Summaries of articles for Work Organization and Job Design

Summaries of articles for Work Organization and Job Design.

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Task Performance and Context Performance - Borman & Motowidlo - Article

Task Performance and Context Performance - Borman & Motowidlo - Article

Task performance is related to the activities which are a contribution to the organization’s technical core business. Contextual performance contributes to the organizational shape, social and psychological context and therefore affects the organizational effectiveness (helping others, cooperating). Contextual performances have been studied often over the last years. Several interpretations of this performance are described, where Soldier Effectiveness is the last model to identify this performance. The model shows all the factors that are relevant for unit effectiveness, but fall out the technical core business. Commitment, Allegiance (orders/regulations), Socialization, Teamwork, Morale and Determination are all influencing the soldier effectiveness.

Borman and Motowidlo have made a five-category system to categorize the contextual performance:

  • Persisting with enthusiasm and extra effort as necessary to complete own task activities successfully

  • Volunteering to carry out task activities that are not formally part of own job

  • Helping and cooperating with others

  • Following organizational rules and procedures

  • Endorsing, supporting and defending organizational objectives

According to them, there are three main differences between contextual performance and task performance. The first difference is the fact that task activities vary across jobs, whereas contextual activities are almost the same across jobs in an organization. Second, task activities are more role-prescribed than contextual activities. Finally, task performance often requires more cognitive ability, whereas contextual performance is involved with more personality variables.

The article provides evidence to the assertion that overall job performance ratings are influences by contextual performance, which is important for the use of personality predicting job performance because personality does have significant links to contextual performance. Studies have found that correlations between personality scales and contextual performance are higher than the correlations between personality and task performance.

Three major conclusions:

  1. Contextual performance is different than task performance and important in the effectiveness of an organization.

  2. Contextual performance is part of the subordinates when making overall performance ratings and these factor weights as high as task performance.

  3. When contextual performances are included as criteria by personnel selection, personality predictors are more likely to be successful correlates.

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Work design research and practice in the future - Parker, Wall, & Cordery - Article

Work design research and practice in the future - Parker, Wall, & Cordery - Article

 

Greater global competition, new forms of information and communication technology, increased service sector and more individualized career paths are changes in the organizational landscape which occur in these current times. By dealing with these changes contemporary and future jobs are designed to be flexible. In this article the key issues for these jobs are identified by designing an elaborated model of work design.

This model distinguishes five categories of variables:

  • Antecedents: describe the factors that influence the choice of work design. These can be internal (management style, technology) or external to the organization (environment, political and labor institutions). Furthermore individual antecedents like personality, believes and trust are also influencing the choice of work design. Identifying these antecedents can be useful by predicting the types of work designs in various settings.

  • Work characteristics: identifying what type of work has to be done. This is dependent on individual-level(job control, skill variety, feedback, emotional demands), group-level(team autonomy, team feedback, team skill variety) and interactions between work characteristics, which means that in some situations individual behavior or group process can be very different than you have predict.

  • Outcomes: There is made a distinction between individual/group outcomes and organizational outcomes. Individual and group outcomes include job performance, affective reactions, safe working, outside-work activities and creativity. Organizational outcomes are related to productivity, customer satisfaction, absence, accidents and innovation.

  • Mechanisms linking work characteristics to outcomes: Gives the mechanisms which are influencing the relationship between work characteristics and outcomes. The work design can affect the outcomes. Mechanisms as motivation, quick response, learning and development and interaction processes are all related to the final outcomes.

  • Contingencies affecting the link between work characteristics and outcomes: there are some contingencies that affect the appropriateness and effectiveness of particular work designs. There are three types of contingencies; organizational contingencies, which stand for interdependence, uncertainty, implementation process, alignment or HR and technological systems.

  • Second, the group contingencies are norms, knowledge, structure, size, skill composition, goal clarity. The last contingencies are the individual, which are growth need strength, ability, context satisfaction, interpersonal trust.

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Sociotechnical systems - Molleman & Broekhuis - Article

Sociotechnical systems - Molleman & Broekhuis - Article

The Sociotechnical system theory is a theory of work design and quality of working life by means of three design principles:

  • Sociotechnical criterion: the control of variance and the statement that variances should be treated as close to their point of origin as possible. An organization should have enough means to respond to variety by using variety in their production process.

  • Minimal critical specification: work descriptions should be minimalized, which enables employees to bring in their own personal contribution. There should only be enough directives to ensure that the employee is executing his own task. (local autonomy and decentralized control is desirable)

  • Joint optimization principle: both social and technical system should be optimized, whereas social system refers to human resources, job design and control structure, and technical systems refer to production structure, technical equipment and information and communication technology.

