Selecting Employees DeNotra Geddis April 11, 2005.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
World Class Selection June 2008 North 51 - A team you can rely on The Psychology of Selection.
Advertisements

Restaurant and Foodservice Operations Are Labor-Intensive
Part 4 Staffing Activities: Selection
Chapter Thirteen Human Resource Management © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Introduction to Business.
Managing Human Resources, 12e, by Bohlander/Snell/Sherman © 2001 South-Western/Thomson Learning 5-1 Managing Human Resources Managing Human Resources Bohlander.
Recruitment: The First Step in the Selection Process
Personnel Planning and Recruiting
Chapter 7 Foundations of Selection
Hiring, Training & Evaluating Employees
Concept of Reliability and Validity. Learning Objectives  Discuss the fundamentals of measurement  Understand the relationship between Reliability and.
Statistics in HRM Kenneth M. York School of Business Administration Oakland University.
Chapter Five Selection © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-1 Dessler, Cole, Goodman, and Sutherland In-Class Edition Management of Human Resources Second.
Part 5 Staffing Activities: Employment
CONCEPT OF SELECTION The next step after requirement is the selection of candidates for the vacant position from among the applicants. This is the most.
Job Analysis: How to Figure Out What the Job Actually Entails Despite What the 30-Year-Old Job Description Says How to Figure Out What the Job Actually.
Employee Testing and Selection
CORRELATIO NAL RESEARCH METHOD. The researcher wanted to determine if there is a significant relationship between the nursing personnel characteristics.
Staffing I.Human Resource Forecasting II.Employee Recruiting III. Employee Selection.
Recruitment and Selection Review Ch. 5 and 6. Recruitment in general Sources of Applicants Types of Tests and Interviews Selection
McGraw-Hill © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Correlational Research Chapter Fifteen.
Fundamentals of Human Resource Management 8e, DeCenzo and Robbins Chapter 7 Foundations of Selection Fundamentals of Human Resource Management Eighth Edition.
6-1 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. fundamentals of Human Resource Management 3 rd edition by.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.7–1.
Human Resources Management
Lecture 10 Human Resources Looking after the human side of the business. It is the set of activities that must be done to acquire.
Roles in the Selection Process In small organizations, a supervisor may have great latitude in selecting employees to fill vacant positions. Some organizations.
Building and Managing Human Resources Chapter Twelve Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Human Resource Management and Labor Relations
Foundations of Recruitment and Selection I: Reliability and Validity
Management Practices Lecture-15.
Understanding Statistics
Building and Managing Human Resources
Human Resource Management
Hires 5 Offers 10 Interviews 40 Invites 60 Applicants 240 Adapted from R.H. Hawk, The Recruitment Function (New York: American Management Association,
Hires 5 Offers 10 Interviews 40 Invites 60 Applicants 240 Adapted from R.H. Hawk, The Recruitment Function (New York: American Management Association,
Human Resource Management Lecture 8 MGT 350. Last Lecture Recruiting Sources –Internal Searches –Employee Referrals/Recommendations –External Searches.
CHAPTER 4 Employee Selection
Managing Human Resources, 12e, by Bohlander/Snell/Sherman © 2001 South-Western/Thomson Learning 5-1 Managing Human Resources Managing Human Resources Bohlander.
PowerPoint Presentation Design by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Prepared by Joseph B. Mosca, Monmouth University and Marla M. Kameny, Baton.
Human Resource Management Lecture 09
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved Recruiting The process of attracting qualified job applicants Goal is to attract the “right” number of.
Part 5 Staffing Activities: Employment
Discriminant Analysis Discriminant analysis is a technique for analyzing data when the criterion or dependent variable is categorical and the predictor.
Hires 5 Offers 10 Interviews 40 Invites 60 Applicants 240 Adapted from R.H. Hawk, The Recruitment Function (New York: American Management Association,
Lecture 11: Compensation. Strategic Issues and Compensation  Why do dome employers pay more than other employers?  Why are different jobs within the.
CROSS-VALIDATION AND MODEL SELECTION Many Slides are from: Dr. Thomas Jensen -Expedia.com and Prof. Olga Veksler - CS Learning and Computer Vision.
Recruiting © Nancy Brown Johnson, 2000 HR Planning.
Measurement MANA 4328 Dr. Jeanne Michalski
HN 347 Public Personnel Adminstration
CHAPTER 6 Selecting Employees and Placing Them in Jobs
Strategy for Human Resource Management Lecture 15
Single-Subject and Correlational Research Bring Schraw et al.
WEEK 5 Staffing Activities: Selection Chapter 7: Measurement.
Managing Human Resources
Getting the Job… Presentation on Recruitment Danielle Beasley and Megan Losito.
Fundamentals of Human Resource Management 8e, DeCenzo and Robbins
6 Selecting Employees and Placing Them in Jobs
Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
RECRUITMENT & SELECTION
Selecting Employees – Validation
Yield Pyramid Hires 5 Offers 10 Interviews 40 Invites 60
CHAPTER 4 Employee Selection
Introduction to Agribusiness Management
Outline the steps خطوات in the selection اختيار process عملية
5 6 Selecting Employees C H A P T E R Training Employees
CHAPTER 4 Employee Recruitment, Selection, and placement
Personnel decisions Study Unit 4.
CHAPTER 4 Employee Selection
Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Chapter 6 Selecting Employees
Presentation transcript:

