Title: Chapter 6 Selection Interviews
1Chapter 6Selection Interviews
2What are the objectives of a job interview?
- Recruiting applicant to the organization
- Communicating information about job to applicant
- Measuring applicant KSAs
- Determining match between organization and
applicant - Getting to know applicant
- Can be used either as a general screening or more
stringently as a formal selection procedure
3Traditional Interviews
- First impressions more important than factual
information. - Evaluations of a candidate are influenced by the
quality of previous candidates. - Applicants who demonstrate greater eye contact
more likely to be hired. - Unattractive candidates less likely to be hired.
- Overweight candidates less likely to be hired.
4Traditional Interviews
- Interviewers give more positive evaluations to
people they perceive to be similar to themselves. - Interpersonal attraction between candidate and
interviewer influences evaluations. - Interviewers judge candidates against their own
stereotype of an ideal candidate. - Interviewers weight negative information more
heavily than positive information.
5Traditional Interviews
- Interviewers weight information differently than
other interviewers. - Interviewers reach a decision about a candidate
within approximately 4 minutes. - Experienced interviewers are no more reliable or
valid than inexperienced interviewers. - Without taking notes, interviewers remember about
half of the information they receive in a
20-minute interview.
6Traditional Interviews
- Why are traditional interviews so bad?
- Low Reliability
- Different interviewers ask different questions
and get different answers from applicants - The same interviewers may ask different
applicants different questions - If interviews are not reliable, they cant be
valid. - Only way to increase validity is to begin with
reliability. - Standardize questions
- Standardize scoring procedure
7Common Interview Questions
- How would you describe yourself?
- Why should we hire you?
- What do you expect to be doing in 5 years?
- Tell me what you know about our company.
- What do you do in your spare time?
8Structured Interviews
- Questions are job relevant
- Ask the same questions
- Have predetermined scoring system
- Train interviewers
- Asking questions
- Prompting
- Recording
9Structured Interviews
- Structured interviews have much higher validity
than traditional interviews. Because they are - Reliable (consistent questions/scoring)
- Job-related
- Behavioral Description Interviews have slightly
higher validity than Situational Interviews.
10Recommendations for Use of Interviews
- Make interviews structured (e.g., same
predetermined Qs for all use of behavioral
anchors, standardized scoring formats) - Provide training on how to conduct interviews
(e.g., how to probe, take notes) and what errors
to be aware of - Restrict use of interview to most job-relevant
KSAs
11Recommendations for Use of Interviews
- Limit the use of pre-interview data about
applicants - Use job-related questions
- Use multiple questions for each KSA
- Use interview in conjunction with other selection
methods - When highly structured and highly job-related,
validity can approach .45 to .50
12Determining Interview Content
- Determine performance criteria by
systematically collecting information about - Job tasks/responsibilities
- Job context
- Competencies Knowledge, skills, abilities,
interests, motivations, and other characteristics
that are required to perform job - Desired performance outcomes (results) and what
individual should do to achieve them - Critical incidents identifying incidents that
are essential to good performance, or that
distinguish good from poor performers can be
used to develop interview questions
13Interview Focus Experience-based or Behavioral
Questions
- Situation What was the situation the candidate
faced? - Behavior What did the candidate do or say?
- Outcome What was the result of those behaviors?
14 Behavioral Question Example
- Tell me about a time when you made an important
decision too quickly. What were the consequences
of that decision? Would you do anything
differently? - Assesses the competency of problem-solving
- Looks for results, including learning
15Rating Behavioral Responses
- Define desired responses in advance, based on
organizational input - The best responses accurately reflect the
performance criteria - The more recent the behavior, the greater its
predictive power. - The more longstanding/frequent the behavior, the
greater its predictive power. - Verifiable behaviors are more likely to be
accurate.
16Interview Focus Future-oriented or Situational
Question
- Situation Create/describe the situation the
candidate would face - Behavior Determine what the candidate says they
would do or say
17Situational Question Example
- Two of your employees have had a serious
disagreement, which resulted in a shouting match.
How would you respond to such a situation? - Assesses the competency of managing people
- Key issues that response should address are
defined in advance, based on expectations of your
organization
18Evaluating Interview Effectiveness
- Subjective or soft metrics
- Interviewee perceptions
- Manager satisfaction
- Objective or hard metrics
- Performance changes in business unit
- Correlation with performance evaluation data
- Turnover
19Types of Interviewer Errors
- Leniency, severity, central tendency scoring
everyone too easily, harshly, etc. - Halo one or two global characteristics
influence overall evaluation - Contrast quality of preceding applicants
influences evaluation - Primacy (aka first impression error) making
evaluation of applicant within the first minutes
of interview - Similar-to-me making favorable evaluations due
to similarity to interviewer in some way
20Examples of Legal Cases Involving Interviews
- Watson v. Fort Worth Bank (1988) any device used
for selection or promotion cannot be discriminant - King v. TWA (1984) females did not receive same
questions as males - Robbins v White-Wilson Medical Clinic (1981) no
guidelines for conducting or scoring interviews - Most important characteristic to avoid litigation
is to make interviews objective job-related