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Unpacking personal adaptability at work.

Publication: Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies
Publication Date: 01-FEB-08
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access

Article Excerpt
Adaptability is a key competency for career success. In this article, the authors examine how individual adaptability is associated with the accrual of human capital, the organization of the work environment, and the characteristics of individuals. They find that a number of factors are particularly strongly related to personal adaptability: gender, employability, education, and management support. By understanding the variety of factors that are intrinsic to individuals, those that can be developed within individuals, and work environment design, it seems possible to foster the development of personal adaptability in the workplace.

Keywords: adaptability; flexibility; work demands; stress; careers

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If we doubt that individuals struggle to adapt and accept change, we need only look at the amazing success of the "Who Moved My Cheese?" training and development materials (Johnson, 1998). The materials are popular for good reason. For many workers, the cheese has moved multiple times as organizations have been turned upside down. In place of neat hierarchical organizational charts, we find a mix of overlapping circles, process flows, and roles performed by associates, team members, coaches, and some who are not even company employees (Pearlman & Barney, 2000). New workplace technologies require change (Pulakos, Arad, Donovan, & Plamondon, 2000), and globalization demands understanding of new sets of cultural rules (Sanchez & Levine, 2001). Downsizing, rightsizing, and outsourcing all contribute to work transience and affirmation that organizations are not always built from jobs but from elements of work that need to be done (Bridges, 1994).

How, in a practical sense, should workers deal with all of this change and dislocation? How should they direct their careers, in the near and long term? Take charge. That is the advice given by career experts. It is "You & Co"; we are all self-employed (Bridges, 1994; Hakim, 1994). Our careers are "boundaryless" (Arthur & Rousseau, 1996), so opportunities transcend individual employment arrangements (Arthur, Khapova, & Wilderom, 2005).

In this turbulent environment, individuals navigate more career transitions and must be adaptable and competent learners (Hall & Chandler, 2005). However, personal career management and internal changes are more easily proclaimed than accomplished. Enacting a protean career in a shifting landscape of work may not be equally easy for all workers. The merit of such a new career form has been questioned by Scott (2003) who contends that "such a vision seems overly utopian and, at best, would characterize a minority of high-end careers .... Even Proteus needs some tangible social supports!" (p. 334). When faced with turmoil and change, why is it that some workers seem to thrive, whereas others suffer psychological or physical distress? In this article, we explore personal adaptability, one attribute that is important in dealing with change and taking charge of career direction (Heslin, 2005). By better understanding the correlates of adaptability in a turbulent workplace, the hope is to provide better insights for how individuals can develop this metacompetency and how it might be fostered through the structure of work.

Adaptability has been proposed by Hall (2002) as a career metacompetency, which along with personal identity forms the core of a protean career. It is, at its core, the capacity to change, including both the competence and the motivation to do so (Hall & Chandler, 2005).

Although recent work has addressed adaptive behaviors as they relate to particular types of jobs (Pulakos et al., 2000), beyond Hall's (2002) work, this concept has not been extensively developed in the careers literature (Goodman, 1994). Little empirical work has been done to measure and carefully explore its correlates, and there are still gaps in our understanding of the psychological resources that are needed as individuals make adult career transitions (Ebberwein, Krieshok, Ulven, & Prosser, 2004). Recently, Hall (2002) raised the question this way:

To what extent is adaptability a function of personality or age and state versus a skill and outlook that can be developed?.... From the literature, it appears that the answer is that it is both. There is a need for careful research that would measure a combination of key person variables and key situational variables, however, so that we might quantify the relative contributions of each set of variables to the variance in adaptability motivation and behavior. Although this question always seems to be lurking in the literature, it has not been addressed directly. (p. 231)

The purpose of this article is to address those questions. By building on the work of R.W. Morrison and Hall (2001) and Hall (2002), we propose that three groups of factors such as the characteristics of the individual, the characteristics of the work environment, and the measure of human capital are correlates (and perhaps antecedents) of personal adaptability (see Figure 1). The goal is to understand more clearly the genesis and support of personal adaptability in the workplace. As we unpack personal adaptability and the role of dispositional and situational correlates, we may provide a bit more guidance for those involved in the changing career landscape of the early 21st century.

Individual Adaptability

Adaptability is a personal quality that is important in handling ambiguity, dealing with uncertainty and stress, and in working outside traditional temporal and geographic boundaries (Pearlman & Barney, 2000).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

One might argue that adaptability is an innate part of individuals' personalities. Some careers research has followed this approach, seeing adaptability as a relatively inflexible disposition (Metz, 2004). At the same time, specific advice has been offered on how individuals might increase their personal adaptability (Heslin, 2005), assuming that adaptability is malleable. To explore these contrasting views, we propose that adaptability is shaped by a number of factors that are both internal and external to individuals. We argue that some individual factors such as age, race, and gender might influence adaptability insomuch as these attributes may set expectations according to social norms and produce differences in preferences and treatment in the workplace. Furthermore, we propose that the accrual of human capital in terms of occupational status, education, tenure in a work organization, experience working for a contract-based employer, and perceived employability affect one's sense of adaptability. We also argue that aspects of the work environment may increase or diminish one's self-reported adaptability. In this regard, we follow the lead of stress researchers, focusing on work demand, managerial support, and personal control (Karasek & Theorell, 1990; Van Yperen & Hagedoorn, 2003). Finally, we propose that the receipt of adequate workplace communication may enhance personal adaptability, as suggested by the literature on organizational change and restructuring (Brockner, 1992).

By investigating adaptability from this perspective, we believe that this inquiry will be important to human resources and career practitioners. For instance, if employability, education, and particular kinds of work experience make people more adaptable, then career coaches or perhaps those involved in leadership development might pay attention to the positive value of those experiences. Likewise, if work design and implementation factors such as personal control, managerial support, work demand, and communication are important in fostering adaptability, then there might be clear implications for action.

Individual Characteristics

Age

Is it the buster, boomer, or old guard employee who will be the most adaptable? Those of the Gen X generation, born between 1965 and 1981, differ in notable ways from their predecessors of the Silent Generation, born between 1925 and 1942, and the Baby Boomers, born between 1943 and 1964. Gen Xers tend to distrust hierarchy, like more informal arrangements, and prefer to make judgments based on merit rather than on status....

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