Previous research has primarily focused on how employees passively react to job insecurity (e.g., withdrawal). We shift this focus by examining when and for whom job insecurity may relate to proactive career behaviors. Leveraging regulatory focus theory and the diminishing marginal utility principle, we theorize a nonlinear moderated mediation model that links job insecurity to two proactive career behaviors - networking and seeking mentorship - through avoidance work motivation and depending on collectivism orientation. Two data sets, consisting of three-wave time-lagged surveys of employees from Chile and Australia, were used to examine our hypotheses. In both samples, for those high in collectivism orientation, job insecurity increased avoidance work motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors up to a point, after which job insecurity was no longer related to these variables. For those low in collectivism orientation, regardless of the levels of job insecurity, there were no significant relations of job insecurity with avoidance motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors in the Australian sample; however, the nonsignificant relations of job insecurity with avoidance motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors turned positive in the Chilean sample. Overall, our research extends the job insecurity literature by demonstrating the conditions under which job insecurity increases proactive career behaviors.

Preparing for a rainy day: A regulatory focus perspective on job insecurity and proactive career behaviors / Jiang, L.; Debus, M. E.; Xu, X.; Hu, X.; Lopez-Bohle, S.; Petitta, L.; Roll, L. C.; Stander, M.; Wang, H.. - In: APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 0269-994X. - 74:2(2025). [10.1111/apps.70004]

Preparing for a rainy day: A regulatory focus perspective on job insecurity and proactive career behaviors

Jiang L.
;
Xu X.;Hu X.;Petitta L.;
2025

Abstract

Previous research has primarily focused on how employees passively react to job insecurity (e.g., withdrawal). We shift this focus by examining when and for whom job insecurity may relate to proactive career behaviors. Leveraging regulatory focus theory and the diminishing marginal utility principle, we theorize a nonlinear moderated mediation model that links job insecurity to two proactive career behaviors - networking and seeking mentorship - through avoidance work motivation and depending on collectivism orientation. Two data sets, consisting of three-wave time-lagged surveys of employees from Chile and Australia, were used to examine our hypotheses. In both samples, for those high in collectivism orientation, job insecurity increased avoidance work motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors up to a point, after which job insecurity was no longer related to these variables. For those low in collectivism orientation, regardless of the levels of job insecurity, there were no significant relations of job insecurity with avoidance motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors in the Australian sample; however, the nonsignificant relations of job insecurity with avoidance motivation and subsequent proactive career behaviors turned positive in the Chilean sample. Overall, our research extends the job insecurity literature by demonstrating the conditions under which job insecurity increases proactive career behaviors.
2025
avoidance motivation; collectivism orientation; job insecurity; proactive career behaviors
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Preparing for a rainy day: A regulatory focus perspective on job insecurity and proactive career behaviors / Jiang, L.; Debus, M. E.; Xu, X.; Hu, X.; Lopez-Bohle, S.; Petitta, L.; Roll, L. C.; Stander, M.; Wang, H.. - In: APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 0269-994X. - 74:2(2025). [10.1111/apps.70004]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Jiang_Preparing_rainy_day_2025.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 658.05 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
658.05 kB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1736090
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact