BSBOPS402 Learner Guide V1.0
BSBOPS402 Learner Guide V1.0
BSBOPS402 Learner Guide V1.0
Develop personal
work priorities
Learner Guide
Table of Contents
Unit of Competency ..................................................................................................................... 4
Application ...................................................................................................................................... 4
Performance Criteria....................................................................................................................... 5
Foundation Skills ............................................................................................................................. 6
Assessment Requirements .............................................................................................................. 7
1. Plan personal work schedule .................................................................................................... 9
1.1 – Identify task requirements ....................................................................................................... 10
Planning work ............................................................................................................................... 10
Task requirements ........................................................................................................................ 10
1.2 – Identify own accountabilities in line with task requirements.................................................. 12
Task accountabilities ..................................................................................................................... 12
Task ownership ............................................................................................................................. 12
Your task accountabilities ............................................................................................................. 13
Organisational requirements ........................................................................................................ 13
1.3 – Assess barriers for performance of personal accountabilities................................................. 14
Barriers to personal accountabilities ............................................................................................ 14
Assessing the barriers ................................................................................................................... 14
Contingency plans ......................................................................................................................... 15
1.4 – Develop a personal work schedule .......................................................................................... 16
Documenting work plans .............................................................................................................. 16
Your work schedule....................................................................................................................... 17
Techniques to prepare personal plans and identify priorities ...................................................... 20
Business technology to schedule and plan ................................................................................... 21
2. Implement personal work schedule ........................................................................................ 22
2.1 – Communicate personal work schedule to relevant personnel ................................................ 23
Business technology features and functions ................................................................................ 23
Communicating work schedules ................................................................................................... 24
2.2 – Monitor own performance according to personal work schedule .......................................... 26
Monitoring performance .............................................................................................................. 26
Performance measures ................................................................................................................. 27
2.3 – Document variations between expected and actual work performance according to task
requirements and communicate to relevant personnel................................................................... 28
Identifying and documenting performance variations ................................................................. 28
Preparing reports .......................................................................................................................... 29
Communicating performance variations ...................................................................................... 29
3. Review personal work priorities ............................................................................................. 31
3.1 – Seek and evaluate feedback from relevant stakeholders on own work performance ............ 32
Gaining feedback on your work performance .............................................................................. 32
Feedback methods and strategies ................................................................................................ 32
Evaluate received feedback .......................................................................................................... 33
3.2 – Analyse variations between expected and actual work performance .................................... 35
Analysing variations in performance ............................................................................................ 35
3.3 – Update personal work schedule according to internal and external feedback and changes in
circumstances ................................................................................................................................... 37
Changes to your schedule ............................................................................................................. 37
Making changes ............................................................................................................................ 37
References ........................................................................................................................................ 38
Unit of Competency
Application
This unit describes the skills and knowledge required to plan and prioritise own work tasks.
It also addresses the skills and knowledge to monitor and obtain feedback on personal work
performance.
The unit applies to individuals who are required to design their own work schedules and
work plans and to establish priorities for their work. They will typically hold some
responsibilities for the work of others and have some autonomy in relation to their own
role.
No licensing, legislative, regulatory or certification requirements apply to this unit at the
time of publication.
Pre-requisite Unit
None stated
Unit Sector
Learning:
➢ Develops strategies to reflect on own performance and obtain feedback.
Reading:
➢ Identifies and applies textual information from relevant sources to understand
organisation’s policies and practices.
Writing:
➢ Prepares written reports and workplace documentation that communicate complex
information clearly and effectively.
Numeracy:
➢ Analyses numerical information related work accountabilities.
Enterprise and initiative:
➢ Identifies and understands roles and responsibilities in relation to organisational
objectives, policies and procedures.
Planning and organising:
➢ Plans, organises and implements tasks to meet organisational requirements
➢ Uses the main features and functions of digital technologies and tools to complete
work tasks efficiently and effectively.
Assessment Requirements
Performance Evidence
The candidate must demonstrate the ability to complete the tasks outlined in the elements,
performance criteria and foundation skills of this unit, including evidence of the ability to:
➢ Develop, implement and review one personal work schedule.
In the course of the above, the candidate must:
➢ Identify personal responsibilities and barriers to their fulfilment according to task
requirements
➢ Prepare a personal work schedule
➢ Communicate work schedule to relevant personnel
➢ Monitor personal work performance to identify variations between expected and
actual work performance
➢ Review own work performance against workgroup objectives through self-
assessment and seeking and acting on feedback from internal and external
stakeholders.
