Recruiting, hiring and retaining good employees is a challenging task. However, with a clearly written job description the task gets easier.
The purpose of a job description is to clearly define what needs to be done, and clearly define the type of person you need to do it.
A well-written job description will include a short overview of the position, bullet points of tasks to be done, and a listing of important qualifications. In essence, the job description should describe the job.
In this post, we’ll review Best Practices for writing your brewery job descriptions, present the One Thing that should be in your job description (but probably isn’t), and provide a road map for putting the job description into practice.
Best Practice #1: Get it in writing
At its most basic, the job description should be in writing and given to the employee (or job candidate). Sounds obvious, but I’ve seen many employees hired and many employees who worked for years without a formal job description.
Sometimes we are in a hurry to hire someone and neglect to write up a job description. Other times, we just take it for granted that the employee knows what to do in the position and everything will work out fine.
Regardless, one simple basic best practice is to get the job description down on paper and get it in the hands of the employee.
Best Practice #2: Follow a Job Description Structure
The website BetterTeam.com defines job descriptions this way:
A job description is an internal document that clearly states the essential job requirements, job duties, job responsibilities, and skills required to perform a specific role.
The document itself can be one page, or several pages, depending on what’s needed to outline the necessary requirements and skills.
A typical job description will use the following structure:
- Short narrative overview
- Give the candidate a feel for the position. What can they expect? What do you expect from them?
- Bullet point list of tasks, responsibilities
- List only what is important and meaningful. Use the ‘other duties as assigned’ to cover the rest
- Qualifications you want from the candidate
- List specialized skills, knowledge, or education
- Specific job requirements
- If there will be travel away from home, working nights or weekends, spell it out so there’s no hard feelings later
These are the standard sections of a job description. In total, they provide a good overview of what the job is about and what is expected of the employee.
Next post we’ll look at the One Thing that must be in your job description (but probably isn’t).
In the meantime, if you need 60+ template brewery job descriptions, job postings and compensation planning models, the 2022 Brewery Job Descriptions Guide may be profitable for you. Check out the details here. The 2022 Brewery Job Descriptions Guide is included with your subscription to Craft Brewery Financial Training.