Defining the term new in new employee research
Author: Rollag, Keith1
Source: Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, Volume 80, Number 1, March 2007 , pp. 63-75(13)
Abstract:
Researchers and managers use the term `new' to describe organizational members who have recently joined an organization, but how long are arriving recruits considered `new employees', and what factors drive this new-to-old transition? In this paper I hypothesize that co-worker perceptions of an individual's `newness' in the organization are a function of (1) the individual's relative position in the firm's tenure distribution and (2) the frequency of interaction between the rater and the individual. To evaluate these hypotheses I conducted a sociometric survey among four entrepreneurial organizations (N=200), asking respondents to evaluate the newness of their co-workers. The results support both hypotheses, but suggest that relative tenure (defined as a member's percentile rank in the firm's tenure distribution) is the strongest predictor of organizational newness perceptions. More specifically, `new employees' are the 30% of the organization with the lowest tenure. This means that organizational growth and turnover have a major effect on how long arriving recruits are considered new employees, which in turn has implications for new employee research in areas like socialization, mentoring, training and career development.
