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How to
Write an Effective Position Description
by
Laura Gassner Otting,
President, Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group
(This article was originally published by
www.NonprofitOyster.com,
as part of their NonprofitOyster Pearls series.)
Volume 1 / Issue 1 / March 12, 2003
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5 Pearls of Wisdom:
Writing More Engaging Position
Descriptions
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How to Write an Effective Position
Description: Intro
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Components of a Well-Written Position
Description
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The Executive Summary
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Background
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Position-Specific Challenges
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Qualifications
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Conclusion
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Gathering Information
5 PEARLS OF WISDOM: WRITING MORE
ENGAGING POSITION DESCRIPTIONS
Before you sit down to write a position description, take time
to do your research, asking key staff, funders, community
members or other stakeholders these important questions:
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What is the context within which
this person must work? What are the particular challenges
facing the organization at this time? Which will the new
person be faced with tackling? What is the timeline to meet
these challenges? What tools will they have at their
disposal?
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What fundamental differences do you
see in this organization 12 months, 18 months and 24 months
after this person is on board? What outcomes, subjective and
objective, will be used to determine success?
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Describe the education and training
background ideal for this position. From what kinds of
organizations might this person come? What types of roles
might they have held in the past?
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What activities, programs, staff
need to be sustained? Which need to be enhanced, initiated,
diversified, recalibrated, reassessed or eliminated?
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Are there resources or advertising
vehicles that should be considered, such as online
discussion forums, newsgroups, publications or websites that
are organized to assist nonprofit organizations reach out to
potential candidates? In addition, are there any candidates
or other sources of candidates that ought to be tapped?
HOW TO WRITE AN EFFECTIVE POSITION
DESCRIPTION
The departure of a key employee causes a great deal of
consternation in most nonprofits. The first worry-driven
thought that runs through many managers' minds is "How can I
find someone who combines the skills and experiences of this
person, as well as the knowledge of and connections to our
constituents?" Yet, instead of just filling the shoes of the
former worker, the replacement of an employee, or the creation
and filling of a new position, can provide an opportunity for
strategic reflection and redirection and therefore deserves
serious thought.
Components of a Well-Written
Position Description
Position descriptions are read by candidates and colleagues
alike and may serve many purposes. A good job description will
excite candidates to apply, especially some that might not
have after reading only a few paragraphs of boilerplate
information. According to Joyce Lapenn, a Vice President with
DRG in New York City and the former Executive Director of
Graham Windham, a major family and children's services agency,
"Crafting an attractive position description to generate
genuine interest comes after a very thoughtful assessment of
the needs of the organization and how the open position
relates to these needs. The employer should put some real
effort into this document and exclude, for example, such usual
'pat' phrases such as 'good interpersonal skills.' How and to
whom this position relates is more fundamental and ultimately
more meaningful for potential candidates."
A good position description will also bring together a
nonprofit around the central themes and challenges facing the
new hire, many of which will be used in both the interview and
weighing of candidates as well as their performance evaluation
in the months and years to come. In other words, a good
position description will sell the organization, serve as a
mini-strategic planning session, and provide performance
evaluation clear to the hire and the supervisor. Becky Klein,
partner with The Phillips Oppenheim Group whose position
descriptions are often six or seven pages long, states that
"position descriptions really become marketing tools for both
the position and the client itself and include a detailed (and
hopefully enticing) description of the organization, an
overview of the basic function, lists of key responsibilities,
experience required and personal characteristics, and, most
importantly, a section listing the priorities for the
successful candidate in the first year."
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The Executive Summary:
Every position description should start with an executive
summary. Not all of your colleagues (those people who
provide helpful ideas for candidates or outreach techniques)
will want to read the entire position description. Further,
some outreach vehicles will only let you post a paragraph or
two, and having this summary done ahead of time will make
you more efficient later.
The executive summary begins with a clear statement of
purpose, i.e., "Founded in 1978, YouthBuild USA is a
comprehensive youth and community development program
committed to giving at-risk youth life and job skills that
lead to economic independence, while helping them rebuild
their communities. We are currently seeking a Vice President
of XYZ who will...." It finishes by describing that the rest
of the document lays out some information about the current
state of affairs at YouthBuild, as well as the particular
challenges facing the VP of XYZ.
