Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Response preference in organizational behavior research: do respondents to classical and internet surveys possess different psychological characteristics

Mestdagh, Steven
Buelens, Marc
Citations
Altmetric:
Publication Type
Working paper
Editor
Supervisor
Publication Year
2003
Journal
Book
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
1
Publication Begin page
Publication End page
Publication NUmber of pages
19
Collections
Abstract
The Internet has become a widespread tool for conducting research in organizational behavior. Little is known, however, of the psychological characteristics of Internet users. In the present study, differences in motivation, satisfaction, behavioral patterns and work outcomes are examined among respondents who had the choice of either filling in an online or a traditional pen-and-paper version of a large-scale Flemish survey (N=5853). Participants in both groups were mostly professional workers. After controlling for demographic variables, our results suggest that those who responded over the Internet place higher importance on opportunities for self-development and on assuming responsibility than those who opted for the pen-and-paper version. Moreover, Internet respondents appeared to be less satisfied with the content of their jobs and with their bosses. They also reported a significantly higher intention to leave the organization. Finally, the Internet group reported less compulsive work addiction, fewer health complaints, and less work-to-family conflict. The results allow us to conclude that Internet respondents more closely represent the image of the modern professional workforce, as often characterized in terms of shifting psychological contracts, values and career expectations. KEYWORDS: Internet Surveys, Organizational Behavior
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Emotional Intelligence
Citation
Knowledge Domain/Industry
DOI
Other links
Embedded videos