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What is Job Design – Meaning and Definition

Job design is the logical sequence of the process of job analysis and involves conscious
efforts to organize tasks, duties and responsibilities into a unit of work so as to business
objectives.

Job design is the logical sequence to job analysis. It involves conscious efforts to organize
tasks, duties and responsibilities into a unit of work so as to achieve organizational
objectives. It deals with the allocation and arrangement or organizational work activities and
tasks into sets where a singular set of activities constitutes a “job” and which is subsequently
performed by a job incumbent.

Davis (1966) has defined job design as “the specification of the content, methods and
relationships of jobs in order to satisfy technological and organizational requirements as well
as the social and personal requirements of the job holder”.

The main goal of designing a job is as follows:

i. Facilitating the interest of employees towards the job and enhancing their satisfaction

ii. Increasing employee motivation and productivity

iii. Enhancing employees’ skills by identifying their training needs

iv. Covering the modern needs of employee participation

v. Ensuring safer working environment

vi. Making the communication process clear and effective in the organization

vii. Improving the quality of working life of employees

viii. Eliminating the unnecessary levels of supervision, checking, and control

ix. Establishing high-level standards for customer service

x. Minimizing cost by reducing wastage.

Importance of Job Design:

Job design and work organization deal with the specifications of the content, methods, and
relationships of jobs in an integrated manner to satisfy technological and organizational
requirements as well as the personal needs of employees.

During the 1970s, the challenge before HRM professionals dealing with job designs was to
find out how organizations achieve results in the wake of loss of productive effort resulting
from industrial actions and absenteeism, increased demand for employee participation, and
imposition of various employee legislations.

During the 1980s a major change occurred in the working environment in the form of
introduction of new technologies and a shift in the cost of production in favour of machines
as against workforce. In this period of recession, the need for retrenchment of employees also
arose. All these factors changed the perspective of job design.

It was only in the 1990s that a real challenge in terms of optimum job design and work
organization arose to respond to the fast-changing environmental conditions. This resulted in
giving a greater importance and adopting a new approach towards job design.

Job Design Objectives:

Objective # 1. Quality:

The ability of staff to produce high-quality products and services can be affected by job
design. This includes avoiding errors in the short term, but also includes designing jobs which
encourage staff to improve that job itself in such a way as to make errors less likely.

Objective # 2. Speed:

Sometimes speed of response is the dominant objective to be achieved in job design. For
example, the way in which the jobs of emergency service personnel are organised (the range
of tasks for which they are trained, the sequence of activities in their approved procedures,
the autonomy which they have to decide on appropriate action, and so on) will go a long way
to determine their ability to respond promptly to emergencies and perhaps same lives.

Objective # 3. Dependability:

Dependable supply of goods and services is usually influenced, in some way, by job design.
For example, in the postal services, working arrangements, multiskilling, accurate use of
sorting equipment through good staff machine interface design, and the ‘design’ of postal
staff’s clothing, can all aid dependable delivery of letters and particles.

Objective # 4. Flexibility:

Job design can affect the ability of the operation to change the nature of its activities. New
product or service flexibility, mix flexibility, volume flexibility and delivery flexibility are all
dependent to some extent on job design. For example, staff who have been trained in several
tasks (multi-skilling) may find it easier to cope with a wide variety of models and new
product or service introductions.

Objective # 5. Cost:

All the elements of job design described above will have an effect on the productivity, and
therefore, the cost of the job. Productivity in this context means the ratio of output to labour
input- for example, the number of customers served per hour or the number of products made
per worker. In addition, job design will influence two other particularly important objectives.
Objective # 6. Health and Safety:

Whatever else a job design achieves, it must not endanger the well-being of the person who
does the job, other staff of the operation, the customers who might be present in the
operation, or those who use any products made by the operation.

Objective # 7. Quality of Working Life:

The design of any job should take into account its effect on bob security, intrinsic interest,
and variety, opportunities for development, stress level and attitude of the person performing
the job.

Job design principles help in tackling and managing the following issues:

i. Work overload;

ii. Work under load;

iii. Repetitiveness leading to drudgery and adverse effect on productivity;

iv. Work and people isolation;

v. Multiple shifts;

vi. Managing pending filling-up of vacancies;

vii. Excessive working hours; and

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