Human Resource Management: Chapter 2: The Analysis and Design of Work
Human Resource Management: Chapter 2: The Analysis and Design of Work
Work Redesign, often a firm will look for redesigning a work to make it
more efficient and effective. In order to redesign it, the company must have
detailed information about the existing job. In addition, redesigning a job will,
in fact, be similar to analyzing a job that does not yet exist.
Job Evaluation, the basis for job evaluation was provided by job analysis.
Determining the relative value of the job which in turn helps determine job
compensation is the purpose of a job appraisal. If pay structures are not
equitable, employees will be dissatisfied and quit, or they will not see the
benefits of striving for promotions
There are four (4) main different approaches to job design, namely:
Last but not the least perceptual–motor approach, has roots in human-
factors literature. If the biological approach focuses on physical capabilities
and limitations, the perceptual–motor approach focuses on human mental
capabilities and limitations. This is similar to the mechanistic approach since it
also reduces a job’s cognitive demands. This approach seeks to lessen the
information-processing requirements in a job by considering a worker’s
mental capabilities and limitations.