Is retention necessarily a win? Outcomes of searching and staying Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • 2016 This research examines the issue of employee retention by considering what happens to employees that engage in the job search process yet end up staying with an organization. Grounded in the conceptualization of reluctant staying from Hom, Mitchell, Lee, and Griffeth (2012), we consider a potential downside of employee retention. Specifically, the study examines the psychological (i.e., job dissatisfaction, low organizational commitment) and behavioral detachment (i.e., neglect behavior, diminished job performance) employees may experience when they search for alternative employment yet ultimately stay with an organization. This study also examines the moderating role of the objective underlying the search behavior on job search and its criteria, arguing that the strength of the search-criteria link varies depending upon an employee's objective to leave the current employer. Results suggest an increase in psychological detachment and greater neglect behavior for employees that searched and stayed. These findings were not dependent on the reported objective to leave the employer. Implications for research on job search activity and withdrawal are discussed.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL BEHAVIOR

author list (cited authors)

  • Boswell, W. R., Gardner, R. G., & Wang, J.

citation count

  • 8

complete list of authors

  • Boswell, Wendy R||Gardner, Richard G||Wang, Jiexin

publication date

  • January 2017