Job and Organizational Design. Approaches to Job Design Work Simplification –Advocated by Frederick Taylor Break jobs down into simple components (small.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
7-1©2005 Prentice Hall 7: Creating a Motivating Work Setting Chapter 7: Creating a Motivating Work Setting Organizational Behavior 4th Edition JENNIFER.
Advertisements

Chapter 8 Organizing for Quality, Productivity, and Job Satisfaction
Examples of “Classic” Theories of Work Motivation (Mobilization?) Needs theories Maslow’s hierarchy of needs Herzberg’s two factor theory Aldefer’s ERG.
Motivation III Motivation in practice Organizational Behaviour The Individual.
Organization Development and Change Thomas G. Cummings Christopher G. Worley Chapter Sixteen: Work Design.
Motivation III Motivation in practice Organizational Behaviour The Individual.
Motivation III Motivation in practice Organizational Behaviour The Individual.
MOTIVATIONMOTIVATION MOTIVATION DEFINED  Willingness to exert high levels of effort to reach organizational goals.
GOAL SETTING AND JOB DESIGN APPROACHES TO MOTIVATION
Organizational Attitudes & Behavior Organizational Attitudes –Job Satisfaction –Organizational Commitment –Job Involvement –Organizational Justice Organizational.
Job and Organizational Design
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved Chapter Fifteen Managing Performance through Job Design and Goal Setting.
GOAL SETTING AND JOB DESIGN APPROACHES TO MOTIVATION
7-1©2005 Prentice Hall 7 Creating a Motivating Work Setting Chapter 7 Creating a Motivating Work Setting.
6-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Human Relations, 3/e © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Job and Organizational Design
Developing a Work-Unit Analysis
Employee Motivation Chapter 10.
Job Design Lecture #10. Job Design Job Characteristics Model Hackman-Oldham Model Job Description Index Model of Job Design Model of Job Redesign.
MOTIVATION.
Chapter 5: Motivation.
Dessler, Cole and Sutherland Human Resources Management in Canada Canadian Ninth Edition Chapter Three Designing and Analyzing Jobs © 2005 Pearson Education.
LECTURE 9 APPLYING MOTIVATION THEORIES: JOB DESIGN AND EMPOWERMENT.
Chapter 8 Motivation Through Needs, Job Design & Intrinsic Rewards What Does Motivation What Does Motivation Involve? Involve? Need Theories of Need Theories.
Job Design and Involvement
Chapter 6 Job Design – A Book Review
Chapter 14 Work Motivation
Organizing Lecture 6. Main terms in organizing The next function in management is organizing. It means how to group organizational activities and resources.
MANPOWER PLANNING.
Employee Motivation Chapter 10. Employee Motivation Chapter 10.
Motivation I: Needs, Job Design and Satisfaction Chapter Six.
Job Design MANA 3320 Dr. Jeanne Michalski. Design of Work Systems  Job Specialization Based on Frederick Taylor’s Scientific Management Based on Frederick.
Job Design Chapter 11 Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publisher, Copyright
1-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Human Resource Management Gaining a Competitive Advantage Chapter 4 The Analysis.
UNIT A LEADERSHIP AND SUPERVISION 2.01 Recognize the four functions of management.
Job design What is job design and why is it important?
7.
Extrinsic Extrinsic Instrinsic Instrinsic. Types of Rewards Extrinsic Extrinsic Instrinsic Instrinsic.
Motivation I: Needs, Job Design and Satisfaction
Managing the Structure, Flow, and Design of Work.
Chapter 9b Job design and work organization Source: Bettman/Corbis.
Need Theories of Motivation Maslow’s Need Hierarchy Theory Maslow’s Need Hierarchy Theory –Physiological –Safety –Love –Esteem –Self- Actualization Britt.
Internal Alignment Dr. Jeanne Michalski. Hay Group/Fortune Magazine Study Most admired companies (MAC)  Survey of C-suite executives, directors and industry.
EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION MGMT 371: CHAPTER 6. EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION  Job Performance Model  Need Theories  Motivational Job Design  Intrinsic Motivation.
Organizational Design, Diagnosis, and Development Session 20 Techno-structural Interventions, III Work Design.
Chapter 6 Jobs & the Design of Work. Job Compared to Work Job - a set of specified work and task activities that engage an individual in an organization.
+ Understanding Canadian Business Chapter 11 Motivating Employees.
Work Design.
CHAPTER 8 Job Design and Work Schedules Andrew J. DuBrin Essentials of Management, 6/e South-Western College Publishing Copyright © 2003 Screen graphics.
Organizations Behavior Structure Processes Tenth Edition Gibson Ivancevich Donnelly Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc Chapter.
Motivating Employees Chapter 12. Motivation The psychological processes that arouse and direct goal-directed behavior.
12 Chapter Motivation McGraw-Hill© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Motivation Chapter Three.
Human Resources Frame. Human Resource Assumptions Organizations exist to serve human needs People and organizations need each other When the fit between.
Managing Performance through Job Design and Goal Setting
Beyond Motivation: Improving Performance through Job and Work Design
Chapter 5 Motivation at Work
CHAPTER TEN Designing Adaptive
Human Resource Management: Gaining a Competitive Advantage
To A Session On Job Design Welcome
Job Design (Discussion Note) 2017 BKB/NASC/ADV.HRM/2017.
Organization Development and Change
14 Work Design.
Managing Work Flows Chapter 2 – Part 1
Chapter 16 Motivating Employees.
Comparing Among Content Theories
The Job Characteristics Theory of Work Motivation
Job Characteristics Model (JCM)
CHAPTER 4 - ORGANISATION AND JOB DESIGN
Chapter 12 Motivation.
Presentation transcript:

