Managing high achieving information systems professionals

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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.

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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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