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This thesis explores the issue of why female managers’ commitment is so often reported
as being less of that of males, despite research evidence that there is no gender
difference in levels of commitment. No previous research was found which reported
managerial meanings of “commitment”, usually conceptualised with an affective
component resulting in loyalty and effort, and a continuance component, the desire to
stay in an organisation. Meanings of “commitment” in three major engineering companies
were elicited through interviews with 37 engineering managers in the UK and Sweden.
The sample included sixteen male/female pairs matched on age, qualifications and job
position, from top, middle and junior levels of management.
The meanings important to managers were the manifested behaviours of commitment at
work. The most common of the 36 elicited meanings were task delivery, putting yourself
out, involvement, and quality. Overall, male meanings were more similar to top managers’
meanings than female meanings. Top women’s meanings were similar to those of top
men, sharing meanings of being proactive/using initiative, being ready for challenge,
being creative/innovative, and being business aware. More women overall gave
meanings oriented towards the organisation, particularly good citizen behaviours, which
would be less visible to managers, whilst more men overall gave meanings, benefiting
themselves as well as the organisation, which were very active and highly visible. Five
types of commitment meanings were identified: Virtuous, Volunteer, Virtuoso, Vanguard
and Gender-Shared.
In a later questionnaire, the sample were asked to rate the importance of their 36
meanings of commitment in terms of their own view and their perceived view of how their
organisation would rate them. Through gaps between individual and perceived
organisational ratings, tensions were identified and mapped, providing a guide for an indepth
analysis of meanings with the greatest tensions, particularly on hours over the
norm perceived to be valued more by the organisation, and on getting balance, enjoying
work, thinking of oneself as well as the organisation, and being people-concerned.
Interviewees at all levels indicated the importance of getting work/nonwork balance, most
rejecting the notion of commitment meaning working additional hours. Attitudes to
managers seeking maternity/paternity leave were reported. Through the Swedish
comparison, a trend was identified that where most male managers take extended
paternity leave, the issue which is seen as a woman’s individual problem in the UK
becomes an organisational planning issue in Sweden. Thus, perceived lesser
commitment is transformed into less unplanned availability for a short period.
The process of commitment assessment has also been explored and a number of
dimensions drawn out, particularly the tacit nature of the evidence, the subjectivity of
assessment, and the manager’s susceptibility to influence. These affect the way in which
commitment behaviours are interpreted by the manager, as both males and females use
impression management strategies to demonstrate their commitment.
The contribution of this thesis is to the commitment field, in identifying managers’
meanings of commitment, and to the women in management field, where evidence is
presented of the differences in male and female meanings of commitment, and the
importance of visibility of commitment to managers. As women’s meanings are less
visible than those of men in this sample, this suggests an explanation of why women’s
commitment is still challenged. |
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