TY - JOUR
T1 - Bouncing back for promotability through recognition
T2 - Does having diversive curiosity matter?
AU - Sofyan, Yunita
AU - Richards, Malika
AU - Shang, Yufan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 European Academy of Management (EURAM).
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Are employees with career resilience more likely to get promoted? Building on the conservation of resources theory, we extend career resilience research to propose that resilient employees are more likely to receive recognition from others. This recognition then improves their promotion prospects. We further explore how this relationship is particularly salient in the presence of diversive curiosity—an individual difference in dispositional tendencies to participate in exploration, accompanied by a desire for a novel, interesting, or entertaining stimuli. Using a three-wave survey of 294 employees from private and government organizations in Indonesia, combined with PROCESS macro-based bootstrapping, we find that employee resilience positively impacts their promotability, directly and indirectly, through perceived recognition. This relationship is especially prominent when diversive curiosity is high. We conclude that those who can enhance their resilience will also boost their promotability in the workplace. This study offers implications for resilience, prosocial motivation, recognition, and promotability by explaining how and when resilience will help employees achieve professional success, what employees can do to enhance their careers, and what management can do to enhance their succession planning.
AB - Are employees with career resilience more likely to get promoted? Building on the conservation of resources theory, we extend career resilience research to propose that resilient employees are more likely to receive recognition from others. This recognition then improves their promotion prospects. We further explore how this relationship is particularly salient in the presence of diversive curiosity—an individual difference in dispositional tendencies to participate in exploration, accompanied by a desire for a novel, interesting, or entertaining stimuli. Using a three-wave survey of 294 employees from private and government organizations in Indonesia, combined with PROCESS macro-based bootstrapping, we find that employee resilience positively impacts their promotability, directly and indirectly, through perceived recognition. This relationship is especially prominent when diversive curiosity is high. We conclude that those who can enhance their resilience will also boost their promotability in the workplace. This study offers implications for resilience, prosocial motivation, recognition, and promotability by explaining how and when resilience will help employees achieve professional success, what employees can do to enhance their careers, and what management can do to enhance their succession planning.
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U2 - 10.1111/emre.12702
DO - 10.1111/emre.12702
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85211488994
SN - 1740-4754
JO - European Management Review
JF - European Management Review
ER -