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Aviation Job Descriptions
Looking for Sample Job
Descriptions?
The Avjobs Employer Portal has
thousands of job descriptions -
ready to download and customize
Each description has a
consistent format, and includes
"Essential Job Functions".
Job descriptions are essential.
Job descriptions are required
for recruitment so that you and
the applicants can understand
the role. Job descriptions are
necessary for all people that
work. A job description defines
a person's role and
accountability. Without a job
description it is not possible
for a person to properly commit
to, or be held accountable for,
a role.
The process of writing job
descriptions is actually quite
easy and straight-forward. Many
people tend to start off with a
list of 20-30 tasks, which is
okay as a start, but this needs
refining to far fewer points,
around 8-12 is the ideal.
Smaller organizations
commonly require staff and
managers to cover a wider or
more mixed range of
responsibilities than in larger
organizations (for example, the
'office manager' role can
comprise financial, HR,
stock-control, scheduling and
other duties). Therefore in
smaller organizations, job
descriptions might necessarily
contain a greater number of
listed responsibilities, perhaps
15-16. However, whatever the
circumstances, the number of
responsibilities should not
exceed this, or the job
description becomes unwieldy and
ineffective.
Any job description
containing 20-30 tasks is
actually more like a part of an
operational manual, which serves
a different purpose. Job
descriptions should refer
to the operational manual, or to
'agreed procedures', rather than
include the detail of the tasks
in the job description. If you
include task detail in a job
description you will need to
change it when the task detail
changes, as it will often do.
What would you rather change,
100 job descriptions or one
operational manual?
Similarly, lengthy details of
health and safety procedures
should not be included in a job
description. Instead put them
into a health and safety manual,
and then simply refer to this in
the job description. Again, when
your health and safety procedure
changes, would you rather change
100 job descriptions or just one
health and safety manual?
A useful process for refining
and writing job descriptions
responsibilities into fewer
points and ('responsibilities'
rather than 'individual tasks'),
is to group the many individual
tasks into main responsibility
areas, such as the list below
(not all will be applicable to
any single role). Bold type
indicates that these
responsibility areas would
normally feature in most job
descriptions:
Bold type indicates that
these responsibility areas would
normally feature in most job
descriptions:
- communicating (in
relation to whom, what, how
- and this is applicable to
all below)
- planning and
organizing (of what..)
- managing information
or general administration
support (of what..)
- monitoring and
reporting (of what..)
- evaluating and
decision-making (of what..)
- financial budgeting and
control (of what..)
- producing things
(what..)
- maintaining/repairing
things (what..)
- quality control (for
production roles normally a
separate responsibility;
otherwise this is generally
incorporated within other
relevant responsibilities)
(of what..)
- health and safety
(normally the same point for
all job descriptions of a
given staff grade)
- using equipment and
systems (what..)
- creating and developing
things (what..)
- self-development
(normally the same point for
all job descriptions of a
given staff grade)
plus any responsibilities for
other staff if applicable,
typically:
- recruiting (of
direct-reporting staff)
- assessing
(direct-reporting staff)
- training
(direct-reporting staff)
- managing
(direct-reporting staff)
Senior roles will include
more executive aspects:
- developing policy
- duty of care and
corporate responsibility
- formulation of direction
and strategy
You will find that you can
cluster most of the tasks on
your (initially very long) list
into a list of far fewer broad
(but still specific)
responsibilities according to
the above examples of typical
job description activity areas.
Obviously the level of
authority affects the extent of
responsibility in the job
description for determining
strategy, decision-making,
managing other people, and for
executive roles, deciding
direction, policy, and
delivering corporate
performance.
Wherever possible refer the
detail of standards and process
to your 'operational manual' or
'agreed procedures' or 'agreed
standards' rather than allowing
the job description to become a
sort of operating manual. If
your boss or employer is asking
for you to detail your tasks at
length in a job description,
encourage him/her/the
organization to put this level
of detail into an operational
manual - it will save a lot of
time.
Writing or re-writing a job
description is a good
opportunity to frame the role as
you'd like it as well as reflect
how it is at the moment, so try
to think outside of the normal
way of thinking, and if this is
difficult seek the input of
somebody who is less close to
things.
