HR - Recruit, Select, Orientation

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HR Flashcards on HR - Recruit, Select, Orientation, created by Liyah on 19/03/2015.
Liyah
Flashcards by Liyah, updated more than 1 year ago
Liyah
Created by Liyah about 9 years ago
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Question Answer
Recruitment and selection process 1. Decide what positions to fill 2. Build a pool of candidates for these jobs 3. Have complete application 4. Use selection tools, i.e. tests, background checks, physicals 5. Decide to whom to make an offer (interviewing)
workforce (or employment or personnel) planning process of determining what positions the firm will have to fill and how to fill them
trend analysis study of firm's PAST employment needs over a period of years to predict future needs
ratio analysis forecasting technique for determining FUTURE staff needs by using ratios between, for example, sales volume and number of employees needed
scatter plot graphical method used to help identify relationship between two variables
qualifications (or skills) inventories manual or computerized records listing employees' education, career, and development interests, languages, special skills, and so on, to be used in selecting INSIDE candidates for promotion
personnel replacement charts company records showing present performance and promotability of inside candidates for most important positions
position replacement card prepared for each position in a company to show possible replacement candidates and their qualifications
succession planning ongoing process of systematically identifying, assessing, and developing organizational leadership to enhance performance
Employee Recruitment getting people to apply for a job - job fairs - newspaper - internet
recruitment yield pyramid - used to gauge staffing issues that need to be addressed historical arithmetic relationships between recruitment leads and invitees, invitees and interviews, interviews and offers made, offers made and offers accepted.
Recruitment Sources A. internal they know the expectations, company, employee, strengths and limitations, loyalty, cheaper
b. External internals don't have qualifications, attributes, need "fresh eyes", new perspectives, cleaning house
Finding internal sources -Job posting -internal recommendations -skills inventory -contacts and referrals - employees refer friends - more successful than internal recruits, credibility of referree -training internal candidates, getting them prepared for position that may not be open yet "just in case," "build a pool" - have subordinate prepped to fill your spot if you could get promoted
External sources -walk-ins - get people who knows something about the company - cheap - college and other educational institutions (how to establish relationships with and recruit graduates) - student endowment fund, relationships with professors, allow students to visit company and do education related functions (clubs)
External sources (cont) - employment agencies (temp help) ('difficult to hire' positions) - check sent by temp agency, temp agency gets paid by company - hire w/temp for short term, save money on benefits packages - no termination paperwork because not company employee
External sources (cont) - public employment agency, low skill level jobs, manual labor, cheap recruitment - advertising (newspaper/print ads): basic jobs, secondary labor market, also can post in specific areas for specific job specialties, search domains, post jobs or people can post resumes, attract right individuals
What if you can't find someone with skills to match? try to attract the people who are not looking and don't have jobs i.e. students, stay-at-home moms and dads; retirees, discouraged workers under the right circumstances, these groups would go back to work, ask the right questions! give them their needs, tailor the job to them
Why Fire? People get fired due to lack of cultural fit rather than the lack of technical skills (which can be taught)
Selection Process -
Past is Best Predictor tells how employee will do in current work future - identify what you're looking for
Reliability and Validity Reliability: consistency of scores obtained by same person when retested with identical or alternate forms of tests
Validity - is it true? good? - test validity: accuracy which a test, interview, and so on measures what it purports to measure or fulfills the function it was designed to fill -
criterion validity based on showing that scores on test (predictors) are related to job performance (criterion)
content validity contains a fair sample of the tasks and skills actually needed for the job in question
construct validity demonstrates that a selection procedure measures a construct and that construct is important for successful job performance
How to Validate Test 1. Analyze job: job descriptions 2. Choose the tests 3. Administer the test 4. Relate your test scores and criteria 5. Cross validate and revalidate
expectancy chart graph showing relationship between test scores and job performance for a group of people
Sources of Information - Resumes and Applications -info on previous employers and education -uncovered periods of time (why?)
Sources of Information - Interview most common, important of selection device - first impressions
Structured Interviews ask certain number of questions (5 etc.) , write notes, ask the same questions to everyone
unstructured (or nondirective) interview conversation-style interview where interviewer pursues points of interest as they come up in response to questions - make it up as you go - look at resume - talk about it and figure out which questions to ask
situational interview series of job-related questions that focus on how candidate would behave in a given situation
behavioral interview questions that focus on how candidate reacted to actual situations in the past
job-related interview job-related questions that focus on relevant past job-related behaviors
stress interview applicant is made uncomfortable by a series of often rude questions - this helps identify hypersensitive applicants and those with low or high stress tolerance
unstructured sequential interview each interviewer forms an independent opinion after asking different questions
structured sequential applicant is interviewed by several persons; each rates applicant on standard form
panel interview group of interviewers questions applicant
mass interview panel interviews several candidates
Reference Checks Lie of Commission Lie of Omission If you want to use references, take four references, ask them about 3-4 more references, and then 3-4 more
Realistic Job Preview Approach -build trust w/company -be truthful but also talk about positives of job -want people to deselect themselves so don't spend money on training - reduces turnover
Rational Decision Making Process analyzing data/info of interview to make a selection
Intuitive/"gut" feeling make hiring decisions based on intuition even after analyzing interview data - don't skip your "gut" - no stereotypical decisions
Orientation Two Phases - Company Specific HR handles this talks about rules, health benefits, taxes, procedures, safety, culture and mission of company
Orientation Two Phases - Job Specific (manager handles) get up-to-speed on job, work expectations; specifics, attendance, problem-solving
Mentor helps new employee, makes a point they get accepted to the group, fit-in, invite to lunch, drinks etc.
Job Search "not selling toothpaste" ask - "What do I bring to the table?" to get hired in right circumstances WRONG approach - How can I get them to hire me? Ask - characteristics of employer that makes me want to work for them - FOCUS on what makes you DIFFERENT - stress the things that matter
Negotiation Salary Don't answer early. 1. NEVER GO FIRST. 2. IF decision maker (i.e. manager) isn't "in the room" don't bring your "decision maker" - salary is only one of the important factors - talk about benefits, location, company, being a good fit for the job - range
Salary neg. (cont) 3. Hold off discussion for as long as possible When you aren't CHOSEN for position, you want to convince you are the right person for the job
Salary neg (cont) when offered salary and benefits package COUNTER - employee will counter back - THEN accept i.e. 48,000 a year; they would give you $50,000 but they want you to counter, so say $50,000!
Salary neg (cont) If interviews at other places - Go to 2nd position and ask/let them know someone else wants you, see how quick they can answer you with THEIR offer -Even if you are going to say yes, say "good offer, I'd like to talk it over with professor, wife, husband, dog...." - there's another company who wants to hire me, can't make decision til Tuesday - reasonable time about a week
Salary neg (cont) not common but can also do $50,000 w/2000 signing bonus if make decision right now - before time requested
What to ask when countering? 48500? go to 50,000! companies make offer assuming you will counter - not just counter for $50,000...make a list of other things, benefits, vacation..."I accept, however, is it possible to get....."
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