New Year’s Resolutions, Career Outlook, and Personality: An Investigation of Library Employees’ Goal Setting Behaviors

Authors

  • Amelia Anderson Old Dominion University
  • Leo Lo Old Dominion University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5860/llm.v33i2.7318

Keywords:

goal setting, performance objectives, resolutions, professional development, personal goals

Abstract

Many organizations use goal setting as a professional tool to get employees to achieve gains within the workplace. Many librarians in the United States participate in setting New Year’s resolutions as part of their personal goal-setting behavior. As studies indicate correlations between personal goal-setting behaviors, performance and attitude in professional roles, the researchers posit that learning how library employees set and achieve New Year’s resolutions could provide insight into how organizations can improve employee goal setting. An online survey was conducted in 2016 with 512 respondents. Results showed that respondents who self-reported as ambitious tend to be more successful in achieving their goals. Furthermore, ambitious respondents utilized goal-setting best practices more than less ambitious respondents. Respondents with a less clear sense of purpose in life tended to put in less effort or gave up more often than those with a clearer sense of purpose.

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Published

2019-03-02

How to Cite

Anderson, A., & Lo, L. (2019). New Year’s Resolutions, Career Outlook, and Personality: An Investigation of Library Employees’ Goal Setting Behaviors. Library Leadership & Management, 33(2). https://doi.org/10.5860/llm.v33i2.7318

Issue

Section

Peer Reviewed