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Psychology 572 Job Design Week 1 Overview

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Title: Psychology 572 Job Design Week 1 Overview


1
Psychology 572Job Design Week 1Overview
  • David Morrison

2
Objectives
  • To make students familiar with contemporary
    theories of job design, their promises and
    limitations
  • To develop an awareness the difficulties incurred
    by the organisational change process and how to
    cope with them
  • To introduce students to the art of evaluating
    change
  • To add value to the collective knowledge of the
    group and to make the unit a worthwhile
    experience

3
Learning Modes
  • Active learning
  • Some lecturing
  • Lots of open discussion
  • Case study analysis
  • Class presentations (case workshops)
  • Examination (2hrs)

4
Case studies
  • Select a case for analysis
  • Undertake background research for the case
  • Brainstorm the case in class (analyst
    responsibility)
  • Present a solution at end of semester
  • Take responsibility to add value the class
    experience

5
Historical Overview
  • As early as l776, Smith wrote that specialisation
    increased productivity for 3 reasons
  • Increased dexterity with practice
  • Reduction in time moving from task to task
  • Increasing probability of the invention of labour
    saving machinery.

6
The Industrial Revolution
  • Babage (l835) explained how specialisation could
    increase profitability by reducing the cost of
    labour -
  • "The master manufacturer by dividing the work to
    be executed into different processes, each
    requiring different degrees of skill or force,
    can purchase exactly that precise quantity of
    both which is necessary for each process whereas
    if the whole work were executed by one workman,
    that person must possess sufficient skill to
    perform the most difficult and sufficient
    strength to execute the most laborious". (from
    Kelly l984).

7
Scientific Management
  • development of a science of production
  • selection and training of workers
  • bring together the science and the workers i.e.
    match the man to the task
  • an equal division of responsibility and
    cooperation between management and workers, i.e.
    workers work and managers manage. (Taylor 1911)

8
Taylors Philosophy
  • "It is only through enforced standardization of
    methods, enforced adoption of the best implements
    and working conditions, and enforced cooperation
    that this faster work can be ensured. And the
    duty of enforcing this cooperation rests with
    Management alone."

9
Taylors 5 Principles
  • Find, say, ten or fifteen men (preferably in as
    many separate establishments and different part
    of the country) who are especially skillful in
    doing the particular work to be analysed.
  • Study the exact series of elementary operations
    or motions which each of these men uses in doing
    the work which is being investigated, as well as
    the implements each man uses.
  • Study with a stopwatch the time required to make
    each of these elementary movements and then
    select the quickest way of doing each element of
    the work.

10
5 Principles Contd
  • Eliminate all false movements, slow movements and
    useless movements.
  • After doing away with all unnecessary movements,
    collect into one series the quickest and best
    movements as well as the best implements.

11
Add-ons
  • Cinematography (Gilbreth, 1911)
  • The production line (Henry Ford, 1914)

12
Extent of Adaptation
  • Taylors ideas were questioned in the House of
    Reps. But the publicity seemed to lead to wider
    adoption
  • Davis, Canter Hoffman (1955) found that
  • minimising time required to perform operations
  • minimising skill requirements
  • minimising training and learning times
  • were rated as the most important factors in job
    design by companies.
  • The ideas were pervasive 2-3 decades later and
    some argue that JIT is Taylorism applied by
    workers
  • While not universal job simplification is the
    reference point against which other forms are
    compared.

13
Psychological Consequences
  • The Industrial Fatigue Research Board (Industrial
    Health Research Board) (1918) later the
    Institute of Industrial Psychology run by C.S.
    Myers
  • Examined horizontal (simplification) rather than
    vertical division (reduction in discretion)
  • The Industrial Fatigue Board reported
  • 'Boredom has become increasingly prominent as a
    factor in the industrial life of the worker and
    its effects are no less important than those of
    fatigue' (Industrial Research Board, l93l30).