Knowledge Evidence
The candidate must be able to demonstrate knowledge to complete the tasks outlined in
the elements, performance criteria and foundation skills of this unit, including knowledge
of:
➢ Content of work plans including:
o resource requirements
o stakeholder needs
o workgroup targets
➢ Business technology applications to schedule tasks and plan work
➢ Methods of personal work performance review including:
o self-assessment
o feedback from others
➢ Techniques to prepare personal plans and establish priorities
➢ Methods to elicit, analyse and interpret feedback.
Assessment Conditions
Skills in this unit must be demonstrated in a workplace or simulated environment where the
conditions are typical of those in a working environment in this industry.
This includes access to challenges and situations to demonstrate the application of
performance evidence.
Assessors of this unit must satisfy the requirements for assessors in applicable vocational
education and training legislation, frameworks and/or standards.
Links
Companion Volume Implementation Guide is found on VETNet -
https://vetnet.gov.au/Pages/TrainingDocs.aspx?q=11ef6853-ceed-4ba7-9d87-
4da407e23c10
1. Plan personal work schedule
1.1. Identify task requirements
1.2. Identify own accountabilities in line with task requirements
1.3. Assess barriers for performance of personal accountabilities
1.4. Develop a personal work schedule
1.1 – Identify task requirements
By the end of this chapter, the learner should be able to:
➢ Obtain task requirements from the relevant source
➢ Check and confirm task requirements with the task originator.
Planning work
In any work environment, the first step is to plan what needs to be
done. It is important to take time to assess work and to identify
what is required, such as resources, deadlines, and goals.
This initial planning time will help you to make sense of the tasks
you have, so you can put things in order and identify what you will
be doing. You can look ahead at the practical arrangements that
need to be made and ensure things are in place when you and
others need them to be.
Techniques for planning work will include:
Assessing tasks and what needs to be done
Identifying resources for tasks, such as materials, equipment, or
team member’s skills
Prioritising tasks into a suitable order for working on (for
example, this may be according to deadlines, task difficulties, or when they were received)
Determining timeframes for tasks to identify how long they should take
Determining timeslots for when you will work on tasks
Identifying other persons (or stakeholders) who need to be included or involved in tasks.
To plan your work, you will need to identify all task requirements. This will enable you to
make the necessary task preparations.
Task requirements
Task requirements should be identified in your supplied work briefs, job requests, and work
instructions. These will apply to the tasks that are allocated or given to you by others. In
these requirements, there should be information to explain what the task is. They should
include the essential details that you need to know about, for example, quantities, who is
accountable, and recordkeeping. This may be given to you on paper or by digital means,
such as by email, task notifications, or through work records or systems software. They may
also be given to you in a spoken meeting or work briefing.
Other task requirements may relate to the tasks that are repeated or performed regularly
by you. These should be the tasks that you are used to doing, and they will be familiar to
you. There may be some differences each time, but essentially they will remain the same.
Task requirements for these may be found in your job description, your work/operation
procedures, or in discussions with your manager or the task originator.
Task requirements may include:
A description of the task and the task objective
A set of actions or instructions
Customer/client preferences
A reference of resource requirements
A timeline or deadline for when this must be completed.
The task requirements must be identified, along with any specific task instructions, so you
can make your own work plans. You should be prepared to clarify requirements or seek
confirmation of these from your manager/the task originator if needed. You should ensure
you are fully informed about your tasks, so your plans and schedule accurately
interpret work needs.
You should:
Check that you have the full details you require
Ask for any information or instructions that are missing
Clarify and confirm you have understood the task correctly
Discuss resource issues or any difficulties that need to be managed.
1.2 – Identify own accountabilities in line with task requirements
By the end of this chapter, the learner should be able to:
➢ Determine their duties and obligations for tasks
➢ Recognise their responsibilities in relation to the task requirements
➢ Follow organisational requirements for completing tasks.
Task accountabilities
As well as identifying task requirements, you also need to know your level of
accountability and responsibility in tasks. Your role and job description
should give you a basic understanding of this, but when tasks are
undertaken, different situations, stakeholders, and influences may
occur to make this unclear.
Task accountability is knowing and being responsible for
completing the task or the parts of the task you have been given
to do. This will relate to your own work role and to the roles of
those that you have a responsibility to manage. In the role of
manager, you will need to set a positive example for your team to
follow.
This is fulfilling your work duties and obligations with full awareness of how this impacts the
organisation and others. For example, when you complete an action, this may then initiate a
colleague to perform another action; their role in the task will be dependent on you
finishing this step first.
