Title: Chapter 14 Nelson
1Chapter 14 Nelson Quick
2Job Compared to Work
- Job - a set of specified work and task activities
that engage an individual in an organization - Work mental or physical activity that has
productive results - Meaning of Work - the way a person interprets
and understands the value of work as part of life
3B - provides personal affect identity
A - value comes from performance.
accountability is important
C - profit accrues to others by
work performance
D - physical activity directed
by others and
performed
in a workplace
E - generally unpleasant
physically mentally strenuous
activity
F - activity constrained to specific time
periods no positive affect through its
performance
Six Patterns of Work
4Job Characteristics Theory
Scientific Management
Traditional Approaches to Job Design
Job Enrichment
Job Enlargement/ Job Rotation
5- Emphasizes work simplification
(standardization and the narrow, explicit
specification of task activities for workers)
Allows diverse groups to work together Leads
to production efficiency and higher profits
- Undervalues the human capacity for thought
and ingenuity
6- Job Enlargement - a method of job design that
increases the number of activities in a job to
overcome the boredom of overspecialized work - Job Rotation - a variation of job enlargement in
which workers are exposed to a variety of
specialized jobs over time - Cross-Training - a variation of job enlargement
in which workers are trained in different
specialized tasks or activities
7- Job Enrichment - designing or redesigning jobs
by incorporating motivational factors into them -
Emphasis is on recognition, responsibility,
and advancement opportunity
8- Job Characteristics Model -
- a framework for understanding person-job fit
through the interaction of core job dimensions
with critical psychological states within a
person - Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) - the survey
instrument designed to measure the elements in
the Job Characteristics Model
9Job Characteristics Model
J.R. Hackman and G.R. Oldham, The Relationship
Among Core Job Dimensions, the Critical
Psychological States, and On-the-Job Outcomes,
The Job Diagnostic Survey An Instrument for the
Diagnosis of Jobs and the Evaluation of Job
Redesign Projects, 1974. Reprinted by permission
of Greg R. Oldham.
10Social Information Processing (SIP) model
- SIP Model - a model that suggests that the
important job factors depend in part on what
others tell a person about the job
Four premises 1) people provide cues to
understanding the work environment 2)
people help us judge our jobs 3) people tell us
how they see our jobs 4) peoples positive
negative feedback help us understand our
feelings about our jobs
11Interdisciplinary Approach
Motivational
Biological
Perceptual/motor
No one approach can solve all performance
problems caused by poorly designed jobs
12Outcomes of Various Job Design Approaches
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13Outcomes of Various Job Design Approaches
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14International Perspectives on the Design of Work
- The Japanese Approach
- Emphasizes strategic level
- Encourages collective and cooperative working
arrangements - Emphasizes lean production
15Lean Production
Using committed employees with ever-expanding
responsibilities to achieve zero waste, 100 good
product, delivered on time, every time
16International Perspectives on the Design of Work
- The German Approach
- Technocentric - placing technology and
engineering at the center of job design decisions
(traditional German approach) - Anthropocentric - placing human considerations at
the center of job design decisions (more recent
German approach)
17International Perspectives on the Design of Work
- The Scandinavian Approach
- encourages high degrees of worker control
- encourages good social support systems for workers
18Work Design and Well-BeingTo increase control
in work organizations
- Give workers the opportunity to control aspects
of work workplace - Design machines and tasks with optimal response
times and/or ranges - Implement performance-monitoring systems as
source of worker feedback
19Work Design and Well-BeingTo reduce uncertainty
- Provide employees with timely and complete work
information needed - Make clear and unambiguous work assignments
- Improve communication at shift change time
- Increase employee access to information sources
20Work Design and Well-BeingTo manage conflict
- Use participative decision making to reduce
conflict - Use supportive supervisory styles to resolve
conflict - Provide sufficient resource availability to meet
work demands, thus preventing conflict
21Emerging Issues in Design of Work
- Telecommuting - employees work at home or in
other locations geographically separate from
their companys main location - Alternative work patterns
- Job Sharing - an alternative work pattern in
which there is more than one person occupying a
single job - Flextime - an alternative work pattern that
enables employees to set their own daily work
schedules
22Emerging Issues in Design of Work
- Technology at work
- Virtual Office - a mobile platform of computer,
telecommunication, and information technology and
services - Technostress - the stress cause by new and
advancing technologies in the workplace - Task Revision - the modification of incorrectly
specified roles or jobs - Skill development
23The Distinguishing Feature of Job Design in the
Future
Flexibility