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PROFESSIONAL NETWORK IDENTIFICATION: SEARCHING FOR STABILITY IN TRANSIENT KNOWLEDGE WORK
Journal article   Peer reviewed

PROFESSIONAL NETWORK IDENTIFICATION: SEARCHING FOR STABILITY IN TRANSIENT KNOWLEDGE WORK

Robert C. Litchfield, Giles Hirst and Daan Van Knippenberg
The Academy of Management review, v 46(2), pp 320-340
01 Apr 2021

Abstract

Business Business & Economics Management Social Sciences
Precarious employment arrangements are increasingly common for knowledge workers, which challenges the construction of traditional work identifications. As transient work crosses both organizational and professional boundaries, individuals may seek stability in their self-definitions by identifying with core, repeated elements of the temporary relationships that they form again and again in their work lives-a notion we capture in proposing the concept of "professional network identification" (PNI). Developing the concept of PNI, we describe how it establishes coherence in self-conception in an environment of weakening traditional identifications. Relative to traditional forms of work identification, PNI leads individuals to engage with and disengage from relationships more swiftly, to prefer transient over more stable work relationships, and to be less constrained by the norms, values, and interests of a specific organization, profession, or relationship at work. This benefits individuals and organizations by facilitating productive outcomes in transient knowledge work, including proactive behavior and creativity. Because it reflects a fundamental untethering of individuals and organizations, PNI may also motivate individual behaviors that may be difficult for employers to anticipate or understand, particularly where it concerns the management of knowledge resources.

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Business
Management
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