小李飞刀 2006-5-26 04:53 PM
What Is Talent, and How Do We Measure It?
[color=Purple][size=3][b]What Is Talent, and How Do We Measure It?[/b][/size][/color]&Q*M0{&~
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[color=Purple][size=2]Four things you could do to improve the quality of hires you bring in[/size][/color]
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Wednesday, April 26, 2006| by Kevin Wheeler
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Managers ask us to bring them the best talent we can find. We say that quality of hire is our most important metric and that it is tied directly to the kind of talent we can attract. Yet while we bandy about the term "talent," we have no real definition of it.
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For many recruiters, talent is synonymous with "anyone who says yes." For others, it is any hire that stays for six months or a year. And for still others, it is any hire that a manager finds satisfactory.0CX{:v
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I think we should define "talent" as those employees whose contributions are vital to our ability to produce our product or deliver our service. Excellent talent then refers to those who produce an above-average amount of our product and poor talent means those who do much less than average.
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Sports teams measure talent this way all the time. When a team manager speaks of quality talent, he is talking about those individuals who make the most points, block the other team most often, or who the fans and players identify as essential for success. Almost all organizations rate and rank their sales forces. They know that above-average performers generate more sales than average performers. F8R(G
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McKinsey, in its [i]Talent War 2000[/i] study, has also documented this. Those surveyed by McKinsey were asked to assess how much more a high-performer in a P&L position generates than a mid-performer. They estimated the difference at 49 percent, and they said that the high-performer should be paid 42 percent more. When you think about what 49 percent means, it is astounding. That means that a high-performer brings in almost twice as much business as an average-performer or produces twice as much. If you, as a recruiter, could identify potential high-performers, how much more respect would you get? How much better would your reputation be?
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Defining quality of hire is not the hardest part, though. You should be able to sit down with hiring managers and get some agreement on quantifiable performance measures for most positions. For recruiters it could be simply the time it takes to present qualified candidates or it could be the number of candidates that you present who get an offer. Both measures are easy to track and directly measure your ability to source and qualify candidates and sell those candidates to the hiring manager.
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