Therefore, task dependencies will directly affect other workers, and the timing of task steps
may be integral to making sure the task is completed successfully and on time. This is why
prioritising actions in work plans is so important; it allows you to look ahead to see how
work may cross over to other people or work areas. You can see when others need to be
involved in order to carry out their part.
Equally, accountabilities may relate to safety and quality. You should make sure that what
you do is carried out according to such standards. These will be set out in organisational
policies, procedures, and practices.
Task ownership
Tasks will ultimately be accountable to someone. There may be a chain of accountability
from the top down, which is relevant to each person’s role. You may or may not be involved
at the top level of this, but there will be someone above you who will be responsible (or
accountable) for your involvement. They will need to make sure you complete your work,
and they may be involved in checking or supervising actions in relation to this. In turn, you
may also be accountable for your team and their part in the task.
Task ownership will be at a management/decision-making level. This person (or persons)
will need to be kept informed and consulted with if issues or difficulties prevent the
successful completion of the task.
Your task accountabilities
Your accountabilities will be relevant to your role, skills, and knowledge. Your
accountabilities include the steps to complete the task and any other factors that are made
known to you. You should always clarify these accountabilities with the originator when task
management or situations are unclear.
For example, accountabilities can include:
Following organisational policies and safe operating procedures
Carrying out task requests and accommodating preferences
Appointing team members to perform task actions
Managing and supervising team members’ roles
Completing quality checks and processes
Communicating task progress and completion to stakeholders
Meeting individual and/or team deadlines
Following business regulations and requirements
Using equipment and tools safely and correctly.
Organisational requirements
Tasks will need to meet the expectations of the
organisation. Objectives will be set to guide you; they
will tell you what the organisation wants to achieve.
There will be long-term objectives that tell you what the
organisation is working towards, and there will be short-
term and task objectives that are focused on immediate operations. Objectives will be used
to form goals, and these will tell you what has been identified as being achievable at that
time.
Policies will tell you the organisation’s framework for conducting business; this will include
the legal and ethical business requirements that must be carried out. It can also include
incorporating the values and mission of the organisation; this can help establish the
approach the organisation wants its staff to take. As mentioned, procedures are the steps or
actions that staff must undertake to complete their tasks; these will be developed from
policies and best practice approaches.
The above organisational requirements must be known and followed. This will be found in
organisational documentation, plans, and from other information sources. For example,
your organisation may have a staff handbook or an information system that contains various
instructional texts. You should ensure you know where to access such guidance from and be
familiar with how this is written and structured. Information will be documented in different
ways, and you should read this to gain a full understanding of your organisation’s
requirements.
1.3 – Assess barriers for performance of personal accountabilities
By the end of this chapter, the learner should be able to:
➢ Identify potential barriers for the performance of personal accountabilities
➢ Address the barriers to meeting personal accountabilities with management
➢ Make plans to resolve the barriers to the performance of personal
accountabilities.
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Your schedule may just have a column left blank for you to fill in the time periods rather
than having the hourly time slots already written down, and you may want to remove
Saturday or Sunday if these days are not worked.
You can also include other columns to identify further details, such as employees with roles
and responsibilities or task deadlines.
Techniques to prepare personal plans and identify priorities
When preparing personal plans, you should use effective techniques that make this process
straightforward and consistent.
Along with those mentioned in section 1.1 of this unit, techniques may also include:
Consulting stakeholders to obtain the full facts and to discuss work requirements
Creating clear, documented plans that include all of the relevant information
Circulating plans for approval or notifying stakeholders of planned arrangements.
You should use techniques that allow you to gather the information you need, for example,
arranging formal work meetings and having effective digital technologies to capture task
information. Techniques also include using digital technologies and following procedures to
record, document, and circulate plans. Plan and schedule templates can be used or set up to
make repeated work planning easier and quicker to perform.
Establishing priorities
To establish priorities, there are some simple techniques you can use. This starts with asking
task originators or management for the deadlines and task timelines; it also includes
assessing tasks for their complexity and preparation time. Establishing priorities is about
having the correct knowledge about the tasks, work processes, planning and preparation,
and resources, so you can make the appropriate scheduling decisions.
Techniques to establish priorities include:
Writing a ‘to-do’ list to identify the tasks that need to be completed; you may have a list
that identifies all the tasks you have, and you may have another list for the tasks that you
plan to do that day
Having a master list that categorises different tasks according to type, deadline, project,
department, task originator, and so on; from the master list, you can access all the
information you have in order to create a schedule with priorities
Thinking ahead to identify a suitable order for tasks; sometimes all it will take is forward
planning to schedule tasks according to your priority criteria
Using the Eisenhower Matrix to identify a priority order by determining task urgency and
importance. This identifies four separate categories by which to prioritise tasks; in order of
priority, these are:
urgent and important
important but not urgent
urgent but not important
not important and not urgent.
