Extent:
1 online resource (270 pages)
Type of publication: Book / Working Paper
Language: English
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Organizational Fit Key : Issues and New Directions; Contents; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Preface; 1 Fit for the Future; Person-Environment (PE) Fit Paradigm; Perceived Fit Paradigm; The Epistemology of Fit; The Chapters; Part 1: New directions within the fit paradigms; Part 2: New directions for the fit paradigms; Conclusion; References; Part 1 New Directions within the Fit Paradigms; 2 A Motivational Model of Person-Environment Fit: Psychological Motives as Drivers of Change; FundamentalMotivations to Fit; Drive for consistency; Drive for hedonism
Drive for uncertainty reductionDrive for control; Drive for belonging; Fit Management Tactics; Model of PE fit; Biases and heuristics; Responses to job satisfaction; Coping, stress, and regulation; Proactive behaviors; Discussion; Expanding the motivational model; Implications for PE fit research; Conclusion; References; 3 Dyadic Fit and the Process of Organizational Socialization; Relationships and Fit: Definitions; Contributions of an Interpersonal Socialization Perspective to the Literature on Fit; Dyadic Fit and Organizational Socialization
Antecedents of the Development of Dyadic Fit in the Socialization ProcessDyadic Fit and Interpersonal Processes; Outcomes of Dyadic Fit in the Socialization Process; Summary; References; 4 A Self-Regulation Approach to Person-Environment Fit; Theories of Self-Regulation; Viewing PE Fit within a Self-Regulation Framework; Regulating Person-Environment Fit over Time; Individual Differences that Impact PE Fit; Limitations; Conclusion; Notes; References; 5 Person-Organization Fit, Organizational Citizenship, and Social-Cognitive Motivational Mechanisms; Organizational Fit and Citizenship
PO fit and performanceCitizenship performance; An Integrative Social-CognitiveModel; CAPS; Fit-related schema and encoding processes; Cognitive-affective mediating processes; Behavior generation process; Self-regulation processes; Discussion; Theoretical issues for consideration; Conclusion; References; 6 Mapping Fit: Maximizing Idiographic and Nomothetic Benefits; Introduction; Nomothetic and Idiographic Research; Combining approaches; A heuristic model; Mapping Fit; Different forms of cognitivemaps; Generating maps; Analyzing maps; Conclusion; References
Part 2 New Directions for the Fit Paradigms7 The Construal of Person-Organization Fit during the ASA Stages: Content, Source, and Focus of Comparison; Introduction; The Need to Fit: The Need to Belong; The Establishment of PO Fit; ASA: Content, Source, and Reference of PO Fit Perceptions; PO fit with the unknown; PO fit with the known; Some people make the place; Fit with prototypical models; Conclusions and Avenues for Future Research; Note; References; 8 Exploring the Middle Range of Person-Environment Fit Theories through a Conservation of Resources Perspective
Conservation of Resources Theory
ISBN: 978-1-118-32088-4 ; 978-0-470-68361-3
Source:
ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012600566