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LESSONS & TOPICS

Employee Abilities and Skills

Employee Abilities and Skills

How do people with different abilities, skills, and personalities build effective work teams?
We begin with a look at employee abilities and skills. Abilities and skills generally represent those physical and intellectual characteristics that are relatively stable over time and that help determine an employee’s capability to respond. Recognizing them is important in understanding organizational behavior, because they often bound an employee’s ability to do the job. For example, if a clerk-typist simply does not have the manual dexterity to master the fundamentals of typing or keyboard entry, her performance will likely suffer. Similarly, a sales representative who has a hard time with simple numerical calculations will probably not do well on the job.

Dimensions of Mental Abilities
Verbal comprehension. The ability to understand the meanings of words and their relations to each other.
Word fluency. The ability to name objects or use words to form sentences that express an idea.
Number aptitude. The ability to make numerical calculations speedily and accurately.
Inductive reasoning. The ability to discover a rule or principle and apply it to the solution of a problem.
Memory. The ability to remember lists of words and numbers and other associations.
Spatial aptitude. The ability to perceive fixed geometric figures and their relations with other geometric figures.
Perceptual speed. The ability to perceive visual details quickly and accurately.

People with low cognitive complexity typically exhibit the following characteristics. They tend to be categorical and stereotypical. Cognitive structures that depend upon simple fixed rules of integration tend to reduce the possibility of thinking in terms of degrees. Internal conflict appears to be minimized with simple structures. Since few alternative relationships are generated, closure is quick. Behavior is apparently anchored in external conditions. There is less personal contribution in simple structures. Fewer rules cover a wider range of phenomena. There is less distinction between separate situations.

On the other hand, people with high levels of cognitive complexity are typically characterized by the following. Their cognitive system is less deterministic. Numerous alternative relationships are generated and considered. The environment is tracked in numerous ways. There is less compartmentalization of the environment. The individual utilizes more internal processes. The self as an individual operates on the process.

Research on cognitive complexity has focused on two important areas from a managerial standpoint: leadership style and decision-making. In the area of leadership, it has been found that managers rated high on cognitive complexity are better able to handle complex situations, such as rapid changes in the external environment. Moreover, such managers also tend to use more resources and information when solving a problem and tend to be somewhat more considerate and consultative in their approach to managing their subordinates.4 In the area of decision-making, fairly consistent findings show that individuals with high cognitive complexity (1) seek out more information for a decision, (2) actually process or use more information, (3) are better able to integrate discrepant information, (4) consider a greater number of possible solutions to the problem, and (5) employ more complex decision strategies than individuals with low cognitive complexity.5

Physical Abilities
The second set of variables relates to someone’s physical abilities. Included here are both basic physical abilities (for example, strength) and psychomotor abilities (such as manual dexterity, eye-hand coordination, and manipulation skills). These factors are summarized in Table 2.2.6 Considering both mental and physical abilities helps one understand the behavior of people at work and how they can be better managed. The recognition of such abilities—and the recognition that people have different abilities—has clear implications for employee recruitment and selection decisions; it brings into focus the importance of matching people to jobs. For example, Florida Power has a 16-hour selection process that involves 12 performance tests. Over the test period of a couple of years, 640 individuals applied for “lineperson” jobs. Of these, 259 were hired. As a consequence of the new performance tests and selection process, turnover went from 43 percent to 4.5 percent, and the program saved net $1 million.7 In addition to selection, knowledge of job requirements and individual differences is also useful in evaluating training and development needs. Because human resources are important to management, it is imperative that managers become more familiar with the basic characteristics of their people.

Psychomotor Abilities
Control precision. The ability to make fine, highly controlled muscular movements needed to adjust a control mechanism.
Multilimb coordination. The ability to coordinate the simultaneous movement of hands and feet.
Response orientation. The ability to make an appropriate response to a visual signal indicating a direction.
Rate control. The ability to make continuous anticipatory motor adjustments in speed and direction to follow a continuously moving target.
Manual dexterity. The ability to make skillful and well-directed arm-hand movements in manipulating large objects quickly.
Finger dexterity. The ability to make skillful and controlled manipulations of small objects.
Arm-hand steadiness. The ability to make precise arm-hand movements where steadiness is extremely important, and speed and strength are relatively unimportant.
Reaction time. How quickly a person can respond to a single stimulus with a simple response.
Aiming. The ability to make highly accurate, restricted hand movements requiring precise eye-hand coordination.

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