STS is related to four organizational performance indicators:

  • Price

  • Quality

  • Flexibility

  • Innovation

Firms in which prices are very important, are often mass-producing firms. These companies have a high need to standardize their production process because of the easiness to implement and of the strong competitive value. There is almost no need for local autonomy and the decentralized decision-making is minimal, which makes work specifications more needed in these kinds of companies. The joint optimization is ignored, because the technical system gets all the attention and therefore dominates the social system. Examples for practices have shown that there are some mass-producing firms which have focused on the social factors and they found out that the motivation and satisfaction of the employees plays an important role in the effectiveness of the company. Principles as Lean can be more useful by implementing this joint optimization.

Over the last years, quality has become more important and therefore it is important to control undesired variations in quality. When quality and price are the mainly performance indicators, it is important to implement specification and standardization. With routinized work and standardize tasks, a company achieves the most effective and completed products. Technical systems to fulfill these goals are dominated and therefore you can conclude that quality is often a second performance indicator, and efficiency (costs) the only important one.

Flexibility is caused by the consumers’ demand to more diversity and shorter delivery times. Organizations have to produce a lot different products in many variants. Referred to the sociotechnical criterion, flexibility means that an organization should be able to deal with a quick changing environmental demand and therefore should need variety in products, skills and tasks. There should be enough space for local decision-making to respond effectively to changes in customer demand. In a variable environment both technical and social systems are important.

Innovation is a major determinant for long-term success in dynamic and changing markets. Processes are based on non-routines and non-repetitive actions, which makes it important to have a flexible structure. There should be a moderate level of diversity at the team level (preventing too much differences among members), but there should be a high level of diversity at organizational level, in order to be able to achieve different markets and their customer needs. The selection of workers in these kinds of businesses is very important, because central themes are trust and power in the team. Optimization is mainly focused on the social aspect of the system.

The learning approach to STS identifies several characteristics which influence the team learning. First, worker characteristics like high self-efficacy, high tolerance for ambiguity and a moderate level of group loyalty are given. The other characteristics are focused on team and design characteristics, which include flexible structures, moderate level of diversity at team level, high level of mutual trust and low variety in power. Al these characteristics are influencing the team learning and this relationship is moderated by the support of technical systems. On step further to organizational learning, aspects as flexible structures, technical support systems and a high diversity at organizational level are required characteristics.

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Personality Matters - Barrick & Mount - Article

Personality Matters - Barrick & Mount - Article

In contrast to what researchers in the past have said, personality matters because it predicts how we behave at work and the Big Five traits are predictors or job performance across a wide variety of outcomes that organizations value. Personality characteristics are always taken into consideration, even unnoticed. By selection, a manager would always prefer a dependable, confident and persistent person over a lazy and impulsive person.
But also research has shown the importance of personality. Personality is important as an enduring predictor of behaviors at work, which cannot be predicted by general mental ability, job knowledge of the situation itself. Often, Conscientiousness and Emotional Stability are the best predictors for job performance. In this article, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Openness to Experience are used as predictors of performance, but only effective in specific niches:

  • Extraversion: only significant when a job involves interacting with others and focused on influencing, status and power.

  • Agreeableness: only matters when interaction involves helping, cooperating and nurturing others.

  • Openness to experience: is only significant when creativity is needed and when influencing the ability to adapt to change.

Human behavior at work is complex, and therefore the relationship between personality traits and job performance is difficult to understand. The article gives three future areas for research. The first area the investigation of the interaction between personality and context. Barrick and Mount state that personality has the biggest effect on behavior when the situation is relevant to the trait’s expression, but weak enough to give employees the opportunity to choose how they behave in a particular situation. The second area is investigating the motivation a person has, which influences job performance. Motivational variables could be used as mediators by the relationship between personality traits and specific performance dimensions. The last area includes finding critical measurement issues to measure personality and its influence.

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General Cognitive Ability and Job Performance - Schmidt - Article

General Cognitive Ability and Job Performance - Schmidt - Article

General cognitive ability is the degree to which a person is able to learn. The difference between cognitive ability and intelligence is the genetic potential and the concept of developing. Even though cognitive ability is influenced by genes, it is influenced by much more than only the genetic potential. Cognitive abilities that are narrower than general cognitive abilities are called specific aptitudes, and they used to use these aptitude measures as better predictors of job performance rather than General Cognitive Ability. But recent research has shown that General Cognitive Ability is the best prediction of job performance, whereas aptitudes have no contributions to that prediction, because of the higher degree of validation.

