By Inspired Dimensions
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May 1, 2022
Clarity of what is expected for each job is critical for any incumbent to be successful. The Job Description (JD) provides details on the responsibilities and the priority areas for any given role. Collectively, all JDs within an organisation must encompass what the organisation seeks to achieve. Who decides on the content? The details of a JD are prepared following input from various stakeholders that include the incumbent, line management and other stakeholders that work with the role being described. At Executive level, the Board must ensure that the JDs are in alignment with what the organisation strategy. The responsible departmental manager is empowered to make approvals to new JDs and any changes to JDs from their area. The employee must also contribute and always keep an updated copy. Human Resources provides training and guidelines for JDs to be accurately written and that all the relevant content is included. Audit may conduct checks on compliance across the organisation. Updating JDs By their nature, JDs are “live documents”, which must be edited whenever there are significant changes to the roles covered. The employee and the line manager have a responsibility of agreeing on changes as they become effective, add them to the JD and together sign them off. Both parties must keep an updated version of the JD. In some situations, organisations are forced to update or draft new JDs, these include: ◎ when placing adverts for attracting new applicants to a role ◎ as an audit requirement The accuracy of the content can be queried when a JD is not prepared as a tool to aid employee performance but for other reasons. JDs prepared for recruitment are intended to attract top level candidates which may result in some of the responsibilities being inflated. JDs prepared for audit purposes tend to be minimalistic in nature, to only satisfy the audit requirements. JDs must be kept updated to ensure employees are fully aware of what is expected of them and not updating as a reaction to some external requirement. How accurate is the JD content? The accuracy of a JD is a reflection of the thoroughness of the process followed when writing the JD. Individuals tend to emphasise responsibilities that they enjoy or those that they feel make their roles more important. Overlaps in responsibilities are natural for roles that work together but clarity on what each role does must be documented. For completeness, each JD must be reviewed together with that of its line manager, its direct reports, peer roles and other roles that are in close contact to ensure that overlaps are acceptable and also that nothing has been missed. Primary content from a JD must be obtained from the line manager and the incumbent. Input can also be obtained from other stakeholders that have close contact with the role. The line manager has the responsibility of verifying stakeholders input as this might not be in line with the plans for the role. What should go into a Job Description? The Wright State University states that a JD not only describes the position’s responsibilities, it sets the foundation for recruiting, developing and retaining talent and also sets the stage for optimum work performance by clarifying responsibilities, expected results, and evaluation of performance. Attached below is a JD framework that encompasses all the critical areas that must be included.