Assessment

Strategic E-commerce Competency Diagnostic

This assessment compares your current business operations against the 18 Programs & 40+ Missions of the Dijipilot Academy curriculum.

We analyze your answers to determine exactly which Skills you have mastered and which Lessons you are missing.

At the end, you will receive a personalized Gap Analysis and a custom curriculum generated dynamically based on your specific needs.

⏱️ 5 Minutes 🧬 100+ Skill Checkpoints 🗺️ Dynamic Roadmap
9.1.1.2 - Defining the "Seat": Writing Job Descriptions based on KPIs, Not Just Tasks (Difficulty: Advanced | Path: Scale)

9.1.1.2 - Defining the "Seat": Writing Job Descriptions based on KPIs, Not Just Tasks (Difficulty: Advanced | Path: Scale)

Lesson Summary

Writing Outcome-Based Job Descriptions

What is it?

Traditional job descriptions (JDs) list tasks: \"Post to Instagram daily,\" \"Answer emails.\" Outcome-based JDs list Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): \"Grow Instagram engagement by 20%,\" \"Maintain customer response time under 2 hours.\" It defines the destination, not just the journey.

Why is it important?

When you hire for tasks, you get a robotic employee who stops working when the list is done. When you hire for outcomes, you get a problem solver (an \"Owner\") who figures out how to hit the goal. This transfers the mental load of strategy from you to them.

The 3-Part \"Scorecard\" Format:

  1. The Mission: A 1-sentence summary of why the role exists.
    Example: \"To ensure every customer feels heard and valued, turning support interactions into brand loyalty.\"
  2. The Outcomes (KPIs): 3-5 measurable numbers that define success.
    • Bad: \"Handle support tickets.\"
    • Good: \"Close 50+ tickets daily with a CSAT score > 4.8/5.\"
  3. The Competencies: The soft skills required to achieve the outcomes (e.g., \"High emotional intelligence,\" \"Tech-savvy/Fast typer\").

Do's and Don'ts

  • Do: Be specific with numbers. \"Fast response\" is subjective. \"Under 4 hours\" is objective.
  • Don't: Copy-paste generic JDs from Google. They attract generic candidates. Write in your brand's voice to filter for culture fit immediately.
  • Do: Review these KPIs in the interview. Ask: \"Have you ever had a target of replying to 100 emails a day? How did you handle it?\"

MASTERCLASS

9 - Team Building, Outsourcing & External Partners (Path: Scale) -> 9.1 - Organizational Design & The Hiring Funnel -> 9.1.1 - Designing Your E-commerce Team -> 9.1.1.2 - Defining the "Seat": Writing Job Descriptions based on KPIs, Not Just Tasks

Defining the "Seat": Writing Job Descriptions based on KPIs, Not Just Tasks

Most e-commerce founders hire backward. They wait until they are drowning in operational noise—overflowing inboxes, unfulfilled orders, and chaotic ad accounts—and then they frantically write a job description that lists every task they personally hate doing. The resulting document is a "grocery list" of activities: "Post to Instagram," "Answer customer emails," "Update Shopify inventory." When you hire based on a list of tasks, you attract task-doers. These employees wait for instructions, stop working when the list is complete, and ultimately require you to manage them as closely as you managed the work itself.

This approach fails because it focuses on the journey (the tasks) rather than the destination (the business outcome). In the "Scale" phase of your DijiPilot journey, you cannot afford to be the brain for every pair of hands in your company. You need to hire "Owners"—people who accept psychological ownership of a specific metric or result. To attract Owners, you must fundamentally change how you define the "Seat" on your bus. You are not hiring someone to "run ads"; you are hiring someone to "acquire customers at a profitable ROAS." The difference seems subtle, but it changes the entire psychological contract between employer and employee.

An Outcome-Based Job Description (OBJD), or a "Scorecard," replaces the task list with Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). It defines success using objective numbers. Instead of asking for "Good communication skills," it asks for "A Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) above 4.8." Instead of "Manage inventory," it demands "Inventory accuracy of 99.5% with zero stockouts on hero products." By defining the "What" and the "Why," you leave the "How" up to the talented professional you are hiring. This transfers the mental load of strategy from you to them, freeing you to focus on high-level growth.

🔒

DijiPilot Academy Access Required

This comprehensive masterclass (Defining the "Seat": Writing Job Descriptions based on KPIs, Not Just Tasks) is locked. Upgrade your plan to unlock the full technical roadmap.

Previous Post
Next Post

Questions & Answers

Reviewing this step? Browse questions from other DijiPilot users below. If you are stuck, check the existing answers to bridge the gap between setup and success.

Have a specific question?

Don't let a technical hurdle stop your growth. Submit your question below and our team will update this guide with the answer.

About Us