14
Well Known Studies
  • Fraser (l944) in a study (n3000) found neuroses
    common among those that found work boring, had
    jobs with little variety, were engaged in bench,
    assembly, inspection or performed jobs requiring
    constant attention.
  • Kornhauser(l965) looked at mental health in
    factory workers. Mental health was highest among
    those in more skilled work, and lowest for those
    engaged in repetitive routine, machine paced,
    semi-skilled jobs.
  • Broadbent(l985) reports high anxiety and
    depression amongst those with low autonomy and
    little control attribution of causal relationship
    is problematic.

15
Osterman 1994
  • Conventional wisdom is that gains in productivity
    depend on adopting new models of work
    organisation.
  • Includes broad job definition, teams, employee
    problem solving groups and quality circles.
  • Known as transformed systems, salaried systems,
    flexible specialisation, high commitment
    organisations and high performance work
    organisation.

16
Modern DesignAdvanced Manufacturing
  • CNC, assembly and robots
  • Flexible manufacturing
  • Reduced Labour
  • Consistent performance
  • Increased output
  • Computer aided design (CAD)
  • Computer aided production management planning and
    control of production resources (Manufacturing
    Resource Planning MRPII)

17
Modern Design Cellular Manufacturing
  • Grouping of technology and processes
  • fewer products
  • simpler work
  • less set up time
  • less planning and set-up
  • less WIP
  • early cells were single person
  • large production sub-units now commonly found
  • product based
  • factory within a factory

18
Modern Design Just in Time vs Just in Case
  • Minimises capital tied up in materials,
    components, WIP, stores of finished goods and
    payment from customers/
  • Is a pull rather than push system.
  • Pull of customer demand
  • requires coordination and planning
  • manufacturing of smaller batches which puts
    pressure on set up change over times
  • Goes hand in hand with AMT

19
Modern Design Total Quality Management
  • Quality is the competitive edge
  • It is integral to production that is the
    responsibility of everybody

20
Essential Features of TQM(Legge, 1995)
  • Quality defined in terms of meeting customer
    requirements not conformance to standards
  • Concept of customers extend to internal customers
  • Emphasis on quantitative measurement to analyse
    deviations from quality
  • Requires the involvement of all (not just
    inspectors)
  • Continuous improvement to eliminate waste
    (non-value adding) (right first time)

21
TQMRedesign(variants)
  • TQM typically
  • gives more responsibility for quality
  • puts people in teams
  • give more authority for monitoring and problem
    solving to help process improvement and aid
    product design innovation
  • Hard approaches emphasise standardisation and
    measurement (seen as expensive)
  • Soft approaches emphasise training and
    involvement (seen as less expensive)

22
Other Variants in Design
  • BPR Radical redesign to eliminate uneccessary
    practices
  • Supply -Chain Partnering Vertical Integration
    (strategic alliances)
  • Outsourcing Contracting out processes
  • Learning Culture Development opportunities for
    all employees
  • Empowerment Delegation of responsibility
  • Team Based working AWGs
  • Total Productive Maintenance Involve operators
    in maintenance
  • Concurrent Engineering Simulataneous design and
    manufacture
  • Integrated Computer-Based Technology CIM, FMS,
    CADCAM
  • Manufacturing Cells Groups of operators complete
    whole product
  • JITDirect response to customers (internal or
    external)
  • TQM Continuous improvement to quality making all
    staff responsible

23
Modern Manufacturing
  • Problem Solving demands
  • Production Responsibility
  • Monitoring Demands
  • Timing Control
  • Method Control
  • Advanced Technology
  • Just In Time
  • Total Quality Management

Flexibility
Cost Control
Quality
Work Smarter Not Harder
24
Opportunity Knocks?
  • A re-uniting of conceptual and manual tasks
  • beginning of the end of mass production
  • demise of the job in favour of flexible roles
  • Case studies support these assertions

25
Work Design Implications
  • The debate is polarised between de-skilling and
    opportunity
  • Does AMT take control away?
  • Does JIT lead to standardisation and less
    discretion over task design less control over
    time?
  • The above is back up by case study observations

26
Trends in Change
  • This trend away from Taylorism is becoming a
    universal model for organisations, especially
    large ones. (This trend) describes more flexible
    organizations, adaptable to change, with
    relatively levels of formal hierarchy and loose
    boundaries among functions and units, sensitive
    and responsive to the environment concerned with
    stakeholders of all sorts The organizations
    empower people to take action and be
    entrepreneurial , reward them for contributions,
    help them gain in skill and employability
  • Kanter, Stein and Jick, (1992).