Source ‘Eisenhower Matrix’ from TechTarget, retrieved from
What is the Eisenhower Matrix? (techtarget.com).
You will also need to be clear on what your criteria points are
for deciding priorities, for example:
When the task is required (date order)
The complexity of the task (a task may take longer to complete if there are
many different processes that need to be undertaken)
Who the task is for (e.g., a client who is only available on specific days)
To complete a work project so the organisation can send an invoice for payment.
Criteria may change according to the task and any current organisational
requirements or external influences. You may need to check what the criteria will
be on a regular basis.
Monitoring performance
When the schedule is implemented, you will need to keep a check on your performance to
make sure that you are completing tasks as needed. This can include monitoring your time,
work progress, and work quality. There must be some control and management for the
success of tasks.
Your personal schedule will identify what needs to be done, but it will depend on how
detailed this is as to whether this will provide all the information you need in relation to
performance requirements. Other task-related information may provide you with more
details, and this can be used to assess if tasks are being carried out as planned.
To monitor your performance, you can:
Check your task status against the schedule to assess if you are
where you should be; from this point, you can evaluate if you
need to alter your performance
Create a checklist that you can apply to the tasks you work
on; this way, you can have a consistent set of check points (or
standards) to monitor your performance against
Use an activity log to keep track of your task performance; this
can include logging time, task issues, and notable achievements
Perform a self-reflection or assessment to look at how your
performance went; this can include asking questions, such as:
how well did the task go?
was the planning and preparation appropriate?
how well did I manage task difficulties?
what could I do to improve task performance?
Ask for feedback from other personnel; this can be structured around four or five
statements or questions that will help you to assess your performance. You should be
willing to listen to what others have to say and be ready to take on board any feedback that
may be negative.
Other methods can also be used, such as comparing your current performance against past
performance records. This can highlight where changes have been made and whether you
need to make further improvements.
Conduct a job analysis
An analysis of your job is where you look at your job role, responsibilities, and
accountabilities, and you determine how well you are performing these. It can be used to
identify where gaps in your performance lie. You can use these results of your evaluation to
identify if you have any skills development or training needs.
Review your work goals
Take a close look at how you are handling your workplace and personal goals. If you feel you
are not reaching these goals on a regular basis, it could be a sign that there is a skills gap.
This review will help you focus on if and where improvements are required.
Performance measures
You can also use or establish specific measures that will tell you if your performance is on
track. This can include time targets, task completion rates, quality indicators, or other
measures that will tell you if you are meeting your performance requirements. You may
establish these as part of a project management approach, whereby performance statistics
are recorded and used to analyse performance at a later date.
The SMART acronym
Performance measures will be related to your own and the organisation’s work goals and
capabilities. When measures are set, they need to be achievable; the SMART acronym can
be used to guide the development of performance measures (or key performance
indicators). It is often used in goal-setting.
SMART is an acronym that has a number of different variations:
➢ S = specific, significant
➢ M = measurable, meaningful
➢ A = attainable, achievable, acceptable, action-
oriented, agreed on
➢ R = realistic, relevant, reasonable, rewarding, results-
oriented
➢ T = time-based, time-bound, timely, tangible, trackable.
These five aspects will help focus on developing measures that can be
reached. This ensures that you think about your suggested measures to make
sure they are feasible for the work environment.
2.3 – Document variations between expected and actual work performance
according to task requirements and communicate to relevant personnel
By the end of this chapter, the learner should be able to:
➢ Identify performance variations and record these according to organisational
requirements
➢ Prepare reports to convey variations and related information
➢ Follow a communication plan to keep others informed about work
performance.
Making changes
Your schedule should be updated to accurately show what you
have decided and agreed upon. You should create a new schedule version according to your
organisation’s documentation requirements.
This may include:
Having a new version number or code for your schedule
Documenting the date the schedule was created or updated
Keeping old versions of your schedule for recordkeeping requirements
Sending or circulating your revised schedule to others.
You should take care to check that information is correctly inputted, and that schedule
changes do not impact other activities or affect the layout and presentation. You may need
to alter its appearance to accommodate changes in the information, such as adding
additional rows or deleting information sections. A final spelling, grammar, and meaning
check should be performed to check this is correct.
References
These suggested references are for further reading and do not necessarily represent the
contents of this unit.
Websites
‘Eisenhower Matrix’ from TechTarget: What is the Eisenhower Matrix? (techtarget.com)