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Employer perspectives on professional identity and its role in graduate recruitment

Employer perspectives on professional identity and its role in graduate recruitment
Employer perspectives on professional identity and its role in graduate recruitment
Practice and theory on graduate employability continues to recognise the importance of professional identity (PI) as a key determinant of individuals perceived and realised worth in the labour market. However, studies are predominantly from student, graduate and academic perspectives with little exploration of employers’ perceptions on PI and its importance for graduates’ acculturation into practice and workplace outcomes. Accordingly, we explored employer perspectives on what PI means and what it signals during graduate recruitment. Using closed and open response questions, we gathered survey data from 339 employers closely involved in recruiting, developing, supervising and performance managing graduates in Australia. We examined the importance of familiarity, proximity, experience, and professional self-efficacy as dimensions of PI and their influence on early career graduates’ learning, performance and wellbeing in the workplace, as understood by employers. We also investigated what PI signalled during recruitment, how it was assessed and its capacity to predict specified workplace outcomes. Findings advance the conceptual framing of PI and our understanding of its role in graduate recruitment, informing practical strategies for careers professionals and educators to support higher education students in their transition to work.
Professional identity, employability, graduate recruitment, person-organisation fit, signalling theory
0307-5079
Jackson, Denise
2fe4b27a-4bea-4a1a-8cf3-80657c05f094
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
Jackson, Denise
2fe4b27a-4bea-4a1a-8cf3-80657c05f094
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18

Jackson, Denise and Tomlinson, Michael (2026) Employer perspectives on professional identity and its role in graduate recruitment. Studies in Higher Education. (doi:10.1080/03075079.2026.2616618).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Practice and theory on graduate employability continues to recognise the importance of professional identity (PI) as a key determinant of individuals perceived and realised worth in the labour market. However, studies are predominantly from student, graduate and academic perspectives with little exploration of employers’ perceptions on PI and its importance for graduates’ acculturation into practice and workplace outcomes. Accordingly, we explored employer perspectives on what PI means and what it signals during graduate recruitment. Using closed and open response questions, we gathered survey data from 339 employers closely involved in recruiting, developing, supervising and performance managing graduates in Australia. We examined the importance of familiarity, proximity, experience, and professional self-efficacy as dimensions of PI and their influence on early career graduates’ learning, performance and wellbeing in the workplace, as understood by employers. We also investigated what PI signalled during recruitment, how it was assessed and its capacity to predict specified workplace outcomes. Findings advance the conceptual framing of PI and our understanding of its role in graduate recruitment, informing practical strategies for careers professionals and educators to support higher education students in their transition to work.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 January 2026
Keywords: Professional identity, employability, graduate recruitment, person-organisation fit, signalling theory

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510058
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510058
ISSN: 0307-5079
PURE UUID: 257e1b6d-54ef-4a8b-8275-bcb902fe41f9
ORCID for Michael Tomlinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1057-5188

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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2026 17:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2026 02:44

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Author: Denise Jackson

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