Three weeks ago I participated in the conference organized by Polish Association of Organizational Psychology. It was two days of paper & poster sessions and discussions about organizational behavior, employee well-being, entrepreneurship, leadership and employee management. The theme that particularly intrigued me was the job crafting. This is a relatively new area of research, especially in the Polish organizations and that is why I decided to clear it up a little bit.
Job crafting is a means of describing the ways in which employees utilize opportunities to customize their jobs by actively changing tasks and interactions with others at work*. In other words it is about all intentional activity of employees (mental and behavioral), through which they change their professional reality so that they think better of it and are more satisfied with what they are doing.
What exactly do employees who are job crafters?
- Firstly, they can take on more or fewer tasks, expand or diminish the scope of tasks or change the way they perform tasks. For example, a secretary could create a new method of filling documents to accelerate her work.
- Secondly, they can change the nature of relationships at work or extend their interactions with other people. For example, an IT administrator could start teaching co-workers how to make their data safer to have more social interactions at work.
- Thirdly, they can change their perception of their task. For example a florist may think that she helps people express their feelings and maintain positive relationships with other people rather than just selling flowers.
- giving more attention, spending more time and energy to tasks related to one?s passion;
- taking on additional tasks that are related to one?s passion;
- reframing the social purpose of one?s work to align with one?s passion.
0 Comments