Empirical research have shown that there is a strong link between General Cognitive Ability and job performance, which is so strong, that General Cognitive Ability can be considered as a valid predictor of job performance. It would be curious if General Cognitive Ability would not be a valid predictor of job performance, since General Cognitive Ability is used as a predictor for many aspects of human lives, such as income, education and criminal behavior.

The reason why General Cognitive Ability is so important by predicting job performance is because people higher in General Cognitive Ability acquire more job knowledge and they acquire it faster. When knowledge of a job is higher, this automatically leads to a higher level of job performance. According to Schmidt, it would be better if General Cognitive Ability was less important, and when specific aptitudes would be better argued and used by selecting and prediction job performance. But because of the large amount of evidence, Schmidt has to admit that General Cognitive Ability is too important to neglect.

Social Policies are striving for equal representation of all groups in all jobs at all different levels of job complexity. But every group differs in General Cognitive Ability and therefore in job-relevant skills and abilities. And because Social Policies should encourage managers to hire employees on basis of performance predictors such as General Cognitive Ability, it is not realistic to strive for this equal representation.

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The Workplace and Affect - Brief & Weiss - Article

The Workplace and Affect - Brief & Weiss - Article

Organizational behavior is composed of influences of work organizations on people and people on work organizations. This article gives an overview about affective experiences in organizational settings.

Historical Context

Since 1930 it was possible to do scientific research to a social phenomenon, and therefore the understanding of workers’ feelings could increase. Studies were innovative, full discoveries and very diverse. That scientific point of view soon became narrower by neglecting extra-work factors and ignoring qualitative research methods. Between 1985-1990 researches found the principles of moods and emotions. Moods are generalized feeling states that are not typically identified with a particular stimulus, where emotions are associated with specific events and are intense enough to disrupt thought processes.

Affective status of the job satisfaction construct

Job Satisfaction is an affective reaction to one’s job or job experiences and it should have a cognitive and affective content, whereas the cognitive content is more used in measurements, although the affective content influences the job satisfaction more. Job Satisfaction can also be considered as an evaluative judgment.

The production of moods and emotions in the workplace

The article identifies and categories several factors which are influencing the production of moods or emotions in the workplace:

  • Exogenous factors: the factors in the workplace that influence the feelings experienced there. Cycles in feelings do occur related to lifestyle and sociocultural factors. Also the group affective tone is an exogenous factor, which can be described as the consistent or homogenous affective reactions within a group.

  • Stressful Events or Conditions at Work

  • Leaders: leaders can influence the feelings of their followers, especially among transformational leaders, who use strong emotions.

  • Work Group Characteristics: The group affective tone is influence by the characteristics and personality traits within groups. People’s moods are influenced by the collective mood of their co-workers over time.

  • Physical settings: Physical settings play an important role in the emotions and moods of employees. Although there is small research done, research recognizes customers or clients as mood or emotion generators.

  • Organizational rewards

Consequences of moods and emotions in the workplace

Affect-driven behaviors are straight behavioral and cognitive outcomes, often bound in time and the overall judgment of job experience. Judgment-driven behaviors are influenced by evaluative judgments.

The main consequences of moods and emotions:

  • Positive mood enables creative problem solving

  • Positive mood generally encourage to behave helpfully and cooperative.

  • General performance is either increased by positive emotions or negative emotions. This is dependent on the context, since negative emotions can lead to more effective problem solutions and more accurate judgments.

  • Negative emotions can also help to achieve more in negotiation context.

  • Positive emotions predict absenteeism and both positive and negative emotions are predicting turnover intentions, mediated by commitment.

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Human Abilities: Emotional Intelligence - Mayer, Roberts & Barsade (2008) - Article

Human Abilities: Emotional Intelligence - Mayer, Roberts & Barsade (2008) - Article

Mayer et al., view intelligence as a general descriptive term referring to a hierarchy of mental abilities. This model consists of several hierarchical levels: basic mental abilities, broader cohesive groups of abilities and on the highest level general intelligence (of all domains).

Emotional intelligence is defined as the ability to carry out accurate reasoning about emotions and the ability to use emotions and emotional knowledge to enhance thoughts. Almost all mental activities involve emotion and intelligence, but the difference with Emotional Intelligence is the involvement of a primary focus on a specific area of problem solving.

Different approaches to emotional intelligence in the literature:

  1. Theoretical Approaches to Emotional Intelligence

  2. Specific-Ability Approaches to Emotional Intelligence: consider individual mental capacities important to EI. Some of these abilities are emotional perception (nonverbal perception is recognizing the social information about power and emotional expressions), use of emotional information in thinking (people with higher EI can be more objective when something is related to emotions), reasoning about emotions and emotion management.

