can a employee refuse to work, which is not mention in his role and responsibility? what can a company do if such a situation exist.
From India, Meerut
From India, Meerut
Dear Rajesh, Please don’t do that for the sake of your job. otherwise your employer will show you the highway.
From India, Pune
From India, Pune
Dear Rajesh,
What exactly is the issue? Does the query pertain to you, or have you raised it on behalf of someone? What is your designation, and in what department do you work? When given a chance to work in another department or section, is it not beneficial for the employee as their knowledge gets enhanced? Why then is the query raised with legal undertones?
By working in another department or section, will career opportunities grow or diminish, or will they not have any significant value? From the management side, I would say that they have failed to motivate an employee to take up a new role or responsibility. If the proper career path is shown, many employees accept the new role. There is a difference between "ordering" and "influencing," which many leaders fail to understand.
For Aniket: It appears that you have jumped the gun. Let us never offer a solution unless we understand the case completely. "First understand then be understood" is one of the habits that Stephen Covey has taught us. Let us not forget it.
Thanks,
Dinesh Divekar
From India, Bangalore
What exactly is the issue? Does the query pertain to you, or have you raised it on behalf of someone? What is your designation, and in what department do you work? When given a chance to work in another department or section, is it not beneficial for the employee as their knowledge gets enhanced? Why then is the query raised with legal undertones?
By working in another department or section, will career opportunities grow or diminish, or will they not have any significant value? From the management side, I would say that they have failed to motivate an employee to take up a new role or responsibility. If the proper career path is shown, many employees accept the new role. There is a difference between "ordering" and "influencing," which many leaders fail to understand.
For Aniket: It appears that you have jumped the gun. Let us never offer a solution unless we understand the case completely. "First understand then be understood" is one of the habits that Stephen Covey has taught us. Let us not forget it.
Thanks,
Dinesh Divekar
From India, Bangalore
Rajesh,
What is the role and designation? What is the nature of the job offered that you feel does not fall within your charter of duties as you understand it? It requires careful analysis to determine if the job is significantly outside your responsibilities to the extent that you are considering legal refusal. Please provide more details to explain your issue so others can comment and offer advice.
From India, Pune
What is the role and designation? What is the nature of the job offered that you feel does not fall within your charter of duties as you understand it? It requires careful analysis to determine if the job is significantly outside your responsibilities to the extent that you are considering legal refusal. Please provide more details to explain your issue so others can comment and offer advice.
From India, Pune
Dear Dinesh Sir,
What you are saying is absolutely right, and I will keep that in mind. But, in my defense, I was just answering this raw question: "Can an employee refuse to work, which is not mentioned in his role and responsibility? What can a company do if such a situation exists?"
Nothing is specifically mentioned in the question. If a marketing person is asked to do the work of housekeeping, I will surely advise one should not. But, if someone gives you work which may not be mentioned in your JD or JS but related to your profile, you have to do it. My answer was for the second case and for the phrase "refusal to work."
From India, Pune
What you are saying is absolutely right, and I will keep that in mind. But, in my defense, I was just answering this raw question: "Can an employee refuse to work, which is not mentioned in his role and responsibility? What can a company do if such a situation exists?"
Nothing is specifically mentioned in the question. If a marketing person is asked to do the work of housekeeping, I will surely advise one should not. But, if someone gives you work which may not be mentioned in your JD or JS but related to your profile, you have to do it. My answer was for the second case and for the phrase "refusal to work."
From India, Pune
What's wrong in learning something new and mastering it?
Organizations need their employees to perform across departments at times. Employees should be motivated enough to take on new challenges and learn if opportunities are given.
Having said this, it is also important to review oneself to understand why the change in the role took place. Is it a need of company management, underperformance, or behavioral issues?
Teamwork and amicability are always seen in the work environment.
Roles and responsibilities, if not mentioned, do not mean that one can simply refuse. It is considered part of your core job. However, apart from that, if required, the company can ask for some other work to be done within the scope of company timings and employee capacity.
Cleaning my own office table is not my work and is not mentioned in roles and responsibilities, but what is wrong if I clean it myself?
It is all about how you perceive and your attitude towards the work. A positive attitude is important.
From India, Vadodara
Organizations need their employees to perform across departments at times. Employees should be motivated enough to take on new challenges and learn if opportunities are given.
Having said this, it is also important to review oneself to understand why the change in the role took place. Is it a need of company management, underperformance, or behavioral issues?
Teamwork and amicability are always seen in the work environment.
Roles and responsibilities, if not mentioned, do not mean that one can simply refuse. It is considered part of your core job. However, apart from that, if required, the company can ask for some other work to be done within the scope of company timings and employee capacity.
