Title: and gossip Recruitment methods Overt efforts by the
1Recruiting Employees
- Prof. John Kammeyer-Mueller
- MGT 4301
2Plan
- Where we are
- Discussed the primary goals of internal and
external recruiting systems - Discussed some metrics used in evaluating
recruiting - Where we want to be today
- Learn about external recruiting processes
- How well know how were doing
- What is the importance of matching in the
recruiting process? - How do companies and employees learn about one
another during recruiting? - What are the outcomes of various recruiting
strategies?
3Nature of Staffing
- Definition
- Staffing is the process of acquiring, deploying,
and retaining a workforce of sufficient quantity
and quality to create positive impacts on the
organizations effectiveness. - Implications of definition
- Acquire, deploy, retain
- Staffing as a process or system
- Quantity and quality issues
- Organization effectiveness
4Why Is Recruiting So Important?
- Watson Wyatt estimated that if a company has an
excellent recruiting function, is associated with
10 higher total market value - All of the other staffing functions are
contingent on recruiting the right people - You can only select qualified candidates if they
apply in the first place - Good candidates could get more out of proper
training and development opportunities - Individuals who are in high demand will be
especially able to pick companies that do a good
job of recruiting
5A Summary Model of Job Choice Decisions
- Sources of information
- Signals
- Social information
- Recruiting methods
- Recruiting outcomes
- Job acceptance
- Post-hire attitudes
- Post-hire performance
- Reactions to the Job
- Attributes
- Attitudes
- Moderators
- Credibility
- Richness
6Defining Effective Recruiting
- Salience
- The message reaches enough people
- The message reaches the right people (e.g.,
people who are qualified and likely to fit in
well with the organization) - Credibility
- The message being delivered is accepted by those
hearing it - Information is considered unbiased and objective
- Richness
- The message contains enough information for the
candidate to appraise the position - The message is sufficiently detailed
- Respondents can solicit more information if needed
7Finding out About Jobs
- Signaling
- Factors that indirectly influence your image of
what the company is likely to be - Social information
- Discussions, rumors, and gossip
- Recruitment methods
- Overt efforts by the organization to produce a
reaction in job seekers
8Signaling Theory and Job Choice
- Signals
- Salient pieces of information that shape choices
under uncertainty - The attributes of any company are not known with
certainty, and people are skeptical of company
information - Requires employees to look for signals of what
the company will be like - What are some signals that tell you what a
company might be like?
9Signals in the recruiting process Examples of
inferences about fit
- Inferences about interpersonal fit
- I wasnt sure of the fit at first. But after
talking with the people there, I feel like there
was a pretty good fit. I have talked to seven
people there and liked all of them. - Inferences about corporate culture
- They interviewed about a hundred people in a
day. Then, based on the initial interview, people
were asked to re-interview the next day in
different divisions. So instead of just putting
resumes in a pile and having people look at them,
they were on the ball.
10Signals in the recruiting process Strong
negatives!
- Inferences about skills
- _____ has a management training program which
the recruiter had gone through. She was talking
about the great presentation skills that _____
teaches you and the woman was barely literate.
She was embarrassing. If that was the best they
could do, I did not want any part of them. - Inferences about diversity
- The guy at the interview made a joke about how
nice my nails were and how they were going to
ruin them due to all the tough work. - For example, the ______ companies wouldnt even
put one woman on my schedule. That scares me.
11Social Information
- Word-of-mouth about companies
- One of the strongest influences on how a company
is perceived - Not entirely under the companys control
- Informal sources of information, like family and
friends, are extremely credible and rich sources
of information
12What are Job Seekers Looking For?
13Another Way of Summarizing Applicant Preferences
- Attributes
- Beliefs about the actual employment conditions at
an organization - A combination of wages, working conditions,
benefits, and social environment - Attitudes
- Feelings about what the company is like as a
whole - The more emotional beliefs about an
organization - Evidence from Collins and Stevens (2002) showed
that both attributes and attitudes were related
to application decisions
14Recruiting Methods
- How do you find out about jobs?
