Role Clarity: 7 Ways to go beyond the typical Job Description

Do you have an employee that needs role clarity? To give real clarity to a role, you have to go beyond the typical job description. If you feel that you have roles with ambiguity, this guide will help you give role clarity. Here’s how to write a clear job description that sets clear expectations for everyone on your team.

Role Clarity: how to give role clarity with a great job description

Do you struggle to give role clarity? Here’s how to give clear roles and responsibilities.

The only way to set crystal clear expectations is to have absolute role clarity. Role clarity is not the typical job description. You need to go beyond the typical job description and write a job description that provides clarity to any position.

Here is how to give real role clarity to any position in your organization. You use these 7 steps to create a job description for people that are in your company or for a new hire.

1. How To Give Role Clarity: Define Responsibilities for the job description

Start with the responsibilities of the role. What are they supposed to do? What is their “job?” This is the typical job description and where role definition often stops. You need to go deeper.

2. Role Clarity: Must vs. Wants for the job description

The next step is to ask “What are the musts versus the wants of this position?” Don’t think names or personalities. Think about the position. That’s hard. Do they need a college degree? What about experience in our industry? Or is experience in their area (for example, sales) ok? Don’t try and make everything a “must,” in the job description, either. After every “must,” pressure test it – can it be a “want” instead?

Many times, people try weaving someone’s name back to the position. If you are aiming for crystal clear role clarity, you need to focus on the role – not the person in it or a candidate.

3. Role Clarity: Define The Future in the job description

Next, ask, “One year from now, if this individual is wildly successful, what would happen?” List the outcomes.

For a sales position, maybe they will have sold $1 million from new clients or increased sales to existing clients. For an HR Role, maybe they will have filled several key missing roles and have an employee satisfaction survey in place.

Dream big.

List the outcomes out. Don’t worry about debating them and discussing them or getting them word-smithed. Just list them out. After they are listed, then start to pressure test the outcomes.

4. Role Clarity: How do they get to the future?

Now that you’ve defined what one year from now looks like, define what the first 90 days would look like.

Pretend the goal is to drive from Denver to San Diego in one year. In 90 days, I should be somewhere between San Diego and Denver, not in Wisconsin.

This level of detail will further help you get crystal clear role clarity.

5. Role Clarity: How matters.

Next, you need to define, “How do we want this person to go about doing their job?” This is crucial in any job description or where clarity if missing.

For example, I had an organization bringing in a head of product. The product was the problem, in their opinion.

The executive didn’t spend time defining the steps above. The candidate misunderstood how to go about the role. The candidate heard this role was supposed to ride in on a white horse and save the day.

Fortunately, we caught this before moving forward. But, if we didn’t, this attitude would alienate everyone. The organization’s culture wouldn’t tolerate it and the role would fail.

This could have been avoided with some simple conversations to set expectations.

How matters. People get hired for skill and fired for behavior. We’re great at defining skill and terrible at defining behavior. The how is a critical part of the job responsibility that is rarely discussed.

6. Role Clarity: Accountability

What is this role accountable for? Accountability is a dirty word inside some organizations. There are three reasons people don’t do something. They either don’t know how, they can’t, or they won’t.

If they don’t know how – they will need help to excel in this role.

If they can’t – they will never succeed in the role.

If they won’t – this is why defining the “how” is critical.

Read more about what to do with a poor performer.

We need to be clear about what the role is accountable for. If things don’t go as expected, this allows us to have the conversation.

7. Role Clarity: Finally, weave names back to the role or list the job description.

Not that you have crystal clear clarity, it’s time to weave a name back to the role (if it’s someone in your company). Since the name wasn’t there the whole time, it shouldn’t be emotional. The role is vetted and clear expectations set. For a new hire, there is no emotion, but you have crystal-clear clarity on the role.

You have to start with the end in mind. Sometimes this takes two, three, sometimes four hours to define.

Don’t do it in a vacuum. Do it with a team of people. We want to get everyone’s fingerprints on the murder weapon. We want alignment.

We don’t want efficiency when it comes to setting expectations.

It doesn’t cost you anything other than a little bit of time and a little bit of struggle. It’s worth it because it will get you to the top.

Here’s the full guide on how to hire the right person. Once you’ve hired the right person, here’s how to give a performance review.