Management of Human Resource Term Paper

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Job Analysis and Design

Approaches the HR manager can take to conduct a job analysis of the Customer Service Representative position.

The completion of a competent job analysis is needed to outline the job description, the responsibilities of the position and the qualities the holder of the position is expected to have so that they are successful for in that position. Not using a job analysis makes it hard to fill vacant positions effectively (Prien, Goodstein, Goodstein & Gamble, Jr., 2009).

The various ways of carrying out a job analysis for the position of customer representative is as given below:

a) DACUM (Developing a Curriculum): This is a quick but valid technique for job analysis that is used in the determination of competencies that the team should focus on in the training curriculum for a given occupation. DACUMs are made use of in developing job profiles for all kinds of occupations as it saves both money and time. It has been validated by research and it compares very well with other methods used for job analysis. DACUM is grounded on the following premises:

Expert professionals are better at describing their work than any other person can do

Any position can be described effectively in terms of tasks and competencies that workers who are successful in that field do

The particular skills, tools, attitudes and specific knowledge that workers need to effectively do their job can be described (Halasz & Reid, 2003).

The process takes thinking deliberately in an organized way and needs about 5 to 9 workers who are experts in their field of work, a recorder and a DACUM facilitator. While some job analysis can be carried out in a single day, it is more prudent to schedule more than one day for those jobs that are complex. The members of the panel must be heavy hitters in their areas of expertise, and have excellent skills and knowledge. To achieve good outcomes, a facilitator with training in the DACUM process is needed. The first step is preparing a profile or chart that shows the duties and tasks the person seeking the position will do and the required general knowledge, skills, and tools. Following the development of the profile, it should undergo validation and expert workers as well as supervisors should review it for accuracy and completeness. Different criteria can be used in the process of validation, but a critical criterion is performance frequency and training needs (Halasz & Reid, 2003).

Advantages of the DACUM Method (Hartley, 1999):

Self-validation as verification is done by the experts in that particular area as well as the panel established.

It is proven to work for not less than 3 decades now.

It establishes a sense of ownership among the supervisors and managers as they design the training.

Disadvantages of the method (Hartley, 1999):

Listing all qualities and tasks the job requires is cumbersome.

It takes long to orient managers who are not certified to the terms used in such a process and nearly a quarter of the time is dedicated to this.

A session like the one mentioned above needs a certified DACUM facilitator. The concerned organization must therefore get certification from DACUM licensees.

b. Critical Incident Technique (CIT): A behavioral analysis is done on a phenomenon so as to identify the behavioral aspects of the job. The individuals directly in contact with the phenomenon or who feel the effects of the behavior give the needed information. Data may be obtained from workshops or interviews (Scott & Reynolds, 2010). There are four characteristics to a good incident:

Specificity

Focus on behavior that is observable

Description of the behavior's context

Highlights the consequences that accrue due to the behavior

The method involves asking experts in the job to give stories of poor or good performance so that specific undesirable or desirable behaviors and competencies can be identified. Since the focus is not on the typical but extreme undesirable or desirable behavior, the method is not typically made use of (Condrey, 2010). The basic steps made use of in this method are the generation of lists by competent workers of notable incidents, categorization of the incidents considered to be critical into various dimensions, and once the dimensions are validated, they are reported and also defined by the incidents deemed critical and then recorded (Condrey, 2010). For every incident, every participant is requested to give a description of:

Circumstances preceding that particular incident

The exact deed considered unhelpful or helpful

The reason the behavior is considered unhelpful

An approximation of the time the incident took place (Scott & Reynolds, 2010).


Advantages of CIT method (Ngo, 2010):

The data collected is in the respondent's own words and the respondent is not forced to use a certain framework.

Focus on extraordinary or unusual can yield more helpful data.

It is flexible.

Not expensive but gives rich data.

It identifies those rare occurrences that other methods might miss.

It emphasizes those features that can ensure the vulnerability of a system and so benefit the firm hugely.

Disadvantages of the CIT method are:

Emphasis is on rare events and everyday concerns might be missed.

Critical incidents are reliant on memory.

Not very reliable.

It is biased towards recent incidences as they can be recalled more easily.

c) Structured Interview Method: It is probably the technique that is most widely used in the determination of what exactly a job involves and its wide interview usage is testament to its effectiveness (Lunenburg & Ornstein, 2011). This method allows the analysts to talk one on one with the current job holder and hence interrogation is permitted on both sides and so the analyst is afforded the chance of explaining the importance of obtaining the information they are looking for. The interviews can be carried out with one or several incumbents using structured set of questions that allow different answers to be given.

Advantages of the interview method:

Allows the gathering of specific data or information

Permits probing as well as clarification

Disadvantages of the interview method

Consumes a lot of time

Lacks on-the-spot validation

Inefficiency as the interviewer must give an explanation of the purpose and give background information

Might be expensive if carried out in several locations

2.

Two Job Design Approaches

Job design involves the job contents that someone will do, i.e. The tasks and roles to be fulfilled, and the methods to be made use of in fulfilling those tasks. The four main approaches taken in such a scenario are as below:

3. Motivational: The approach is targeted at improving the attitudinal and effective reactions employees have like intrinsic motivation and job satisfaction plus other behaviors like performance, turnover and absenteeism. Three techniques used are discussed below:

o

Job enlargement: Involves having variety in a job by having varied tasks with varying difficulty in a job.

o

Job rotation: The movement of employees from one job to another by giving them chance to do two or more different jobs in rotation. This results in flexibility and interest.

o

Job enrichment: Finds a basis in the motivation-hygiene theory that was put forth by Herzberg and involves the modification of a job so that an employee gets the chance to experience recognition, achievement, stimulating work, advancement and responsibility.

4. Perceptual -- Motor approach: Is based on research that evaluates human factors engineering, cognitive and perceptual skills as well as processing of information and puts emphasis on outcome reliability through the examination of rate of errors, feedback given by workers and accidents and ties these together to improve safety, reliability as well as user reaction through the designing of jobs in a manner that lowers the job's information processing requirements (Kinicki & Kreitner, 3006). A major concern with the approach is the safe and efficient utilization of humans in human-machine systems, emphasizing on the design, selection as well as arrangements of components of the system so that the limitations and capabilities of people is accounted for Challenges of Applying Method

Motivational

Job enlargement requires more training (Salvendy, 2001).

Limitation of employee rotation as some specialized roles cannot be carried out by other people.

Perceptual -- Motor approaches

Customer service requires a given level of empathy that is not considered in the perceptual -- motor approach.

Reduced motivation because of more rules and systems and also reduced mental stimulation.

Strategies to Attract and Select Qualified Applicants

Given any market condition, there exists at least 3 strategies that are different conceptually that can be used in increasing success in the attraction of labor force. Some include: alteration of employment inducements, improvement of recruitment practices as well as the targeting of non-traditional applicants (Rynes & Barber, 1990). New employees are now looking for better arrangements in work and other benefits that are non-traditional. Workers from Gen Y value benefits and perks in a job more -- and businesses view this as a win -- win (Crossland, 2013).

The company can make use of the following two methods to attract employees (Heathfield, n, d,):

Employee recognition plans:….....

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