- Write down your top three methods
- For each method describe
- How salient the message will be (how much
coverage does it have?) - The richness of this source
- The credibility of this source
15Major Methods of Recruiting
- Applicant initiated
- Employee referrals
- Job fairs
- Media campaigns
- Employment websites
- Job tryout procedures
- Recruiting firms
16Applicant Initiated Recruiting
- Applicants start the process without knowing
about specific jobs - A few corporate hiring website examples
- Amazon Microsoft Merck
- Were always hiring
- Customer service
- Retail
- Some types of day labor
- Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
17Employee Referrals
- Typical process
- Informal referrals
- Many employees will inform friends about jobs
- In artistic fields, most recruiting is done
through informal social networks - Mostly achieved through weak ties or distal
members of ones social network - Formal referrals
- Explicit organizational policy of rewarding
referrals - Offices for handling referrals
- Williams, Labig, Stone, (1993) Granovetter
18Employee Referrals
- Applicant source effects
- Those who are recruited by friends and
co-workers - Are more satisfied and/or committed
- Are less likely to turnover.
- Contacts in a social network provide jobs that
- Pay more
- Are more likely to be set up specifically for the
applicant - Applicants with information from formal and
informal sources - Higher pre-hire knowledge of the job
- Higher qualifications
- Williams, Labig, Stone, (1993) Granovetter
- Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
19Job Fair Recruiting
- Typical procedures
- Establish connection with colleges
- Provide advertising through media
- Information on multiple jobs is presented
- Brief informal interviews and screening are
usually part of the process - Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
20Media Campaigns
- Typical procedures
- Prepare banner ads, radio, and television
messages - Receive applications through company website
- Information on multiple jobs is presented
- Continually updated as the need arises
- Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
21Employment Websites
- Employment websites
- CareerBuilder, HotJobs, and Monster
- List jobs for employers for a fee
- They also will post resumes for employees
- Companies can get tracking data on recruiting
methods and their effectiveness - Also can track EEO data
- Some of these sites will pre-screen potential
applicants - Niche websites
- Often these are occupationally specific
- Have a much higher rate of qualified applicants
- These are growing rapidly in some fields
- Also used as part of affirmative action planning
- Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
22Using LinkedIn for Recruiting
- A LinkedIn survey of its users found that a third
had been contacted at some point regarding a job
opportunity. - Most of the "power users" paying LinkedIn 200 a
month for premium services such as InMails are
recruiters, Guericke says. - Tim Farrelly, president of Coit Staffing,
requires all 12 recruiters in his company to use
the site. He estimates he spends 7,200 a year on
LinkedIn services, but "Weve probably made at
least 100,000 because of it. - Similar efforts are being made to use Facebook
and MySpace for recruiting
23Job Tryout ProceduresTemp-to-Hire and
Internships
- The big advantages
- Employees a chance to see the organization from
the inside - Get a chance to interact with co-workers in a
variety of situations - Results suggest an even stronger effect than for
realistic job previews. - Potential disadvantages
- Can be expensive to put someone through the full
procedure - Need to be careful about legal implications
- Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
24Another Possible Solution Using Recruiting Firms
- Typical processes for professional recruiting
firms - Candidates can apply directly to these companies
to get their names into a database - Often, these companies will have official
recruiters (e.g., headhunters) who seek out full
time employed individuals who might be attractive
to employers - Employers can solicit these companies for access
to the database of applicants - Example recommendedrecruiter.com maintains a
searchable database of recruiters by location - Advantages and disadvantages
- For companies?
- For applicants?
25Realistic Recruiting Expectations?
26Types of Recruiting Messages
- Realistic
- Workers told both the good and bad points of jobs
- Based on the assumption that turnover is the
result of a mismatch between information thats
typically provided and what jobs are really like - Branded
- Emphasize the unique properties of the
organization and what it does that is different
than competitors - Often accompanied by descriptions of why the
company should be an employer of choice - Involves research on perceptions of the
organization - Targeted
- Emphasizes how the organization or job is
especially well suited to a specific group of job
seekers - Usually involves extensive research on applicant
preferences
27Realistic Recruiting
- Examples from Prudentials realistic recruiting
- A Prudential representative finds that a high
degree of personal recognition is available. And
a successful Prudential Special Agent is
recognized in the community as a professional.
