Recruiting Source Effects: A Social Psychological Analysis
ISBN: 978-1-78560-077-7, eISBN: 978-1-78560-076-0
Publication date: 8 July 2015
Abstract
Purpose
I present and evaluate various explanations for why new workers who were sponsored by oldtimers tend to have better job outcomes (better performance, more satisfaction, and less turnover) than do new workers who were not sponsored.
Methodology/approach
My evaluations involve searching for evidence that fits (or does not fit) each of the explanations.
Findings
The two most popular explanations argue that the job benefits of sponsorship arise because (a) sponsored newcomers have more realistic job expectations than do unsponsored newcomers, or (b) the quality of sponsored newcomers is greater than that of unsponsored newcomers. Unfortunately, these explanations have weak empirical support. A third explanation, largely untested as yet, attributes the performance benefits of sponsorship to social pressures that can arise when someone is sponsored for a job. These pressures include efforts by newcomers to repay the people who sponsored them, efforts by sponsors to assist the newcomers they sponsored after those persons have been hired, and stereotypes among coworkers about the kinds of people who get jobs through sponsors. Although limited as yet, the evidence regarding this new explanation seems promising.
Research implications
More research on this third explanation for sponsorship effects should be done. Suggestions for how to do such research are reviewed and a relevant experiment is presented.
Social implications
The ideas and evidence presented here could help employers who want to improve the job outcomes of their new workers. Poor outcomes among such persons are a major problem in many settings.
Originality/value
Although some of my ideas have been mentioned by others, they were not been described in much detail, nor were they tested. My hope is that this chapter will promote new theory and research on the performance benefits of sponsorship, a topic that has been largely ignored in recent years.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgments
Many thanks are owed to Ms. Ranjani Krishnan, who worked closely with me to find, read, and discuss the literature on recruiting source effects. I would also like to thank several undergraduates, including Sheri Booth, Rebekah Greenebaum, Morris Isaacson, Jennifer Leiter, Theodore Requa, and Tara Shetye, who helped me to carry out research exploring some of the ideas presented in this chapter.
Citation
Moreland, R.L. (2015), "Recruiting Source Effects: A Social Psychological Analysis", Advances in Group Processes (Advances in Group Processes, Vol. 32), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 123-148. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0882-614520150000032005
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015 Emerald Group Publishing Limited