Keywords

age, employee attitudes, employee surveys, generation, tenure

 

Authors

  1. Teclaw, Robert PhD
  2. Osatuke, Katerine PhD
  3. Fishman, Jonathan PhD
  4. Moore, Scott C. PhD
  5. Dyrenforth, Sue PhD

Abstract

This study estimated the relative influence of age/generation and tenure on job satisfaction and workplace climate perceptions. Data from the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Veterans Health Administration All Employee Survey (sample sizes >100 000) were examined in general linear models, with demographic characteristics simultaneously included as independent variables. Ten dependent variables represented a broad range of employee attitudes. Age/generation and tenure effects were compared through partial [eta]2 (95% confidence interval), P value of F statistic, and overall model R2. Demographic variables taken together were only weakly related to employee attitudes, accounting for less than 10% of the variance. Consistently across survey years, for all dependent variables, age and age-squared had very weak to no effects, whereas tenure and tenure-squared had meaningfully greater partial [eta]2 values. Except for 1 independent variable in 1 year, none of the partial [eta]2 confidence intervals for age and age-squared overlapped those of tenure and tenure-squared. Much has been made in the popular and professional press of the importance of generational differences in workplace attitudes. Empirical studies have been contradictory and therefore inconclusive. The findings reported here suggest that age/generational differences might not influence employee perceptions to the extent that human resource and management practitioners have been led to believe.