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A practical guide explaining Job Enlargement, its purpose, benefits, and variations.
Job Enlargement is a job design strategy that increases the number of tasks or duties assigned to a role to make work more varied and reduce monotony.
Definition
Job Enlargement refers to expanding the scope of a job horizontally by adding similar-level tasks, providing employees with a broader range of activities without increasing the complexity or responsibility level.
Job Enlargement focuses on diversifying an employee’s daily activities to create a more engaging work environment. It is commonly used in operational and administrative roles where tasks may become repetitive.
By increasing the range of tasks, companies aim to make jobs more interesting, improve morale, and reduce turnover. However, it must be implemented carefully to avoid overwhelming employees with additional duties without proper support.
Job Enlargement differs from Job Enrichment, which adds depth, responsibility, and autonomy rather than just additional tasks.
There is no formula, but the process typically includes:
In a customer service center, an employee who typically handles inbound calls may also be given responsibility for email inquiries. This broadens their workload and reduces repetition while staying within the same skill level.
Job Enlargement helps organizations:
It also supports lean operations by enabling employees to handle a wider set of tasks.
Job Enlargement adds more tasks; Job Enrichment adds more responsibility and autonomy.
Not always, if poorly implemented, it can feel like extra work without benefit.
Administrative, operational, and routine task roles.