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Background:
A nice way to ease into the duties, responsibilities,
challenges and potential problems facing the next hire is to
describe the inspirational story of the founding of the
organization and the context in which this hire will have to
work. Providing a framework in which the candidate can
imagine day-to-day activities and long term projects helps
candidates rule themselves in or out of a search before
wasting your time. More importantly, the background elicits
intelligent questions and conversations from your
candidates, helping you to determine which candidates are
stronger than others.
The background section of a job description for Share Our
Strength, for example, starts with the story of Billy Shore
corralling a few local chefs in the basement of a Capitol
Hill row house, and follows by describing the $70 million
Share Our Strength has invested in more than 1,000 local,
state, national and international hunger and poverty
organizations over the past 18 years. This information, like
most of the other material needed for this section, has
probably already been written in one of the following
documents, and should be kept handy for exercises like this:
publicity materials, web content, brochures, annual reports,
grants, financial statements, department budgets, mission
statement, a predecessor's position description, board
presentations, articles, biographies, or anything public
from a recent strategic planning session. Finally, this
section, once written, can be cut and pasted into other
position descriptions as much of it centers around general
historical facts of an organization and not the specifics of
any one particular job.
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Position-Specific Challenges:
Each role in an organization fulfills some basic need that
keeps that organization running smoothly as well as,
hopefully, raises it to a new level. These are the
challenges set forth in a particular job. Challenges allow
the realities of an organization's past to meet the hopes
for its future. A well-written challenge statement can be
measured during the interview process against the
candidate's past track record, and then later against his or
her performance on the job. When challenges are met, they
allow hiring managers and supervisors to measure fundamental
differences in an organization such as whether difficulties
have been abated or new opportunities opened.
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Qualifications:
From the challenges facing this job, a clearer picture will
appear regarding the specific professional and personal
qualifications needed for success. Professional
qualifications include a candidate's career track record,
education and training; further, these qualifications can be
tailored to the size and scope of the position at hand.
Personal qualifications might include a candidate's
background, experience, character, personality, exposure or
outlook. Continues Phillips Oppenheim Group Partner Klein,
"Spelling out qualifications not only gives a prospective
candidate an understanding of the needs, but helps to ensure
that the client organization is clear about what is going to
be required of the individual hired and how to measure that
individual's performance. The more specific a position
description is, the more targeted the response from
appropriate candidates should be."
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Conclusion:
Finally, be sure to include any compensation, application
deadlines and contact information relevant to the position.
A trick used by nonprofit executive recruiters when the
compensation is open or when they want to survey the field
is to avoid listing the compensation and, instead, ask for a
salary history from applicants. From there, a nonprofit can
determine what they need to pay for the level of talent they
wish to hire without upsetting or offending potential
applicants.
Gathering Information:
As you write any position description, it is helpful to garner
information not just from written materials circulating around
the office and throughout your constituents, but by asking
questions of key staff and stakeholders. Some of these
questions are difficult; some of them are not. Each will
inform the challenges section of the position description, and
in turn, the interviewing and evaluation process both
presently and in months and years to come.
At the beginning of any new search for a middle- to
senior-level position, start by meeting with those who will
surround the new hire. These stakeholders will be able to
answer many of the questions that define and individualize an
organization. Meeting with them early will also increase the
likelihood that they will become invested in the process and
the success of your newest staff member.
Those to be interviewed include but may not be limited to the
Executive Director, members of the senior management team,
direct reports to this position, outside stakeholders such as
consultants, clients and funders and board members as
relevant. In discussing the details of the position with each
of these stakeholders, make sure to ask questions about
specific candidates they might know, online discussion forums
or newsgroups they might read, or web pages they visit or have
heard about. These will form the core of a nonprofit's
outreach and will help a nonprofit increase its knowledge base
about outreach methods for the future.
By putting forth a strong effort at the beginning of a search
to quantify and assess an organization's needs, nonprofit
managers can assure a more strategic search, a broader
candidate pool and a smarter hire.
Laura Gassner Otting is founder and
president of
Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group,
a niche consulting firm dedicated to strengthening the capacity
of nonprofits and their staff, and is available to discuss
individual resumes, cover letters, and job search strategies.
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