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EXPANDING YOUR
POOL—THE KEY TO BEING SELECTIVE!
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The underlying assumption of most selection
assessment programs is usually you have more applicants than jobs and some applicants are more likely to succeed
than others. Assessments are a tool to scientifically
choose the few most likely to succeed from the many less
likely.
As the economy continues to improve and the
population ages and birth rates decline, that underlying
assumption begins to break down. What if you have fewer
applicants than you have openings? Even more likely,
what if you have fewer qualified applicants than
openings?
As recently as a year ago, this just wasn’t much of a
problem. Many hiring managers either were not around
during the employee shortages of the late 1990’s or have
forgotten what it was like and how they dealt with it!
The old adage, “good times build bad habits; tough
times build good habits” may apply here. When it’s easy
to recruit enough candidates for your jobs, complacency
and habits rule the process.
 | When did you last make a substantial change in the
publications where you advertise openings or in the
content of those advertisements?
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 | When did you last look for an untapped reserve of
fresh talent?
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 | Have you looked at where your new hires live, hang
out, or hear about your company? |
In a recent session with a client company, we
requested a simple zip code list of their employees in
an entry-level position where they had an applicant
shortage. We were surprised and they were chagrined by
the results. With a million people living within a 45
minute radius of their plant, 81 percent of their
employees were from just seven Zip codes, representing
less than 100,000 people.
They were recruiting from less than 10 percent of
their possible targets!
Aside from the obvious geographic opportunities,
where else can you look to increase your applicant pool?
For many companies like Home Depot, Borders Books and
Johns Hopkins Medicine, the answer has been in their
partnership with AARP to recruit older workers. Other
companies are working with the V.A. and Armed Forces
Transition Programs to find good candidates in the ranks
of those leaving the military. Community Colleges across
the country are working with employers to provide
specific career preparation.
Wherever you find them, the payoffs may be huge. Many
of these special candidate pools possess a better work
ethic and lower turnover rates than the general
population. Some come with subsidized on-the-job
training. All of these groups help expand your pool so
you can be as selective as possible. You deserve the
best employees you can possibly find and there’s
opportunity in expanded numbers!
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WHY JOB INTERVIEWS ARE OFTEN
MISLEADING
GUEST ARTICLE BY GREG MACIOLEK,
INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT RESOURCES, INC.
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| Studies show that interviewing a
candidate for a job position is only 14 percent
effective in determining “job fit.” On a nice day, it
would be just as effective and more enjoyable to sit on
a park bench and hire every seventh person who walks by!
The steps of hiring and firing employees are similar
to those of marriage and divorce. When you are dating,
you are searching for someone with whom you are
comfortable and who is as good for you as you are for
them. Next, in the courting stage, you are on your best
behavior. You are nice to your companion’s mother, you
might buy flowers and you refrain from burping at the
table. You get the picture.
Your companion may think, “He/she’s not perfect, but
when we are married, I’ll change him/her!” So you marry,
and one spouse tries to change the other. If it can’t be
done, (the usual case, unfortunately) the couple may
separate and then divorce. Of course, divorce is
extremely traumatic and often very costly.
In a process very similar to dating, a company
advertises for candidates. After sifting through many
applications and résumés, the finalist candidates are
called for a face-to-face interview. With the interview
begins the courting. The candidate is on his best
behavior. He has researched the company and says all the
right things.
Finally the interviewer concludes, “Well, he’s not
perfect, but I’ll train him after I hire him.”
Sound familiar? Have you ever regretted hiring
someone on the very first day? It hurts, doesn’t it? Or
someone asks, “What idiot hired that person?” Ouch!
But you don’t give up. You pay for training, trying
to mold the person to do a job he will never do well.
Eventually you begin the sad process of firing the
employee. This, too, is a traumatic and often costly
process. In our litigious society, it can be very
costly. |
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I call it “hiring rabbits to swim.” You
might teach a rabbit to swim, but how effectively? Why
not hire the rabbit into a running job and then train it
to run faster and more effectively. In other words, hire
to the rabbit’s strengths or job-fit. When I conduct
workshops on hiring, I ask the participants to list what
they want in their ideal candidate. They often list the
following descriptions: honest, good people skills,
hardworking, self-starter, gets along with everyone,
relevant work experience, stable, trustworthy, does
quality work.
