There seems to be quite a lot of interest about the whole idea of career shocks in the literature at the moment, so I thought I would try and unpick it to provide a summary.
What is a career
shock?
A career shock happens when an
unexpected external event makes you start to question your own career. A career shock can be defined as ‘a disruptive and extraordinary
event that is, at least to some degree, caused by factors outside the focal
individual’s control and that triggers a deliberate thought process concerning
one’s career’ (Akkermans, Seibert, & Mol 2018, p.4). From a career-theory perspective,
a career shock is a good example of the interplay between agency and structure –
the shock is external (that’s the ‘structure’ bit) but the response is internal
(which is where ‘agency’ comes in).
What kinds of shocks are there?
Career shocks can come from all angles. They can personal or
interpersonal, within the organisation or outside it. Examples include of the death of a parent, getting a promotion,
not getting a promotion, relocating because of a spouse’s job, having children,
illness, an economic crash, a pandemic, being made redundant, an earthquake, or
unexpected exam results. Career shocks can be negative, such as losing one’s
job or a close relative passing away, or positive, such as receiving an
unexpected promotion or receiving an award.
What is the impact of a career shock?
Career shocks can lead to both positive and negative changes.
Most research suggest that shock valence (ie the emotions you feel
about the shock itself) is related to career outcomes (Akkermans et al., 2018),
so positive career shocks lead to positive career outcomes and negative shocks to
negative outcomes. Kraimer et al. (2019) found that positive career shocks
(e.g., receiving a research reward), were related to higher levels of career
satisfaction and work engagement among academics, and Blokker et al. (2019) showed
that negative shocks undermine the relationship between career competencies and
perceptions of external employability in young professionals. Negative
career shocks have also been shown to have a detrimental impact on career
optimism and job security (Hofer, Spurk & Hirshi, 2020). But this is not always the case and
some studies show that negative shocks can lead to positive career outcomes, in
particular for those who weren’t all that happy in their jobs in the first place,
but who needed an external push to motivate them to take action. For example, Rummel et al. (2019)
demonstrated that negative shocks (e.g., being passed over for an anticipated
promotion), can lead to longer term positive outcomes such as starting a
successful business. And even positive shocks do not invariably lead to positive
outcomes – Korotov (2020) showed that positive shocks can cause ambivalent
reactions.
Why does a career shock have an impact?
The career shock
can have an impact on the choices an individual makes (eg Nair &
Chatterjee, 2020, Rummel et al., 2019), their psychological resources including
their levels of optimism (Hofer et al., 2020) or sense of agency or their levels
of person-job fit through an impact on either demands or resources (Pak et al.,
2020). The jarring impact of the shock can also trigger some in-depth reflection
about their career path.
Not all shocks are created equal: the bigger the shock, the more destabilising properties it
has.
An individual’s pre-existing feelings about work seems to influence
the kind of reaction that they had to the shock: People who were satisfied at
work pre-shock are more likely to be prompted to do some rational, conscious critical
reflection about their careers and their next steps. Those who were
dissatisfied pre-shock were more likely to fling themselves spontaneously into
action after the shock. For people who felt neutral about their jobs, a career
shock can make them realise that they weren’t happy – as the literature says,
the shock can surface latent disquiet.
Career shocks and Covid-19
COVID-19 has of
course caused a range of different kinds of career shock – both positive and
negative. Some people are working harder than ever, some people have lost their
jobs, some people can only work from home, and some people have to reinvent how
they work (Kniffin et al., 2020). For many the pandemic
has given them the space to reflect on their careers, and perhaps to re-evaluate
their priorities and values.
How to help
following a career shock:
The literature seems
to offer a number of suggestions for working with career shocks. First there
are some suggestions for things that people can do to shock-proof their careers
– traits or skills they can develop which will help them to cope if they do
face a shock:
- · Good
existing levels of psychological resources (social capital, human capital,
identity and resilience) can help people to cope better when facing unexpected
events.
