452-1474
Author(s):  
Nishani Bourmault ◽  
Michel Anteby

Becoming a manager is generally seen as a highly coveted step up the career ladder that corresponds to a gain in responsibility. There is evidence, however, that some individuals experience “managerial blues,” or disenchantment with their managerial jobs after being promoted. Although past scholarship points to individual differences (such as skills inadequacy) or the promotion circumstances (such as involuntary) as possible explanations for such blues, less is known as to how the expectations that people carry with them from past jobs—such as expectations about what responsibility entails—may shape their first managerial experience. To answer this question, we compare the experiences of supervisors coming from different jobs—that is, former Paris subway drivers (working independently and impacting the lives of others) and station agents (working interdependently with limited impact on others’ lives)—that left them with distinct sets of expectations around responsibility. Drawing on interviews and observations, we find that former drivers developed a deep sense of “personal” responsibility. After promotion, their perceived managerial responsibility paled in comparison with their expectations of what it felt like to have personal responsibility, leading the majority to experience managerial blues. In contrast, former agents had few expectations of what responsibility entailed and reported no disenchantment once they joined the managerial ranks. Overall, we show how imprinted expectations shape people’s future managerial experiences, including their managerial blues, and discuss the implications of our findings for literatures on job mobility and job design.

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 187-204
Author(s):  
Tomás Espino Barrera

The dramatic increase in the number of exiles and refugees in the past 100 years has generated a substantial amount of literature written in a second language as well as a heightened sensibility towards the progressive loss of fluency in the mother tongue. Confronted by what modern linguistics has termed ‘first-language attrition’, the writings of numerous exilic translingual authors exhibit a deep sense of trauma which is often expressed through metaphors of illness and death. At the same time, most of these writers make a deliberate effort to preserve what is left from the mother tongue by attempting to increase their exposure to poems, dictionaries or native speakers of the ‘dying’ language. The present paper examines a range of attitudes towards translingualism and first language attrition through the testimonies of several exilic authors and thinkers from different countries (Vladimir Nabokov's Speak, Memory, Hannah Arendt's interviews, Jorge Semprún's Quel beau dimanche! and Autobiografía de Federico Sánchez, and Eva Hoffman's Lost in Translation, among others). Special attention will be paid to the historical frameworks that encourage most of their salvaging operations by infusing the mother tongue with categories of affect and kinship.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria A. Seitz ◽  
Nada M. Aldebasi

AbstractThe mobile device market, particularly for smart phones, has experienced incredible growth over the past five years. What sets this market apart is the use of applications or apps for just about anything from information to purchases. The purpose of the study was to examine the effectiveness of branded apps on consumers’ attitudes toward brands as well as purchase intentions. The sample was drawn from students enrolled at a southwestern university in the United States, resulting in 50 usable questionnaires. Results of Pearson’s correlation analysis indicated that using branded apps strongly influenced users’ attitudes toward brands; however, using branded apps had a smaller impact on purchase intentions. As well, attitudes towards the branded apps, although significant, had a limited impact on purchase intentions. Implications of the findings were then discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (20) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Марко Шантић ◽  
Брано Маркић ◽  
Сања Бијакшић

Резиме: Сектор туризма у БиХ има позитивне трендове у свим битним показатељима раста у посљедњих десет година, међутим још увијек постоји огроман простор за даљње коришћење његовог потенцијала. Са својим природним богатствима и потенцијалом за туризам на отвореном, богатом природном и културном баштином, добрим географским положајем, међународно познатим манифестацијама, изврсном гастрономском понудом по прихватљивим цијенама и статусом још увијек непознатог туристичког одредишта за главна емитивна тржишта, БиХ има све предиспозиције за изузетно успјешан туризам. Туризам је засигурно јако значајан извор девизних средстава, те се управо из тог разлога сврстава у извозне гране које се фаворизују. За земље које су се, прије свега, издвојиле као значајне рецептивне туристичке земље на међународном туристичком тржишту, девизни прилив од туризма представља најважнију ставку прихода у платном билансу и веома снажан фактор укупног развоја привреде. Туризам представља изузетно важну компоненту националне економије. Сектор је чији се значај не може прецизно квантификовати управо зато што је повезан са скоро свим аспектима друштва. Једна од основних функција туризма је што директно и индиректно утиче на раст бруто домаћег производа. Упоредо са јачањем његовог економског аспекта подстиче се запошљавање, утиче на отварање нових радних мјеста што се одражава на побољшање општег животног стандарда. На јединствен начин подстиче развој неких од комплементарних дjелатности и доприноси укупном БДП-у.Summary: Tourist sector in BiH has positive trends in all important growth indicators in the past decade, however, the space for using further its potential is still huge. With its natural resources and potential for outdoors tourism, rich natural and cultural heritage, good geographic location, internationally known events, excellent cuisine for reasonable prices and status of a still unknown tourism destination for main tourist generating markets, BiH has all predispositions for exceptionally successful tourism. Tourism is, certainly, a very important source of foreign exchange and for this reason is classified in favored export industries. For countries which, first of all, are outstanding as significant receptive tourism countries on the international tourism market, foreign exchange inflow from tourism represents the most important item of revenue in the balance of payment and a very strong factor in overall economic development.Tourism is an extremely important component of the national economy. It is a sector whose importance cannot be quantified precisely since it is related to almost all aspects of the society. One of the basic functions of tourism is its direct and indirect impact on the growth of gross domestic product. Along with the strengthening of its economic aspect the employment is being encouraged, affects creating new jobs which is reflected in the improvement of general standard of living. In a unique way it encourages development of other complementary activities and contributes to the overall GDP. 


