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PMC

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Interviewers may ask different questions of different candidates ... May involve more than 1 interviewer (e.g., panel) Rationale for behavioural interview ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PMC


1
Recruitmentand Selection Week 2
(cont.)___________________Dr. Teal
McAteer-EarlyMcMaster UniversityMGD School of
Business


2
Recruitment
  • 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

3
Strategic 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

4
Recruitment
  • 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

5
Recruitment 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

6
Internal 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

7
External 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

8
Factors 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

9
Factors Affecting Recruitment
  • Diversity Management Programs
  • E.g., Employment Equity
  • Recruiter Habits
  • Using same sources looking for same types of
    individuals
  • Environmental Conditions
  • Available workforce

10
Factors Affecting Recruitment
  • Job Requirements
  • More difficult to fill a highly specialized job
  • Costs
  • Inducements
  • Signing bonuses, trips, fitness centre
    memberships etc.

11
Research 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

12
Effectiveness 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

13
Selection
14
Strategic 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

15
Selection
  • 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

16
The Selection System
  • Selection system must be
  • Valid
  • Reliable
  • Practical
  • Free from bias
  • Thorndike (1949)

17
Legally 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)

18
Validity
  • 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

19
Content 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

20
Criterion-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

21
Criterion-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

22
Reliability
  • 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

23
Selection Techniques
  • Resumes/Application Blanks
  • Paper and pencil tests
  • Work samples
  • Assessment centres
  • Reference checks
  • Interviews
  • Informal sources of decision-making

24
Resumes/Application Blanks
25
Types 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.

26
Other 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

27
Reference Checks
28
The Interview
  • Most widely used selection technique
  • 2 main types
  • Unstructured
  • Structured

29
Interviews
  • 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

30
Interviews
  • Problems with unstructured interviews
  • Poor reliability and validity
  • Can lead to biases
  • similar-to-me effect
  • Primacy or recency effect
  • Halo effect

31
Interviews
  • Structured interviews
  • 3 distinguishing features
  • Job-related questions
  • Predetermined scoring system / rating scale
  • Standardized - same approach for all applicants
  • 2 types situational and behavioural

32
Situational 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

33
Behaviour 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

34
Informal Sources of Decision-Making
35
Issues 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

36
Issues 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

37
Issues 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
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