Job design refers to “how jobs, tasks, and roles are structured, enacted, and modified, as well as the impact of these structures, enactments, and modifications on individual, group, and organizational outcomes” (Grant & Parker, 2009, p. 319). An extensive literature provides evidence that structural job characteristics (e.g., decision authority, autonomy, skill utilization, role conflict, work pressure) have an important impact on work outcomes (e.g., Fried & Ferris, 1987; Humphrey, Nahrgang, & Morgeson, 2007).