Your browser does not fully support modern features. Please upgrade for a smoother experience.
Submitted Successfully!
Thank you for your contribution! You can also upload a video entry or images related to this topic. For video creation, please contact our Academic Video Service.
Version Summary Created by Modification Content Size Created at Operation
1 Stefano Toderi -- 563 2026-02-13 07:30:03 |
2 formatted Pearl Wu Meta information modification 563 2026-02-13 07:42:37 |

Video Upload Options

We provide professional Academic Video Service to translate complex research into visually appealing presentations. Would you like to try it?
Cite
If you have any further questions, please contact Encyclopedia Editorial Office.
Toderi, S.; Sarchielli, G. Career Anchors. Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59511 (accessed on 27 March 2026).
Toderi S, Sarchielli G. Career Anchors. Encyclopedia. Available at: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59511. Accessed March 27, 2026.
Toderi, Stefano, Guido Sarchielli. "Career Anchors" Encyclopedia, https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59511 (accessed March 27, 2026).
Toderi, S., & Sarchielli, G. (2026, February 13). Career Anchors. In Encyclopedia. https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59511
Toderi, Stefano and Guido Sarchielli. "Career Anchors." Encyclopedia. Web. 13 February, 2026.
Peer Reviewed
Career Anchors

The career anchor (CA) is a metaphor created by Edgar Schein to illustrate the role of patterns of self-perceived talents, motives, and values in guiding, stabilizing (i.e., anchoring), and integrating a person’s work career. With the early years of work experience, this pattern tends to stabilize into one of the possible CAs and plays two main roles: guiding the selection of specific occupations and work environments; shaping individual reactions to the actual occupation and work environment. Since Schein’s initial conceptualization, theoretical refinements have been proposed, suggesting that CAs can change over time and that multiple CAs can coexist. Although substantial evidence supports the theory’s key predictions, the available literature appears fragmented, with a primary focus on descriptive concerns. Actual measurement issues also limit the development of theoretical knowledge. This entry provides an updated overview of the central predictions related to CAs, aiming at promoting greater integration and coherence in research and practice.

career anchors career orientation inventory career preferences career choices career congruence
Around 50 years ago, Edgar Schein [1] studied 44 MBA students and their career progressions longitudinally, discovering that their work histories showed significant similarities in the motivations underlying their career decisions. Schein organized the qualitative content collected through interviews and analyzed how personal values and motives influenced career-related experiences. Despite the pressure exerted by organizations, the author recognized the power individuals have in shaping their work histories and identified five distinct patterns of talents, needs, and values, self-defined by the person, that he suggested serve to guide, integrate, and stabilize the individual’s career [1][2]. Focusing on the career-stabilizing role of the emerging pattern, the author used the metaphor of the Career Anchor (CA hereinafter) to describe and name the personal emerging pattern. The most innovative aspect of Schein’s conceptualization lies in the simplification of the reality and complexity of individual work histories, obtained through the development of the taxonomy of anchors. This classification clarifies what anchors individual career decisions and suggests predictions about expected outcomes.
In the more recent decades, career research has placed increasing emphasis on internal or subjective career characteristics, and the term career orientations is widely used to refer to a variety of personal (e.g., career capitals, career competencies, career resources) and environmental factors that support people’s proactivity and self-direction in constructing their work history [3][4]. In this scenario, the concept of CA remains widely prevalent in the scientific literature, particularly in studies examining how an individual’s values, beliefs, attitudes, and motivations shape their career [5]. However, the available literature appears fragmented and driven by somewhat different objectives. Furthermore, to our knowledge, there are no recent reviews on the topic, with the sole exceptions of Cabot and Gagnon [6] as well as Woldeamanuel [5]. However, the former is limited to studies focused on information technology professionals, and the latter is a “scientometric” analysis primarily oriented towards mapping the characteristics of published research (e.g., main topics, keywords, geographic areas, trends in the number of publications).
With this entry, we do not aim to provide an exhaustive review of the existing literature but rather to highlight and systematize the main knowledge available on the key predictions of the CA concept and methodological issues, promoting greater integration and coherence in research and practice. The entry is divided into three parts: the conceptual development of CAs, the methodological issue, and the knowledge available regarding the model’s key predictions.

References

  1. Schein, E.H. Career Anchors and Career Paths: A Panel Study of Management School Graduates; MIT Alfred P. Sloan School of Management: Cambridge, MA, USA, 1974.
  2. Schein, E.H. Career Dynamics: Matching Individual and Organizational Needs; Addison Wesley: Reading, MA, USA, 1978.
  3. Hirschi, A.; Koen, J. Contemporary Career Orientations and Career Self-Management: A Review and Integration. J. Vocat. Behav. 2021, 126, 103505.
  4. Rodrigues, R.; Guest, D.; Budjanovcanin, A. From Anchors to Orientations: Towards a Contemporary Theory of Career Preferences. J. Vocat. Behav. 2013, 83, 142–152.
  5. Woldeamanuel, A.G. A Scientometric Analysis of Career Anchor/Orientation Research from 1975 to 2023. Future Bus. J. 2024, 10, 74.
  6. Cabot, C.; Gagnon, S. Understanding the Career Dynamics of IT Professionals in Digital Transformation Times: A Systematic Review of Career Anchors Studies. Int. J. Inf. Syst. Proj. Manag. 2021, 9, 44–60.
More
Upload a video for this entry
Information
Subjects: Psychology
Contributors MDPI registered users' name will be linked to their SciProfiles pages. To register with us, please refer to https://encyclopedia.pub/register : Stefano Toderi , Guido Sarchielli
View Times: 26
Online Date: 13 Feb 2026
Notice
You are not a member of the advisory board for this topic. If you want to update advisory board member profile, please contact office@encyclopedia.pub.
OK
Confirm
Only members of the Encyclopedia advisory board for this topic are allowed to note entries. Would you like to become an advisory board member of the Encyclopedia?
Yes
No
${ textCharacter }/${ maxCharacter }
Submit
Cancel
There is no comment~
${ textCharacter }/${ maxCharacter }
Submit
Cancel
${ selectedItem.replyTextCharacter }/${ selectedItem.replyMaxCharacter }
Submit
Cancel
Confirm
Are you sure to Delete?
Yes No
Academic Video Service