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Who is successful in career development? A person-centered approach to the study of career orientation profiles

Nicolas Bazine (Department of Psychology, UR4139, Université de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France)
Léandre Alexis Chénard-Poirier (Department of Management, HEC Montreal, Quebec, Canada)
Adalgisa Battistelli (Department of Psychology, UR4139, Université de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France)
Marie-Christine Lagabrielle (Department of Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, EA1697, University of Toulouse Jean Jaures, Toulouse, France)

Career Development International

ISSN: 1362-0436

Article publication date: 8 November 2023

Issue publication date: 6 December 2023

288

Abstract

Purpose

This research examined the presence of career orientation profiles by investigating how young workers combined protean career orientation attitudes, motivation to learn to develop one's career and an optimistic future perspective on their career. It explored how a differentiated endorsement of these attitudes and motivation (i.e. career orientation profiles) were associated with the adoption of multiple career-enhancing behaviors, namely proactive career behaviors (i.e. career planning, networking and skill development) and learning behaviors with technologies.

Design/methodology/approach

Latent profile analysis was conducted among young individuals starting their career (N = 767) and found four distinct profiles.

Findings

The first profile revealed that 17.2% of workers in this sample were displaying low levels in protean career orientation, motivation to learn and optimistic future time perspective (profile 1). Two differentiated profiles showed either low levels of protean career orientation and high levels of motivation to learn (profile 2) or high levels of protean career attitudes and low levels of motivation to learn (profile 3). These profiles presented an average level of future time perspective and represented 13.8 and 40.6% of the sample. Finally, 28.4% of the sample showed high levels on all these variables (profile 4).

Originality/value

Only young workers who showed high levels on all these indicators also presented high levels of proactive behaviors and learning with technologies. The other three profiles were associated with suboptimal levels on these outcomes. Taken together, these results offer new insights into the psychological state of mind of workers most adapted to succeed in a modern career.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The first two authors (Nicolas Bazine and Léandre Alexis Chénard-Poirier) contributed equally to the preparation of this article. Both should be considered as first authors.

Citation

Bazine, N., Chénard-Poirier, L.A., Battistelli, A. and Lagabrielle, M.-C. (2023), "Who is successful in career development? A person-centered approach to the study of career orientation profiles", Career Development International, Vol. 28 No. 6/7, pp. 772-792. https://doi.org/10.1108/CDI-11-2022-0301

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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