HRM Chapter 4 (Job Analysis)

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

Surveys

Can create your own or buy one such as the (PAQ) Can assess task statements for importance or frequency Most commonly used-efficient! Anonymous and more objective Bad questions can be problematic

Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)

Classifies all workers into one of 23 major groups of jobs that are subdivided into minor groups of jobs and detailed occupations.

Diary/log

Daily listings made by workers of every activity in which they engage along with the time each activity takes.

Job specification

Describes who you'd want to hire for the job

Competency-based job analysis

Describing the job in terms of measurable, observable, behavioral competencies that an employee doing that job must exhibit to do the job well.

Job specification

Detailed summary of the qualifications needed to perform the essential job tasks

Job description

Ensures jobs are clearly defined

Department of Labor (DOL) Procedure

Experts at the U.S. Department of Labor put together a Dictionary of Occupational Titles which contained detailed information on virtually every job in America

DO

Focus on key tasks

Indirect observation through video

Good for dangerous jobs Get permission/consent

Job description

Helps for basic HR functions (coordinate HR functions and easily communicates JA info to others

DO

Include a disclaimer

DON'T

Include minor tasks not unique to a specific job

Interview

Individuals or focus groups Gets richest data, but must be analyzed and synthesized Time-consuming and expensive Identifiable

Human Behaviors

Information about human behaviors the job requires, like sensing, communicating, lifting weights, or walking long distances.

Job context

Information about such matters as physical working conditions, work schedule, incentives, the number of people with whom the employee would normally interact.

Work activities

Information about the job's actual work activities, such as cleaning, selling, teaching, or painting. This list may also include how, why, and when the worker performs each activity.

Performance standards

Information about the job's performance standards (in terms of quantity levels for each job duty, for instance).

Machines, tool, equipment, and work aids

Information regarding tools used, materials processed, knowledge dealt with or applied (such as finance or law), and services rendered (such as counseling or repairing).

Human requirements

Information such as knowledge or skills (education, training, work experience) and required personal attributes (aptitudes, personality, interests).

DON'T

JD: Base the job description on the KSAOs or interests of incumbents alone

DONT

JD: Use narrative form

Job description and job specification

2 Key documents:

STEP 1: Determine what kind of data to collect STEP 2: Determine who/where to collect the data from STEP 3: Determine data collection method STEP 4: Collect and analyze the data

4 STEPs to conducting the job analysis

1. Observation 2. Work sample 3. Work diary 4. Interview 5. ______ 6. Perform the job 7. Background records

7 Data Collection Methods

STEP 1: Perform the job analysis STEP 2: Establish the essential functions STEP 3: Organize the data concisely STEP 4: Add disclaimers STEP 5: Finalize for approval

SHRM 5 steps for building a job description:

Job description

Systematic, detailed summary of tasks, duties, and responsibilities

Job rotation

Systematically moving workers from one job to another.

Job specifications

A list of a job's human requirements, that is the requisite education, skills, personality, and so on-another product of a job analysis.

Job requirements matrix

A more complete description of what the worker does and how and why he or she does it; it clarifies each task's purpose and each duty's required KASOs.

Position Analysis Questionnaire (PAQ)

A questionnaire used to collect quantifiable data concerning the duties and responsibilities of various jobs.

1. Figure out why you're analyzing the job 2. Collect Background info (O*NET0 3. Collect task info 4. Collect KSAO info 5. Analyze in a KSAO/Task matrix 6. Write description/specification

A typical job analysis

Process chart

A workflow chart that shows the flow of inputs to an outputs from a particular job.

DO

Write an accurate, concise and complete description

DON'T

Write the job description as a guide of how to do the job

KASO/Task matrix

displays the relationships between each task and KSAOs required to perform them.

Performance Standards

should specify how much, how accurately, etc.

Performance Standards

-HR doesn't understand what's needed, so need to be collected by someone who does -Not always collected in job analysis, but should be due to its usefulness in various HRM functions.

Organization chart

A chart that shows the organization wide distribution of work, with titles of each position and interconnecting lines that show who reports to and communicates with whom.

Workflow analysis

A detailed study of the flow of work from job to job in a work process. (Decides if a job should even exist)

Job descriptions

A list of a job's duties, responsibilities, reporting relationships, working conditions, and supervisory responsibilities-one product of a job analysis.

DO

Refer to titles rather than people

Job enlargement

Assigning workers additional same-level activities

DO

Base the description on needs

DO

Be careful with "may" or "occasionally" tasks

Work Diary

Better for longer, non-repetitive jobs Good for knowledge-based work Hard to do for participants Can be inconsistent and inaccurate (self-report bias and inconsistent work requires longer diary)

KASO/Task matrix

Critical to forming job description and specification later on.

Job title/code FLSA status Job summary Essential functions & performance standards Supervision received/given Job context if unusual Date and revision info Disclaimer

Job description contains: (8)

-Job title/code -Job summary -KSAOs required -Date and revision info

Job specification contains: (4)

Discrimination, Recruiting and selection

Job specification is used mostly for staffing:

Job requirements matrix

KASO/Task Matrix is also referred to as...

Job analysis

LOTS of info comes out of a proper job analysis

Performance Standards

Levels of acceptable performance for each essential job duty

1. Job identification 2. Job summary 3. Responsibilities and duties 4. Authority of incumbent 5. Standards of performance 6. Working conditions 7. Job specification

Most job descriptions contain sections that cover: (7)

Job description

Not required by law but helps

Business Process Reengineering

Redesigning business processes, usually by combining steps so that small multifunction process teams using information technology do the jobs formerly done by a sequence of departments.

Job enrichment

Redesigning jobs in a way that increases the opportunities for the worker to experience feelings of responsibility, achievement, growth, and recognition.

Work sample

Observe samples of critical job tasks Best when job or is repetitive and short cycle

O*NET

Online job description information

Background records

Org charts Training manuals Previous job descriptions Payroll or production records

Talent Management

The goal-oriented and intergraded process of planning, recruiting, developing, managing, and compensating employees.

Job analysis

The procedure for determining the duties and skill requirements of a job and the kind of person who should be hired for it.

Work activities, Human Behaviors, Equipment used, Performance standards, Job context, Human requirements

The supervisor or HR specialist normally collects one or more of the following types of information via the job analysis: (6)

Perform the job

Time consuming Possible safety risks Assumes skills to perform the job

DO

Use action-orientated task statements

DO

Use factual, impersonal tone

Job analysis

Used for many different purposes in HRM

Performance Standards

Useful for performance appraisals, setting compensation, determining training needs

Observation

Watch someone actually perform the job Best for repetitive, short cycle job tasks Best for manual jobs, not good for knowledge-based work

Task statement

Written item that shows what the worker does on one particular job task; how the worker does it; the knowledge, skills, and aptitudes required to do it; and the purpose of the task.


Related study sets

Chapter 9 Part 3 and Clinical PowerPoints

View Set

Management Week 5: Chapter 16 & Appendix

View Set

Chapter 12 Quiz Questions and Answers

View Set

Principles of Real Estate I The CE Shop

View Set

MGT/445: Organizational Negotiations Wk 4 - Practice: Knowledge Check

View Set

Managerial Accounting: Activity-Based Costing, Process Costing, and Cost -Volume-Profit Relationships

View Set

Chapter: Chapter 19: Nursing Assessment: Hematologic Function

View Set

PP RNSG 1538 Mobility Mastery Quiz

View Set

Chapter 2 - Common Terminology and System Components - Irrigation Basics

View Set

The Great Depression Test Review

View Set

Pharmacology PrepU Chapter 38: Agents for Blood Glucose Levels

View Set