Job Descriptions are
Important
Job descriptions improve an
organizations ability to manage
people and roles in the
following ways:
- clarifies employer
expectations for employee
- provides basis of
measuring job performance
- provides clear
description of role for job
candidates
- provides a structure and
discipline for company to
understand and structure all
jobs and ensure necessary
activities, duties and
responsibilities are covered
by one job or another
- provides continuity of
role parameters irrespective
of manager interpretation
- enables pay and grading
systems to be structured
fairly and logically
- prevents arbitrary
interpretation of role
content and limit by
employee and employer and
manager
- essential reference tool
in issues of
employee/employer dispute
- essential reference tool
for discipline issues
- provides important
reference points for
training and development
areas
- provides neutral and
objective (as opposed to
subjective or arbitrary)
reference points for
appraisals, performance
reviews and counseling
- enables formulation of
skill set and behavior set
requirements per role
- enables organization to
structure and manage roles
in a uniform way, thus
increasing efficiency and
effectiveness of
recruitment, training and
development, organizational
structure, work flow and
activities, customer
service, etc
- enables factual view (as
opposed to instinctual) to
be taken by employees and
managers in career
progression and succession
planning
(The list is not exhaustive.)
In the Avjobs Employer Portal
you'll find job descriptions
structure and template, and
samples of various job
descriptions. Also template and
sample 'person-profile',
necessary when recruiting.
Be very careful to adhere to
relevant employment an
discrimination law when
compiling job descriptions, job
adverts and person-profiles.
This means that you must not
specify a preference according
to gender, race, creed,
religion, or physical ability.
If you find yourself writing a
job description with a bias in
any of these areas you should
ask yourself why, as none can be
justified.
Company directors have
personal liability for the
activities of their
organizations aside from their
functional responsibilities, and
arguably this accountability
should be included in some way
in a director's job description.
Clarity is vital. People and
employers need to have a clear,
mutual agreement about the
expectations for the job, and
the job description is a key
instrument by which this is
achieved.
That said, job descriptions
are not operating manuals. I
repeat, keep the descriptions of
duties concise and free of
detailed operating or processing
instructions. If necessary refer
to these is a phrase such as
'according to company
procedures', or 'according to
the operating manual/safety
manual', etc. By referencing
rather than including specific
operating standards or
processes, the headache of
updating all the job
descriptions when procedures
change is avoided.
Job Description Template:
- Job Title
- Based at (Business Unit,
Section - if applicable)
- Position reports to
(Line Manager title,
location, and Functional
Manager, location if matrix
management structure)
- Job Purpose Summary
(ideally one sentence)
- Key Responsibilities and
Accountabilities, (or
'Duties'. 8-15 numbered
points)
-
Dimensions/Territory/Scope/Scale
indicators (the areas to
which responsibilities
extend and the scale of
responsibilities - staff,
customers, territory,
products, equipment,
premises, etc)
- Date and other relevant
internal references
For senior job descriptions
it is useful to break key
responsibilities into sections
covering Functional, Managerial,
and Organizational areas.
The most difficult part is
the Key Responsibilities and
Accountabilities section. Large
organizations have generic
versions for the most common
organizational roles - so don't
re-invent the wheel if something
suitable already exists. If you
have to create a job description
from scratch, use this method to
produce the 8-15
responsibilities:
- Note down in a
completely random fashion
all of the aspects of the
job.
- Think about: processes,
planning, executing,
monitoring, reporting,
communicating, managing
people/resources/activities/money/information/inputs/outputs/communications/time.
- Next combine and develop
the random collection of
ideas into a set of key
responsibilities. (A junior
position will not need more
than 8. A senior one might
need 15.)
- Rank them roughly in
order of importance.
- Have someone who knows
or has done the job well
check your list and amend as
appropriate.
- Double check that
everything on the list is
genuinely important and
achievable.
Do not put targets into a job
description. Targets are a
moving output over which you
need flexible control.
Do not put 'must achieve
target/goals' into a job
description. This is a pure
output and does not describe the
job. The job description must
describe the activities required
to ensure that target will be
met.
Do not have as one of the key
responsibilities 'And anything
else that the manager wants'.
It's not fair, and no-one is
ever committed to or accountable
for such a thing. |
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