Title: Employee Recruitment and Selection
1Employee Recruitment and Selection
2The Recruiting Process
3Strategic Approach to Recruiting
- How many people does the organization need?
- What labor markets will be tapped?
- Should the organization have its own staff or use
other sources such as flexible staffing? - To what extent should recruiting be forced
internally vs.externally? - What special skills and experience are really
necessary? - What legal considerations affect recruiting?
- How can diversity and affirmative action concerns
be addressed when recruiting? - How will the organization spread its message of
opening? - How effective are the recruiting efforts?
4Recruiting Evaluation
- Quantity of applicants
- EEO goals met
- Quality of applicants
- Cost per applicant hired
- Time required to fill openings
5Employment Application Policies
- Applications are accepted only when there is an
opening - Only persons filling out application blanks are
considered applicants - A persons application ceases to be effective
after a certain date - Only a certain number of applications will be
accepted - People must apply for a specific job, not any
job
6Multinational Staffing Policies
- Four Approaches
- Ethnocentric
- Polycentric
- Geocentric
- Regiocentric
7Multinational Staffing Policies
- The Ethnocentric Approach All key positions are
filled by parent-country nationals. - Some Advantages
- Parent-country nationals (PCNs) can ensure the
subsidiary complies with overall corporate
objectives and policies - PCNs can maintain good communication,
coordination, and control links with corporate
headquarters. -
8Multinational Staffing Policies
- Some disadvantages
- This policy Limits the promotion opportunities of
HCNs, may leads to reduced productivity and
increased turnover. - The adaptation of expatriates to host country
often take a long time. - Income-gap in favor of PCNs is viewed by HCNs as
unjustified. - Expatriates are also very expensive to maintain
in international locations.
9Multinational Staffing Policies
- The Polycentric Approach HCNs are recruited to
manage subsidiaries in their own country and PCNs
occupy positions at corporate headquarters. - Main advantages
- Employing HCNs eliminates language barriers,
avoid adjustment problems, removes the needs of
expensive cultural training programs. - Allowing MNEs to take a lower profile in
sensitive political situations. - Spending less money to attract high-quality
applicants. - Giving continuity to the management of foreign
subsidiaries.
10Multinational Staffing Policies
- Geocentric utilizing the best people for the
key jobs throughout the organization, regardless
of nationality. - Some Advantages
- Highly competent employees are available not only
at headquarters, but also in the subsidiaries - International experience is a condition for
success in top positions
11Multinational Staffing Policies
- Some Advantages (continued)
- Managers with high potential and ambition for
promotion are constantly ready to be transferred
from one country to another and - Competent and mobile managers have an open
disposition and high adaptability to different
conditions in their various assignments.
12Multinational Staffing Policies
- The Regiocentric Approach defining as
functional rationalization on a more-than-one
country basis, one way is to divide its
operations into geographical regions and transfer
staff within these regions. - A U.S.-based firm could create three regions
- Asia-pacific
- America
- Europe
- (say a Singaporean to China, a Taiwanese to
Japan, and a Korean to Malaysia.)
13Multinational Staffing Policies
- Some Advantages
- Allowing interaction between executives
transferred to regional headquarters from
subsidiaries in the region and PCNs posted to the
regional headquarters. - Moving from a purely ethnocentric or polycentric
approach to a geocentric approach.
14Multinational Staffing Policies
- Based on top-management attitudes, a
multinational can pursue one of several
approaches to international staffing. It may
even proceed on an ad hoc basis, rather than
systematically selecting one of the four
approaches.
15Recruitment Currently Used Recruitment Methods
- 1. Job Fairs
- 2. Ads on the Internet
- 3. Ads in Trade or
- Professional Journals
- 4. Professional Recruiters
- 5. Unsolicited Applications
- 6. College Placement Offices
- 7. Employment/Temporary
- Agencies
- 8. Word-of Month/
- Networking
- 9. Internal postings
- 10. Employee Referrals
- 11. newspaper Classified
- Advertisements
16Recruitment and Selection
- Three different types of employees
- Parent-country nationals (PCNs)
- Host-country nationals (HCNs)
- Third-country nationals (TCNs)
17Recruitment and Selection
- Parent-country nationals (PCNs)
- Advantages
- Organizational control and coordination is
maintained and facilitated - Promising managers are given international
experience - PCNs may be the best people for the job because
of special skills and experiences - There is assurance that subsidiary will comply
with company objectives, policies, and so on.
18Recruitment and Selection
- Parent-country nationals (PCNs)
- Disadvantages
- The promotional opportunities of HCNs are limited
- Adaptation to host country may take a long time
- PCNs may impose an inappropriate HQ style
- Compensation for PCNs and HCNs may differ.
19Recruitment and Selection
- Host-country nationals (HCNs)
- Advantages
- Language and other barriers are limited
- Hiring costs are reduced, and no work permit is
required - Continuity of management improves, since HCNs
stay longer in positions - Government policy may dictate hiring of HCNs
- Morale among HCNs may improves as they see career
potential
20Recruitment and Selection
- Host-country nationals (HCNs)
- Disadvantages
- Control and coordination of HQ may be limited
- HCNs have limited career opportunity outside the
subsidiary - Hiring HCNs limits opportunities for PCNs to gain
foreign experience - hiring HCNs could encourage a federation of
national rather than global units.
