TY - JOUR
T1 - Job crafting in project management
T2 - Implications for project success and career satisfaction
AU - McKevitt, David
AU - Carbery, Ronan
AU - Collins, Seamus
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd, APM and IPMA
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - There is growing evidence that project managers are a heterogeneous group of people. Practitioners hold competing perspectives of project managing and have increasingly greater agency in the choice of tools and method used in their roles. Using job crafting theory, we contribute to the literature on project management careers by measuring how, and to what extent, project managers customise their jobs to better fit their motives, strengths and passions. Job crafting involves self-initiated behaviours that shape, mould, and change job design to better suit the individual. Using structural equation modelling and a sample of IT project managers (N = 245) the objectives of the paper seek to i) establish whether one's perspective of project management predicts job crafting behaviour, ii) explore how job crafting is used in project management and, iii) ascertain whether the benefit of job crafting is individual, project-based or both. The findings show that a value creation perspective of project management predicts job crafting behaviour. A performative link between task crafting and project success is established which in turn impacts long term career satisfaction. In contrast, relational crafting by project managers positively contributes to job satisfaction, but does not support project success.
AB - There is growing evidence that project managers are a heterogeneous group of people. Practitioners hold competing perspectives of project managing and have increasingly greater agency in the choice of tools and method used in their roles. Using job crafting theory, we contribute to the literature on project management careers by measuring how, and to what extent, project managers customise their jobs to better fit their motives, strengths and passions. Job crafting involves self-initiated behaviours that shape, mould, and change job design to better suit the individual. Using structural equation modelling and a sample of IT project managers (N = 245) the objectives of the paper seek to i) establish whether one's perspective of project management predicts job crafting behaviour, ii) explore how job crafting is used in project management and, iii) ascertain whether the benefit of job crafting is individual, project-based or both. The findings show that a value creation perspective of project management predicts job crafting behaviour. A performative link between task crafting and project success is established which in turn impacts long term career satisfaction. In contrast, relational crafting by project managers positively contributes to job satisfaction, but does not support project success.
KW - IT professionals
KW - Job crafting
KW - Project management
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85136131674
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijproman.2022.08.004
DO - 10.1016/j.ijproman.2022.08.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85136131674
SN - 0263-7863
VL - 40
SP - 741
EP - 749
JO - International Journal of Project Management
JF - International Journal of Project Management
IS - 7
ER -