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changyou Sun

Abstract This study examined the life duration of US paper mills during the past 30 years. The US paper industry has been expanding, but its profit margin has been volatile and decreasing. The hazard rate curve revealed that there was increasing risk of closure during the first 7 years for new mills and for established mills, after the age of 18 years. Parametric duration analysis concluded that large mills had longer life duration. Merger and acquisition (M&A) activities and changes of ownership increased the life duration of mills. Mills located in the South had longer life duration while entry time of mills had limited impact. South. J. Appl. For. 30(1):5–12.


elni Review ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 30-38
Author(s):  
Fatima Arib

Over the past decades, the protection of the environment has become one of the major challenges that Morocco has committed to. The limited impact of the socio-economic programs, coupled with significant environmental degradation, require a shift in policy and priorities to a green and inclusive economy that can contribute to the reduction of poverty and unemployment, and the unwinding of territorial imbalances. This paper aims to analyse the main contextual features of the green economy in Morocco. The main aspects that mark the socio-economic, environmental and regulatory contexts are thus drawn up. The paper concludes by highlighting the importance of the progress made by Morocco and the challenges it needs to overcome.


2020 ◽  
pp. c2-64
Author(s):  
The Editors

buy this issue According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. economy is experiencing an unemployment rate that is at a fifty-year low. Yet, wage growth continues to be weak, with continuing wage stagnation even at the peak of the business cycle. A major and largely undertheorized reason for the sluggish wages in a period of seeming full employment is to be found in the fact that the new jobs being created by the economy do not measure up to those of the past in terms of weekly wages and hours, or in the degree to which they support households or even individuals.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sherwin Rosen

Jacob Mincer has helped set the research agenda and professional style in labor economics for over 30 years. His research helped uncover the empirical content of human capital theory, where he used those ideas to study the determinants of earnings and the sources and nature of earnings inequality. He was also a pioneer in studying labor force participation decisions of married women. For the past decade, Jacob has set his characteristic stamp on the empirical study of job mobility. The following brief survey is meant to convey some of the flavor of Jacob Mincer's work and why it has been so influential in labor economics.


Author(s):  
Ian Hathaway ◽  
Mark E. Schweitzer ◽  
Scott Shane

As markets and business patterns change, new business establishments are created to serve them. Those new establishments can be provided by entrepreneurs creating new firms or by the owners of existing businesses opening new locations. We show that over the past three decades, new establishments have increasingly been provided by existing businesses opening new locations. Those new locations have created jobs at a higher rate than brand-new firms, which helps to boost job creation. Looking at both forms of new establishments shows that job creation is down following the recession, but new locations were growing entering the recession and should be a critical component of job creation as the economy continues to recover.


2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiko Rüger ◽  
Michael Feldhaus ◽  
Katharina S. Becker ◽  
Monika Schlegel

Over the past few decades, employees have had to come to terms with increased demands of the labour market requiring greater flexibility and mobility. At the same time, increasingly versatile and complex forms of job-related spatial mobility are emerging. Consequently, the correlation between job mobility patterns and family-related processes is attracting more and more attention in the field of mobility and family research. However, to date there has rarely been a standard by which to systematically record and analyse job mobility. “Job Mobilities and Family Lives in Europe” (JobMob), a comparative European survey, and the “Panel Analysis of Intimate Relationships and Family Dynamics” (pairfam) constitute two sets of representative data for Germany, which provide largely comparable operationalisations for several forms of circular job mobility, thus allowing us to systematically perform comparative analyses. For the first time ever in this field of research, it is now possible to subject findings to a direct reciprocal validation process and to check whether general rules and correlations can be derived from them.In this regard, the present article aims at achieving three essential objectives. First, we will introduce a common indicator for circular job mobility patterns found in the two surveys. On the basis of this common indicator, we will comparatively analyse the prevalence of different mobility forms and their composition according to key socio-demographic characteristics. In addition, we will use multivariate analyses to illustrate the relevance of job mobility for partnership and family development. Results suggest mobility patterns to be an important individual context factor when explaining processes relevant to partnerships and family. In particular, women who exhibit some degree of job mobility are less often married and rarely have children.


Theology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 123 (2) ◽  
pp. 104-112
Author(s):  
Jeremy Worthen

The ‘Appeal to All Christian People’ that was issued by the Lambeth Conference a hundred years ago reflected a deep sense of the ecumenical vocation of Anglicanism. Three interlinking elements were critical for this: ecclesiology of visible unity, experience as a communion of Churches, and repentance for disunity. While substantial challenges have become apparent over the past century, their combination remains a significant offering that Anglicanism can make to the global Church today.


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