Should Employees Design Their Own Jobs?

A scholar who studies job crafting says you may be less stuck in your job than you think

Written byLouise Lee-Stanford University News Office
| 4 min read
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Traditionally, managers assign job duties and decide how employees should perform them. But sometimes employees themselves are a better source of ideas about how they should spend their time.

One way to elicit their ideas is through “job crafting,” the process of employees redesigning their own jobs to better suit their strengths and interests. Job crafting can boost your happiness and creativity at work, says Justin Berg, a professor at Stanford Graduate School of Business, who has researched the concept with Amy Wrzesniewski at the Yale School of Management and Jane Dutton at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. Berg spoke with Insights by Stanford Business about job crafting and how employees, managers, and companies can benefit from it.

What is job crafting?

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