But there are times when every Special Agent
feels discouraged. A career as a special agent is
not an easy one. It can mean many personal
sacrifices it can mean working four or more
nights a week, in the beginning it can mean
postponing a special outing or an evening at
home it can mean having to take extra insurance
courses.
28Realistic Recruiting
- If I am asked to do any more work than what is
currently in my job description, I will quit. The
job I signed on to do is easily a 2-person, full
time job and I am expected to do it all in 40
hours a week. It is impossible and unrealistic,
and it constantly sets me up to fail. - I intend to quit because the job description and
conditions I was recruited under aren't at all
what I've been doingI was told no travel, but I
have to travel. I was told I'd be doing
instructional design, project management, and
administrative work, Ive been since that I had a
specific function, doing whatever my manager
doesn't want to do. - I was ready to go on day two, and Im still ready
to go. I spend two hours a day looking for a new
jobI have to say, the job is not what I was led
to believe it is. The things Im doing, I did
four or five years ago. I took this job because
I was able to grow in my career and learn more
and do more - From Kammeyer-Mueller, Wanberg, Glomb, Ahlburg,
and Chuang, unpublished data
29Phillips Effects of Realistic Job Previews
- Factors that moderate the effectiveness of RJPs
- Settingslaboratory settings may be missing
important elements of the employment setting - TimingRJP information should be more effective
if its provided before a choice is made - Mediumverbal information is typically more
persuasive and salient, so one would expect that
verbal RJP would have more of an effect
30Phillips Effects of Realistic Job Previews
- Setting and timing dont matter as much as one
might think - Verbal RJPs are more effective across most
categories for influencing attitudes - Videotaped RJP does seem more related to
performance because they can show actual
instances of performance, which might be hard to
do verbally - RJP does very little in general to improve
satisfaction or commitment
31Realistic Job Previews and Applicant Reactions
- Concerns about realistic previews
- Negative information is used more by applicants
than positive information on pay and promotions - If given a choice, most individuals prefer jobs
that are sold during recruiting - Bretz Judge, 1998 (after the Philips
meta-analysis)
32Realistic Job Previews and Applicant Reactions
33However, Realism Can Have Positive Effects After
Hire
Employer honesty
Realistic preview
Organizational commitment
Coping
Withdrawal cognitions
This empirically supported model shows how
realistic previews seem to primarily have their
effects by encouraging employees to cope with the
difficulties of their new jobs From Hom,
Griffeth, Palich, Bracker, 1999
Voluntary turnover
34Branded Recruiting Messages
- Strategy to create a distinctive presence as an
employer - Specifically advertising the companys employment
philosophy - Pairing product brand with beliefs about
employment - Sources of brand beliefs
- Product market presence
- Industry
- Media profiles (e.g., Fortune 100 Best Companies
to Work For)
35Branded Recruiting Messages
- Examples
- General Electric has long promoted itself as a
very achievement and outcome oriented employer - That SAS video that we watched is obviously a
case in point - The U.S. armed forces have always pursued this
approach - What are the potential advantages and
disadvantages of this approach?
36Targeted Recruiting Messages
- Strategy to attract specific employees
- Assessing the preferences of a group of people
- Developing messages that specifically correspond
to these preferences - Examples
- Organizations under affirmative action plans will
seek to place advertisements in publications
aimed at women and minorities - Employers offer specific benefits that are
especially attractive to younger workers - Employers try to create an image that fits with
the companys desired culture - What are the potential advantages and
disadvantages of this approach?
37(No Transcript)
38Considering Different Recruiting Messages
- You are trying to hire recent graduates from UF
to work at your company - Develop a realistic message
- Emphasize good and bad points of the job
- Develop a targeted message
- Think about what recent college graduates are
most interested in - Develop a branded message
- What can your company offer to these graduates
that is unique?
39Wrap Up
- Where we were
- Discussed the primary goals of internal and
external recruiting systems - Discussed some metrics used in evaluating
recruiting - Where we wanted to be today
- Learn about external recruiting processes
- How well know how were doing
- What is the importance of matching in the
recruiting process? - How do companies and employees learn about one
another during recruiting? - What are the outcomes of various recruiting
strategies?