TY - JOUR
T1 - Does meaning-making help during organizational change?
T2 - Development and validation of a new scale
AU - van den Heuvel, Machteld
AU - Demerouti, Evangelia
AU - Schreurs, Bert H. J.
AU - Bakker, Arnold B.
AU - Schaufeli, Wilmar B.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Purpose - The purpose of this paper is first, to test the validity of a new scale measuring the construct of meaning-making, defined as the ability to integrate challenging or ambiguous situations into a framework of personal meaning using conscious, value-based reflection. Second, to explore whether meaning-making is distinct from other personal resources (self-efficacy, optimism, mastery, meaning in life), and coping (positive reinterpretation, acceptance). Third, to explore whether meaning-making facilitates work engagement, willingness to change, and performance during organizational change.Design/methodology/approach - Cross-sectional survey-data were collected from 238 employees in a variety of both public and private organizations.Findings - Confirmatory factor analyses showed that meaning-making can be distinguished from other personal resources, coping and meaning in life. Regression analyses showed that meaning-making is positively related to in-role performance and willingness to change, but not to work engagement, thereby partly supporting the hypotheses.Originality/value - The paper focuses on meaning-making that has not yet been studied empirically in organizational change settings. It shows that the new construct of psychological meaning-making is related to valuable employee outcomes including in-role performance and willingness to change. Meaning-making explains variance over and above other personal resources such as self-efficacy, optimism, mastery, coping and meaning in life.
AB - Purpose - The purpose of this paper is first, to test the validity of a new scale measuring the construct of meaning-making, defined as the ability to integrate challenging or ambiguous situations into a framework of personal meaning using conscious, value-based reflection. Second, to explore whether meaning-making is distinct from other personal resources (self-efficacy, optimism, mastery, meaning in life), and coping (positive reinterpretation, acceptance). Third, to explore whether meaning-making facilitates work engagement, willingness to change, and performance during organizational change.Design/methodology/approach - Cross-sectional survey-data were collected from 238 employees in a variety of both public and private organizations.Findings - Confirmatory factor analyses showed that meaning-making can be distinguished from other personal resources, coping and meaning in life. Regression analyses showed that meaning-making is positively related to in-role performance and willingness to change, but not to work engagement, thereby partly supporting the hypotheses.Originality/value - The paper focuses on meaning-making that has not yet been studied empirically in organizational change settings. It shows that the new construct of psychological meaning-making is related to valuable employee outcomes including in-role performance and willingness to change. Meaning-making explains variance over and above other personal resources such as self-efficacy, optimism, mastery, coping and meaning in life.
KW - Employees
KW - Motivation(psychology)
KW - Organizational change
KW - Resource
U2 - 10.1108/13620430910997277
DO - 10.1108/13620430910997277
M3 - Article
SN - 1362-0436
VL - 14
SP - 508
EP - 533
JO - Career Development International
JF - Career Development International
IS - 6-7
ER -