Abstract
The research reported here is part of an ongoing, longitudinal study of career maturation and progression involving a national sample of information systems (I/S) professionals. The present study describes the job characteristic preferences and self-described personal attributes and work traits (dependent variables) of persons entering I/S careers with three levels of demonstrated academic achievement (independent variable). A second analysis combined the respondent's sex and level of achievement to create a gender-sensitive independent variable. While high achievers enter the workplace with distinguishing work-relevant profiles, the results suggest that the commonalities among high-achieving females and males vastly overshadow their differences. The results are discussed in terms of recruitment, socialization and commitment, motivation and performance, and career progression.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Smits, S. J., McLean, E. R., & Tanner, J. R. (1992). Managing high achieving information systems professionals. In Proceedings of the 1992 ACM SIGCPR Conference (pp. 314–327). Publ by ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/144001.144093
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