Selecting Employees DeNotra Geddis April 11, 2005

Why Do Organizations Hire Employees? Employees are hired to fill newly created positions in organizations Employees are hired to replace individuals who have left the organization

Four Steps to Employee Selection Planning the need for new employees Getting appropriate persons to apply for positions (recruitment) Deciding whom to hire (selection) Getting the selected people to take jobs

Diagram of Acquiring New Employees Planning Acquiring Applicants Hiring Selecting Applicants

Planning Of Human Resource Needs To Maintain the livelihood of an organization, it must have a steady supply of human resources, or people. To do a good job of recruiting the people needed by an organization, careful planning is necessary

Recruiting Applicants Organizations need to be able hire qualified people. In order to fulfill this requirement there must be a large number of job applicants to choose from.

Six Possible Sources Of Applicants Advertising (newspapers, fliers, etc.) Employee Referral Employment Agencies (Unemployment Offices) School Recruiters (Job fairs) Walk-ins Web (Monster. com)

Issues with Recruitment Different sources of job applicants do not necessarily attract the same quality of applicants. According to Zottoli and Wanous (2000) reviewed 50 years of research on applicant sources and found consistent evidence that inside sources, employee referrals of acquaintances or friends, rehires or those who had previously worked at the organization and transfers from inside the organization provided employees who performed better and remained on the job longer on average than outside sources.

How do Organizations Select Employees? Most often used approach, manager interviews the applicant and decides subjectively whom to hire. Purely subjective hiring procedures are likely to be biased and inaccurate.

Important Elements in Employee Selection Employers must know what the criterion is for the job in question. The second element is the predictor, which is anything that relates to the criterion. The previous techniques can be used to assess KSAOs

Validation Studies Validation studies are research studies that attempt to show that the predictor relates to the criterion. Both the criterion and predictor are qualified. Data is collected for a group of employees on both variables. The correlation coefficient indicates how well the two variables relate to each other. If the two variables are significantly related, it can be concluded that the predictor is valid in terms of the criterion.

Conduction a Validation Study Conducting a validation study involves five steps: Conduct a job analysis Specify job performance criteria Choose predictors Validate the predictors Cross-validate

Conducting a Job Analysis Provides information about the tasks involved in a job Also provides information about the KSAOs needed to do the job successfully

Specifying Job Performance Criteria Once an employer has a good idea about what a job entails, criteria for good job performance can be developed.

Choose Predictors As an organization develops criteria for a job, it also chooses potential predictors of job performance on those criteria.

Validate the Predictors Measures of the criterion and the predictors are taken on a sample of people to see whether the predictor relates to the criterion. By conducting field studies in the settings in which selection tools will ultimately be used, the likelihood of generalization is maximized. There are 2 types of study designs. Concurrent validation and predictive validity studies. Concurrent validation both the criterion and predictor scores are collected from a sample of participants at more or less the same point in time. Predictive validity, the predictors are measured before the criterion.

Cross-Validation The final step in a validation study is to cross-validate, or replicate the results of one sample with those of another sample. 2 samples are needed to conduct a cross-validation. The first sample is used to determine whether the criterion and the predictor are significantly correlated. A second sample is used to see whether the significant found in the first sample can be repeated on the second.

Validity Generalization Validity generalization means that validities of selection devices are generalizable or transportable from job to job and organization to organization.

How Predictor Information is Used for Selection Multiple Hurdles: approach sets a criterion for each predictor. If an applicant achieves that criterion, then the hurdle is passed. It is efficient to use multiple hurdles in a specified order and eliminate applicants as the assessment process goes from hurdle to hurdle. Regression Approach: this approach uses the score from each predictor in an equation to provide a numerical estimate of the criterion.

Alternatives to Conducting Validation Studies An alternative approach is to rely on the established validity of selection tools that can be linked to KSAO requirements.

Getting Applicants to Accept Job Offers and Keep Jobs Ensure that salaries are comparable to those of other organizations for similar jobs in the same area. Negotiate salary and other rewards with the potential employee. Cafeteria benefits allow employees to pick and choose benefits from a long list of possibilities, such as different types of insurance policies, stocks and bonds. Care must be taken to present conditions at the work honestly and accuraretly.

Realistic Job Preview (RJP) Used to give job applicants accurate information about the job and the organization. It is most typically accomplished with a brochure or videotaped presentation. A good RJP provides an accurate view of both favorable and unfavorable aspects of a job, so that a person who accepts a job will do so with accurate and realistic expections.

How Valid Selection Devices Work Utility analysis: The analysis of the financial benefits to an organization of taking a course of action. Three basic concepts form the foundation of utility analysis Base rate Selection ratio Validity

Baserate: is the percentage of applicants who would be successful on the job if all of them were hired. Selection Ration: the proportion of job applicants that an organization must hire. It is calculated as the number of positions to fill divided by the number of applicants Validity: The validity of a selection device is the magnitude of correlation between it and the criterion. The correlation, the more accurately the criterion can be forecast by selection device.

Legal Issues Prior to 1964 in the United States, discrimination against ethnic minorities and women was widespread for many jobs, particularly for the most desirable and highest-paying ones. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 made it illegal to discriminate against minorities and other areas of life in U.S. society.

Protected Classes Comprise of persons who have been the target of discrimination in the past, namely African-Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and women.