Unit 4 Job Analysis and Job Design: Objectives
Unit 4 Job Analysis and Job Design: Objectives
Objectives
After completion of the unit, you should be able to:
l define Job Analysis (JA);
l understand the process of JA;
l discuss the methods of JA;
l discuss the concept of Job Description and Job Specification;
l identify techniques of collecting information for JA; and
l describe the process of Job Design and effects of work flow on people.
Structure
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Purpose and Definition of Job Analysis
4.3 The Focus of Job Analysis: Positions and Jobs
4.4 The Importance of Job Analysis
4.5 Methods of Job Analysis
4.6 Job Description and Job Specification
4.7 Techniques of Collecting Information for Job Analysis
4.8 Techniques of Writing Job Descriptions
4.9 Job Design
4.10 Effects of Work Flow on People
4.11 Different Work Systems
4.12 The Current Picture
4.13 Summary
4.14 Self Assessment Questions
4.15 Further Readings
4.1 INTRODUCTION
Emerging from years of downsizing and restructuring, and with a new appreciation
for the value of their human resources, many organizations are moving rapidly to
embrace a new approach to the management of human resource (HR) process. Job
analysis helps to understand the qualities needed by employees, defined through
behavioral descriptors, to provide optimum work performance. These qualities range
from personality characteristics and abilities to specific skills and knowledge.
By linking HR activities through a common language and framework, by reflective the
values and mission of the organization and by establishing clear expectations of
performance for employees integrates HR practices, defines business strategy of the
organization and maximizes the delivery of its services to clients.
The critical role of modern job analysis is in guiding, learning and development at
activities of employees. Modern Job analysis address development through the 5
Getting Human provision of tools for employees that address:
Resources
l What it takes to do a job;
l What an individual brings to the job; and
l What the gaps (learning and development needs) are.
The purpose of this input is to clearly define the context and status of Job Analysis as
an HR approach, situate its use within the organization and describe the issues that
need to be addressed with respect to its growing application across departments and
agencies.
It is hoped that this unit will serve as the common platform on the basis of which key
decisions can be taken by departments, agencies to ensure a more collaborative and
focused approach to the implementation.
s
l Create entry level jobs
l Remove artificial barriers to
employment of special groups
TRAINING STAFFING
l Identification of competencies l Identification of minimum
needed for successful job qualifications
performance l Identification of special
l Identification for organization- selection factors.
based competencies l Development of valid selection
l Development of relevant instruments and procedures
curricula for classroom and
on-the-job training
s
Source: Olson, H.C., Fine, S.A,. Myers, D.C, & Jennings, M.C. (1981). The use of
functional job analysis in establishing performance standards for heavy
equipment operators. Personal Psychology, 34, 351-364.
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Evaluating Functional Job Analysis Job Analysis and
Job Design
From the foregoing analysis, it is easy to see that FJA yields an extremely detailed
picture of what tasks constitute a specific job. Such detailed information can be used
to identify erroneous and possibly damaging assumptions about job tasks: In the
example just cited, FJA resulted in a major revision of employee selection procedures.
At the same time FJA also required a major commitment in terms of resources.
Studying jobs, identifying tasks, developing performance standards, and testing
operators involves large numbers of personnel in a major effort. For smaller
organizations in particular, this approach may be too burdensome to be useful.
Another consideration with regard to FJA is its use of “experts” to analyse jobs. Since
some of the experts are individuals who do not actually perform the tasks, it is
possible that they may not have a full understanding of the job in question. On the
other hand, the job incumbents may also introduce error into the analysis if they do
not understand the importance of all, the components of a job.
One advantage to the critical incident approach is that it can be used to gather large
amounts of data in a short period of time. Workers are assembled in groups and asked
to come up with incidents. According to Flanagan, an analysis of simple jobs would
require from 50 to 100 incidents, skilled and semi-skilled jobs would require from
1000 to 2000 incidents, and supervisory jobs would require from 2000 to 4000.
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Getting Human After the incidents are collected, they are transferred to index cards, and job
Resources incumbents, supervisors, or analysts independently group similar incidents into
broader categories. (Factor analysis is frequently used in this part of the analysis).
