Perceived Causes of Career Plateau in the Public Service
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Career Plateau Research across the Decades
Scale | Study |
---|---|
Milliman (1992) (similar or derivative) | Allen et al. (1998); Allen et al. (1999); Armstrong-Stassen and Ursel (2009); Drucker-Godard et al. (2015); Cheng and Su (2013); Ettington (1997); Ettington (1998); Godshalk and Fender (2015); Helimen et al. (2008); Hurst et al. (2017); Jiang (2016); Jung and Tak (2008); Lapalme et al. (2009); Lentze and Allen (2009); McCleese et al. (2007); McCleese and Eby (2006); Milliman (1992); Wang et al. (2014); Wen and Liu (2015); Wickramasinghe and Jayaweera (2010); Xie et al. (2015, 2016) |
Tremblay (1993) | Tremblay and Roger (1993); Tremblay et al. (1995); Tremblay and Roger (2004) |
Chao (1990) | Chao (1990); Lee (2003); Lemire et al. (1999) |
Corzine (1992) | Corzine et al. (1994) |
Nachbagauer (2002) | Nachbagauer and Riedl (2002) |
Carnazza (1981) | Carnazza et al. (1981) |
Chay (1995) | Chay et al. (1995) |
Rotondo (2000) | Rotondo and Perrewe (2000) |
Sylvia (1986) | Sylvia and Sylvia (1986) |
Unclear | Beheshtifar and Modaber (2013); Ettington (1997) |
2.2. Discrimination as a Cause of Being Career Plateaued
3. Methodology
3.1. Sample
3.2. Interview Design
3.3. Echo Sorting and Content Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Inability to Demonstrate Experience, Abilities and Education
“Naturally, some people do better with stress. They can handle the pressure of higher positions and not let it grind them down. They were just born like that and they have an edge”. These natural abilities include confidence and communication where people “shine in their environment and get noticed”.
“It makes me feel good to see someone promoted because of their experience and education. It helps counter the negativity I carry when I think of people getting ahead because they are simply willing to serve up. A fair outcome is a good outcome, whether you are the winner or loser”.
4.2. Competitive Skills: Inability to Demonstrate Skills in Getting Recruited and Selected
“It is just a game where you know what they want to hear in the job advertisement which outlines the position requirements and key assignments. So, they are going to ask what you would do and all you have to do is tell them what you would do in a 1, 2, 3 style. Then, to be smart, you should talk about the acceptable practices which usually mean involving people, listening to staff, and recognizing diversity and inclusion issues … This is what they need to hear because, in the review afterwards, they will be saying things like: How do they involve staff? How would they respond to minorities and indigenous people?”
“they will ask: can you offer an example where you worked in a team and it really worked well and tell us what you did to help the team. And, could you offer an example of working in a team where it did not go well and what your role was?” The bottom line here is that “you need to get all your stories ready ahead of time to put forward the story they are looking for in the interview”.
4.3. Favoritism and Systemic Biases as a Reason for Being Plateaued
“… of course, I’ve received the benefit of the doubt a few times, I can’t pretend I didn’t benefit from having friends”, and another asked: “Why shouldn’t they favour me? I’m a known performer so why wouldn’t they favour me?”
4.4. Systemic Biases
4.5. Impact of Being Plateaued
4.6. Limitations
5. Discussion
Impacts
6. Conclusions
- Needing to connect to people who can help you progress in your career, but being unable to meet the right people who can help.
- Needing experience to be promoted, but being plateaued and not promoted because of a lack of experience, but not having the chance to obtain a job to gain the experience necessary to be promoted.
- Needing to meet the requirement or criterion for career progression (i.e., education level as a foundational criterion), but not having the degree or education individuals or groups perceive as being more important.
- Needing to illustrate the effectiveness of one’s skills for the job, but not being promoted due to being unable to demonstrate one’s true skills because of not being good at answering questions in the interviewing and the selection process.
