COMMENTARY
Advancing our understanding of successful aging at
work: A socioemotional selectivity theory perspective
Marc Cubrich* and Alexandra Petruzzelli
The University of Akron
*Corresponding author. Email: mmc140@zips.uakron.edu
In response to the aging workforce, researchers have increasingly identified the need to integrate
lifespan developmental perspectives into existing organizational theory. More specifically,
researchers have called for an investigation of the various mechanisms through which age affects
work-related outcomes and for theoretical frameworks to conceptualize successful aging at work
(Ng & Feldman, 2013; Zacher et al., 2018). One such avenue to understanding lifespan develop-
ment in the workplace, socioemotional selectivity theory (SST), has emerged as a preeminent the-
ory of social and emotional development (Carstensen, 1991, 1992, 2006; Carstensen et al., 1999).
Socioemotional selectivity theory provides an explanatory mechanism of how older adults make
social choices and addresses the dynamic role of time in predicting the goals that individuals pur-
sue and the social partners they seek to fulfill them (Carstensen et al., 1999). As such, SST offers a
theoretical lens to advance our understanding of successful aging at work.
The model of successful aging proposed by Kooij et al. (2020) in the focal article builds on
Heckhausen et al.’s(2010) motivational theory of lifespan development in which goal engagement
and disengagement processes are examined in the context of changing opportunities and con-
straints that covary with age. Viewing successful aging through the lens of SST enriches the model
in the focal article for at least four reasons. First, goal-directed behavior underlies both theories,
and each seeks to explain the way in which goal choice informs decisions about the allocation of
time and resources. Second, SST complements the theoretical underpinnings of the model
because, while the motivational theory of lifespan development outlines the processes of goal
engagement and disengagement, SST provides specific goal categories that are influenced by
an individual’s future time perspective. Third, given the emphasis on fit-seeking behavior, con-
sidering goal type should have a direct effect on the extent to which certain goals lead to percep-
tions of P-E fit, and these perceptions should vary with age due to its relationship with future and
occupational time perspective (Rudolph et al., 2018). Finally, practice recommendations to moti-
vate older workers based on SST offer a way to reduce anticipated or experienced misfit between
what an organization supplies and what an aging employee needs.
Ostensibly, the consideration and integration of SST offers an avenue to enrich the process
model of successful aging presented by the focal article. As such, the overarching goal of the pres-
ent commentary is to describe research relating to SST, emphasize the role of SST in understand-
ing successful aging at work, and provide specific practical recommendations to enhance P–E fit
based on the integration of the process model and SST.
Socioemotional selectivity theory at work
Socioemotional selectivity theory has emerged as a prominent motivational theory of lifespan
development and suggests that as individuals age, their future time perspective shifts such that
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology.
Industrial and Organizational Psychology (2020), 13, 369–373
doi:10.1017/iop.2020.71
https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/iop.2020.71
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