High-flyers: glorious past, gloomy present, any future?
High-flyers: glorious past, gloomy present, any future?
The concept of high‐potential career management programmes needs to be re‐examined in the new era of organizational flexibility, given the prevalence of such practices as downsizing and re‐engineering. New types of psychological contracts are emerging, in which promotions cannot be guaranteed or expected as a reward, even for the most promising managers. Organizations need to retain the best people and motivate them to stay and lead organizations. Different approaches are called for. Former methods for selection and assessment of high potentials are likely to become redundant or obsolete as the status of the high‐potential employee fades away altogether. This trend is part of the new way organizations will be managed towards the twenty‐first century.
354-358
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Peiperl, Maury
acc72ff6-9f28-46e3-9d55-fa17b03e8c1f
1 December 1997
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Peiperl, Maury
acc72ff6-9f28-46e3-9d55-fa17b03e8c1f
Baruch, Yehuda and Peiperl, Maury
(1997)
High-flyers: glorious past, gloomy present, any future?
Career Development International, 2 (7), .
(doi:10.1108/13620439710187990).
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Special issue
Abstract
The concept of high‐potential career management programmes needs to be re‐examined in the new era of organizational flexibility, given the prevalence of such practices as downsizing and re‐engineering. New types of psychological contracts are emerging, in which promotions cannot be guaranteed or expected as a reward, even for the most promising managers. Organizations need to retain the best people and motivate them to stay and lead organizations. Different approaches are called for. Former methods for selection and assessment of high potentials are likely to become redundant or obsolete as the status of the high‐potential employee fades away altogether. This trend is part of the new way organizations will be managed towards the twenty‐first century.
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Published date: 1 December 1997
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Local EPrints ID: 487317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487317
ISSN: 1362-0436
PURE UUID: f22b2713-8d5a-473f-a105-4e588ef6c5ae
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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:27
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:25
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Author:
Maury Peiperl
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