21Recruitment and Selection
- Third-country nationals (TCNs)
- Advantages
- Salary and benefit requirements may be lower than
for PCNs - TCNs may be better informed than PCNs about
host-country environment - Disadvantages
- Transfer must consider possible national
animosities (e.g.., India and Pakistan) - The host government may resent hiring TCNs
- TCNs may not want to return to their own
countries after assignment
22Expatriate Selection
- Predicting future performance potential when
hiring or promoting staff is challenging at the
best of times, but operating in foreign
environments certainly adds another level of
uncertainty. - Issue of Expatriate Failure
- What? A return home before the period of
- assignment is completed
23Issue of Expatriate Failure
- Why?
- A selection error?
- Expatriates Ineffective and poor adjustment?
- Spouse and family members inability to adjust?
-
24Reasons for Expatriate Failure (in descending
order of importance)
- Japanese Firms
- Inability to cope with larger international
responsibility - Difficulties with new environment
- Personal or emotional problems
- Lack of technical competence
- inability of spouse adjust
- U.S. Firms
- Inability of spouse to adjust
- Managers inability to adjust
- Other family reasons
- managers personal or emotional maturity
- Inability to cope with larger international
responsibility
25Issue of Expatriate Failure
- Failure Rate
- Harzings report Samples
- U.S. multinationals (N80)
- European multinationals (N29)
- Japanese multinationals (N35)
- 24 of the U.S. firms had recall rates below 10
- 59 of the West European, less than 5
- 76 of the Japanese firms, less than 5
26Issue of Expatriate Failure
- Costs Associated with Expatriate Failure
- Direct Cost
- airfare
- relocation expenses
- salary
- training
27Issue of Expatriate Failure
- Costs Associated with Expatriate Failure
- Indirect Costs
- loss of market share
- difficulties with host-government officials
- productivity suffer
- expatriates lose self-esteem, self-confidence,
and prestige among peers, decreased motivation,
lack of promotional opportunities - threatened expatriates family relationships
28Selection Criteria
- Predicting success factors and developing
appropriate selection criteria for international
operators has become a critical GHRM issue.
29Selection Criteria
- Technical ability (technical and managerial
skills) - Cross-cultural suitability (cross-cultural
management skills) - Family requirements (spouse adjustment to foreign
environment) - Country/cultural requirements (remote area, no
females for certain Middle East or South East
Asian regions)
30Selection Criteria
- MNE requirements (The mode of operation involved,
the duration of the assignment, and the amount of
knowledge transfer inherent in the expatriates
job in the foreign operation) - Language
31Successful Expatriate Experience
- Analysis of Job Requirements
- Analysis of Country of Assignment
- Evaluation of Candidate
- Preparation of Candidate/Family
- Adequate Length of Assignment
- Repatriation Preparation
- Successful Expatriate Experience
32The 21st-Century Expatriate Manager Profile
- Core Skills
- Multidimensional Perspective
- proficiency in line Management
- Prudent Decision-Making Skills
- Resourcefulness
- Cultural Adaptability
- Cultural Sensitivity
- Ability as a Team Builder
- Physical Fitness and Mental Maturity
33The 21st-Century Expatriate Manager Profile
- Augmented Skills
- Computer literacy
- Prudent negotiating Skills
- Ability as a Change Agent
- Visionary Skills
- Effective Delegation Skills
34Advantages and Disadvantages of Internal Sources
35Advantages and Disadvantages of External Sources
36Selection Process Flowchart
37Possible Tests Used for Selection
38Possible Tests Used for Selection
- Ability Tests Tests that assess learned skills.
- Aptitude Tests Tests that measure general
ability to learn or acquire a skill. - Work Sample Tests Tests that require an
applicant to perform a simulated job task. - Mental Ability Tests Test that measure reasoning
capabilities. - General Aptitude Test
Clerical Test - Management Skill Test
Knowledge Test - Dexterity Test
Industrial Skills Test - Assessment Centers
Honesty Test - mechanical Aptitude Test
Work Sample Test - psychological personality Test
39Selection Interview
- A Selection interview is designed to assess
job-related knowledge, skill, and abilities
(KSAs) and clarify information from other
sources. There are six types of selection
interviews - Structured Interview uses a set of standard
questions asked of all job applicants. - Situational Interview composed of questions about
how applicants might handle specific job
situations. - Behavioral Description Interview in which
applicants give specific examples of how they
have performed or handled a problem in the past. - Non-directive Interview that uses general
questions, from which other questions are
developed. - Stress Interview designed to create anxiety and
put pressure on an applicant to see how the
person responds. - Panel Interview in which several interviewers
interview the candidate at the same time.
40Structured Interview
- Tell me how you trained workers for their jobs
- How do you decide the amount of work you and the
maintenance crew will have to do during a day? - How does the production schedule of the plant
affect what a mechanic ought to repair first? - How do you know what the needs of the plants are
at any given time and what mechanics ought to be
doing? - How did you or would you go about planning a
preventive maintenance program in the plant?
41Behavioral Description Interview
- How did you handle a situation in which there no
rules or guidelines on employee discipline? - Why did you choose that approach?
- How did you supervisor react?
- How was the issue finally resolved?
42Background Investigation
- Academic reference
- Prior work reference
- Financial reference
- Law enforcement records
- Personal reference
43Discussion
- To what extent should we recruit people
internally or externally? - What labor markets will be tapped?