Factors Leading to a Satisfying Career in Airport Management: Evidence from Airport Managers in Norway by Eirik Holdø Bachelor of Business Administration University of Agder 2011 A thesis submitted to the College of Aeronautics at Florida Institute of Technology in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Aviation Airport Development and Management Melbourne, Florida May 2014 We the undersigned committee hereby approve the attached thesis Factors Leading to a Satisfying Career in Airport Management: Evidence from Airport Managers in Norway by Eirik Holdø ______________________________ ______________________________ William B. Rankin, Ph.D. Michael A. Gallo, Ph.D. Associate Professor Associate Professor Major Advisor Committee Member College of Aeronautics College of Aeronautics ______________________________ ______________________________ B. Andrew Cudmore, Ph.D. Stephen K. Cusick, J.D. Associate Professor Associate Professor Committee Member Graduate Program Chair College of Business College of Aeronautics Abstract Title: Factors Leading to a Satisfying Career in Airport Management: Evidence from Airport Managers in Norway Author: Eirik Holdø Major Advisor: William B. Rankin, Ph.D. The purpose of this study was to identify factors that influence a person to choose airport manager as a professional career and how these factors relate to the level of satisfaction the person experiences with this career choice. By using a correlational methodology with an explanatory design, this study examined the influence of early aviation interests, demographics, health factors, formal education, and other aviation experiences on Norwegian airport managers’ career choice and its relationship to their level of career satisfaction. A sample of N = 39 airport managers at Norwegian commercial service airports were surveyed. To assess the relationship, a multiple regression analysis was conducted. The result showed that by knowing a person’s early aviation interests, age, gender, family/friends’ influence, years of schooling, formal education, and airport size, one has 50% of the information needed to perfectly predict that person’s satisfaction in the airport manager profession. Moreover, it was found that females had a significantly higher career satisfaction score than their male counterparts. In addition, managers at large airports had a mean career satisfaction score that was significantly higher than the overall grand mean of all 39 airport managers working at the four types of airports. iii Table of Contents List of Keywords ................................................................................................... vii List of Figures ....................................................................................................... viii List of Tables ........................................................................................................... ix Chapter 1: Introduction .......................................................................................... 1 Problem Statement ......................................................................................... 1 Operational Definitions .................................................................................. 1 Background .................................................................................................... 3 Research Questions and Hypotheses .............................................................. 7 Research questions. ............................................................................ 7 Research hypotheses. ......................................................................... 8 Potential Significance and Generalizability of the Study .............................. 9 Potential significance of the study. .................................................... 9 Generalizability of the study. ............................................................. 9 Limitations and Delimitations ...................................................................... 10 Limitations. ...................................................................................... 10 Delimitations. ................................................................................... 11 Chapter 2: Literature Review ............................................................................... 12 Introduction .................................................................................................. 12 Airport Management .................................................................................... 12 Factors Influencing Career Choice............................................................... 16 Family and friends influence. ........................................................... 16 Interests influence. ........................................................................... 19 Factors Influencing Career Choice in Aviation ........................................... 20 Professional pilots. ........................................................................... 20 Airport managers. ............................................................................. 21 iv Career Satisfaction ....................................................................................... 27 Age. .................................................................................................. 27 Organization size. ............................................................................. 28 Gender. ............................................................................................. 28 Summary ...................................................................................................... 28 Chapter 3: Methodology ........................................................................................ 30 Population and Sample ................................................................................. 30 Instrumentation ............................................................................................ 31 KAAS part A – early interests in aviation. ...................................... 32 KAAS part B – attributes and attitudes survey. ............................... 32 KAAS part C – general information. ............................................... 33 Validity and reliability. .................................................................... 33 Procedures .................................................................................................... 34 Research methodology. .................................................................... 34 Procedures. ....................................................................................... 34 Threats to internal validity. .............................................................. 37 Data Analysis ............................................................................................... 39 Statistical procedures. ...................................................................... 39 Chapter 4: Results .................................................................................................. 41 Descriptive Statistics .................................................................................... 41 General demographics. ..................................................................... 41 Key attributes and attitudes survey. ................................................. 46 Inferential Statistics ...................................................................................... 52 Preliminary analysis. ........................................................................ 53 Primary analysis. .............................................................................. 57 Hypothesis testing. ........................................................................... 59 v Chapter 5: Conclusions, Implications, and Recommendations ......................... 64 Summary of Findings ................................................................................... 65 Conclusions and Implications ...................................................................... 65 Early aviation interests. .................................................................... 66 Demographic factors. ....................................................................... 66 Health factors. .................................................................................. 68 Formal education. ............................................................................. 68 Other aviation experiences. .............................................................. 70 Airport size. ...................................................................................... 70 Career satisfaction. ........................................................................... 71 Recommendations ........................................................................................ 71 Recommendations for practice. ........................................................ 72 Recommendations for future research. ............................................ 72 References ............................................................................................................... 75 Appendix A: Tables ............................................................................................... 81 Appendix B: Figures .............................................................................................. 88 Appendix C: Research Questionnaire .................................................................. 93 Appendix D: IRB Application ............................................................................... 99 Appendix E: Email Text ...................................................................................... 105 Appendix F: Informed Consent Form ............................................................... 107 Glossary ................................................................................................................. 109 vi List of Keywords Airport management Airport managers in Norway Career development Career satisfaction Factors influencing career choice vii List of Figures Figure 2.1: Byers’ (2004) revised hypothesized model ........................................... 25 viii List of Tables Table 3.1: Sample versus Population ....................................................................... 31 Table 4.1: Summary of Descriptive Statistics .......................................................... 41 Table 4.2: Demographics by Gender ....................................................................... 42 Table 4.3: Pilot Certificate Currently Held .............................................................. 43 Table 4.4: Formal Education .................................................................................... 43 Table 4.5: Other Formal Educations ........................................................................ 44 Table 4.6: Former Positions in Airport Management .............................................. 45 Table 4.7: Decision to Become an Airport Manager ............................................... 46 Table 4.8: Other Decisions to Become an Airport Manager .................................... 46 Table 4.9: Aviation-Related Activities .................................................................... 48 Table 4.10: Perception of Influence on Career Development .................................. 50 Table 4.11: Career Satisfaction ................................................................................ 51 Table 4.12: Variables Measured on the Questionnaire ............................................ 53 Table 4.13: Resolution for Missing Data ................................................................. 55 Table 4.14: Variables Omitted from the Regression Analysis ................................. 57 Table 4.15: Variables Included in the Regression Analysis .................................... 58 Table 4.16: Overall Multiple Regression Analysis .................................................. 59 ix
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