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Recruitment of Staff

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: MISS ELIZABETH THOMPSON Last modified by: MISS ELIZABETH THOMPSON Created Date: 6/22/2005 3:41:29 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recruitment of Staff


1
Recruitment of Staff the Job Analysis and Job
Description
  • Recruitment is the process of attracting people
    to apply for a job. An organisation will have to
    carry out a JOB ANALYSIS to decide if the job
    does exist and if it will remain the same or
    change.
  • The structure of the job will then be detailed in
    a JOB DESCRIPTION and will include
  • job title
  • location/department
  • who the job holder is responsible to and for
  • main purpose of the job
  • relationships internal external to the
    organisation
  • specific duties and responsibilities
  • any other duties
  • It is a legal requirement that a new post holder
    is given a written copy of his/her job
    description within the first 8 weeks of
    employment.

2
Recruitment of Staff the Person Specification
  • From the JOB ANALYSIS and JOB DESCRIPTION, a
    description of the type of person that would be
    suitable for the post can be drawn up.
  • The Person Specification should categorise the
    requirements of the job as either ESSENTIAL or
    DESIRABLE and would contain
  • qualifications
  • experience
  • personal qualities
  • interests that an IDEAL candidate would
    possess.
  • This information is particularly useful in the
    selection process as it provides a way of
    measuring candidates against the requirements of
    the job and against each other.

3
Recruitment of Staff Advertising the Post
  • The next stage is to inform potential applicants
    of the vacancy with the aim of attracting the
    right kind of applicant.
  • INTERNAL SOURCES OF ADVERTISING
  • notice on staff bulletin boards
  • notice in staff newsletter
  • notice on company intranet
  • This is an efficient method of recruitment as the
    vacancy can be filled quickly, it can enhance
    staff morale, is less costly as it saves on
    induction/training costs.
  • EXTERNAL SOURCES OF ADVERTISING
  • Local or national newspapers
  • Specialist journals/magazines eg Times
    Educational Supplement
  • Internet adverts on company website
  • Job Centre
  • Recruitment Agency
  • This method allows an organisation to appoint
    someone from outside who can bring in new ideas
    and experience to a job.

4
Recruitment of Staff the Selection Process
  • Selection is the process of sorting and selecting
    a suitable employee from the applicants. It would
    be impractical to interview ALL candidates
    vetting applications/references allows a short
    list to be drawn up.
  • APPLICATION FORMS OR LETTERS
  • CURRICULUM VITAE (CV)

ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Easy to use/match application against job criteria May not give a real feel of the person
Can be designed to give information relevant to post Not always accurate items omitted/candidate may lie, etc
Gives indication of candidates writing skills May have been completed/tidied up by someone else
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Can provide good personal overview of the applicant Not always accurate items omitted/candidate may lie, etc
Can assess candidates writing skills May have been completed/tidied up by someone else
5
Recruitment of Staff the Selection Process
  • TESTS
  • INTERVIEWS

ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Can check validity of candidates skills Performance may be affected by nerves
Can compare candidates skills Can be discriminatory
Can give all-round picture of candidate Can be unreliable if not administered by trained staff
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Can meet candidates face-to-face Decisions may be based on first impressions
Interviewer can ask further questions not already covered Interview may be affected by interruptions, poor questions, etc
Gives opportunity to ask what if? scenarios Unfair if all candidates not asked the same questions
Applicant can ask further questions Interviewers may be biased
6
Recruitment of Staff How to correctly interview
  • Use trained interviewers and prepare well for
    interview
  • Have more than one interviewer
  • Structure the interview welcome, time to
    acquire information, time to give information,
    confirmation of next stage
  • Design questions appropriately
  • OPEN to gain opinions/examples from
    candidate
  • PROBING to draw out all information from
    candidate
  • Use Person Specification and a scoring system as
    a guide to measure candidates
  • Use references as a back-up selection method
  • The use of ASSESSMENT CENTRES is growing and
    while these are costly, they have proved very
    reliable when appointing senior managers.

7
Staff Development and Support Performance
Management
  • APPRAISAL SYSTEMS can be used to measure, assess,
    rate and record employee performance and they
    will involve
  • an annual performance review
  • a 2-way discussion employee and employer
    evaluated
  • a paper-based rating of performance
  • a face-to-face interview or discussion of
    rating/performance
  • the setting of targets and discussion of
    development needs to achieve these
  • feedback of performance
  • An appraisal system must be
  • objective
  • participative
  • considered
  • developmental

8
Staff Development and Support Appraisal Methods
  • MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES (MBO) emphasises the
    setting of agreed targets by both employer and
    employee. The employer measures the achieved
    performance against the targets, development
    needs identified and targets set.
  • COMPETENCY-BASED METHOD emphasises the
    importance of assessing how the work is carried
    out. The employer measures the achieved
    performance. This is particularly useful in areas
    of work where it is less easy to measure
    performance eg customer service.
  • 360O METHOD this method uses a variety of
    people in the assessment process supervisors,
    subordinates, peers, customers. An overall
    profile is built up by the Human Resource Manager
    and this is then fed back to the employee and
    their development needs and targets are
    identified.

9
Staff Development and Support Training and
Staff Development
  • BENEFITS OF TRAINING STAFF
  • Staff become more competent at their jobs
  • Staff become more flexible
  • Staff motivation increases
  • Staff become more productive
  • Changes become easier to introduce
  • The organisations image improves
  • COSTS OF TRAINING STAFF
  • Once fully trained, staff may leave for
    better-paid jobs
  • The financial cost of training can be high
  • Work time is lost when staff are being trained
  • Output is lost when staff are being trained
  • The quality of training must be high for it to
    have a positive effect

10
Staff Development and Support Training Methods
  • ON-GOING TRAINING can take place
  • ON THE JOB where training is conducted at the
    employees normal place of work
  • OFF THE JOB where training is conducted at a
    different location such as a training centre,
    college, university
  • TRAINING METHODS
  • DEMONSTRATION the trainee watches a task being
    demonstrated, then completes it themselves
  • COACHING the trainee is taken through a task
    step-by-step and helped to improve by a trainer
    or coach
  • JOB ROTATION the trainee moves around different
    jobs or internal departments learning different
    tasks in each
  • DISTANCE LEARNING the trainee receives a pack
    of materials to work through at their own pace
    and the completed work is marked by an external
    assessor.

11
Staff Development and Support Staff Support
Systems
  • COUNSELLING most organisations will offer
    counselling on a range of issues such as stress,
    health, drugs, alcohol, careers.
  • ADVICE most organisations will offer advice on
    employment and health and safety legislation eg
    maternity and paternity rights, grievance and
    disciplinary procedures, rights to time off.
  • GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES most organisations will
    have grievance and disciplinary procedures in
    place to resolve issues between employer and
    employees.
  • RETURN-TO-WORK INTERVIEWS most organisations
    will have policies on absence and illness and it
    is common for employees to receive advice and
    counselling upon returning to work after a
    prolonged absence.
  • FAMILY-FRIENDLY POLICIES more and more
    organisations are realising the importance of
    flexibility in working practices eg time off for
    family issues, unpaid maternity/paternity leave
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