Job and Organizational Design

Approaches to Job Design Work Simplification –Advocated by Frederick Taylor Break jobs down into simple components (small tasks) Hire/Train people in necessary KSAs for components –Lower skill levels needed –Cheaper for the organization –Can decrease potential for errors Have “expert” employees (specialists) Product produced by combining efforts Employees are replaceable “cogs” in the machine

Consequences of Work Simplification Work Simplification MonotonyBoredom Job Dissatisfaction Tardiness Absenteeism Turnover Stress ProcessPerceptionFeeling Emotional Response Behavioral Response

Results of Exercises

Job Change Strategies Job enlargement –Increasing the number and variety of tasks Job enrichment –Increasing the amount of control over planning and performance of a job –Increasing involvement in setting organizational policy

Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory Hygiene Factors salary company policy physical facilities administration working conditions co-worker relations Motivators challenge autonomy advancement recognition

Job Characteristics Model Core Job Dimensions Critical Psychological States Personal and Work Outcomes High internal work Motivation High quality work Performance High satisfaction With work Low absenteeism And turnover Autonomy Feedback Growth Need Strength Experienced meaningfulness of work Experienced responsibility for work outcomes Knowledge of actual results of activities Skill variety Task identity Task significance

Summary There is no “one best way” to design jobs –Simple Jobs advantages –Can reduce potential for error –Be cheaper to staff –Increase efficiency disadvantages –Result in decreased motivation –Result in decreased satisfaction –Result in decreased attendance/tenure –Enriched Jobs Can enhance motivation and satisfaction May increase costs to organization –more training –more compensation

Why use organizations? –Facilitate complex goal accomplishment –Reduce individual risk Organizational Structure –Form or Shape of Organization –Helps coordinate system activity e.g., decision making, communication, etc. Organizational Structure

Classical Organizational Theory Organizational Components –A system of differentiated activities –People –Authority –Cooperation Structural Principles –Functional Principle –Scalar Principle –Line/Staff Principle –Span of Control Principle President Marketing Director Assistant Director Employee Assistant to Director Production Director Keyboard Manager Employee Monitor Manager Employee Finance Director Assistant Director Employee Research & Development Scientist

Neoclassical Organizational Theory Critiqued principles of Classical theory –Functional Principle –Scalar Principle –Line/Staff Principle –Span of Control President Marketing Director Assistant Director Employee Assistant to Director Production Director Keyboard Manager Employee Monitor Manager Employee Finance Director Assistant Director Employee Research & Development Scientist

Inputs Information Equipment Facilities Materials Money Technology Transformation Organization Human Resources Outputs Products Goods Services Customer Feedback Systems Theory Characteristics of Systems’ Theories –Subsystems –Synergy –Input/Output Model –Goal seeking –Entropy –Dynamic Equilibrium –Feedback