What is (or should be) the difference between competency modeling and traditional job analysis?

We argue that Competency Modeling (CM) has the potential to fill an important void in Traditional Job Analysis (TJA), specifically the infusion of strategic concerns in day-to-day employee behavior. Moreover TJA and CM pursue fundamentally different goals, which those who argue for and against eithe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human resource management review 2009-06, Vol.19 (2), p.53-63
Hauptverfasser: Sanchez, Juan I., Levine, Edward L.
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container_title Human resource management review
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creator Sanchez, Juan I.
Levine, Edward L.
description We argue that Competency Modeling (CM) has the potential to fill an important void in Traditional Job Analysis (TJA), specifically the infusion of strategic concerns in day-to-day employee behavior. Moreover TJA and CM pursue fundamentally different goals, which those who argue for and against either of these human resource methods at times may overlook. To buttress this point we compare TJA and CM along six dimensions: purpose (describe versus influence behavior), view of the job (an object to be described versus a role to be enacted), focus (job versus organization), time orientation (past versus future), performance level (typical versus maximum), and measurement approach (latent trait versus clinical judgment). We conclude with a series of recommendations regarding ways in which TJA can be joined with CM so that an organization may achieve, among other outcomes, the critical purpose of directing employee behavior toward the accomplishment of its strategic objectives.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.hrmr.2008.10.002
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Comparative analysis
Competency modeling
Employee attitude
Job analysis
Strategic work analysis
Studies
title What is (or should be) the difference between competency modeling and traditional job analysis?
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