  3. Integrative-Model Approaches to Emotional Intelligence: regard EI as a cohesive, global ability, in which several specific abilities are related to the overall sense of EI. An example of an integrative model is the Four-Branch Model of EI, in which EI is considered as the joining abilities of four areas: accurately perceiving emotion, using emotions to facilitate thoughts, understanding emotions and managing emotions.

  4. Mixed-Model Approaches to Emotional Intelligence: mixes noncognitive, capabilities, competences or skills, emotionally and socially intelligent behavior and dispositions from the personality domain.

Measuring Emotional Intelligence is possible in very many ways. The key question by choosing for a specific test is: do these tests measure what they claim to? An adequate test design has a content evidence of validity (do I measure what I want to know?), response-process evidence of validity (linking individual answers to criterion of correctness), reliability of emotional intelligence measures (consistency) and validity evidence from factor structure.

 

Topics, which can be predicted by emotional intelligence:

  1. Social Relations in Childhood and Adolescence: EI is positive correlated with good social relations and negative correlated with social deviance.

  2. Social Relations in Adulthood: Higher EI leads to greater self-perception of social competence and a decreased use of destructive interpersonal strategies.

  3. Scholastic Outcomes from Grade school to College: Higher EI leads to higher academic achievements, but not always to higher grades because that is influenced by IQ.

  4. Emotional Intelligence at Work: High EI gives better social relations during work performance and in negotiations.

  5. Psychological and Physical Well-Being: EI is correlated with greater life satisfaction and self-esteem and lower ratings of depression.

  6. Better family and intimate relationships.

  7. High EI individuals are perceived more positively by others.

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Abusive Supervision - Tepper - Article

Abusive Supervision - Tepper - Article

Constructs of hostility

In this article, several constructs of supervisors are evaluated on four dimensions: is the hostility of supervisors only against specific subordinate targets, are there other forms of hostility, are the construct’s content domain capturing nonhostile behavior and the role of intentions. They evaluated the following constructs:

  1. Abusive Supervision: subordinates’ perceptions of the extent to which their supervisors behave hostile, verbal or non-verbal

Directed downward, excludes physical hostility

  1. Generalized hierarchical abuse: exposure to hostility committed by hierarchically superior coworkers.

Directed downward

  1. Pretty tyranny: managers’ use of power and authority oppressively, capriciously and vindictively.

Directed downward, excludes physical hostility, Encompasses content other than hostility.

  1. Victimization: self-perception of an individual of being exposed to aggressive actions

Includes references to intended outcomes

  1. Workplace bullying

Physical hostility, Includes references to intended outcomes

  1. Supervisor aggression: physically or psychologically harm a worker

Directed downwards, Includes references to intended outcomes

  1. Supervisor undermining: supervisor hinders interpersonal relations, work-related success and favorable reputation.

Directed downward, excludes physical hostility, Includes references to intended outcomes

  1. Negative mentoring experiences: incidents that limit the ability to effectively provide guidance to protégés.

Directed downward, excludes physical hostility, Encompasses content other than hostility.

Model of Abusive Supervision

The supervisors’ perceptions of injustice or violation lead to abusive supervision and this relation is moderated by characteristics of subordinates. Thereafter, abuse supervision leads to several negative outcomes on attitudes, resistance, aggression and deviance, performance contributions, psychological distress and family well-being. This relationship is moderated by supervisors’ characteristics and behavior, subordinates’ work context and subordinate characteristics and behavior.

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Charismatic Leadership Behavior and An Affective Events Model - Walter & Bruch - Article

Charismatic Leadership Behavior and An Affective Events Model - Walter & Bruch - Article

This article integrates existing research and a more comprehensive perspective of leadership into a conceptual framework, in which factors such as type of leadership and contextual characteristics are taken into consideration.

Individual antecedents of Charismatic Leadership Behavior

From a demographic perspective, women are more likely to behave as a transformational leader and also age is related to the behavior as transformational leader. Furthermore the cognitive ability of a leader is positive related with transformational leadership even as the personality traits proactivity, risk-taking, self-confidence and social sensitivity. Positive moods and emotions are generally strengthening charismatic leadership. Last, much research has been done on Emotional Intelligence, which is really important for a charismatic leader.

Contextual antecedents of charismatic leadership

Contextual antecedents include position characteristics, which can be defined as the position of the leader within the organization. Besides that, social context characteristics, organizational characteristics, crisis situations and national culture are factors which belong to the contextual antecedents and therefore influencing charismatic leadership.