·
High levels
of career adaptability make it more likely that people experiencing career
shocks (even negative ones) will end up thriving in their careers (Mansur &
Felix, 2020)
- ·
A protean career orientation
– one that is self-directed and values driven has been shown to help people to
cope when external events surprise them.
Then there are
suggestions for coaches working with career-shocked clients:
- ·
A career shock
often ends up being about a person’s values, and writing sessions can be a
great way to help people to identify and articulate what matters to them.
- · Time to think. The evidence is clear that taking a bit of time out
to reflect on what has happened, on your career journey so far and on your
hopes for the future can
- · Social support - both a significant other, and a social circle
both help with the process of critical reflection (Wordsworth et al., 2021)
- ·
Identity work is
what is needed to help people to capitalise on the disruption of the career
shock. A clearly articulated continuous identity is particularly important as a
way to maintain a sense of a coherent self whilst coping with a transition – a strong
sense of identity can help people to see a continuous thread between what they
used to do and what they are having to do now.
- ·
Developing career competencies can enable individuals to
better capitalize on positive career shocks (Blokker et al., 2019).
And finally,
ideas for organisations, to help ensure that their career-shocked employees stay
productive and engaged:
- ·
Mentoring can help
people to focus on possible future selves
- ·
Organisations who
allow or encourage job crafting can help people adjust their work to be more aligned
with their identities
- ·
Organisation or
supervisor can help them to a better P-O fit (Pak et al., 2020)
- ·
Job embeddedness can buffer the effect of negative shocks on
turnover, so keeping your teams close-knit can help (Burton et al., 2010)
Further Reading
Akkermans, J., S.
E. Seibert, and S. T. Mol. 2018. “Tales of the Unexpected: Integrating Career
Shocks in the Contemporary Careers Literature.” SA Journal of Industrial
Psychology 44 (1): 1–10. doi:10.4102/sajip.v44i0.1503
Akkermans, J., Seibert, S. E., & Mol, S. T. (2018). Tales
of the unexpected: Integrating career shocks in the contemporary careers
literature. SA Journal of Industrial Psychology, 44(1), 1-10.
Akkermans, J., Richardson, J., & Kraimer, M. (2020). The
Covid-19 crisis as a career shock: Implications for careers and vocational
behavior. Journal of Vocational Behavior https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001879120300592
Ghosh, R. (2021). Protean career orientation and career shock
due to the pandemic: HRD’s role in supporting intersectional identity work. Human Resource Development International, 1-3.
Hite, L. M., & McDonald, K. S. (2020). Careers after
COVID-19: challenges and changes. Human Resource Development International, 23(4), 427-437.
Hofer, A., Spurk, D., & Hirschi, A. (2020). When and why
do negative organization-related career shocks impair career optimism? A
conditional indirect effect model. Career development international.
Korotov, K. (2021). Executives and career shocks:
observations from coaching practice. Career Development International.
Mansur, J., & Felix, B. (2020). On lemons and lemonade:
the effect of positive and negative career shocks on thriving. Career Development International.
McKenna, S. (2021). Career shock: the profound effect of
COVID-19 on four Australian middle managers. LSE Business Review.
Pak, K., Kooij, D., De Lange, A. H., Meyers, M. C., & van
Veldhoven, M. (2020). Unravelling the process between career shock and career
(un) sustainability: exploring the role of perceived human resource management. Career Development International.
Rummel, S., Akkermans, J., Blokker, R., & Van Gelderen,
M. (2019). Shocks and entrepreneurship: a study of career shocks among newly
graduated entrepreneurs. Career Development International.
Wild, B. (2021). Covid-19 as a career shock and its influence
on career development for nurses in the Netherlands.
Wordsworth, R., & Nilakant, V. (2021). Unexpected change:
Career transitions following a significant extra-organizational shock. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 127, 103555.