27
Recent trends in Australia
  • Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Survey
    (AWIRS)
  • Sheffield Manufacturing Survey

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Who Adopts Change?
  • Some (Kabanoff) suggests that forces outside of
    the organisation enforce change
  • The type of change depends on the type of
    organisation

35
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36
Ostermans (1994) Questions
  • How many firms are engaged in work
    re-organisation?
  • What differentiates firms that undertake these
    efforts from those that do not?
  • The survey was concerned with the extent to which
    the following were used (n875 empsgt50)
  • Flexible work organisation Self directed work
    teams, job rotation, employee problem solving
    groups, and TQM.
  • Degree of penetration examined

37
Predictor Variables
  • Markets and strategy (competitiveness and
    internationalisation)
  • Competitive Strategy (cost or quality, variety
    service)
  • Technology and its complexity (amount of skill
    required)
  • Values
  • (Human resource practices (Japanese have a
    community or stakeholder view whereas US
    companies do not)
  • Work-family benefits and enterprise values
    towards those benefits.
  • Firm environment
  • Pressure to change.
  • Size
  • Age
  • Unionisation.

38
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Regression results
  • Managerial values comes out strongly employers
    that believe they are responsible for employer
    welfare adopt innovative practices.
  • Organisations that compete internationally are
    also more likely Perhaps they learn more quickly
    about alternative forms of work practice.
  • Skill level is also a strong predictor As the
    skill level required by the technology increases
    so does the adoption of flexibility.

40
Supporting Policies
  • seniority versus merit and the importance of
    insider preference vs outside hiring.
  • extent to which employees have a financial stake
    in the enterprise success (profit share, and pay
    for skill)
  • Does the organisation pay a premium relative to
    other organisations in the same industry
    especially as they require employees to be more
    committed and to exercise more discretion.
  • Expect more investment in training.
  • Job security is often one of the carrots used to
    create change.Are HRM policies designed to
    increase commitment, skill and or employee
    reductions.
  • The extent to which employers use contract labour
    to protect the CORE

41
Results
  • Payment for skill, profit sharing and training
    (cross functional training, off the job training
    and a commitment to increasing skill) were seen
    to be very important to extent of penetration.
  • A high value was placed on attaining higher
    levels of commitment, high use of casual labour
    and a high priority given to HRM in the
    organisation was also characteristic of flexible
    organisations.
  • Contrary to expectations it was possible
    introduce innovative work practices without an
    assurance that redundancy would not follow.

42
Conclusions
  • About 35 of private sector establishments had
    made substantial use of flexible work practices
    in 1992.
  • Organisational characteristics do predict
    adoption.
  • Operating in the international arena
  • Use of high skill technology
  • Worker oriented values (emphasising service
    quality, variety of products etc rather than low
    cost)
  • Being a part of a larger organisation was also
    indicative
  • The presence of unions did not impact on adoption
    nor pressure to get short term profits.

43
HRM practice underwrites the innovative work
program
  • Innovative pay schemes
  • Training
  • Efforts to induce commitment
  • Neither employment security nor policies that
    emphasise merit as a basis for promotion seem to
    be important.

44
Limitations in research on Job Design
  • Casual observation of exemplary companies Do the
    successful organisations have the values of the
    successful ones?
  • Questions of causality do values lead to
    success for vice versa
  • Limitations of cross sectional data and lack of
    longitudinal research
  • Retrospective descriptions
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