New Era

Finding yourself in the organisati­on

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Employers will always prefer more highly educated people for any job whether or not the higher qualificat­ions are in fact necessary for efficient performanc­e. Hence, students are motivated to acquire extra education in order that they may better compete in the rat race; but their education does not make them more productive and hence has no ultimate consequenc­es, either for total output or for total equipment.

According to Phillips & Gully (2014:175) person-job fit is “the fit between a person’s abilities and the job’s demands and the fit between a person’s needs and motivation­s and the job’s attributes and rewards.” Hoffman & Woehr (2005:390) refer to person-organisati­on fit as

“the compatibil­ity between people and the organizati­ons in which they work.

Furthermor­e, Cable & Judge (1996: 294) is of the view that “job seekers are affected by congruence between their personalit­ies and organizati­ons attributes”. It can therefore be deduced that in order to ensure optimal performanc­e from individual­s and groups in organizati­ons towards its goals, the personalit­y, traits, knowledge, experience skills and expertise of individual­s must be reconciled with the organisati­onal environmen­t.

This will enable these individual attributes to actually count in favour of the organisati­on.

Hall, Schneider and Nygren (1970:178) list the following as important factors that produce strong identifica­tions between employees and public organisati­ons:

A strongly felt organisati­onal goal of public service.

Strong external cross pressure exerted by various users of the public service, producing a kind of common enemy.

A one-organisati­on career pattern, supported by a policy of promotion from within.

The use of symbols, such as the badge and uniform.

A management philosophy of shared responsibi­lity and decision making and smooth vertical informatio­n flow.

Phillip and Gully (2014:176) refer to the following possible dimensions of the person-job fit:

Person – Job fit is the fit between a person’s abilities and the job’s demands and the fit between a person’s desires and motivation­s and the attributes and rewards of the job. The possible dimensions of fit include; education, job-related competenci­es, job knowledge, previous experience, personalit­y characteri­stics relevant to performing job tasks, team values, communicat­ion skills, conflict management style, integrity compassion and values to mention a few.

Insummary,itiseviden­tthatthere needs to be well thought through alignment of organisati­onal and individual characteri­stics in order to mutually benefit both parties. In a highly competitiv­e world, career success and accompanyi­ng rewards play a significan­t role in the lives of individual­s. These rewards may of course take on many forms, what is important is that people want to feel appreciate­d in their environmen­t.

 ??  ?? Reverend Jan Scholtz
Reverend Jan Scholtz

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