The process of finding information can involve:
- consulting established sources supplied to the worker
- consulting easily identified and located resources not directly supplied
to the worker
- conducting a more complex search for information
- bringing together information from several sources
- conducting research because no information is readily available
The process of extracting or processing information can involve:
- using information in the form in which it is obtained
- selecting information according to some pre-determined criteria (limited
processing required)
- analyzing information to understand what is being presented
- synthesizing information from a variety of sources and performing
complex analysis
Working With Others
This refers to the extent to which employees work together with others
to carry out tasks. It includes direct interactions (face-to-face, voice)
and indirect or delayed interactions (emails, memos, voice messages).
Workers can work:
- alone supplying products or information to others
- independently where they are not physically alone but they work on
their own coordinating their work with others
- jointly coordinating and cooperating with only one other person at
a time
- as a member of a team producing a product or accomplishing a task
through combined effort and organized cooperation
- as supervisors directing the actions of others
Some considerations:
- the number of people with whom the worker must coordinate
- the degree to which the worker must align his/her work with that
of others
- how dependent the worker is on others
- whether teamwork approaches are well defined or the worker must determine
how best to proceed
- whether different cultural or language groups are involved
- how unpredictable or complicated situations are and to what extent
group processes must be constantly adapted
- the degree to which the worker is responsible for influencing or
determining the actions of others in achieving organizational objectives
|