| Literature DB >> 29155616 |
Jaap J A Denissen1, Wiebke Bleidorn2, Marie Hennecke3, Maike Luhmann4, Ulrich Orth5, Jule Specht6,7, Julia Zimmermann8.
Abstract
The notion of person-environment fit implies that personal and contextual factors interact in influencing important life outcomes. Using data from 8,458 employed individuals, we examined the combined effects of individuals' actual personality traits and jobs' expert-rated personality demands on earnings. Results from a response surface analysis indicated that the fit between individuals' actual personality and the personality demands of their jobs is a predictor of income. Conclusions of this combined analysis were partly opposite to conclusions reached in previous studies using conventional regression methods. Individuals can earn additional income of more than their monthly salary per year if they hold a job that fits their personality. Thus, at least for some traits, economic success depends not only on having a "successful personality" but also, in part, on finding the best niche for one's personality. We discuss the findings with regard to labor-market policies and individuals' job-selection strategies.Entities:
Keywords: individual differences; open data; open materials; performance; personality; socioeconomic status
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29155616 PMCID: PMC5774615 DOI: 10.1177/0956797617724435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976
Means, Standard Deviations, and Reliabilities of the Ratings of Actual Personality and Job Personality Demands
| Measure |
|
| Internal consistency (α) | Agreement ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actual personality (self-ratings) | ||||
| Extraversion | 4.86 | 1.13 | .65 | — |
| Agreeableness | 5.33 | 0.98 | .48 | — |
| Conscientiousness | 6.01 | 0.84 | .58 | — |
| Emotional stability | 4.33 | 1.18 | .60 | — |
| Openness to experience | 4.53 | 1.16 | .62 | — |
| Job-demanded personality (expert ratings) | ||||
| Extraversion | 4.58 | 0.84 | .86 | .72 |
| Agreeableness | 4.59 | 0.52 | .67 | .62 |
| Conscientiousness | 5.77 | 0.33 | .34[ | .48 |
| Emotional stability | 5.63 | 0.45 | .76 | .55 |
| Openness to experience | 4.18 | 0.67 | .69 | .75 |
Subsequent analysis indicated that the low internal consistency of the experts’ conscientiousness ratings was partly due to one rater having difficulty with the item “does a thorough job.” Excluding this item for this particular rater increased the average internal consistency to .51 across raters.
Fig. 1.Density distributions of actual and job-demanded openness to experience. Job demands and actual personality levels were assessed using the same metric, ranging from 1 (not at all true) to 7 (applies fully). Mostly overlapping distributions indicate that, theoretically, a large part of the population could achieve high congruence between their actual personality and the personality demands of their jobs.
Response Surface Parameters Indicating Effects of Personality-Job Combinations on Annual Income
| Parameter | Coefficient | 95% confidence interval |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extraversion | ||||||
| 0.058 | [0.021, 0.096] | .002 | ||||
| −0.009 | [−0.044, 0.027] | .642 | ||||
| −0.004 | [−0.041, 0.034] | .855 | ||||
| −0.031 | [−0.069, 0.006] | .105 | ||||
| Agreeableness | ||||||
| −0.008 | [−0.044, 0.029] | .678 | ||||
| −0.017 | [−0.037, 0.002] | .087 | ||||
| −0.059 | [−0.096, −0.022] | .002 | ||||
| −0.031 | [−0.054, −0.008] | .009 | ||||
| Conscientiousness | ||||||
| 0.106 | [0.070, 0.142] | < .001 | ||||
| 0.018 | [−0.009, 0.046] | .194 | ||||
| −0.102 | [−0.137, −0.066] | < .001 | ||||
| −0.022 | [−0.049, 0.005] | .117 | ||||
| Emotional stability | ||||||
| 0.092 | [0.052, 0.133] | < .001 | ||||
| 0.006 | [−0.024, 0.037] | .687 | ||||
| −0.013 | [−0.054, 0.028] | .534 | ||||
| −0.019 | [−0.050, 0.013] | .251 | ||||
| Openness to experience | ||||||
| 0.057 | [0.018, 0.096] | .004 | ||||
| −0.029 | [−0.047, −0.010] | .002 | ||||
| −0.054 | [−0.094, −0.014] | .009 | ||||
| −0.038 | [−0.063, −0.014] | .002 | ||||
Note: The a1 parameter (linear effect of the line of congruence) is positive when combinations of high traits and high job demands predict higher income levels. The a2 parameter (curvilinear effect of congruence) is positive when there is an income bonus for individuals whose very low or very high levels of traits are congruent with their jobs’ demands. The a3 parameter (linear effect of the line of incongruence) is positive when income is higher if people’s personality exceeds the level of job demands and negative when such combinations are associated with lower income. Finally, the a4 parameter (curvilinear effect of incongruence) is positive when individual deviations from the normative job demands are rewarded with higher income and negative when such nonfitting combinations are associated with lower income.
Fig. 2.Response surface indicating the association between income (vertical axis) and combinations of jobholders’ actual openness to experience and their jobs’ demands for openness to experience (the horizontal base). The shape of this response surface within this three-dimensional space is described by four statistical coefficients (a1–a4), whose values are shown at the top of the graph. The colors on the surface correspond to log-transformed, residualized income values, as indicated on the color key to the right. The note to Table 2 explains how to interpret these coefficients. The blue lines running across the surface are the line of congruence (front to back) and the line of incongruence (left to right).
Comparison of Average (Adjusted) Annual Income (in Euros) for Different Levels of Fit Between Actual and Job-Demanded Personality
| Trait | Combination of actual and
job-demanded personality | Fit bonus | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LH | MM | HL | LH and HL mean (incongruent) | ||
| Extraversion | 37,064 | 39,314 | 37,182 | 37,123 | 2,191 |
| Agreeableness | 37,098 | 39,150 | 33,330 | 35,214 | 3,935 |
| Conscientiousness | 39,373 | 36,566 | 34,035 | 36,704 | −138 |
| Emotional stability | 37,180 | 37,574 | 34,878 | 36,029 | — |
| Openness | 35,513 | 38,919 | 35,863 | 35,688 | 3,231 |
Note: Income levels were adjusted for covariates but were not log-transformed. For both job-demanded personality and actual personality, scores were categorized as “low” (L; lower than 1 SD below the average demanded or actual level), “medium” (M; from 1 SD below the average up to, but not including, 1 SD above the average), or “high” (equal to or higher than 1 SD above the average). These classifications were then used to create two noncongruent groups for each personality trait: one in which jobholders’ actual level of the trait was low and the job-demanded level was high (LH) and one in which jobholders’ actual level of the trait was high and the job-demanded level was low (HL). The labels for the groups indicate the categorization of the jobholder and then the categorization of the job; for example, “LH” refers to individuals who had low levels of the indicated trait and jobs that demanded high levels of that trait. The fit bonus is reported only for those traits that had at least a marginally significant a4 parameter (p < .12).