Modeling meaningful work: A complementary variable- and person-centered approach to the psychometric structure of meaningful work
Abstract
Meaningful work is an important yet complex organizational construct. Although meaningful workhas historically been conceptualized as a simple unidimensional construct, current meaningful worktheory considers meaningful work to be phenomenologically rich and complex. Unfortunately,the typical latent variable modeling approaches used to model meaningful work may bias resultsbecause they do not account for the psychometric complexity characterizing meaningful work.Towards this, the present study used the complementary person- and variable-centric approach tomodel the psychometric structure of meaningful work as operationalized by two popular measures(i.e., the Work and Meaning Inventory [WAMI] and the Comprehensive Meaningful Work Scale[CMWS]). Results provided evidence that the CMWS measures the complexity of meaningful work(i.e., multidimensional, hierarchical, and idiosyncratic nature). Although the more complex WAMImodels had good model fit, there was evidence for unidimensionality across archival samples and anewly collected sample. These results suggest that different operationalizations of meaningful workmay capture different aspects of the construct. Additionally, the person-centric LPA uncovered a3-Profile solution of meaningful work for the CMWS, and these profiles exhibited different patternsof relations with work and life outcomes. Together, the results suggest that researchers should bemodeling the psychometric complexity of meaningful work. Implications and future directions arediscussed.
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