CHAP 4: EMPLOYEE SELECTION: RECRUITING AND INTERVIEWING
Highly structured interview
All three criteria of structured interview are met
Clarifiers
Allow the interviewer to clarify information in the resume, cover letter, and application, fill in gaps, and obtain other necessary information
Cost per qualified applicant
Amount of money spent on a recruitment campaign divided by the number of qualified people that subsequently apply for jobs as a result of the recruitment campaign
Public employment agency
An employment service operated by a state or local government, designed to match applicants with job openings; they often offer services such as career advertisement and resume preparation
Employer-based websites
An organization lists available job openings and provides information about itself and the minimum requirements needed to apply to a particular job
Employment agency
An organization that specializes in finding jobs for applicants and finding applicants for organizations looking for employees; they charge either the company or the applicant
Future-focused questions (situational)
Ask an applicant what she would do in a particular situation
Recruitment
Attracting people with the right qualification (as determined in the job analysis) to apply for the job
Psychological resume
Based on sound psychological theory and research, containing the strengths of both chronological and functional styles
Face-to-face interviews
Both the interviewer and the applicant are in the same room
Videoconference interviews
Conducted at remote sites
Recruiting kiosks
Located in shopping malls and public buildings where applicants can use to search for local job openings and get information on how they can apply for the jobs
Direct mail
Method of recruitment in which an organization sends out mass mailing of information about job openings to potential applicants
Skill-level determiners
Tap an interviewee's level of expertise
1) Number of applicants 2) Cost for applicant 3) Cost per qualified applicant 4) Number of successful applicants 5) Number of minorities and women
Ways to evaluate the effectiveness of recruitment strategies
Apply-in-person ads
When they don't want their phones tied up by applicants calling, want the applicants to fill out a specific job application, or want to get a physical look at the applicant
ads with emblem
attracts the greatest number of applicants
ads with salary range and company phone
attracts the highest quality if applicants
word-of-mouth system
information about recruitment is passed from one person to another
Group interviews
Have multiple applicants answering questions during the same interview
Contrast effect
Interview performance of one applicant may affect the interview score given to the next applicant
Noncompetitive promotions
Involve "career" progression" positions in which employees move from a position; number of promotions are not limited and they do not compete with other employees
One-on-one interviews
Involve one interviewer interviewing one applicant
Written interviews
Involve the applicant answering a series of written questions and then sending the answers back through regular mail or through email
Serial interviews
Involves a series of single interviews
Point-of-purchase method
Job vacancy notices are posted in places where customers or current employees are likely to see them: store windows, bulletin boards, restaurant placemats, and the sides of trucks
Panel interviews
Have multiple interviewers asking questions and evaluating answers of the same applicant at the same time
Cover letter
Letter that accompanies a resume or job application
Chronological resume
List previous jobs in order from the most least to recent
Typical-answer approach
Method of scoring interview answers that compares an applicant's answer with benchmarks answers
1) Build rapport 2) Explain the process 3) Ask questions 4) Score answers 5) Provide information about the job and the organization 6) Answer any questions the applicant might have 7) Compliment the interviewer
Steps in conducting interview
1) Conduct the job analysis 2) Write a job description 3) Find the best way to measure an applicant's ability
Steps in creating a structured interview
Resumes
Summaries of an applicant's professional and educational background
Organizational-fit questions
Tap the extent to which an applicant will fit into the culture of an organization or with the leadership style of a particular supervisor
Resumes written as a history of one's life
Tend to be long and list every job ever worked, as well as personal information such as hobbies, mental status, and personal health
Resumes written as an advertisement of skills
Tend to be shorter and contain only information that is both positive and relevant to a job seeker's desired career
Cost per applicant
The amount of money spent on a recruitment campaign divided by the number of people that subsequently apply for jobs as a result of the recruitment campaign
round interview
another term for panel interview
application form
consists of personal information as well as previous work experiences, including previous salary
structure
determined by the source of the questions
medium
extent to which they are done in person
blind ads
hides the identity of the company
interviewee appearance
in general, physically attractive applicants have an advantage in interviews over less attractive applicants and applicants who dress professionally receive higher interview scores than do more poorly dressed applicants
resume fraud
lying on their resumes about what experience or education they actually have
onkine recruitment
number three source of recruitment
interviewer-interviewee similarity
research suggests that an interviewee will receive a higher score if he or she is similar to the interviewer in terms of personality, attitude, gender or race
