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Applying the psychological contract to the management of volunteers in sport.

05/06/2012.

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Applying the psychological contract to the management of volunteers in sport.

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    1. Applying the psychological contract to the management of volunteers in sport. Geoff Nichols, Sheffield University Management School

    2. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 2 Structure The importance of volunteers in sport Application of the psychological contract to employees The nature of volunteering, in contrast to paid work Implications for applying the psychological contract to volunteers

    3. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 3 The importance of sports volunteers To help achieve government policies Expression of individual or collective identities Contribution to democratic structures.

    4. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 4 How many volunteers? 44% of adults volunteer formally (England) sport & exercise 3rd most important type of organization Sports clubs run by their members = 75% of sports volunteers [100,000 clubs] Major events 70,000 volunteers for London Olympics

    5. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 5 Psychological contract for employees As mutual promises Subjective Studied to help manage behaviour

    6. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 6 Types of contract / measurement Content transactional / relational By features written / unwritten etc. By how employees evaluate it

    7. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 7 Content exchange balance

    8. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 8 Issues in application to employees Free engagement v conflict of interests Trust a substitute for control Change with experience Usually just employees view not managers Dominant quantitative methods Attempts to generalize

    9. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 9 Psychological contract and volunteers Subjective experience with socio-cultural and institutional influences Nature of volunteering Contrast to paid work Illustrated with sports volunteers New research questions

    10. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 10 Volunteering as Leisure Unpaid work Activism Serious Leisure provision and expression of valued social identity

    11. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 11 Volunteering as Leisure

    12. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 12 Unpaid work - implications Effort bargain minus pay Manage volunteers like paid employees Motives a proxy for expected rewards A transactional contract is possible

    13. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 13 Activism - implications Focus on values of volunteers Aligned with those of organisation Values may extend to how the organization meets its objectives

    14. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 14 Serious leisure - implications Used to understand volunteers in small organizations Explains stalwarts Commitment self-identity from volunteering strong bond Changes transactional to relational

    15. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 15 3 types of leisure - implications Psychological contract understood through qualitative research Might be considerable variety on one organization e.g. a sports club Might be better to research them as a social gathering

    16. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 16 Influence of views of paid work Work / leisure couplet defined in relation to each other As co-operation / or as conflict? Less free will than leisure

    17. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 17 Views of paid work - implications If a conflict view of paid work, volunteers may resent management as manipulation under another name If a co-operation view management is effective organization But a different style of management may be expected by volunteers Need to understand volunteers and managers views

    18. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 18 Conclusions Psychological contract useful in understanding the relationship between volunteers and managers But mutual expectations will be influenced by experience of volunteering as leisure, and leisure as a contrast to paid work.

    19. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 19 Conclusions Difficult to generalize from employees Require qualitative research e.g. in sports clubs Compare views of volunteers and managers Different between event volunteers and sports clubs

    20. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 20 Some research questions Does a view of volunteering as leisure affect the PC? How and why do contracts change how can management influence this? Do views of employment affect PC in volunteering?

    21. 05/06/2012 The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications 21 Some research questions How do managers view the PC with volunteers? Is it different to employees? When volunteers manage volunteers can we understand this as a viable combination of psychological contracts a social relationship. e.g. sports club?

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