Job Design

 Job Design – What? Why? How?

 



 







What is Job Design? It is setting up duties and tasks for a specific job, to be performed individually and/ or in groups.


The origin of the job design comes from Taylorism or scientific management. Fredrick Taylor tried to develop a science (Boundless.com, n.d.) for every job to succeed within an organization with below simple principles;

- Create a standard method for each job.

- Select a successful candidate and hire.

- Train selected workers.

- Support workers to do their best.

 

Why a Job Design?

- Job satisfaction

- Motivation of employees

- Enhances the quality of work life.

- Increase productivity for both organization and the employee.

- Manage Absenteeism

  

How to Job Design?

There are many techniques for job designing. Top of the techniques are (Armstrong, 2003) job rotation, job enlargement, job enrichment, self-managing teams, and high-performance work design.

 

Job Rotation: According to Durai (Durai, 2010), job rotation is a system that allows an employee to rotate from one job to another.

 

Job Enlargement: Adding extra responsibilities of the same level, into an existing job is called job enlargement.  This helps to meet the employee needs as well as the organization's requirements.

 

Job Enrichment: This refers to the best work practice challenge to an employee for better performance (Durai, 2010).

 

Why Job Design fail?

Workflow: This signifies the work balance between jobs. It depends on the product or service nature. As an example, when making an Aircraft the frame of an aircraft should be made before its doors and seats.

 

Ergonomics: This is concerned about the physical ability to perform the job of an employee. In this way, the primary consideration is handling the job physically.

 

Work practices: Work practices are a setup system of how employees perform their work. Traditional or collective systems of employees will be the reason for this.

 

Environmental Factors: The basis of designing have to consider employee abilities and availabilities as well as the social and cultural values.

 

 

Conclusion

Job design helps to achieve organizational goals as well as motivate employees.

  

References

Armstrong, M., 2003. A Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice. 9th ed. London: Kogan Page.

Boundless.com, n.d. Lumen Learning. [Online]
Available at: courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-management/chapter/job-design-and-motivation/#:~:text=Job%20design%20is%20the%20systematic%20and%20purposeful%20allocation,or%20scientific%20management%2C%20is%20the%20original%20job-design%20theory.
[Accessed 26 April 2021].

Durai, P., 2010. Human Resource Management. New Delhi: Pearson Education India.

Comments

  1. Job design involves organizing tasks, duties, and responsibilities into a unit of work to achieve certain objectives. 4 types of Job designing. That are Job Rotation, Job Simplification, Job Enlargement and Enrichment of Jobs. job design can be a rewarding process, for both the manager as well as for the employee.

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  2. good one Rumesh since every employees should know about this & it will helps to perform in the organization as well as Job enlargement, job enrichment, job rotation, and job simplification are the various techniques used in job design exercise. A well-designed job will encourage a variety of’ good’ body positions, have reasonable strength requirements, require a reasonable amount of mental activity, and help foster feelings of achievement and self-esteem. Achieving good job design involves administrative practices that determine what the employee does, for how long, where, and when as well as giving the employees a choice where ever possible.

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  3. It is the process of designing a job which enables the organization to achieve its goals while rewarding and motivating its employees.Job design has five characters.They are skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy and feedback.Job design influence motivation, quality performance, low absenteeism, low turnover, and job satisfaction.

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  4. Job design is a systematic approach to creating jobs that are both motivating for employees and add value to the organization. The latter is important – the role needs to fit in the organizational framework and help to contribute to organizational goals.

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  5. It is an interesting article. A job design can best be thought of as a blue print of the position in the organization. It outlines the essential duties and responsibilities that are expected of the employee and the basic purpose of the work the employee is expected to perform. If the HR management reflects the Job design in the context of personnel as a “cost” to the business, the organization will fail in the employee’s good motivation towards the organization.

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  6. ob design means to decide the contents of a job. It fixes the duties and responsibilities of the job, the methods of doing the job, and the relationships between the job holder (manager) and his superiors, subordinates, and colleagues.

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  7. Job design is a method to make work simple by dividing works. The approaches or methods of job design are work simplification, job rotation, job enlargement, job enrichment, socio-technical method, job characteristics model, etc

    ReplyDelete

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