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Attracted or Repelled? Investigating Job Seekers' Perceptions of Obsessive Entrepreneurs

Title data

Streeb, Mirjam ; Baum, Matthias:
Attracted or Repelled? Investigating Job Seekers' Perceptions of Obsessive Entrepreneurs.
2024
Event: 84th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management (AOM 2024) , 9-13 August 2024 , Chicago, Illinois, USA.
(Conference item: Conference , Paper )
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5465/AMPROC.2024.14637abstract

Official URL: Volltext

Abstract in another language

This study investigates the impact of entrepreneurs' obsessive passion on potential job seekers, exploring whether it functions as an asset or a liability in startup recruitment. Drawing upon signaling theory and person–environment (PE) fit theory, we develop a contingent model that elucidates job seekers’ perceptions of “obsessive passion” as a recruitment signal taking their individual characteristics as boundary conditions for the interpretation of this signal into account. Our hypotheses were tested through a metric conjoint experiment involving 181 job seekers, yielding 2,896 decisions. The results indicate that the impact of an entrepreneur’s perceived obsessive passion on a venture’s attractiveness as a potential employer is contingent upon the characteristics of the job seeker. Specifically, signaling obsessive passion is only attractive to job seekers with highly proactive personalities and entrepreneurial self-efficacy; those who score low on these factors, as well as those who are risk-averse, tend to be repelled by such signals. These findings contribute to the literature on new venture recruitment by demonstrating how signals of obsessive passion aid in the self-selection of applicants, ultimately attracting employees well-suited for the entrepreneurial environment.

Further data

Item Type: Conference item (Paper)
Refereed: Yes
Keywords: Recruitment; organizational attractiveness; new venture; obsessive passion; applicant attraction; human capital; metric conjoint; signaling theory; PE fit theory
Institutions of the University: Faculties > Faculty of Law, Business and Economics > Department of Business Administration > Chair Business Administration XVI > Chair Business Administration XVI - Univ.-Prof. Dr. Matthias Baum
Result of work at the UBT: Yes
DDC Subjects: 300 Social sciences > 330 Economics
Date Deposited: 19 Aug 2024 07:12
Last Modified: 19 Aug 2024 07:12
URI: https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/90219