These independent groupings are compared in order to establish categories may
include “promptness of service,” “accuracy of orders,” or ‘interaction with
customers.” Raters discuss any differences in categorization in order to ensure
agreement and the reliability of the ratings. From this procedure, a detailed outline of
the content of a specific job will emerge.
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Getting Human Like the other methods, however, job elements is time-consuming and costly to
Resources operationalise. Additionally, job analysts may have access to computer programs in
order to complete an analysis. Nevertheless, although job elements has the possibility
of becoming a bit unwieldy, it had had an important effect on developing other
methods of job analysis. Primoff had developed a supplemental procedure (Primoff,
Clark & Caplan, 1982) that combines the job elements method with functional job
analysis and the critical incident technique.
Box 2
After receiving orientation about the jobs and the use of the PAQ, job analysts,
supervisors, and some job incumbents rated the jobs. Overall, salaries were found to
be fair and all methods of job evaluation had similar results. Interestingly, Robinson
et al. found that the analyses done by the job incumbents were not as thorough as
those done by the supervisors.
a) Questionnaires
Questionnaires, to be completed by job-holders and approved by job-holder’s
superiors, are useful when a large number of jobs are to be covered. They can also
save interviewing time by recording purely factual information and by helping the
analyst to structure his or her questions in advance to cover areas which need to be
explored in greater depth.
Questionnaire should provide the following basic information:
l The job title of the job-holder.
l The title of the job-holder’s superior.
l The job titles and numbers of staff reporting to the job-holder (best recorded by
means of an organization chart).
l A brief description (one or two sentences) of the overall role or purpose
of the job.
l A list of the main tasks or duties that the job-holder has to carry out. As
appropriate, these should specify the resources controlled, the equipment used,
the contacts made and the frequency with which the tasks are carried out.
b) Interview
To obtain the full flavour of a job it is usually necessary to interview job-holders and
to check the findings with their superiors. The aim of the interview is to obtain all the 1 7
Getting Human relevant facts about the job, covering the areas listed above in the section on
Resources questionnaires.
To achieve this aim job analysts should:
1) work to a logical sequence of questions which help the interviewee to order his or
her thoughts about the job;
2) pin people down on what they actually do;
3) ensure that the job-holder is not allowed to get away with vague or inflated
descriptions of his or her work; and
4) obtain a clear statement from the job-holder about his or her authority to make
decisions and the amount of guidance received from his or her superior.
Job Title
The existing or proposed job title indicates as clearly as possible the function in which
the job is carried out and the level of the job within that function.
Reporting to
The job title of the manger or superior to whom the job-holder is directly responsible
is given under this heading.
Overall responsibilities
This part describes as concisely as possible the overall purpose of the job. The aim is
to convey in no more than two or three sentences a broad picture of the job which will
clearly distinguish it from other jobs and establish the role of job-holder.
Main tasks
The steps taken to define the main tasks of the job are as follows:
1) Identify and list the tasks that have to be carried out. No attempt is made to
describe in detail how they are carried out, but some indications is given of the
purpose or objectives of each task.
2) Analyze the initial list of tasks and, so far as possible, simplify the list by
grouping related tasks together so that no more than, say, seven or eight main
activity areas remain.
3) Decide on the order in which tasks should be described. The alternatives include :
l Frequency with which they are carried out (continually, hourly, daily,
weekly, monthly, intermittently);
l Chronological order;
l Order of importance; and
l The main process of management that are carried out, for example, setting
objectives, planning, organizing, coordinating, operating, directing and
motivating staff, and controlling.
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4) Describe each main task separately in short numbered paragraphs. No more Job Analysis and
than one or at most two sentences are used for the description, but, if necessary, Job Design
any separate tasks carried out within the task can be tabulated (a, b, c, etc) under
the overall description of the activity. A typical sentence describing a task
should:
l Start with an active verb to eliminate all unnecessary wording. Active
verbs are used which express the actual responsibility to recommend, to do,
ensure that someone else does something, or to collaborate with someone,
e.g. Prepares, completes, recommends, supervises, ensures that, liaises
with;
l State what is done as succinctly as possible; and
l State why it is done: this indicates the purpose of the job gives a lead to
setting targets or performance standards.