Then I ask how they determine if the candidate has
these qualities. Often they admit, if the interviewee is
outgoing, they infer he must have good people skills. If
he maintains eye contact, he must be honest.
Except for relevant work experience, the traits we
seek may be hard to see. Since it is difficult to
determine these traits, we use behaviors (like eye
contact or a firm handshake) to infer their presence or
absence.
Consider punctuality, for example. A hiring official
may think a candidate’s early arrival for the interview
is a sign of integrity or good work ethic. In reality,
it may be the first time the candidate has been on time
for an interview in his life!
In a hurry to hire, we may neglect to examine whether
we are hiring a rabbit to run - or to swim. Haste to
hire is a costly exercise and results in both the
company and the employee being unhappy.
Valid, scientific assessment of the characteristics
necessary for job fit can reduce these errors in the
hiring process and increase hiring success! |
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| CUSTOMER SERVICE “BLITZ” IMPROVES SERVICE,
PROVIDES ONGOING TRAINING |
| A luxury boutique hotel basks in the high-altitude
sun and snow of the Rockies and caters to skiers and
snowboarders all winter; fly-fishers, mountain hikers
and bikers in the summer. Guests who pay the hotel’s
$700+ room rates demand very high levels of service. The
hotel’s ownership and management demand no less, as they
are in hot pursuit of AAA’s coveted five-diamond status.
Adding pressure to the equation, the resort area is
rapidly growing and the employee pool is both limited
and in high demand. Employers must select good people,
develop their employees internally and work hard to keep
them.
For the past two years, the property has used the
Step One Survey II™ to help select high-quality
employees and has also used the Profile XT™ to insure
good fit and high probability of success in building
their management team. In the fall of 2004, before the
ski season, the hotel embarked on a full-scale “blitz”
designed to identify the common characteristics of their
top customer service people and to provide coaching
input for each staff member to improve individual
customer service. The program also included training and
feedback to ensure every member of the team was on the
same page when it came to delivering five-diamond class
service.
The core of this intensive effort was Profiles
International’s Customer Service Perspective™ assessment
(CSP). Before the kick-off, management identified the
hotel’s top performers in customer service. The CSP was
administered to this group and a Success Pattern was
created. These top performers met with management to
create the Company Service Perspective - their consensus
answers to the 49 very tough questions on service issues
contained in the assessment - a thoughtful guide to “how
we do it here.” Built on this foundation and implemented
over a one-month timeline, the initiative followed this
sequence:
In week one, all employees completed the CSP,
requiring about a half-hour each, on-line.
In week two, all supervisors received training on
proper use of the CSP’s Coaching Report and received
their own Coaching Report in the process.
During the third week, every employee met with their
supervisor and the two discussed the Coaching Report
results and how to improve each employee’s customer
service delivery. The employee’s answers to the Company
Service Perspective questions were discussed, with
emphasis on where their responses differed from those
developed by the top performers and management. Since
many of these answers differ with perspective and
situation, these were often lively discussions.
Week four was devoted to small-group workshops of 20
employees or fewer and focused on the Company Service
Perspective, the company’s answers and the situations
and circumstances leading individuals to have differing
answers to these questions. The atmosphere was one of
encouraging individual opinion, as the questions often
have no one “right” answer. Participation was high and
the groups generally agreed. Their awareness of the
complexities of service issues had been greatly
increased. Finally, as follow up to the initiative,
individual working groups continued to discuss these
questions and issues, one question at a time, through
the winter as they held routine staff meetings.
The hotel participates in a third-party customer
satisfaction measurement program, which provides a
numerical summary of customer feedback on a monthly
basis. Results of the program are at left.
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 "Dig Your Well Before You Are
Thirsty"
~ Harvey MacKay

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