Title: Chapter 7 Recruiting and selecting employees
1Chapter 7Recruiting and selecting employees
2Recruitment
is the process of generating a pool of capable
people to apply for employment to an organization.
Selection
is the process by which managers and others use
specific instruments to choose from a pool of
applicants a person or persons most likely to
succeed in the jobs, given management goals and
legal requirements.
3The stages of recruitment and selection
4Recruitment and selection
- Recruitment and selection are vital to the
formation of a positive psychological contract,
which provides the basis of organizational
commitment and motivation. - The attraction and retention of employees is part
of the evolving employment relationship, based on
a mutual and reciprocal understanding of
expectations.
5Recruitment and selection
- There are wide variations in recruitment and
selection practices, reflecting an organizations
strategy and its philosophy towards the
management of people. - Progressive HR practices are crucial to a
positive psychological contract this includes
attention to effective recruitment and selection
practices.
6Recruitment and Attraction
- A key role for HR is to align performance within
roles with the strategy, so recruiting for the
right people for a role depends on how it is
defined in terms relating to performance to
achieve the strategy. - Criterion-related behaviours or standards of
performance are referred to as competencies. - Competencies can be used to provide the
behaviours needed at work to achieve the business
strategy, and enable organizations to form a
model of the kinds of employee it wishes to
attract through recruitment.
7Schneiders Attraction Selection Attrition
Framework
- Schneider argued that people are attracted to an
organization on the basis of their own interests
and personality. - Thus, people of a similar type will be attracted
to the same place. - Furthermore, the attraction of similar types will
begin to determine the place.
8Competencies
- Table 7.1 shows how one large financial services
organization in the UK sets out its competencies.
9Recruitment and Attraction
The main approaches to attracting applicants can
be summarized as follows
- Walk-ins
- Employee referrals
- Advertising
- Websites
- Professional associations
- Educational associations
- Professional agencies
- E-recruitment (general recruitment agents/
companies own sites) - Word of Mouth
10Recruitment and Attraction
An organization will take account of a number of
factors when forming recruitment plans and
choosing media
- Mobility of labour geographic and occupational
- Retention and labour turnover rates
- Legislation and regulations on equal
opportunities and diversity
- Cost
- Time taken to recruit and select
- Labour market focus, for example skills,
profession or occupation
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15Recruitment and Attraction (1)
- Personnel specifications versus competencies
- Personnel specifications may contain stereotypes
of the ideal person and so organizations may be
reinforcing the stereotype in their recruitment
practices. - The use of competencies allows organizations to
free themselves from traditional stereotypes in
order to attract applicants from a variety of
sources.
16Personnel specifications versus competencies
- Competencies appear to be
- more objective
- have a variety of uses in attracting applicants
- allow an organization to use more reliable and
valid selection techniques.
17Selection Costs
- Organizations have become increasingly aware of
making good selection decisions, since it
involves a number of costs - The cost of the selection process itself,
including the use of various selection
instruments - The future costs of inducting and training new
staff - The cost of labour turnover if the selected staff
are not retained
18Selection reactions of applicants
- According to Hausknecht (2004) organizations must
beware - Invasive selection, diminishing attraction of
organization - Candidates with a negative experience dissuading
others - A negative selection experience can impact on job
acceptance - Discrimination legislation and regulations
- Mistreatment putting off future applications and
stopping applicants using organizations products
or services
19Selection Principles
- Underlying the process of selection and the
choice of techniques are two key principles - Individual differences Attracting a wide choice
of applicants will be of little use unless there
is a way of measuring how people differ, i.e.
intelligence, attitudes, social skills,
psychological and physical characteristics,
experience etc. - 2. Prediction A recognition of the way in which
people differ must be extended to a prediction of
performance in the workplace.
20Selection Reliability and Validity
- Reliability refers to the extent to which a
selection technique achieves consistency in what
it is measuring over repeated use. - Validity refers to the extent to which a
selection technique actually measures what it
sets out to measure.
21Selection CVs and Biodata
- CV (a curriculum vitae) - enables candidates to
set out their experience, skills and
achievements. - It also provides an early chance for the
organization to screen the applicants before
moving to the next stage of selection. - Biodata - information about a persons past
experiences and behaviours in particular
situations, gathered by questionnaires including
several multiple-choice questions and/or
scenarios seeking data that can be verified as
factual.
22Selection Interviews
- Information elicited interviews have a specific
focus, i.e. facts, subjective information,
underlying attitudes. - Structure ranging from the completely
structured to the unstructured. A compromise
between the two enables the interviewer to
maintain control yet allowing the interviewee
free expression. - Order and involvement the need to obtain
different kinds of information may mean the
involvement of more than one interviewer.
Applicants may be interviewed serially or in a
panel.
23Recruitment and selection
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25Face validity
- How selection and assessment techniques appear to
those subjected to them
26Dilemma
- Should the interview focus on establishing a good
relationship with the applicant to elicit a
positive reaction from the candidate about the
selection process, or should the interview be
concerned with using good structure and
sophisticated questions that have higher
predictive validity?
27Psychometric Testing
- Personality research has lent support to the use
of sophisticated selection techniques such as
psychometric tests that have a good record of
reliability and validity. - Ability tests these focus on mental abilities
(verbal/ numerical) and physical skills testing.
Right/ wrong answers allow applicants to be
placed in ranked order. - Inventories self-report questionnaires
indicating traits, intelligence, values,
interests, attitudes and preferences. No
right/wrong answers but a range of choices
between possible answers.
28Five factor (big five) model
- Emotional stability (neuroticism)
- Extroversion
- Openness to experience
- Agreeableness
- Conscientiousness
29E-assessment
- On-line testing, or e-assessment, is also used
for selection and other HR purposes. - Benefits
- Online testing enables organizations to test at
any time and anywhere in the world. - It enables the quick processing of applicants.
- As tests are taken, results can be accumulated
and used to improve the validity of the tests. - Drawback
- Loss of control over the administration of the
tests anyone can be called on to help. - All tests need to conform to the requirements of
discrimination laws.
30Assessment Centres
- Assessment centres are designed to yield
information that can be used to make decisions
concerning suitability for a job. - They provide a fuller picture by combining a
range of techniques. - General methods used include group discussions,
role plays and simulations, interviews and tests. - Candidates attending an assessment centre will be
observed by assessors who should be trained to
judge candidates performance against criteria
contained within the competency framework.
31Realistic Job Previews
- Applicants have expectations about how the
organization will treat them. Recruitment and
selection represent an opportunity to clarify
these. Realistic job previews (RJPs) provide a
means of achieving this. - RJPs can take the form of case studies,
shadowing, job sampling and videos this enables
the expectations of applicants to become more
realistic - RJPs lower initial expectations cause some
applicants to de-select themselves, but also
increase levels of organization commitment, job
satisfaction, performance and job survival.
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