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Workforce Performance -
Reasons to Use Pre-employment Assessments
- Two of three new hires will disappoint in the
first year
- Two of three employees would rather work somewhere else
- Ninety-five of 100 applicants will "exaggerate" to
get a job
- Most hiring decisions are made in haste - during the first
five minutes of an interview
- One of three businesses will be sued this year over an employment
issue
- Turnover costs thousands of dollars for every departing
employee
- Eighty percent of employee turnover
is avoidable
AND...
- You want employees who are dependable
In 1998, absenteeism cost employers $757 per employee,
according to a report in USA TODAY. This was the direct cost reported
by a survey of human resource professionals and does not include
the cost of hiring others or paying overtime to perform the work
of absent employees.
You can be held liable for employees' behavior on and off the job
You must know the nature of the people you hire because their criminal
behavior could cost your business millions of dollars. Every time
you hire without practicing due diligence, you may be accepting
liability for their actions - even when they are "off the
clock."
You can be sued for illegal discrimination
In the absence of objective data, how can you demonstrate a hiring/promotion
decision was made objectively, without discrimination because of
gender, race, religion, etc.
Résumé writers
write great fiction
In a survey of recent college graduates, 95% said they would be
willing to make a false statement in their résumés
in order to get a job. Forty-one percent admitted they had already
done
so, according to a report in Nation's Business (May, 1999).
Testing is acceptable, even expected
As reported in Molding Systems (May, 1999, v57 i5 p56(1)), a survey
found that 92% of job applicants accept testing as part of the
job qualification process. Only 3% resent it, while 5% were neutral.
Historically, employers depend upon résumés,
references and interviews as sources of information for making
hiring decisions.
In practice, these sources have proved inadequate for consistently
selecting good employees.
When training employees, a "one size fits all" approach
has failed to provide the desired results
When selecting people for promotion, otherwise excellent employees
have too often been miscast into roles they could not perform satisfactorily.
Clearly, an essential ingredient for making "people decisions" has
been missing from the formula.
The use of assessments has become essential to employers who want
to put the right people into jobs; provide employees with effective
training; help their managers to become more effective; and promote
people into positions where they will succeed.
The use of assessments has resulted in extraordinary increases in
productivity while reducing employee relations problems, employee
turnover, stress, tension, conflict and overall human resources expenses.
Several factors contribute to the failure
of traditional hiring methods. Résumés often contain
false claims of education and experience while omitting information
that would help employers
make better hiring decisions.
Business references are of little value because
most past-employers will tell you nothing but "name, rank
and serial number."
These realities are the reason interviews have become the most influential
factor in hiring and promotion decisions. However, experience shows
only a coincidental correlation between the ability to deliver well
in an interview and to deliver well on the job. Studies peg this
correlation at 14% -- one good employee in every seven hires. Even
background checks don't help much. The success rate becomes 26%,
but that's only one good hire in every four. Unfortunately, many
employers have accepted these poor results and the high cost of excessive
turnover as a business reality. They have flown the white flag of
surrender.
Don't Surrender! Assessments Do Help
Significantly
Assessing behavioral traits improved the hiring success rate to
38%.
When both thinking abilities and behavioral traits are assessed,
the right people are hired 54% of the time.
When an assessment of occupational interests is added, successful
results improve to 66%.
The most impressive results are achieved,
however, when an integrated assessment is used - one that measures
behavioral traits, thinking,
occupational interests, plus "Job Match."
These integrated assessments employ cutting-edge
technology and empirical data to assess the qualities of "The Total Person." In
doing so, the individual qualities of candidates are compared to
the qualities of employees who performing their duties in a superior
manner. These 21st Century assessments successfully identify potentially
excellent employees better than 75% of the time.
Job Match Outranks All Other Factors
A well-documented study, published in Harvard
Business Review concludes that "Job Match" is by far the most reliable predictor
of effectiveness on the job. The study considered many factors including
the age, sex, race, education and experience of approximately 300,000
subjects. It evaluated their job performance and found no significant
statistical differences, except in the area of "Job Match." The
conclusion: "It's not experience that counts or college degrees
or other accepted factors; success hinges on a fit with the job."
The only reliable method for evaluating "Job Match" is
with a properly designed assessment instrument, capable of measuring
the essential job-related characteristics particular to each specific
job. Profiles International has assessments designed for this purpose.
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