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The Right Person for
the Right Job
Chuck Schwartau, Regional Extension Educator
December 9, 2005
More and more dairy farms utilize non-family employees
today. Perhaps more farms, even relatively small ones,
should consider increasing that practice. Having the right
employees (family and non-family) has several economic
benefits including:
- Increased operational efficiency
- More owner/manager time for marketing, pricing and
financial activities
- An increased likelihood of completing tasks on time
- More efficient use of capital and overhead
- Increased production for profit
- More opportunities for growth
There are also non-economic benefits that many
more dairy families are now considering:
- Reduced stress and pressure
- Increased flexibility of time for leisure, health,
family activities, etc.
- A safer work environment often created by better trained
and skilled workers
Achieving any or all of those goals depends on having
the right people for the tasks at hand. Having the wrong
person, just to fill the position, may actually create
more work or stress rather than create a smoother, more
profitable operation.
There are a few key questions to ask yourself that may
help to not only hire the right person if you hire from
outside, but may also help have the people already on the
farm doing the right jobs. Here are some of those key questions:
1. What type of help do I need?
- Short-term for a specific
project?
- Part-time for specific tasks on a
regular basis?
- Full-time seasonal to meet the needs
of heavy work load periods?
- Permanent full-time
for specific or various tasks as fit the farm
situation?
2. Is there sufficient cash flow from the farm to support
the type of employee (or family member) I think
fits the need?
- Will this job attract and keep the interest of a highly
motivated person?
3. What will be the benefit to
this farm if we hire additional labor? Will this free
up someone else’s time
for a more valuable job? Will this provide me time
for other personal or business activities?
- Do I have the necessary skills to train, supervise
and evaluate an employee?
- What type of employee is best suited for the job at
hand?
These questions and how they are asked on any farm usually
center on hired employees. The same questions can be asked,
however, as farms look at how they are utilizing the available
family labor. Family labor is often not structured with
assignments that fit knowledge, skills and interest, but
rather on who is available.
Making labor decisions without asking these or similar
questions are more likely to result in hiring the wrong
people for what you really want to get done, or hiring
the wrong category of employee to meet the real needs of
your farm. If the decisions revolve around family labor,
they can still result in the wrong person doing a job when
someone else may be a better choice for the good of the
business.
A careful task analysis will help determine specific
skills or attitudes necessary to complete a job successfully.
Such a task analysis should include both physical and knowledge
or skill attributes. The analysis considers:
- The amount of time necessary for a task and whether
there are schedules or sequences that must be followed
in order to keep a flow of work going on the farm.
- The degree of skill is necessary to perform the tasks.
Some tasks require only basic knowledge and physical
ability while others require a higher level of skills
and knowledge (complex machinery operations or livestock
management).
- The level of responsibility goes with this job. Does
this job require one to follow orders with very few if
any decisions necessary, or does the employee on this
task have to make decisions that may have significant
impact on the rest of the operation?
- The value of the task to the operation. If a task can
have a significant impact on the productivity of the
farm, or the safety of people or animals on the farm,
the task has a high value and should not be left in the
hands of the least prepared person on the farm, regardless
of any other attachment on the farm.
Putting the right person in the right job goes all the
way from the farm owner to the most recent person to enter
the operation. All staff on the farm need to be working
as a team, recognize their role on the farm and contribute
to achieving high expectations on the farm.
“The Right Person for
the Right Job” is
just one of two dairy farm labor management topics that
will be covered at the nine University of Minnesota Dairy
Days to be held around Minnesota from January 6-20, 2006
. Other topics will include housing and cow comfort, feed
efficiency, minimizing process variation to enhance profitability,
managing for control of Johnes Disease, reproductive management,
National Animal Identification System, and an industry
forum conducted by the Minnesota Milk Producers Association.
For details of the program, locations and registration
information, go to the University
of Minnesota Dairy Team web page on Dairy Days.
[Sources of information for this
article include the U of MN Extension Service curriculum, “Employment
Skills for Today”, 1998; and the “Employers’ Handbook
for Owners, Managers and Supervisors in Agriculture and
Horticulture”, Ontario Agricultural Human Resources
Committee, 1996] |