Affective Event Model

The Affective Event Model is based on the Affective Events Theory, which distinguishes affect-driven behavior from judgment-driven behavior. Affect-driven behavior is the behavior caused by individuals’ moods and emotions, where judgment-driven behavior is caused by individuals’’ work attitudes. This theory also integrates contextual aspects with individual determinants of employees’ behavior. To summarize the model:

  1. Charismatic leadership can influence either affect-driven elements or judgment-driven elements.

  2. Leader’s emotional intelligence is a moderator on two relations: the relation between leader positive affect to leader work attitudes (a leader can perform charismatic behavior, even if he doesn’t feel that way) and the relation of leader positive affect to charismatic leadership behavior (reduces the effects, high EI leaders can easier retain to positive work attitudes.

  3. The leaders’ context factors are categorized into two groups: context features, which shape the job characteristics, demands and constraints, and context features that influence leaders’ positive feelings through the work events. Context factors shape the work attitude of employees.

  4. The personality of leaders influences their affective reactions.

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Bridging the Gap between HR Practices and I/O Research - Hollenbeck, DeRue & Guzzo - Article

Bridging the Gap between HR Practices and I/O Research - Hollenbeck, DeRue & Guzzo - Article

 

Although the use of teams is become more important over the past years, almost no literature is paying attention to teams and their functioning. This article is discussing the current gaps and provides more information about team composition, training and job design.

Team Composition

Generic teamwork skills predict the team success above individual’s unique technical skills and abilities. By designing a team, there are some implications for selecting the right person. First, selection procedures should not only focus on individual-level Knowledge, Skills and Abilities, but also on teamwork KSAs. Second, recruiting for teams should emphasize the importance of teamwork requirements. Finally, team staffing decision should consider differences in employee preferences for working in groups. Measurements for the team characteristics go further than only measure the average of each team member’s responses, because team scores are dependent on circumstances and therefore you could use other score measurements.

  • Mean score technique: when tasks are additive, each member contributes to team performance in proportion to her ability.

  • Maximum Score: for disjunctive tasks (problem-solving tasks), because the group can perform as well as the best member.

  • Minimum Score: for conjunctive tasks (mountain climbing), because the team performance is depending on the performance of the weakest member.

The mix of individual traits in team contexts is critical, and among these contexts, the appropriateness of a particular mix is dependent on personal traits, nature of a task and the desired team outcome. Diversity can positively influence the team performance, but this is dependent on the type of diversity. Demographic diversity can improve overall performance, but is ales important than other forms of diversity. The effects of diversity on other dimensions can neglect the effect of demographic diversity. Maximizing differences in individual KSAs and minimizing differences in psychological dimensions of diversity may result in effective teams.

Team Training

The relative value of team training is higher when it is executed in team context instead of individual context. The perfect training program should consist of an individual task-specific content, but also with a teamwork focus, team interaction training and a leader component. Furthermore, there should be a shared mental model, because tasks are often too complex to deal for one individual. Managers should focus on designing a trainings program, which enables the team to develop a shared mental model.

Recent research suggests that cross-functional training could have more positive effects than only task-based training. This is in composite with the thoughts that everyone should have an own task in a team, but cross-functional training generates more effective team processes (teamwork, interaction and communication. Within high workload and intense task-interdependence environments, a cross-functional team is necessary, but within other situations it a more task-based team can be appropriated.

Team Task Design

Team task design can be described as the structures and roles within a team context, which determine the allocation of tasks, responsibilities and authority. An essential element of teams is task interdependence, because without interdependence, a team should behave more like a group. But high interdependence is not the only critical element; the type of task and the level of internal and external fit are also critical elements of team task design. The type of work can change the required level of interdependence, because in behavioral tasks (production), a moderate level of interdependence is required, but in conceptual tasks (negotiating) the required interdependence has the shape of a U: very high or very low level of interdependence results in higher team performance. Organizations can use team structures to achieve a higher team performance by external fit (structure and task environment), but not by internal fit (structure and individual traits).

Judging a member’s input in the team performance can be difficult, but there are some factors that can help to measure accurately: the presence of feedback, leader experiences and the provision of information. A management perspective states that the development of feedback mechanisms that provide leaders with information on the quality of team members’ past judgments enhances overall team decision-making accuracy. But from a training perspective, managers should focus on how to use and distribute the decision influences in the best way.

Individual-based rewards can be useful in some contexts of team-based structures. Teams with high extroversion and agreeableness perform better when rewarded as a cooperative system and teams low on extroversion and agreeableness perform better when rewarded as a competitive system.

 

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