Title: PMC
1Recruitmentand Selection Week 2
(cont.)___________________Dr. Teal
McAteer-EarlyMcMaster UniversityMGD School of
Business
2Recruitment
- The process of finding and attracting capable
applicants to apply for employment - Process begins when new recruits are sought and
ends when the application is submitted - See pg. 205 of your text for model
3Strategic Issues re Recruitment
- Can help organizations gain a competitive
advantage - Reap the benefits from selecting from a diverse
pool of candidates - Choose to recruit either skilled external
candidates or internal candidates (to develop
internally) - Amount of recruitment budget affects the quality
of recruits
4Recruitment
- 3 necessary conditions
- Common communication medium
- Job seeker must perceive a match between his or
her personal characteristics and the job
requirements - Job seeker must be motivated to apply
5Recruitment Sources
- Internal Recruiting
- Current employees (e.g., promotions)
- External Recruiting
- Referrals
- from current employees, former employees,
customers - Print ads
- Employment / temp agencies
- Universities / colleges
- Internet
6Internal Recruiting
- Advantages???
- Ee is familiar with org and culture
- Lower recruitment costs
- Ee has proven their ability
- Improves workplace morale and motivation
- Disadvantages???
- Internal rivalry
- No new blood
- Poor morale of ees who are not selected
7External Recruiting
- Advantages???
- Can acquire skills that is not available within
the orgn - Newer ideas may emerge
- Disadvantages???
- Newcomers may not fit
- Newcomers need to learn about the org and its
culture - More expensive
- Lower morale of ees who dont see career growth
within the firm
8Factors Affecting Recruitment
- Organizational Policies
- Promote from within (e.g. union)
- Compensation policies (recruiters dont have
authority to set pay, etc.) - Employment status policies (restriction of no
part-time or temporary ees) - Human Resource Plans
- Plan of which jobs should be filled by recruiting
and which jobs should be filled internally
9Factors Affecting Recruitment
- Diversity Management Programs
- E.g., Employment Equity
- Recruiter Habits
- Using same sources looking for same types of
individuals - Environmental Conditions
- Available workforce
10Factors Affecting Recruitment
- Job Requirements
- More difficult to fill a highly specialized job
- Costs
- Inducements
- Signing bonuses, trips, fitness centre
memberships etc.
11Research on Internet Recruiting
- 26 of students rejected employers from job
search because of poor website design - Study comparing effectiveness of different
website orientations (Williamson et al., 2003) - Recruiting orientation
- Goal is to sell and promote the company to
prospective applicants - Screening orientation
- Goal is to evaluate and screen applicants
- Results Websites with a recruiting orientation
resulted in higher levels of attraction to
organizations
12Effectiveness of Recruitment Sources
- Cost per hire
- Time-lapse from candidate identification to hire
- Source yield
- Ratio of hires applicants
- Ratio of offers applicants
- Ratio of qualified applicants total applicants
- Performance of hires
- Tenure / turnover of hires
- Diversity / Employment equity issues
13Selection
14Strategic Issues re Selection
- Organizational performance is contingent on
performance of individual employees - Selection decisions must reflect job requirements
- Selection strategy should consider organizational
needs resources, labour market realities
15Selection
- Selection is about prediction
- Predicting who will be most effective at
performing a given job in a given organization - Want to maximize hits and avoid misses
16The Selection System
- Selection system must be
- Valid
- Reliable
- Practical
- Free from bias
- Thorndike (1949)
17Legally Defensible Selection System
- Must provide equal employment opportunities to
all individuals without regard to race, age,
gender, national origin, marital status, family
status, sex, handicap etc. - Based on Ontario Human Rights Code
- In addition to validity and reliability, need to
demonstrate - Active recruitment
- That selection system is job-related (job
analysis)
18Validity
- Appropriateness of the inferences made based on
scores of selection techniques - E.g., if we predict an individual will perform
well based on interview results, validity is
concerned with the evidence that supports this
prediction - 3 types of validity 1st 2 are particularly
important for selection - Content validity
- Criterion-related validity
- Construct validity
19Content Validity
- Does the system adequately represent the KSAs
required by the position? - E.g., having applicants for position of secretary
lift a 50 kg box - No content validity if its not an essential job
requirement - E.g., having applicants for position of secretary
take typing test to assess typing speed - If certain typing speed is required, then it is
content valid - Hint Use Job analysis
20Criterion-Related Validity
- Does ones standing on a selection technique(s)
relate to the outcome (criterion) of interest
i.e., job performance? - How is C-R validity established?