preliminary screening
to eliminate unsuitable or unqualified candidates from the selection process
Right/wrong approach
Some interview questions, especially skill-level determiners, can be scored simply on the basis of whether the answer given was correct or incorrect
Benchmarks answers
Standard answers to interview questions, the quality of which has been agreed by experts
Innovative advertising
Creative, high-energy ads
Telephone interviews
Often used to screen applicants but do not allow the use of visual cues
Expectation-lowering procedure (ELP)
A form of RJP that lowers an applicant's expectations about the various aspects of the job
Virtual job fair
A job fair held on campus in which students can "tour" a company online, ask questions of recruiters, and electronically send resumes
Employee referral
A method of recruitment in which current employees recommend family members and friends for specific job opening; most effective recruitment method
Realistic job preview (RJP)
A method of recruitment in which job applicants are told both the positive and the negative aspects of a job
Key-issues approach
A method of scoring interview answers that provides points for each part of an answer that matches the scoring key
Employment interview
A method of selecting employees in which an interviewer asks questions of an applicant and then makes an employment decision based on the answers to the questions as well as the way in which the questions were answered
Averaging versus adding model
A model proposed by Anderson that postulates that our impressions are based more on the average value of each impression than on the sum of the values of each impression
Job fairs
A recruitment method in which several employers are available at one location so that many applicants can obtain information at one time
Print advertising
Declining method of recruiting employees; one of the least effective recruitment methods in a 2007 survey
Style
Determined by the number of interviewees and number of interviewers
Blind box
Directs the applicants to send resumes to a blind box
1) Poor intuitive ability 2) Lack of job relatedness 3) Primacy effects 4) Contrast effects 5) Negative-information bias 6) Interviewer-interviewee similarity 7) Interviewee appearance 8) Nonverbal cues
Eight factors that contribute to the poor reliability and validity of the unstructured interview
Executive search firms
Employment agencies, often also called headhunters, that specialize in placing applicants in high-paying jobs; charge their fees to the company
Negative information bias
Fact that negative information receives more weight in an employment decision than does positive information
Nonverbal communication
Factors such as eye contact and posture that are not associated with actual words spoken
Primacy effect
First impressions, the fact that information presented early in an interview carries more weight than information presented later
Past-focused questions (pattered-behavior descriptions interviews)
Focus on a previous behavior; taps an applicant's experience
Unstructured interview
One in which interviewers are free to ask anything they want, are not required to have consistency in what they ask each applicant, and may assign number of points at their own discretion
Structured interview
One in which the source of questions is a job analysis (job-related questions), all applicants are asked the same questions, and there is a standardized scoring key to evaluate each answer
Functional resume
Organizes jobs based on the skills required to perform them rather than the order in which they were worked
Incremental validity
Predictive power
Job board
Private company whose website lists job openings for hundreds or thousands of organizations and resumes for millions of applicants
Disqualifiers
Questions that must be answered a particular way or the applicant is disqualified
Internal recruitment
Recruiting employees already employed by the organization; filled by transferring or promoting someone from within the organization
External recruitment
Recruiting new employees to the organization
Competitive promotions
Several internal applicants compete with one another (and sometimes with external applicants) for a limited number of higher positions
Return interviews
Similar to interviews with the difference being a passage of time between the first and subsequent interview
1) Clarifiers 2) Disqualifiers 3) Skill-level determiner 4) Future-focused question 5) Past-focused question 6) Organizational-fit questions
Six types of interviewer questions
Employer-based websites Job boards Social networking sites
Three forms of internet recruiting
Structure, style and medium
Three main factors where interviews vary
1) The organization doesn't want its name in public 2) The company might fear that people wouldn't apply if they knew the name of the company 3) On rare occasions, a company needs to terminate an employee but wants first to find a replacement
Three reasons organizations use blind box
1) Many types of organizations have booths at the same location 2) Many organizations in the same field in one location 3) An organization holds its own
Three ways job fairs are conducted
Moderately structured interview
Two criteria of structured interview are met
1) Typical-answer approach 2) Key-issues approach
Two main methods of scoring most answers
Chronological resume Functional resume Psychological resume
Types of resumes
Respond by calling
When an organization wants to either quickly screen applicants or hear an applicant's phone voice (e.g., for telemarketing or receptionist positions
Send-resume ads
When the organization expects a large response and does not have the resources to speak with thousands of applicants