Industrial sociologists and psychologists have often paid little more than scant attention to the actual work of the people they have been studying. The literature is full of brief comments about the work situation which lack both data and an analytical framework. This deficiency is surprising. Work content has been shown to have a significant impact on behaviour, morale, and productivity in the workplace. The purpose of job design research is to seek to understand this relationship more clearly and then to use research‐based insights to create jobs which are more satisfying to perform, and more efficient in performance. As such this body of knowledge should be a subject of particular relevance for personnel specialists since job content considerations should affect recruitment, training, placement and effort‐reward policies. However, although job content has very wide repercussions for the personnel area, job design is frequently left by default to the technical and engineering specialists, who seek to make their work system function effectively in production rather than human terms.
Article navigation
1 February 1973
Review Article|
February 01 1973
JOB DESIGN
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6933
Print ISSN: 0048-3486
© MCB UP Limited
1973
Personnel Review (1973) 2 (2): 68–73.
Citation
Mills S (1973), "JOB DESIGN". Personnel Review, Vol. 2 No. 2 pp. 68–73, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb055232
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
China will risk alienating India to placate Pakistan
Expert Briefings (March,2019)
“We put teamwork back on the agenda again and again”: The role of support systems in autonomous teamwork
Team Performance Management: An International Journal (August,2013)
India’s data rules will favour state and local firms
Expert Briefings (June,2019)
Organizational Design in Industry—Towards a Democratic, Socio‐technical Approach
Personnel Review (February,1973)
JOB SATISFACTION: A METHOD OF ANALYSIS
Personnel Review (March,1972)
Related Chapters
References
Cultural Ergonomics
INTRODUCTION: ADDING A CULTURAL DIMENSION TO HUMAN FACTORS
Cultural Ergonomics
1. NATIONAL AND CULTURAL VARIABLES IN ERGONOMICS
Cultural Ergonomics
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
