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The Ties that Bind: Social Networks, Person-Organization Value Fit, and Turnover Intention

Abstract (Summary)

This article examines the influence of social networks and value congruence on turnover intention among public and nonprofit employees. We argue that employees exist in social networks inside and outside their organization, and these networks shape employee attitudes and behavior. To illustrate this theory, we use turnover intention. A strong and positive intraorganizational social network characterized by good relations with and a sense of obligation toward other staff is hypothesized to make it more likely that employees will stay. A strong social network external to the organization is hypothesized to increase the opportunities that employees have to leave. Our findings offer strong support for the role of intraorganizational networks, but relatively weak support for the effect of external networks. We also propose that person-organization (P-O) fit shape turnover intention. Our results suggest that employees who experience a strong P-O fit in terms of value congruence are more likely to offer a long-term commitment. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

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Indexing (document details)

Subjects:Studies,  Employee turnover,  Social networks,  Employee attitude,  Correlation analysis,  Organizational behavior
Classification Codes9130 Experimental/theoretical,  6100 Human resource planning,  2500 Organizational behavior
Author(s):Donald P Moynihan,  Sanjay K Pandey
Document types:Feature
Document features:Diagrams,  Tables,  References
Publication title:Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory. Lawrence: Apr 2008. Vol. 18, Iss. 2;  pg. 205, 23 pgs
Source type:Periodical
ISSN:10531858
ProQuest document ID:1445782861
Text Word Count11689
DOI:10.1093/jopart/mum013
Document URL:

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