Today’s business environment, correct job design can help a company to become successful and competitive in the market. The job design is more emphasized and focused since jobs have to be designed using processes that model new types of job design.
Job Design
Today’s
business environment, correct job design can help a company to become successful and competitive in the market.
The job design
is more emphasized and focused
since jobs have to be designed using processes that model new types of job design.
Job design is the process of putting together various elements
to form a job, bearing in mind organizational and
individual worker requirements, as well as considerations of health, safety, and ergonomics. The scientific management
approach of Frederick Winslow Taylor viewed job design as
purely mechanistic, but the later human relations movement rediscovered the importance of workers’ relationship to their work and stressed
the importance of job satisfaction.
Approaches to Job Design
There are three important
approaches to job design;
Engineering approach,
Human approach
and
The Job characteristic approach.
Engineering Approach
The
most important single element in the Engineering approaches, proposed by FW Taylor and others,
was the task idea, “The work of every workman
is fully planned out by the management at least one day in advance and each man receives in most cases complete written instructions, describing in detail the task which he is to accomplish...
This
task specifies not only what is to be done but how it is to be done and the
exact time allowed for doing it.” The
principles offered by scientific management to job design can be summarized thus:
Work should
be scientifically studied.
Taylor advocated fragmentation and routinisation of work to reap the advantages of specializations.
Work should
be arranged so that workers
can be efficient.
Employees selected
for work should be matched to the demands of the job.
Employees should
be trained to perform the job.
Monetary compensation should be used to reward successful performance of the job.
These
principles to job design seem to be quite rational and appealing because they point towards
increased organizational performance.
Problems with Engineering Approach
Walker and Guest indicated
the problems with job specialization are:
Repetition:
Employees performed
a few tasks repeatedly. This quickly led the employees to become very bored with the
job. There was no challenge to the employees to learn
anything new or to improve
the job.
Mechanical pacing: Assembly line workers were made to maintain a
certain regular pace of work. They
could not take a break when they needed to, or simply divert their attention to some other aspect of the job or
another individual.
No end product: Employees found that they were not turning out any
identifiable end product; consequently, they had little pride and enthusiasm in their work.
Little social interaction: Employees complained
that because the assembly line demanded
constant attention, there was very little opportunity to interact on a casual basis with other employees and
share their work experiences, beliefs and sentiments.
No input: Employees also complained that they had little chance to
choose the methods by which they performed their jobs, the tools which they used, or the work procedures. This, of course, created
little interest in the job because there was
nothing which they could improve
or change.
Human Relations
Approach
The
human relations approach recognized the need to design jobs in an interesting manner. In the past two decades much work
has been directed to changing jobs so that job
incumbents
can satisfy their needs for growth, recognition and responsibility. Herzberg’s research popularized the notion of enhancing need
satisfaction through what is called job enrichment. One widely
publicized approach to job enrichment uses what is called job characteristics model and this has been explained separately in the ensuing
section.
According to Herzberg there are two types of factors;
Motivators like
achievements, recognition, work itself, responsibility, advancement and growth
and
Hygiene factors like
working conditions, organizational policies, inter-personnel relations, pay and job security. According
to Herzberg, the employee is dissatisfied with the job if maintenance factors to the
required degree are not introduced into the job. But, the employee
may not be satisfied even if the required maintenance factors are provided. Herzberg feels that the
employee will be satisfied with his job and he
will be more productive if
motivators are introduced into the job content. As such, he asserts that the job designer has to
introduce hygienic factors adequately to reduce dissatisfaction and build motivating factors. Thus, Herzberg has
put emphasis on the psychological needs of the employees
in designing jobs.
The Job Characteristics Approach
The
Job Characteristics Theory of Hackman and Oldham states that employees will work hard when they are rewarded for the
work they do and when the work gives them satisfaction.
According
to this approach, any job can be described in terms of five core job dimensions which
are defined as follows:
Skill variety:
The degree to which
the job requires that workers use a variety of
different activities, talents and skills in order to successfully
complete the job requirements.
Task identity:
The degree to which
the job allows workers to complete whole tasks
from start to finish, rather
than disjointed portions
of the job.
Task significance: The degree
to which the job significantly impacts the lives
of others both within and outside the workplace.
Autonomy: The degree to which the job allows
workers freedom in planning and scheduling and the methods used to complete
the job.
Feedback: The degree to which the job itself provides workers
with clear, direct
and understandable knowledge
of their performance.
All
of the job dimensions impact workers psychologically. The first three
dimensions affect whether
or not workers view their job as meaningful. Autonomy
determines the extent of responsibility workers feel. Feedback
allows for feelings
of satisfaction for a job well done by providing knowledge
of results.
The
core job dimensions can be combined into a single predictive index called the Motivating Potential
Score.
Socio Technical
System Approach
The
approach taken by the socio technical systems method is the design or work systems that foster a meshing of the technical and social
aspects of jobs. Redesigning work through socio technical
systems methods requires the combined efforts of employees, supervisors and union representatives in analyzing significant job operations.
The
thrust of the socio technical approach to job design is that both the technical system and the accompanying social system
should be considered when designing jobs. According
to this concept, jobs should be designed by taking a ‘holistic’ or ‘systems’
view of the entire job situation,
including its physical and social environment. Using the socio technical approach, the following guidelines
have been developed
for designing jobs:
A job needs to be reasonably demanding for the individual in terms other than sheer
endurance and yet provide some variety (not necessarily novelty).
Employees need to be able to learn on the job and to go on learning.
Employees need some minimum
area of decision making that they can call their own.
Employees need some minimal
degree of social support and recognition at the workplace.
Employees need to be able to relate what they do and what they produce to their social life.