Cleaning my own office table is not my work and is not mentioned in roles and responsibilities, but what is wrong if I clean it myself?
It is all about how you perceive and your attitude towards the work. A positive attitude is important.
From India, Vadodara
It is difficult to answer the query unless it is in full. If the work is related, even remotely, maybe the employer has the right to get it done through the employee, and the roles and responsibilities are not slot machines wherein all your tasks will be put in one or the other place. There are many tasks which are incidental to the job, and one has to do them. The issue arises when a purely technical person is given something irrelevant or purely administrative in nature, and that too as routine work for him/her. The concerned employee can raise a diplomatic objection by speaking to the person delegating such work or to the higher authority, as the case may be. Before refusing, just think and understand if the employer is testing your all-round capability and humility in taking up work or trying to undermine your skills.
From India, Hyderabad
From India, Hyderabad
Dear Rajesh,
We do not know exactly why you seek advice on 'refusal' to work as a new assignment is not a part of the role and responsibility. You are advised to check with your appointment letter to see what it specifies. Is there any line/clause written in it stating "you may, during the course of your employment, be given any new assignment arising out of the company's business that the company, in its subjective judgment, feels is essential"?
In this context, it would be better for the employee to discuss with his department head with a positive mindset. He is not refusing but rather showing his inability as he considers himself not confident to handle the new assignment, lacking exposure or academic qualifications. This could result in the employee being perceived as non-productive, affecting career growth and the company's work. If you, as the department head, still believe that the employee is the best choice at this time, then you should put in your best effort but also seek supportive assistance from management.
Many members have provided positive feedback on your query for better understanding. Please consider what would be the best course of action.
Best regards,
[Your Name]
From India, Mumbai
We do not know exactly why you seek advice on 'refusal' to work as a new assignment is not a part of the role and responsibility. You are advised to check with your appointment letter to see what it specifies. Is there any line/clause written in it stating "you may, during the course of your employment, be given any new assignment arising out of the company's business that the company, in its subjective judgment, feels is essential"?
In this context, it would be better for the employee to discuss with his department head with a positive mindset. He is not refusing but rather showing his inability as he considers himself not confident to handle the new assignment, lacking exposure or academic qualifications. This could result in the employee being perceived as non-productive, affecting career growth and the company's work. If you, as the department head, still believe that the employee is the best choice at this time, then you should put in your best effort but also seek supportive assistance from management.
Many members have provided positive feedback on your query for better understanding. Please consider what would be the best course of action.
Best regards,
[Your Name]
From India, Mumbai
It is always preferable to be friendly and flexible.
Before you jump to make this a formal, go-by-the-rule type of response, first understand what is being expected and why you wouldn't want to do it. If it is a task that would not add value to you or is inappropriate for your skill and experience, try to handle it with aptitude.
One way would be to perform that task once very well, get it acknowledged, and the next time politely inform that you would want to focus on responsibilities at hand. Try to find out why this task is being assigned to you regularly. In your opinion, who should be doing it, and why is it not being assigned to them?
If the assignment is making you feel hurt, try to understand what is going on. Management usually assigns work to people who they think are confident of delivering. If they are assigning you irrelevant work or work that you consider low profile, maybe you are not being friendly and favored. Work on that. Asserting rules, roles, and responsibilities may not lead you to a favorable response.
From India, Bengaluru
Before you jump to make this a formal, go-by-the-rule type of response, first understand what is being expected and why you wouldn't want to do it. If it is a task that would not add value to you or is inappropriate for your skill and experience, try to handle it with aptitude.
One way would be to perform that task once very well, get it acknowledged, and the next time politely inform that you would want to focus on responsibilities at hand. Try to find out why this task is being assigned to you regularly. In your opinion, who should be doing it, and why is it not being assigned to them?
If the assignment is making you feel hurt, try to understand what is going on. Management usually assigns work to people who they think are confident of delivering. If they are assigning you irrelevant work or work that you consider low profile, maybe you are not being friendly and favored. Work on that. Asserting rules, roles, and responsibilities may not lead you to a favorable response.
From India, Bengaluru
If an employee refuses to do a job other than his role, the employer cannot force him to do so. At the time of selection, the employer definitely speaks about the roles and responsibilities of a particular position, and if the appointment letter also mentions the designation. However, as an employer, one can ask an employee to do a particular job other than his role, but it should be done with proper manner and not by forcing. There are many other ways to encourage an employee to take on tasks outside of their designated role. This could involve effective communication with the employee, fostering a strong bond between the employee and the employer, offering recognition to the employee, and considering the remuneration for the additional responsibilities.
From India, Bangalore
From India, Bangalore
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