- Needing to be connected to the values of the people in charge, but being plateaued because of biases, culture, or personal preferences or the group thinking of those in power.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Job Experience 37 Participants 49 Comments | -Experience is a basic requirement: You need to have experience related to the work and be able to demonstrate this during an interview. Every job posting has an experience requirement. Sometimes the posting language allows the waiving of requirements through an equivalency clause; you have to have recent experience which is relevant to the team. -Experience is hard to get when you are new. Even though experience is a requirement, it is hard to get experience when you don’t have experience. -How can you get a management job if they say you have to management experience to apply? It is hard to figure out what experiences are more important. |
Education 32 Participants 41 Comments | -Education is seen as a foundation. You won’t get the interviews for a promotion or even lateral movement if you don’t have the right education. It is ve logical and makes sense … Really, education is the foundation of a good society … it depends entirely on what job you’re doing. If it is a financial job and they require a CPA, then you really need it to understand government’s accounting and financial requirements. -Training is important to support the skills you need to do the job and government does a really good job of providing work training with online courses … I went back to school to get my master’s degree so I could be more competitive. -Education is a requirement, but not always; The education requirement can be waived. Usually, an advanced degree is required for senior positions though sometimes they give the escape clause of ‘equivalent’ education and experience. But you don’t see equivalent education and experience for a law degree. The lawyers won’t let that happen … I have been screened out of job opportunities because I didn’t have the right education, as my history degree isn’t valued the way it should be. -My degree from China isn’t valued the same as Canadian degrees … Not everyone can afford the time and money to go back to school. |
Skills and Abilities (Knowledge) 29 Participants 36 Comments | -Knowledge or Skills and abilities are important. You need to have the right skills to do the job. Without the skills and abilities, you won’t be successful. Managers won’t give you the chance to have the job to start with and if you did somehow manage to land the job you will struggle. -You need people who really know what they are doing, people with knowledge and insight. -We often use written assessments to gain an understanding of the candidate’s policy knowledge. -You need to understand how things are really done. If you’re working with FN communities, you need to understand how we do things. You must know the people you are working with. -Knowledge is hard to define; Knowledge relevant to the job is different than education and harder to judge; Knowledge is a very subjective criterion and is often judged by skills and abilities, but what is that? How do you gain knowledge other than through experience? Knowledge is common sense and ability to do the right thing, but how can we assess that? |
Fair Hiring and Promotion Process 12 Participants 21 Comments | -A fair process is perceived to be fair; I have been in a few competitions where I was well prepared but was simply beat out by a better candidate; When I can see that the person who beat me is capable, I’m fine with that. -I’m a glass half full person so I realize that these things happen. I have been in a few competitions where I could tell I lacked what they were looking for. Sometimes, it was a little annoying as they could see that I didn’t have the qualifications, but they still interviewed me, sort of wasted everyone’s time but they do get a better candidate. -It makes me feel good to see someone promoted because of their experience and education. It helps counter the negativity I carry when I think of people getting ahead because they are simply willing to serve up. A fair outcome is a good outcome, whether you are the winner or loser. |
Interview Skills 16 Participants 16 Comments | -I think if we really look at the system and the way it is set up now, we will see that the system is promoting and hiring based on how people interview, not how they do the job. -People who can talk well and make their points well in an interview will do better. -It’s an experience thing. Not experience with the job but experience with interviews. Like anything, the more you do it the better you get. But if you don’t get screened in you don’t get the experience. Some people benefit from the experience of interviewing and get more and those of us who don’t we just fall further behind. The rich get richer they say. |
Giving Panel the Answers They Want 13 Participants 13 Comments | -I went in totally with the wrong attitude. I knew the area and I knew the panel members knew my work, so I didn’t cover my answers in the detail I needed to. -One time, early in my career, I didn’t know how the system worked. I didn’t realize when you do an interview you have to say specifically what you did and cover off everything, you can’t leave anything out or assume they know you know how to do the job, even if they do. You must use the exact words and phrases they are looking for or you won’t be successful. -The panel is forced to use what information you give. Even if they know you could do the job and do it well, even if you have done the job in the past, they aren’t allowed to consider that stuff. It is a stupid system that ignores reality. |
Preparation and Confidence 11 Participants 14 Comments | -Not preparing is a killer because people don’t answer questions well and often show they are not prepared because of their lack of confidence. Preparation creates confidence and this is so important in hiring and promotion. -When I know I haven’t had the time to prepare and get myself ready, I know that I’m not bringing my A game to the interview. I start to feel less confident even before going in. Not being prepared costs me an opportunity in a couple of cases … -If you are really busy at work and have young children, how do you find the time to prepare? |
Having the Right Competency Examples 9 Participants 9 Comments | -They ask you to tell them about this time when you did something, to explain how you would be good at the job, but it is really about examples that fit their competency stuff. -The entire competency framework as it is used for interviews in government requires you to tell a story that illustrates the competency. But I don’t think of things that way, more like what I do for the job. So, it kinda gets lost in translation: The challenge is that this approach gages your ability to tell a story around a competency. It doesn’t find your talents. |
