Job Evaluation Principles & Techniques
by Arnold Anderson, Demand Media
A job evaluation can be an interactive
process where the manager and the employee discuss the evolution of the
employee's job duties. A job evaluation clarifies for the employee the
execution and evaluation of job tasks. When you apply proper job appraisal
techniques, you maintain and build upon the principles upon which a job
evaluation is founded.
Job Duties
A guiding principle of job evaluations
is to maintain an accurate job description. Managers need to have a
comprehensive job description to properly evaluate employees, and employees
need a detailed job description to know what is expected of them. An interview
technique that preserves this principle is for the manager and employee to read
the employee's job description and determine if that description is still
relevant. A job description evolves through changes made based on employee
experience.
Interaction
Job evaluations try to determine the
individual performance of the employee and how the employee's performance
affects the rest of the company. The principles of a job evaluation are as much
about the employee's performance as they are about how the job itself
contributes to the success of the company. During the evaluation, a manager can
note how the job performed by the employee assists co-workers in doing their
jobs. For example, a shipping employee with a low level of errors helps the
customer service department by reducing customer complaints.
Uniformity
The job evaluation needs to be uniform
to be fair to employees and useful to the company. For example, using a
numbered evaluation system for ranking employee performance allows employees to
be judged using the same criteria and then compared to each other. This sort of
uniform evaluation allows the employees and the company to see what parts of
employee performance need improvement. It also helps the company to identify
more productive employees to assign to important projects or to be singled out
for management training.
Communication
Communication in a job evaluation
evaluates the different levels of interaction specific to a job classification.
For example, a production worker may only need to communicate with his
co-workers and supervisor, but a payroll employee communicates with co-workers,
managers and executives. The evaluation of the employee can judge how well he
communicates at various levels and can determine if communication needs to be
expanded or more focused to be more productive. For example, job appraisals may
determine that basic payroll clerks do not need to communicate directly with
executives to do their jobs. In fact, communicating with executives slows down
the production of a basic payroll clerk. You would then remove that level of communication
from the job description.
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