The Impact of Onboarding Levels on Perceived Utility, Organizational Commitment, Organizational Support, andc

Authors

  • Amanda M. Meyer Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
  • Lynn K. Bartels Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

Keywords:

Organizational Psychology, Perceived Utility, model of onboarding levels

Abstract

This study examined the outcomes and assumptions of Bauer’s (2010) model of onboarding levels (Compliance, Clarification, Culture, and Connection). Specifically, we examined the impact of onboarding levels on subsequent work attitudes (i.e., perceived utility of onboarding, organizational commitment, perceived organizational support, and job satisfaction). Participants who were onboarded at the highest level, Connection, had higher perceptions of onboarding utility, organizational commitment, perceived organizational support, and job satisfaction. Bauer’s hierarchical assumption was supported, however our data suggests the frequency of occurrence of these levels is quite different. Organizations should design onboarding programs that provide all four levels of onboarding experiences.

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Published

2017-11-01

How to Cite

Meyer, A. M., & Bartels, L. K. (2017). The Impact of Onboarding Levels on Perceived Utility, Organizational Commitment, Organizational Support, andc. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 17(5). Retrieved from https://mail.articlegateway.com/index.php/JOP/article/view/1650

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Articles