6533b86cfe1ef96bd12c8c64

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Conflicting personal goals: a risk to occupational well-being?

Asko TolvanenMari HuhtalaKatriina HyvönenJohanna RantanenTaru FeldtBettina S. Wiese

subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial PsychologyGoal orientationburnoutpersonal work goalsPrestigeWork engagementmanagerstyön imuManagement Science and Operations ResearchBurnoutgoal conflictEmployment contractgoal contentWell-beingGoal conflictPsychologyCompetence (human resources)Social psychologyApplied Psychology

description

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the moderating role of goal conflict in the relationship between the contents of managers’ personal work goals and occupational well-being (burnout and work engagement). Eight goal categories (organization, competence, well-being, career-ending, progression, prestige, job change, and employment contract) described the contents of goals. Goal conflict reflected the degree to which a personal work goal was perceived to interfere with other life domains. Design/methodology/approach – The data were drawn from a study directed to Finnish managers in 2009 (n=806). General linear models were conducted to investigate the associations between goal content categories and occupational well-being and to test whether goal conflict moderates the relationship between goal content categories and occupational well-being. Findings – Career-ending goals related to significantly higher burnout than progression goals. Participants with organization, competence, or progression goals reported the highest goal conflict, whereas participants with well-being, career-ending, or job change goals reported lower goal conflict. Goal conflict was found to have a moderating role: in a high-goal conflict situation, participants with organizational, competence, and progression goals reported lower occupational well-being, whereas participants with job change goals reported higher occupational well-being. Originality/value – The research highlights that both the contents and appraisals (e.g. goal conflict) of personal work goals should be taken into account when investigating the relationship between personal goals and well-being at work.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201603011727