Job, Role, Competency and Skill Analysis
Job, Role, Competency and Skill Analysis
Analysis
• Definition of the terms
• Job analysis
• Role analysis
• Competency analysis
• Skills analysis
• Job descriptions
• Role profiles.
Introduction
• The analysis of jobs, roles, skills and competencies is
one of the most important techniques in HRM. It is of
fundamental importance in most of the key HRM
activities.
• organization and job design,
• recruitment and selection,
• performance management,
• Learning and development,
• career management,
• job evaluation
• design of grade and pay structures.
Definitions
Job
• A job is an organizational unit which consists
of a group of defined tasks or activities to be
carried out or duties to be performed.
Definitions
Job analysis
• Job analysis is the process of collecting,
analyzing and setting out information about
the content of jobs.
Job description
• A job description defines what job holders are
required to do in terms of activities, duties or tasks.
Role
• ‘an organized set of behaviors’. It is the part
people play in their work – the emphasis is on
the patterns of behaviour expected of them in
order to achieve agreed outcomes.
Role analysis
• Role analysis finds out what people are
expected to achieve when carrying out their
work and the competencies and skills required
to meet those expectations.
Accountability profile
• It is a type of role profile that focuses on what
role holders will be held to account for in terms
of what they do and what they achieve.
• It may be set out as a list of main accountabilities.
Definitions
Generic role
• A generic role is a role in which essentially
similar activities are carried out by a
number of people (e.g. a team leader).
Competency
• Competency is ‘an underlying characteristic
of a person that results in effective or
superior performance’.
Behavioural competencies
• the type of behaviour required to deliver
results under such headings as team working,
communication, leadership and decision
making. They are sometimes known as ‘soft
skills’.
Types of competencies
Technical competencies
• Technical competencies define what people have to know
and be able to do (knowledge and skills) to carry out their
roles effectively.
Competency analysis
• Competency analysis is concerned with
functional analysis to determine work-based
competences and behavioural analysis to
establish the behavioural dimensions that
affect job performance.
Definitions
Skills analysis
• Skills analysis determines the skills required to
achieve an acceptable level of performance.
Definitions
Person specification
• A person specification, also known as a job or
role specification, sets out the education,
qualifications, training, experience,
personal attributes and competences a job
holder requires to perform her or his job
satisfactorily.
• Person specifications are used in recruitment
and selection.
Definitions
Learning specification
• A learning specification defines the knowledge
and skills needed to achieve an acceptable level
of performance.
• Interviews
• Questionnaires
• Observation
Interviews
• The aim of the interview should be to obtain
the relevant facts about the job, namely the job
title, organizational details and a list of the
tasks or duties performed by the job holder.
Guidelines for Conducting a job analysis
interview
• Work to a logical sequence of questions
• Review as necessary to establish what people really do.
• Ensure that job holders are not allowed to get away with
vague or inflated descriptions of their work.
• Sort out the wheat from the chaff.
• Obtain a clear statement from job holders about their
authority to make decisions and the amount of guidance
they receive from their manager or team leader.
• Avoid asking leading questions which make the expected
answer obvious.
• Allow the job holder ample opportunity to talk by creating
an atmosphere of trust.
Questionnaires
• Job title
• Reporting to
• Reporting to job holder
• Overall purpose
• Main activities, tasks or duties
An example of a job description
Role analysis and role profiles
• Job breakdown
• Manual skills analysis
• Task analysis
• Faults analysis
• Job learning analysis
Job breakdown
• analyses a job into separate operations, processes, or tasks
which can be used as the elements of an instruction
sequence.
• A job breakdown analysis is recorded in a standard format of
three columns:
1. The stage column in which the different steps in the job are
described.
2. The instruction column in which a note is made against
each step of how the task should be done.
3. The key points column in which any special points such as
quality standards or safety instructions are noted against
each step.
Manual skills analysis