Initial employability development: introducing a conceptual model integrating signalling and social exchange mechanisms
Initial employability development: introducing a conceptual model integrating signalling and social exchange mechanisms
This article develops a conceptual understanding of initial employability development, specifically the transition into first career destinations. Substantial previous research focuses on the role of individuals in ensuring employment readiness and continued employability development. Studies also identify the importance of employers for sustained employability. However, the interdependence and interaction between employers and individuals are under-theorized. We integrate social exchange theory and signalling theory to conceptualize initial employability development. We propose a cyclical model that comprises interactive and reciprocal signalling and social exchange processes between employers and individuals. The model overcomes the limitations of linear conceptualizations and one-sided models that theorize employability as either the outcome of human capital resources deployed by individuals or as managed by employers in employability development processes. We extend the processual approach to employability by redirecting theoretical attention to the interaction of signalling and social exchange as fundamental to employability development. We conclude by discussing implications in relation to employability research and theory development.
Employability, careers, signalling theory, social exchange theory, talent management
54-66
Akkermans, Jos
d7807e64-f8a4-4743-a020-53c16d7653a6
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
Anderson, Valerie
cdc16280-53ba-40e7-9533-185c8c3f55ed
January 2024
Akkermans, Jos
d7807e64-f8a4-4743-a020-53c16d7653a6
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
Anderson, Valerie
cdc16280-53ba-40e7-9533-185c8c3f55ed
Akkermans, Jos, Tomlinson, Michael and Anderson, Valerie
(2024)
Initial employability development: introducing a conceptual model integrating signalling and social exchange mechanisms.
European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 33 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/1359432X.2023.2186783).
Abstract
This article develops a conceptual understanding of initial employability development, specifically the transition into first career destinations. Substantial previous research focuses on the role of individuals in ensuring employment readiness and continued employability development. Studies also identify the importance of employers for sustained employability. However, the interdependence and interaction between employers and individuals are under-theorized. We integrate social exchange theory and signalling theory to conceptualize initial employability development. We propose a cyclical model that comprises interactive and reciprocal signalling and social exchange processes between employers and individuals. The model overcomes the limitations of linear conceptualizations and one-sided models that theorize employability as either the outcome of human capital resources deployed by individuals or as managed by employers in employability development processes. We extend the processual approach to employability by redirecting theoretical attention to the interaction of signalling and social exchange as fundamental to employability development. We conclude by discussing implications in relation to employability research and theory development.
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EWO.569.21.R1 - Blinded manuscript (1)
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Initial employability development introducing a conceptual model integrating signalling and social exchange mechanisms
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 March 2023
Published date: January 2024
Keywords:
Employability, careers, signalling theory, social exchange theory, talent management
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Local EPrints ID: 477068
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477068
ISSN: 1359-432X
PURE UUID: a3aae90e-b41f-45b2-b448-f69688eeb9b6
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Date deposited: 25 May 2023 16:43
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:49
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Author:
Jos Akkermans
Author:
Valerie Anderson
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