In Workday, titles are called "Job Profiles". Workday job descriptions are available for many job profiles in Workday. To find a Workday job description in Workday, use the search box at the top of the Workday screen, type "Job:" and add any keywords to help identify the job profile for which you are searching, e.g. "Job: Administrative Coordinator I". Once you press "Enter", all job profiles that match your search criteria will become available, and you can click on each one to view the corresponding Workday job description. The Workday job descriptions will detail the job duties, requirements, exemption status, pay grade, and much more. The Workday job descriptions will detail the job duties, requirements, exemption status, pay grade, and much more.
To edit a staff position description in Workday, the HR Hub representative should work with the position's manager to complete the Workday Position Description Template. Completing every question on the template will provide the information necessary to complete the Edit Position Restrictions business process in Workday. This format is specifically designed to aid in reading and understanding the different parts of a Texas A&M position description and will ensure faster analysis by Classification and Compensation. The template is located here.
Job Description Summary
The Job Description Summary field should be no longer than four sentences. It is intended to be a brief general summary of the position and should be consistent with and reflective of the more detailed duties sections, giving an overview of the level of skill required and scope of responsibility. Detailed duties or responsibilities should be included in the Job Duties section, not the Job Description Summary. Use the following format for the first sentence of the Job Description Summary: "The [position title] is responsible for…"
Qualifications
- Required qualifications are the minimum qualifications of education, experience, license/certification, and knowledge, skills and abilities for acceptable performance of the essential functions of the job upon hire.
- University Approved Jobs all have minimum required education and experience set which may be modified slightly to reflect specific types of education (such as a Bachelor of Science in Biology) and experience, so long as the level of education and quantity of experience remain consistent with those required by the pay plan and are related to the job performed.
- Required education and experience may not be modified for job profiles that Texas A&M University has an exception to use a specific set of minimum qualifications that differ from the Workday job description. Example: Administrative Associate I-V. Their exception minimum qualifications must be used verbatim.
- Qualifications should relate to the position, not the person.
- Preferred qualifications represent criteria most desired and serve as the secondary screening criteria for the hiring manager to use when evaluating applicants for a position. These qualifications are not required for performance of the essential functions.
Essential Duties/Tasks
- There is not a set requirement for the number of duties sections, but a general guideline is that most positions can be appropriately described in 3 to 10 sections of duties. Depending on the position and variety/nature of the duties being performed, it may be necessary to divide the duties into more than 10 sections. Any one duty can have several components to help identify the level and scope of the duty being performed, and therefore identifying the level of the position.
- Duties should be grouped into logical sections, with assigned percentages of time for each section of 5% to 100%. The total for all duties should total 100%.
- A "Duty Title" is required and is used to describe each section of duties. Examples of some commonly-used duty titles include: supervisory, customer service, program/project coordination, administrative support, business support, recruiting, scheduling, professional development, management and training, and other duties.
- Duties must be designated as essential or non-essential in the position description, as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act as Amended (ADAAA). Essential duties are the core tasks that must be completed to get the job done. Non-essential duties are the occasional duties that are performed as needed. Factors to consider in determining if a function is essential include:
- Whether the reason the position exists is to perform the function,
- The number of other employees available to perform the function or among whom the performance of the function can be distributed, and
- The degree of expertise or skill required to perform the function.
- The position description should include an accurate description of the job functions. The department should be specific on the job duties performed. Departments should describe jobs as they exist now, not as they will exist sometime in the future. Departments also should describe what is done and not how it is done.
- Writing guidelines for describing duties:
- Begin each statement with a present tense action verb.
- Use clear, concise language.
- Use words that differentiate levels of the same job title series generally denoting experience, creativity, education or training.
- Avoid using adjectives. Adjectives tend to give extra detail to nouns and may be unnecessary.
- List specific essential functions.
- Include the level of independent judgment and work complexity involved in each duty/component, and supervisory responsibilities.
- Always include one job duty for "Other Duties: Performs other duties as assigned." This job duty should have no percentage and is non-essential. This duty includes all duties that pop up here and there, but are not a major function of the position.