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Box 4 Job Analysis and
Job Design
(Illustration of Teamwork Engineered)
The mill was intensively reengineered according to basic industrial engineering
procedures. Each job had carefully assigned work loads based on engineering study.
In one room there were 224 looms operated and maintained by twelve occupational
groups. Each weaver tended twenty-four on thirty two looms, each battery filler
served forty to fifty looms, and each smash had served and average of seventy-five
looms. The other nice occupations were service and maintained, and each worker
had either 112 or 224 looms.
Although the mill appeared to be superbly engineered, it failed to reach satisfactory
output. Research disclosed that close teamwork of all twelve occupations was
required to maintain production, yet work organization prevented this teamwork.
Each battery filler served all looms of one weaver and part of the looms of a second
weaver, which meant a weaver and battery filler were not a team unit even though
the nature of the process required it. In effect, a weaver tending twenty-four looms
and using a battery filler serving forty looms, worked with three-fifth of a battery
filler, while another weaver shared two-fifths of him. The situation was even more
confused with smash hands who tended seventy-five looms.
Eventually work was reorganized so that a certain group of workers had
responsibility for definite number of machines. Workers then were able to set up
interaction and teamwork which causes production to soar.
Work flow can also be setup in such a way that the job puts unreasonable pressure
on a person. In a series of similar offices the secretary of each was required to
prepare technical correspondence for five to seven managers, answer the telephone,
greet visitors, and serve as group leader of a few clerks. The result was high
turnover and more than a normal amount of nervous disorders among the
secretaries. Another example is that of a hotel food checker who inspected food
brought by waitresses on the telephone. Under conditions of this type it is useless to
try to solve the problem by training the participants to understand each other better,
to communicate better, or to apply good human relations. The first requirement is to
reorganize the work flow then human relations training may not even be needed!
It is well known that plant layout and work flow have much to do with the
opportunity which people have to talk to one another during work. In an insurance
office, for example, the layout of desks was such that persons who needed to
coordinate their work were unnecessarily separated by a broad aisle. Employee met
the problem by loudly calling across the aisle, but this eventually had to be stopped
because of the disturbance. The end result was poor communication. In another
company sewing machines were located so that talking was discouraged but
management soon discovered that another layout which permitted talking led to
higher productivity because it relived the monotony of routine work.
Managers often overlook the fact that layout can also affect off-duty interaction of
employees. Some years ago I visited a new factory which was a model of
engineering efficiency. Although the lunchroom was spotless and efficiently
designed, I ate an uneasily meal. I normally have an affinity for the factory
environment, but his time it was too much—the cafeteria was located in the
basement directly beneath stamping and light forging presses! Vibration was so
terrific it stopped conversation. The floor and ceiling shook; the dished settled; there
was no sound-deadening tile on the ceiling. The space beneath the presses
apparently was not needed for another function; so the cafeteria got it, but
employee communication and relaxation were thereby exclude at mealtime. Lunch
hours in the plant were staggered into four periods, which meant that the presses
operated during the time most employees ate. When I asked my host, “Why?” his
answer “ The cafeteria is for eating only, and anyway, the noise shouldn’t bother 2 1
anyone.”
Getting Human The evidence is clear that work systems and layout have a substantial effect on human
Resources behaviour. They do this by:
1) Determining who initiates procedural action on whom, and some of the
conditions in which the initiations occurs.
2) Influencing the degree to which employees performing interdependent functions
can work together as a team.
3) Affecting the communication patterns of employees.
The general conclusion for management is that relationships among workers in a
system can be just as important as relationships of the work in that system. In the
design of any system it is folly to spend all time planning work relationships but
ignoring worker relationships
c) Control of Red Tape. One aspect of procedure which is universally known as
respected for its effect on people is red tape. It is the unnecessary procedure which
delays and harasses people everywhere. The term originated from real red tape used to
tie official government documents, many of which having long been challenged as
unnecessary by those who prepare them. No doubt some of the work in government
and in business as well is true red tape, but some is in reality “fictions red tape.” It
exists when those who perform the procedure do not know why they are doing it.
They, consequently, think it is red tape, but from a broader viewpoint the work is both
necessary and worthwhile. The remedy for fictitious red tape is improved
communication and development of a broader perspective among those who perform
the work.
