PSYCH180 Chapter 4 (Employee Selection: Recruiting and Interviewing)
noncompetitive promotions
"career progression" positions, get position with gains in experience and knowledge
when is an employment agency useful?
1. HR department is too busy 2. no one has skills/experience needed to select employees
ways to conduct job fairs
1. many organizations have booths at same location 2. many organizations in same field in one location 3. organization holds own job fair
cover letter paragraphs
1. opening, saying 1. resume is enclosed, 2. name of job you are applying for, 3. how you know about job opening 2. why you are qualified 3. why you are interested in company 4. closes letter, how you can be reached
types of ads
1. respond by calling 2. apply in person ads 3. send resume ads 4. blind box
parts of the cover letter
1. salutation 2. paragraphs 3. signature
expectation-lowering procedure (ELP)
a form of RJP that lowers an applicant's expectations about the various aspects of the job
resumes
a formal summary of an applicant's professional and educational background, but may not predict performance
cover letters
a letter that accompanies a resume or job application
face to face interviews
both interviewer and applicant in same room, personal setting, participants can use both visual and vocal cues
interviewer-interviewee similarity
interviewee usually receives higher score if they are similar to interviewer in personality, attitude, gender, race
poor intuitive ability
interviewers often base hiring decisions on "gut reactions" or intuition, but intuition and clinical judgment are inaccurate predictors
videoconference interviews
interviews conducted at remote sites
structured interview
interviews in which questions are based on a 1. job analysis, 2. every applicant is asked the same questions, and there is a 3. standardized scoring system so that identical answers are given identical scores
group interviews
multiple applicants answering questions during same interview
organizational-fit questions
a type of structure-interview question that taps how well an applicant's personality and values will fit with the organizational culture
skill-level determiner
a type of structured interview question designed to tap an applicant's knowledge or skill
disqualifier
a type of structured interview question in which a wrong answer will disqualify the applicant from further consideration
future-focused question
a type of structured interview question in which applicants are given a situation and asked how they would handle it
clarifier
a type of structured interview question that clarifies information on the resume or application
past-focused question
a type of structured-interview question that taps an applicant's experience
public employment agencies
an employment service operated by a state or local gov., designed to match applicants with job openings, no cost to applicants
unstructured interview
an interview in which applicants are not asked the same questions and in which there is no standard scoring system to score applicant answers
employment agency
an organization that specializes in finding jobs for applicants and finding applicants for organizations looking for employees, operates by 1. charging company or 2. applicant when applicant takes job, but company loses some control over recruitment
written interviews
applicant answers series of written questions and send answers to interviewers
psychological resume format
begins with summary of strengths, relevant education/experience information, including positive unusual information when possible, lists only the best positive activities and accomplishments
campus recruiters
behaviour and attitude of recruiters influence applicant decisions to accept job offer, but expensive
executive search firms
employment agencies, often also called headhunters, that specialize in placing applicants in high-paying jobs, private -> profit, public -> strictly non-profit
differences between employment agencies and search firms
executive search firms 1. represent higher-paying, non-entry level positions 2. always charge fees to organizations, not applicants 3. fees charged tend to be ~30% of applicant's first-year salary
nonverbal communication
factors such as eye contact and posture that are not associated with actual words spoken, affects unstructured interviews
interviewee appearance
in general, physically attractive applicants and those who dress professionally have an advantage, extends to weight
point of purchase methods
job vacancy notices posted where customers or current employees are likely to see them, are inexpensive and targeted at frequent visitors, but have limited exposure ex. receipts, paper placemats
special recruit populations
many organizations make special efforts to recruit underrepresented groups such as women and minorities
lack of job relatedness
most common questions asked by interviewers are not job related and so do not predict future employee performance; some questions asked are illegal
panel interviews
multiple interviewers asking questions and evaluating answers of the same applicant at the same time
interview style
number of interviewees and number of interviewers
telephone interviews
often used to screen applicants, do not allow use of visual cues
one on one interviews
one interviewer interviewing one applicant
employer-based websites
organization lists avail. job openings and provides info about itself and min. reqs. needed for job
job board
private company's website lists job openings for hundreds or thousands of organizations and resumes for millions of applicants, advantage is cost and reaches larger demographic
right/wrong approach
questions that can be scored simply on basis of whether answer was correct/incorrect; may disqualify candidate
advantages of electronic media
reaches many audiences, Americans watch 3.7 hrs TV and listen to radio 2.3 hrs a day
recruiting passive applicants
recruiters try to find ways to identify hidden talent and convince the person to apply for a job with their company
external recruitment
recruiting employees from outside the organization
internal recruitment
recruiting employees from outside the organization
respond by calling
recruitment ads in which applicants are instructed to call rather than to apply in person or send resumes
send resume ads
recruitment ads in which applicants are instructed to send their resume to the company rather than call or apply in person
apply in person ads
recruitment ads that instruct applicants to apply in person rather than to call or send resumes
blind box
recruitment ads that instruct applicants to send their resume to a box at the newspaper; neither name or address of company is provided
serial interviews
series of single interviews
competitive promotions
several applicants compete for a limited number of high positions
return interviews
similar to serial interviews, passing of time between first and subsequent interview
benchmark answers
standard answers to interview questions, the quality of which has been agreed on by job experts, increasing number to a question increases reliability
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
cost per qualified applicant
the 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
primacy effect
the fact that information presented early in an interview carries more weight than information presented later
negative information bias