- Predictive validation
- Extent to which test scores predict subsequent
job performance - Collect test scores correlate scores with
subsequent job performance ratings of those who
are hired
21Criterion-Related Validity
- Concurrent validation
- Degree to which a test score obtained now
predicts current performance - Administer employment test to current job
incumbents - Collect current (recent) job performance ratings
of incumbents - Look at correlation between test scores and
performance ratings
22Reliability
- Refers to the consistency of scores produced by a
selection technique - 2 important types of reliability
- Stability - Test-retest reliability
- Repeated administrations of the same measure
yield consistent results - Particularly important for tests
- Equivalence - Inter-rater reliability
- Agreement between 2 or more raters of same
behaviour - Particularly important for interviews
23Selection Techniques
- Resumes/Application Blanks
- Paper and pencil tests
- Work samples
- Assessment centres
- Reference checks
- Interviews
- Informal sources of decision-making
24Resumes/Application Blanks
25Types of Paper and Pencil Tests
- Cognitive ability tests
- General intelligence (IQ)
- Specific capacities (verbal, spatial,
mathematical) - Personality tests
- Traits identified as job-related
- E.g., Conscientiousness
- Integrity / Honesty tests
- Aim to avoid hiring dishonest or disruptive
employees - Related to reduce theft, aggression, absenteeism,
etc.
26Other Selection Techniques
- Physical Ability tests
- Strength, speed, agility, endurance, etc.
- Potential for adverse impact
- Work samples
- Involve applicants performing actual job tasks
- E.g., typing, preparing and delivering oral
presentation, athletic tryouts - Assessment Centre
- Procedure involving multiple assessment
techniques to assess reactions to real
job-related tasks - Often to assess managerial potential
27Reference Checks
28The Interview
- Most widely used selection technique
- 2 main types
- Unstructured
- Structured
29Interviews
- Unstructured interviews
- Open-ended questions, various topics
- Interviewers may ask different questions of
different candidates - Interviewer makes decision based on gut feeling
- No clear guidelines for evaluating interviewees
30Interviews
- Problems with unstructured interviews
- Poor reliability and validity
- Can lead to biases
- similar-to-me effect
- Primacy or recency effect
- Halo effect
31Interviews
- Structured interviews
- 3 distinguishing features
- Job-related questions
- Predetermined scoring system / rating scale
- Standardized - same approach for all applicants
- 2 types situational and behavioural
32Situational Interview
- Based on job analysis
- Presents candidate with a dilemma What would
you do? - Candidate must answer by saying how s/he would
respond to the dilemma - Rationale for situational interview
- intention predicts future behaviour
- Explicit scoring system
- 1 least effective 5 most effective
- Good reliability and validity
33Behaviour Description Interview
- Based on job analysis
- Candidate is asked to describe a specific
situation s/he has been involved in that relates
to a specific skill or competency - Tell me about a time when you had to work on a
team with someone you didnt get along with. - May involve more than 1 interviewer (e.g., panel)
- Rationale for behavioural interview
- past behaviour is the best predictor of future
behaviour - Good reliability and validity
34Informal Sources of Decision-Making
35Issues to Consider
- Screen on hard criteria, select on soft
criteria - Screen out those who do not possess essential
hard job specifications - E.g., specific degree, license, etc. that is
critical - Select those who possess essential soft
skills/characteristics - Using structured behavioural interview
36Issues to Consider
- Focus on factors that are not readily trained
- Often, specific job content skills can be trained
- Less tangible skills/characteristics are not as
readily trained - Fit with organization culture
- Initiative, conflict resolution, adaptability,
stress management, etc. - Consider multiple hurdle approach
37Issues to Consider
- Selection system signals how organizations value
the people they hire - A good selection system may be costly and
time-consuming (and demanding for candidates) - But it has many benefits
- High quality hires
- Legal defensibility
- Fosters commitment and motivation of new hires