Genuine red tape arises primarily because (1) managers are afraid to delegate and
consequently set up all sorts of unnecessary approvals and checks, and (2) procedures,
even through once useful, tend to persist long after their usefulness has passed. The
first reason can be eliminated through good leadership and second reason deserves
further attention at this point.
One cause of the “stickiness” of red tape is normal resistance to change. A procedure
tends to become a habit, and people resist changing it. Since it as, in a sense, set up to
eliminate thinking by giving its followers a routine to use without having to decide
each step, they-seldom think about changing it. They get “stuck in a rut.” Another
cause of useless procedure is that it is often determined by a higher authority who does
not understand work problems, but his personnel hesitate to challenge the procedure
because they did not participate in establishing it. In other cases, people do not know
why they are performing a procedure; consequently they cannot know whether it is
useless or not, and they do not date to expose their “ignorance” by questioning a
procedure with their boss may be able to prove essential beyond a shadow of a doubt.
People do not like to get caught not knowing something about their work.
Another reason for useless procedures is that most of them cross lines of authority,
jumping from one chain of command else worry about. “ they know about this
procedure, too – and it originates with them – so let them change it.” An additional
reason why procedures tend to outlive their usefulness is that the persons who created
them are often supervisors all out of proportion to their real significance. Very often
he focuses extremes attention on one or two of them. They become an obsession with
him and this condition is known as obsessive thinking.
Where conditions permit obsessive thinking and the conditions cannot be changed,
employee effectiveness is increased through the use of activities which occupy the
mind and crowd out obsessive thinking. The more a worker’s mind is kept busy, the
less should be his obsessive thinking. This is one reason management provides music
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in routine and monotonous situations. For this same reason management permits – Job Analysis and
even encourages – talking across the aisle or workbench. Contests and recreational Job Design
programs are other activities which occupy the mind, drive out obsessive thinking, and
provide additional group solidarity.
In order to escape some of the human effects of poorly designed systems more
companies are insisting that their systems experts and industrial engineers have human
relations training. Where the stakes are high, even more stringent requirements may be
set. One company which employed many persons with advanced degrees in its offices
and in small lot of production established the policy of having all job design and
systems work performed by a team of two men. On each team one person was an
industrial engineer concerned with technical requirements, and the other was a human
relations specialist dealing with human aspects of the work.
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Getting Human Box 5
Resources
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Box 6 Job Analysis and
Job Design
Labour Pool in Oil Refeneries
Oil refineries are required to operate twenty-four hours a day because of the
nature of the production process. One refinery established a central labour pool of
skilled, versatile men to be sent to other departments to replace persons absent.
Before the pool was established, engineers and cost experts carefully proved that
the idea was workable and would reduce costs by reducing overtime and/or
regular standby men in each department. However, after a year of Herculean effort
by management the pool had to be abandoned, for two reasons. First, management
could not keep men in the pool. It lowered their status to be in the pool, and they
objected to working for different foremen on different jobs. They disliked being
without a specific work station which they could count as theirs. Some men chose
to quit the company when transferred to the pool.
Second, the pool increased labour costs instead of decreasing them. Since pool
men, lacked interest and motivation, foremen avoided them and started doubling
shifts (working one of their own men sixteen hours) instead of using pool men.
This left pool men idle, further hurting their morale and increasing pool costs. It
also increased department costs by requiring overtime.
If management had introduced the pool properly, perhaps it could have worked;
but it failed because management was unaware of how the work system was
affecting human relations.
c) Assembly Lines . Assembly lines are a type of product work system, because
work is organized and simplified in terms of the product manufactured. An assembly
line is based on the following concepts: (1) standardization (2) interchangeability of
parts, (3) breakdown of jobs into simple motions, (4) an orderly progression of the
product through a series of operations, and (5) mechanical movement of the product to
and from workers.
4.13 SUMMARY
To sum up, this unit provided a clear understanding of the process of job analysis and
the methods involved in it. All the methods discussed have some advantages and
disadvantages. Keeping these in view, an efficient Job Analyst uses the required job
analysis technique. Also, the concept of job design and its associated techniques have
been discussed so as to improve your ability to design jobs more effectively.
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