moon 2006-11-16 10:21 AM
Bigger Does Not Always Mean Better
The Wall Street Journal recently posted an audio weblog describing the hiring practices used by a well-known Internet service provider. Apparently, some people believe this provider is setting some kind of hiring example. (S5e-dxPr
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However, after listening to the recording, I think it is a better example of a hiring process that sounds good on the surface, but contains some serious flaws. Here are their talking points:
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[u]The company hired about 4,000 people in the last 18 months
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They want to hire people who are smart, fast learners, collaborative, curious, and love solving problems 1[Q5vk AXz2A-y
The company averages six to seven interviews per candidate
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All finalists are reviewed by senior management and a hiring committee MAU#y$`v8F
They administered questionnaires to develop job requirements
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They administered a 300-item questionnaire to employees, are comparing scores with 30 to 40 measures of performance and plan to use the results to identify five to 10 key applicant questions
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Sound good? Well, let's look at this process through our "squinty-eyed-scientist" lens. [/u]
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[b]The Background[/b]
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The company hired 4,000 people in the last 18 months and expects each new employee to be smart, a fast learner, collaborative, curious, and love solving problems. Looking at these goals from a whole-job-whole person, this description only covers two of the four critical job competency clusters.
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To be complete, the company needs to expand the profile to include planning/organizing ability, additional interpersonal skills, and a few more motivational aspects. In addition, it needs to clarify how-much of each skill is necessary for each job-type (managers, for example, need broader and deeper cognitive abilities and better coaching skills than job-holders).
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As a side note, the overall success it has enjoyed in the past often comes from having a good product and being at the right place at the right time. However, flush with newfound success, employees (many of them newly wealthy) forget the right-time-right-place effect and wrongly take full credit for their success. As a consequence, they are quite surprised when market forces fade (e.g., who can forget the effects of the dot-com bomb?). 1u$|W
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Employees riding the crest of a market wave often fail to consider that even a chicken can travel 60 mph on the way to the processing plant! It's a good time for management to develop some humility. Soon, the market swell will be gone, and high performance will demand more and better employee skills. (If not. Can you spell l-a-y-o-f-f? Of course you can.)+]|2s!y`^
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[b]The Interviews[/b]
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Hiring managers are generally smart enough to recognize that everyone who passes an interview does not live up to expectations. They are also smart enough to realize that two interviewer heads are better than one. But six to seven interviewers, the executive management team, and a hiring committee is total overkill. It's a great way to diffuse responsibility for bad hires, but the bright folks at this company should seriously consider the law of diminishing returns. &g
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Interview effectiveness is entirely another matter. I don't know what kind of interviews they conduct, but the most predictive interviews have a high degree of structure. That is, interviewers are highly trained to probe for examples, use questions derived from a job analysis, and have standardized answer keys. Usually three interviewers are enough.
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Hiring managers, in my experience, tend to be a maverick group. They often ignore structured questions, venture into questionable areas, and otherwise do their own thing. I get much better results when all interviewing and testing is done by a centralized staff and hiring managers are only involved for a chemistry check.
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The only reason why I can imagine involving the executive management team is when they have a lot of free time and are looking for something to do to stay busy.
moon 2006-11-16 10:22 AM
[b]Questionnaires?[/b]t*pm.P?s
Using questionnaires to determine job skills is a challenge. For one thing, not everything listed will be equally important, occur with the same frequency, or will be considered important by management. I've used both and found that either job-holders tend to consider everything important or the questionnaires miss critical information.
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It is much more difficult and time-consuming to interview job-content experts, but I find only a skilled analyst can sort out details that a survey would miss. Unless the job is strictly by the rules (i.e., law enforcement or firefighting), questionnaire-based job analyses tend to get very messy. 3dC;Ng4W0AF2fe
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[b]Five to 10 Items? [/b]%X)R
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At first, a 300-item bio-data survey seems like a good idea. After all, who can tell us more about the job than the people who do it? But consider this: the majority of people completing your survey have already survived the "on-the-job" test. That is, they might have differences in performance, but they are not big enough to get fired. This is called "restriction of range." It means that test results from current employees are likely to have smaller differences than test results from applicants. 9K|aNg2BH7e(T