The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry

This paper studies the discrepancy between pre-entry job expectation and post-entry actual perception of new employees in the Hong Kong retail banking industry. It investigates what new employees' expectations and perceptions are and how and why they diverge. Also, the relationship of the discr...

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Main Author: Tong, Shuk Chong
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2007
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20986/
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author Tong, Shuk Chong
author_facet Tong, Shuk Chong
author_sort Tong, Shuk Chong
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper studies the discrepancy between pre-entry job expectation and post-entry actual perception of new employees in the Hong Kong retail banking industry. It investigates what new employees' expectations and perceptions are and how and why they diverge. Also, the relationship of the discrepancy between expectation and perception and work outcomes (job satisfaction and intention to quit) is found out. From the present study, it is found that new employees do not always hold inflated job expectations which suggested by past studies. They hold both higher and lower expectations compared to the reality in different job aspects. The significant areas of discrepancy which affect work outcomes are pay, task importance, work pressure, encouragement of free speech and fairness to employees. Lastly, suggestions to align discrepancies in these areas are also provided in this paper.
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format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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spelling nottingham-209862018-01-14T23:47:59Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20986/ The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry Tong, Shuk Chong This paper studies the discrepancy between pre-entry job expectation and post-entry actual perception of new employees in the Hong Kong retail banking industry. It investigates what new employees' expectations and perceptions are and how and why they diverge. Also, the relationship of the discrepancy between expectation and perception and work outcomes (job satisfaction and intention to quit) is found out. From the present study, it is found that new employees do not always hold inflated job expectations which suggested by past studies. They hold both higher and lower expectations compared to the reality in different job aspects. The significant areas of discrepancy which affect work outcomes are pay, task importance, work pressure, encouragement of free speech and fairness to employees. Lastly, suggestions to align discrepancies in these areas are also provided in this paper. 2007 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20986/1/lixsct07.pdf Tong, Shuk Chong (2007) The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Tong, Shuk Chong
The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title_full The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title_fullStr The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title_full_unstemmed The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title_short The Expectation Gap? A Case Study of New Employee in the Hong Kong Retail Banking Industry
title_sort expectation gap? a case study of new employee in the hong kong retail banking industry
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20986/