In Workday HCM, it is critical to understand the distinction between job management and position management, as worker movement and vacancy behavior differ significantly between the two staffing models. In a job management organization, workers are hired into jobs, not into discrete position objects. Jobs in this model do not represent fixed headcount slots; instead, they are simply descriptive attributes assigned to workers.
When a worker in a job management organization retires, the worker’s job assignment ends with the worker. Because job management does not maintain a separate position record, there is no concept of a job remaining open, being frozen, or awaiting backfill. Once the worker exits the organization, the job itself effectively no longer exists unless another worker is hired into the same job profile through a separate hiring event.
Option A is incorrect because leaving a role open for backfill applies only to position management, where positions are persistent objects that can remain vacant and be refilled. Option B is invalid, as Workday does not support overlapping jobs in this manner. Option D is also incorrect because freezing applies to positions, not jobs.
From a Workday Pro HCM best-practice perspective, this behavior reinforces why job management is often used for organizations that require greater flexibility, such as high-volume or seasonal hiring. There is no headcount lock tied to individual jobs, and staffing levels are managed through hiring rules and organizational limits rather than position vacancies.
Therefore, the correct and Workday-verified outcome is that the job no longer exists once the worker retires in a job management organization.