Human Resource Management and Design of Work

 

The content, structure and arrangement of jobs and activities are referred to as job design or work design. The majority of research is done on job features such role issues, autonomy, workload and feedback. Job designs have evolved over time from a purely efficiency- and productivity-focused approach to ones that incorporate motivational elements, such as the social approach to work. A wide range of outcomes, including as employee health and well-being, attitudes like commitment and job satisfaction, employee cognition and learning, and behaviours like productivity, absenteeism, proactivity, and innovation, depend on job design. The personal traits of the employee are crucial to the design of the job. They have the power to alter the impact of work design and have an impact on how employees view and seek out specific job qualities. They also aid in understanding the influence that job design has.

Job Design and Well-being


Figure 1 - Job Design

The activities of employees, their responsibilities, the tasks necessary to carry out their work, and the organization and scheduling of those tasks and duties are all included in job design. Contemporary job design typologies encompass elements like job needs, job control, skill utilization, task variation, role clarification, skill utilization, task variety, support and social interaction at work and job security.

It is good that work may be a beneficial aspect of living, as billions of people spend the majority of their waking lives at work. The corresponding compensation contributes to maintaining a particular level of living and helps with bill payment. However, having a regular job also helps one to organize their time, develop their identity, interact with others and take part in worthwhile activities (Jahoda, 1982). The way work is designed has a big impact on whether it is beneficial or harmful. The content, structure and organization of a person's tasks and activities are referred to as their work design. 



Human Resource Management Function

In an organization, the human resources department oversees a number of core duties. Ensuring adherence to labor laws, maintaining documentation, hiring and training personnel, paying salaries, providing support in building relationships and offering assistance in handling specific performance issues are all crucial. These tasks are crucial since without them, the business would not be able to provide for the necessities of its employees and management.

Figure 2 - HRM Functions


Job analysis and design

An employee must meet the job criteria with their skills, abilities, and motivation in order to perform satisfactorily. Mismatches can result in poor performance, absenteeism, employee turnover, and other issues. When scientific management was popular, occupations were designed to be basic and routine so that untrained workers could pick them up fast. This technique is called job analysis and it determines the skills and abilities needed to do a certain job. Several presumptions about workers before the turn of the century were undoubtedly true however a fundamental tenet of such job designs was that average people had neither desire or aptitude to participate in decision-making at work and had no need to find fulfilment in their employment. However, during the early years of industrialization, the motivations have undergone numerous adjustments due to employee needs. Many businesses use a skill set for job creation that is similar to scientific management. According to organizational studies, workers are not only asking for more fulfilling and gratifying jobs, but they are also proving that participation in decision-making actually increases organizational effectiveness rather than decreases it.


Figure 3 - Job analysis

Recruitment and selection



The productivity of an organization's workforce has a significant impact on its overall effectiveness. An organization's performance will always be poor if its labor force is of low quality. For this reason, one of the most important personnel functions is hiring new employees. A number of human resources procedures are involved in finding and hiring qualified workers, including as labor market analysis, long-term planning, testing and interviewing. 


For the most part, the number of posts that selection staff and working teachers have and the time it takes to fill them are used to gauge their success. An employer's workforce is largely shaped by its internal selection personnel rather than by the hiring managers and the businesses that perform the hiring. Together with the managers tasked with conducting the final candidate election, they oversee start-up meetings, advertise work publications, initial candidates, screening applicants, and plan recruitment events.

Training and development

The development of an organization's human resources is intimately linked to its growth. Stunting organizations are prone to occur when personnel are unable to advance and improve in their work. Successful staff development programs do not ensure organizational success, yet they are typically found in businesses that are growing and succeeding.

 Companies need to provide employees with the fundamental tools for success, which usually means training new hires thoroughly so they can transition into a different company culture from the outset. Additionally, many HR departments provide professional development and activity readiness training. Administrative training may be crucial for newly appointed and motivated chiefs and directors on matters like execution management and handling employee relations at the division level.


Compensation and health



A human resource professional with dual capabilities may often supervise the compensation and benefit components of human resources as well as the relationships between workers and their jobs.


In terms of compensation, the human resources departments are responsible for creating pay scales and evaluating aggressive payment plans. In accordance with this, a compensation and benefits specialist can coordinate procedures for retirement hold reserves with the assistance supervisor and organize gathering wellness integration rates with help designs. The pay and annuity area for human resources might include finance; managers frequently reallocate administrative responsibilities, such as finance, depending on the circumstances. 


