Influences on perceived career success: findings from US graduate business degree alumni
Influences on perceived career success: findings from US graduate business degree alumni
Purpose: the purpose of this paper is to examine the perceptions of US MBA and specialist master's degree alumni to determine the influence that their degree program experiences had on subsequent perceptions of career success.
Design/methodology/approach: data were collected from 318 alumni MBA and specialist master's degree recipients from a large university in the southwestern USA; more than half of them were male. The university provided independent demographic data used to match respondents' surveys.
Findings: evidence was found that men and women graduates perceived their post‐graduate degree success differently, with women graduates reporting less salary gain but higher hierarchical levels and job satisfaction compared to men. Social capital and perceived discrimination indirectly affected the reported career success of graduates on hierarchical level salary gain.
Research limitations/implications: use of self‐report data, for all model variables, puts the findings at risk for common‐method bias. Additionally, while discrimination measure had acceptable reliability for this sample, it has not been widely validated.
Practical implications: the findings that women viewed their graduate program as less effective for advancing their careers than men despite earning higher grades suggests that business schools emphasize improving graduate student experiences as well as managerial competencies. Organizations' leaders should make their diversity management practices readily apparent as women and minority MBA graduates are likely to view such practices as important during their job search.
Originality/value: this study contributes to the knowledge of factors that influence career success.
39-58
Cocchiara, Faye K.
15750169-1ec4-4c6d-a19b-9d0cc810f7c5
Kwesiga, Eileen
aa1e745b-5133-43bd-94f9-365376aa533e
Bell, Myrtle P.
7880b7d5-b8c7-493f-9911-c0f417dbc727
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
23 February 2010
Cocchiara, Faye K.
15750169-1ec4-4c6d-a19b-9d0cc810f7c5
Kwesiga, Eileen
aa1e745b-5133-43bd-94f9-365376aa533e
Bell, Myrtle P.
7880b7d5-b8c7-493f-9911-c0f417dbc727
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Cocchiara, Faye K., Kwesiga, Eileen, Bell, Myrtle P. and Baruch, Yehuda
(2010)
Influences on perceived career success: findings from US graduate business degree alumni.
Career Development International, 15 (1), .
(doi:10.1108/13620431011020880).
Abstract
Purpose: the purpose of this paper is to examine the perceptions of US MBA and specialist master's degree alumni to determine the influence that their degree program experiences had on subsequent perceptions of career success.
Design/methodology/approach: data were collected from 318 alumni MBA and specialist master's degree recipients from a large university in the southwestern USA; more than half of them were male. The university provided independent demographic data used to match respondents' surveys.
Findings: evidence was found that men and women graduates perceived their post‐graduate degree success differently, with women graduates reporting less salary gain but higher hierarchical levels and job satisfaction compared to men. Social capital and perceived discrimination indirectly affected the reported career success of graduates on hierarchical level salary gain.
Research limitations/implications: use of self‐report data, for all model variables, puts the findings at risk for common‐method bias. Additionally, while discrimination measure had acceptable reliability for this sample, it has not been widely validated.
Practical implications: the findings that women viewed their graduate program as less effective for advancing their careers than men despite earning higher grades suggests that business schools emphasize improving graduate student experiences as well as managerial competencies. Organizations' leaders should make their diversity management practices readily apparent as women and minority MBA graduates are likely to view such practices as important during their job search.
Originality/value: this study contributes to the knowledge of factors that influence career success.
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Published date: 23 February 2010
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 486930
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486930
ISSN: 1362-0436
PURE UUID: 61f007b5-4ab1-44b2-b456-68420b1214c1
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Date deposited: 08 Feb 2024 17:44
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:25
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Contributors
Author:
Faye K. Cocchiara
Author:
Eileen Kwesiga
Author:
Myrtle P. Bell
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