Job Descriptions and Job Competency Models Compared
Job Descriptions
• Title of position
• Department
• Reports to (to whom the person directly reports)
• Overall responsibility
• Key areas of responsibility
• Qualifications (skills and experience required)
• Title of position
• Department
• Reports to (to whom the person directly reports)
• Overall responsibility
• Key areas of responsibility
• Qualifications (skills and experience required)
Applicatons: recruitment, compensation structure, performance management (establishing job standards and goals), training.
Example: Project Manager
Job Competency Models (Workitect method)
• Title of Position
• Major responsibilities
• Performance criteria for each responsibility
• Qualifications (competencies: skills, knowledge, and underlying characteristics* required)
• Behavioral indicators (specific ways of demonstrating the competency)
• Links between main responsibilities and competencies
• Title of Position
• Major responsibilities
• Performance criteria for each responsibility
• Qualifications (competencies: skills, knowledge, and underlying characteristics* required)
• Behavioral indicators (specific ways of demonstrating the competency)
• Links between main responsibilities and competencies
Applications: talent management, succession planning, performance management (evaluating characteristics used to meet or not meet job goals), assessment and selection, training and development.
Examples: Project Manager, Executive, Account Rep, Call Center Manager, Human Resources Profesional
*A job competency is an underlying characteristic of a person that results in effective and/or superior performance in a job. The characteristic may be a motive, trait, skill, self-image, or body of knowledge. The Competent Manager, Boyatkis, 1982
Some organizations have combined the two documents and have added required competencies to job descriptions. The advantages are that it reduces the number of HR forms that are needed and makes the list of required qualifications more complete. The main disadvantage is that data needed for talent management, development, and succession planning is usually incomplete.
Regardless of where the competencies are listed, the most important determinant of their effectiveness is how they were identified. A description of Workitect's process for creating competency models can be found on pages 5 & 6 of Integrating HR & Talent Management Processes.
FAQ
Can a generic off-the-shelf competency model be used? Don’t jobs with the same title require pretty much the same competencies in all organizations?
Each organization has its own culture and “way of doing business”. Even for jobs with identical titles, job success in one organization will require some competencies that are different in another organization. Even a small difference could be critical. This is why we only build custom models, or teach internal consultants how to build their own models.
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