Employee relation 



Employee relations and human resources components can be combined and managed by a professional in a unionized workplace, or they can be fully responsible and governed by two human resources professionals who are expressly qualified in every area.
Human resources is in charge of managing relations with workers; through assessing job satisfaction, worker dedication, and workplace compromise, HRS strengthens the business-worker connection. 


Human Resource Managers, Staff and Line Managers


HR Managers deal with important, long-term organizational problems pertaining to employee management, growth, and employment relationships. They assist in the creation of the organization's business plans in addition to being directed by them.
This is accomplished by making sure that senior managers pay attention to how the plans will affect human resources. HR strategists persuade top managers that they need to create business plans that optimize the organization's human resources' key competencies. HR professionals are in a good position to watch, analyse and respond appropriately to changes occurring inside and to their organizations that impact employee employment. HR managers work with their colleagues, or clients, as external management consultants, analyzing problems, diagnosing problems, and suggesting solutions. They will work on "process consulting" and the creation of HR systems or processes. The latter addresses aspects of processes like goal-setting, team-building, and organization (Henry, 1986).

The human resource leader will blend in with other senior executives because of their shared concern for and comprehension of the business needs. Similarly, the human resource department staff will look indistinguishable from other employees because they too share the human resource function. Line managers, human resource staff, and non-managerial employees will collaborate to create and carry out human resource activities, policies, goals and practices.

Employees are increasingly participating in human resource management. Employees might be required to evaluate their own work or that of their peers, for instance. Employees no longer frequently draft their own job descriptions. The biggest change that has probably occurred is that workers are designing their own employment, evaluating their own wants and objectives and controlling their own careers more actively. However, in order to accomplish these goals, the human resources department needs to be staffed with competent people and assist in guiding the process (Gratton, 2000).


Outcomes of Job Design

HR professionals will not be encouraged to create HR metrics that improve business performance if they don't have the assurance that HR matters. The major outcome of job designing is job satisfaction. According to Hasibuan (2007), professional perceptions about how well their employment delivers things that are deemed important lead to job happiness. A good emotional attitude and a love for one's work are indicators of job happiness. 

The main goal of career development is to help the company grow so it can better meet future business difficulties. Every company has to acknowledge that human resources will be essential to its survival in the future. An organization that lacks competitive HR and job design will eventually face setbacks and exclusion since it will not be able to compete. Under these circumstances, organizations must provide career development for their employees; this must be done in a planned and long-term way.

 



References

Broeck A.V.D. and Parker S.K. (2017), ‘Job and Work Design’, Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of Psychology. Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/317560760_Job_and_ Work_Design (Accessed 8th April, 2024)

Chang W.A., Wang Y. and Huang T.C. (2013), ‘Work Design-Related Antecedents of Turnover Intention: A Multilevel Approach’, Human Resource Management, 52(1), 1-26. Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/263367545_Work_Design-Related_Antecedents_of_Turnover_Intention_A_Multilevel_Approach (Accessed 8th April, 2024)

Daniels K. et al. (2017), ‘Job Design, employment practices and well-being: a systematic review of intervention studies’, Ergonomics, 60(9), 1177-1196. Available at: https://www. tandfonline.com/doi/epdf/10.1080/00140139.2017.1303085?needAccess=true (Accessed 8th April, 2024)

Dorenbosch L., Engen M.L.V. and Verhagen M. (2005), ‘On-the-Job Innovation: The Impact of Job Design and Human Resource Management through Production Ownership’, Creativity and Innovation Management, 14(2), 129-141. Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/ publication/227521034_On-the Job_Innovation_The_Impact_ of_Job_Design_and_Human_ Resource_Management_through_Production_Ownership (Accessed 8th April, 2024)

Igwe A., Onwumere J.U. and Egbo O.P. (2014), ‘Effective Human Resource Management As Tool For Organizational Success’, European Journal of Business and Management, 6(39), 210-218. Available at: https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/234626157.pdf (Accessed 8th April, 2024)




 


Comments

  1. The blog provides a comprehensive facts on Job design process considering every aspect. Out come of the Job design is Job satisfaction has clearly explained. Good job

    ReplyDelete
  2. This blog offers a clear and insightful overview of job design and its significance in HRM. It effectively links operational tasks with strategic employee development, though it could benefit from more real-world examples to illustrate these concepts. Good read!

    ReplyDelete

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