Deakin University
Browse

How Career and Non-Work Goal Progress Affect Dual Earners' Satisfaction: A Whole-Life Perspective

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-29, 03:25 authored by Elisabeth Abraham, Marijke Verbruggen, Andreas Hirschi
Many career self-management models assume that career goal progress promotes satisfaction, but research on the topic has yielded mixed results. Adopting a whole-life perspective, this study examines how career and non-work goal progress relate to career, non-work, and life satisfaction and explores crossover effects and gender differences between dual-earner partners. We tested our research model using Actor-Partner Interdependence Modeling on a two-wave dataset of 190 heterosexual dual earners (i.e., 95 couples). Career goal progress was not related to any of the satisfaction indicators. For men, non-work goal progress was marginally positively related to career and non-work satisfaction and positively related to life satisfaction. For women, non-work goal progress was not related to any satisfaction indicator. Between partners, men’s non-work goal progress was positively related to women’s non-work and life satisfaction, whereas women’s career goal progress was negatively related to men’s life satisfaction. Implications for research and career practice are discussed.

History

Journal

Journal of Career Development

Volume

51

Pagination

164-182

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

0894-8453

eISSN

1556-0856

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

SAGE Publications