Personal Bias 40 Participants 109 Comments Favoritism and discrimination arising from individual beliefs and actions | -People promote their friends; I don’t want to say this happens in the majority of cases, but a significant number of people who get hired by their friends -A manager who I don’t like asked me if I was going drinking with the ED after work. I said “no” and he looked me and said “well that’s a career limiting move” -We all have a bias to hire those whose work we know and we are familiar with -If you aren’t in the club, you never will be and you must get into the executive club -A friend of mine once shared that a colleague was making fun of my Chinese accent and laughing at me. -A boss of mine didn’t see my overseas education as valuable -I feel I don’t have as much of a future in the Ministry as others because I’m First Nations (Indigenous). -A black woman like myself doesn’t get into the network the same way white people do. How can I be in the social network when I’m not in the room (not invited to places where the important networks are)? -In China, we rely on a principle called “Face”, which highlights “relationships, reputation, and connections”. It’s central. So, if people are critical of people is hard for me. -Good looking people are more likely to be promoted. It sounds silly but it’s true. There was this DM who worked for one ministry who was always hiring good looking women. -My anxiety and introversion puts me at a real disadvantage, and is an invisible disability; it impacts my life and people make judgements about me -People are incredibly prejudiced and biased against heavy people. Obviously, I’m heavy. They judge me and my intelligence based on my weight. It is incredibly wrong and humiliating, but it is really happening. |
Systematic Bias 30 Participants 44 Comments Bias and discrimination built into system processes or deeper social, cultural or organizational issues beyond the individual | -The hiring approach using events-based interviews and competency frameworks are biased. They discriminate in favor of fitting in rather than illustrating diversity. -A good answer to questions in a Western culture is to illustrate what you did and your personal strengths over others. This works against some other cultures in interviews. -Culture plays a very big role but most people in the majority culture have no idea. To them it is invisible. Everything from education, interview processes, work examples … it has biases built on a foundation of western and male beliefs. -Panel members seem to collude or are trained to score based on what our culture feels is important. Credit is given to answering questions well and presence rather substance -Political connections protect people from being fired and increase chances for promotion. Alignment with Minister or party is a huge source of power and privilege. -Fit is important. Right now, the important words are “enhancing diversity, equality, and equity”, and “protecting the environment”. -We lack a culture respecting diversity. To me, diversity is attention to different cultures and styles; FN experience or knowledge is not valued. I had to go to university to study non-traditional knowledge to get my job in government. -We have so few FN people in government. If fitting with a culture is important, how do we, as First Nations, be recognized? We illustrate different values. -Women communicate differently than men, something which is not recognized here. -Young leader programs discriminate against older employees disguised as some kind of merit or marketing exercise. |
Maladjustments in life and work because of favoritism and Discrimination 33 Participants 98 Comments | -It is sort of unbelievable how willing people are to prostitute themselves to the boss and how willing the boss is to take advantage of the situation. -My anxiety has been a significant challenge and I have seen a counsellor for my social awkwardness, and it helped some but is so discouraging because I can’t really control this. -There is 150 years of racism against indigenous people built into the system. What can you do? -People don’t understand how black people face barriers, from subtle to overt barriers. -I have given up. I don’t even try to get any new positions anymore. -The strategy now is to cling to my position and hold on to retirement. -Most don’t believe there is discrimination and others don’t want to hear it. Nobody wants to say they got ahead in a system that discriminates. They feel better thinking they got ahead in a fair system. -What can I do all by myself? Compromise myself and learning how to play the game? -I constantly try and build my network and suck up to the boss. It’s just smart; while I don’t know what to really do about it, we have to do something and I play the game more now. -Discrimination? Well, I don’t really know what to do about this. Not sure we will ever be free but we have to do something. I just ignore it and make the best of it by pretending I don’t notice. -I see these young people getting ahead and I have trouble sucking up to people who are a whole lot younger than me. But you do what you have to, even if it burns you to do so. |
Being plateaued because of lack of skills and abilities in a competition 29 Participants 52 Comments | -I take Temporary Appointments when I can to get new experience required for me to move up. -I try and get new experiences at work. I keep asking for a chance to work on new teams and doing new things. -I went back to school for more education to gain promotion opportunities. -I try and take online courses that are offered by the PSA, so that is something. -My goal is to learn new skills and competencies to bring to future jobs. -I personally go to experts or mentors for advice and seek out their knowledge and expertise. I ask biologists questions related to their expertise and value it. -If I don’t win because someone better beat me out, I still feel like there is a chance because it was legitimate |
Being plateaued because of I did not do how to compete 18 Participants 37 Comments | -I went about learning the system and the rules that impact hiring and promotion. I learned the game and how to play it. -I make more of an effort to prepare for interviews and try and change the way I prepare when I don’t win a competition because of my lack of preparation. -I practice for my interviews and write up my competency answers and prepare really well. I usually ask my wife to review my performance and help me with my answers. -The competencies need to be understood and used to spin the panel. |
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Darling, S.; Cunningham, B. Perceived Causes of Career Plateau in the Public Service. Adm. Sci. 2023, 13, 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13030073
Darling S, Cunningham B. Perceived Causes of Career Plateau in the Public Service. Administrative Sciences. 2023; 13(3):73. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13030073
Chicago/Turabian StyleDarling, Sean, and Barton Cunningham. 2023. "Perceived Causes of Career Plateau in the Public Service" Administrative Sciences 13, no. 3: 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13030073
APA StyleDarling, S., & Cunningham, B. (2023). Perceived Causes of Career Plateau in the Public Service. Administrative Sciences, 13(3), 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13030073