the fact that negative information receives more weight in an employment decision than does positive information, occurs when interviewers aren't aware of job requirements
applicant yield
the number of applicants through a certain recruitment method
recruitment
the process of attracting employees to an organization
contrast effect
when the performance of one applicant affects the perception of the performance of the next applicant
nontraditional populations
when traditional recruitment methods are unsuccessful, many organizations look for potential applicants from non-traditional populations
surviving the interview
1. scheduling the interview 2. before the interview 3. during the interview 4. after the interview
factors of interviews
1. structure 2. style 3. medium
evaluating recruitment effectiveness
1. time to fill position 2. retention rates 3. cost per hire 4. number of applicants 5. job performance of new hires 6. EEO/diversity impact
characteristics of selective employee selection techniques
1. valid 2. reduce chance of legal challenge 3. cost-effective
evaluating the effectiveness of recruitment strategies
1. applicant yield 2. cost per applicant 3. cost per qualified applicant 4. number of qualified applicants 5. number of successful employees generated by each recruitment source 6. number of minorities and women that applied for the job and were hired
positive verbal behaviours
1. asking questions 2. pointing out similarity to interviewer 3. not asking about salary 5. not speaking slowly 6. not hesitating
characteristics of effective resumes
1. attractive and easy to read 2. no typing, spelling, grammatical, or factual mistakes 3. should make applicant as qualified as possible without lying
steps for structured interview
1. build rapport with applicant 2. explain process and set agenda for interview 3. ask interview questions, scoring answers after they are given 4. provide info about job and organization 5. answer questions from applicant
recruiters
1. campus recruiters 2. outside recruiters
types of resumes
1. chronological 2. functional 3. psychological
types of interview questions
1. clarifier 2. disqualifier 3. skill-level determiner 4. future-focused question 5. situational question 6. past-focused questions
determining KSAOs to tap in interview
1. conduct job analysis 2. write job description 3. determine best way to measure applicant's ability to perform tasks identified in job analysis
best way to write recruitment ads
1. contain realistic info about job 2. contain detailed descriptions of job and organization 3. contain info about selection process
creating a structured interview
1. determine KSAOs to tap in interview 2. creating interview questions 3. creating a scoring key for interview answers
internet
1. employer-based websites 2. job boards
interview mediums
1. face to face interviews 2. telephone interviews 3. videoconference interviews 4. written interviews
positive nonverbal behaviours
1. firm handshake 2. eye contact 3. smiling 4. head nodding
effective recruitment method characteristics
1. get attention of public 2. screen/filter unqualified applicants 3. motivate qualified people to apply 4. be cost effective and timely
interview structure
1. highly structured (3/3) (more reliable) 2. moderately structured (2/3) 3. slightly structured (1/3) 4. unstructured (0/3)
views of resumes
1. history of your life 2. advertisement of your skills (more common)
characteristics of valid selection test
1. job analysis (content validity) 2. predicts work-related behaviour (criterion validity) 3. measures the construct it purports to measure (construct validity) 4. job related (face validity) 5. don't invade applicant privacy 6. adverse impact is minimized
advantages of structured interviews
1. job relatedness 2. standardized scoring 3. valid 4. viewed more favourably by courts due to 1. based on job analysis, 2. substantially less adverse impact
recruitment methods
1. media advertisements 2. point of purchase methods 3. recruiters 4. employment agencies and search firms 5. employee referrals 6. direct mail 7. Internet 8. social media 9. job fairs 10. special recruit populations 11. nontraditional populations 12. recruiting "passive" applicants
benefits of employee referrals
1. more likely to be hired 2. longer tenure
types of promotions
1. noncompetitive 2. competitive
how to improve interview scores
1. obtain training on how to interview 2. practicing interviewing skills to reduce anxiety
types of interview styles
1. one-on-one interviews 2. serial interviews 3. return interviews 4. panel interviews 5. group interviews
reasons for blind box
1. organization doesn't want name in public 2. people may not apply if they know name of company 3. company may need to terminate employee and want to find replacement first
problems with unstructured interviews
1. poor intuitive ability 2. lack of job relatedness 3. primacy and contrast effects 4. negative-information bias 5. interviewer-interviewee similarity 6. interviewee appearance 7. nonverbal cues 8. range restriction (eg. leniency, severity, central tendency)
why are inside sources superior for recruiting?
1. rehires or applicants referred by other employees receive more accurate info about the job 2. differences in effectiveness are result of different recruitment sources reaching and being used by different types of applicants 3. employee referrals result in greater tenure 4. long-tenured employees referred applicants stayed on their jobs longer than applicants referred by short-tenured employees
creating a scoring key for interview answers
1. right/wrong approach 2. typical-answer approach 3. key-issues approach
situational question
a structured interview technique in which applicants are presented with a series of situations and asked how they would handle each one
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 a current employee refers a friend or family member for a job, most effective recruitment method
direct mail
a method of recruitment in which an organization sends out mass mailings of information about job openings to potential applicants, useful for positions involving specialized skills
realistic job preview (RJP)
a method of recruitment in which job applicants are told both the positive and the negative aspects of a job, makes applicants tend to stay on the job longer
typical-answer approach
a method of scoring interview answers that compares an applicant's answer with benchmark answers
key-issues approach
a method of scoring interview answers that provides points for each part of an answer that matches the scoring key, is appropriate to evaluate applicant's nonverbal cues, especially when job involves interpersonal skills
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 question were answered
averaging vs. adding model
a model proposed by Anderson that postulates our impressions are based more on the average value of each impression than on the sum of the values for 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
functional resume
a resume format in which jobs are grouped by function rather than listed in order by date
chronological resume
a resume in which jobs are listed in order from most to least recent
psychological resume
a resume style that takes advantage of psychological principles pertaining to memory organization and impression formation, including priming, primacy, short-term memory limits
patterned-behaviour description (PBDI)
a structured interview in which the questions focus on behaviour in previous jobs