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Have you ever hired or promoted someone who did not live up to your
expectations? If you did, chances are that the person did not possess
the innate traits to execute the competencies of the job. For example,
in a management position, does the person have the internal characteristics
to be a "people" person, big picture thinker, or confident
leader? In a sales position, is the individual internally motivated,
a critical thinker, able to accept rejection?
Hiring or promoting the wrong person for the wrong
job is like asking a rabbit to swim. Rabbits may swim for a short
stint, but eventually they will struggle, get frustrated, and quit.
That is exactly what happens when we hire people for positions that
are foreign to who they are. It is a lot easier to hire rabbits
to run and fish to swim. The only way organizations can consistently
and accurately match people to jobs are through the technology of
employee assessments that measure innate traits and job match.
If your organization is one of the growing number
of businesses using some type of job match assessment for your employees
and applicants, congratulations. Research shows you will outperform
those organizations that do not engage in such practices. When used
properly, employee assessments offer many significant advantages.
Advantage # 1: Job Match
In the United States, studies have shown that as many
as four out of five workers are cast in a job they are not best
suited for. It has become popular to "job hop" by changing
jobs every six months. This is costly to both the organization and
the individual. Employees do not stay around long enough to build
their worth to the business. Organizations rarely generate profitability
as it may takes six months for a new employee to reach a consistently
high output. The overhead expense to find, hire, orient, and train
people is a major investment many businesses fail to track. Depending
on the job, it can be as low as 25% of a person’s annual salary
or as high as 300%.
Assessment tools designed to predict who would succeed
in a job speed up the selection process. When applicants are hired
that are a good job fit, retention and productivity increase substantially.
This alone frees up a fortune in overhead and makes a business much
more profitable even if sales do not increase.
Advantage # 2: Improved Culture
Workers today are more vocal in expressing dissatisfaction with
their job. Much of this is a result of workers who are stressed
because of a poor job match.
True job fit brings out the best in everyone. Best-selling
author on leadership, Dr. John Maxwell, has said, "When people
work out of their strengths 80% of the time, they do their best
work and do not burn out." When workers are forced to work
on things they do not enjoy, they become less happy over time. This
affects their co-workers and can create a less than positive "domino
effect" throughout the organization.
Advantage # 3: Recruiting with Ease
One way to measure how attractive a business is for its employees
is to measure how many people apply for jobs. Those companies ranked
as the best places to work typically get 20 or more applications
for each job filled. Famous management consultant and guru Peter
Drucker, says, "The single most important competitive advantage
will be . . . the ability of a company to attract, hold, and motivate
workers . . ."
David M. Walker, government executive comptroller
general (USA) states, "The key competitive difference in the
21st century will be people. It will not be process. It will not
be technology. It will be people. . . . No organization, whether
it be government, for-profit or not-for-profit, can maximize its
economy, efficiency and effectiveness without having up-to-date,
state-of-the-art human capital strategies that are integrated with
its overall strategic plan.
The fact of the matter is people are assets, in which
you have to invest, in which you expect a return, in which you have
to manage the risk. They are not a resource that has an unlimited
supply that you can consume and throw away."
When you have employees who are right for the job, the word spreads
that you are a good place to work. A recent study found over 95%
of applicants had no objection to taking a preemployment assessment.
These tools can be given at the jobsite or completed at an applicant’s
home via the Internet.
Advantage # 4: Better Information
Assessment tools provide a more complete or "total" picture
of an individual. Coupled with interviews and observations, assessments
reveal what is on the inside of a person. Information derived from
an assessment becomes a true enlightenment. Taking an inventory
of existing and future employees to align each person with the role
that capitalizes on their strengths will pay big human capital dividends
down the road. Job match is virtually impossible to do without using
an assessment specifically designed for that purpose. Human judgment
is too subjective and does not objectively quantify a person’s
intangibles.
How often have companies promoted the top sales or
customer service person to management, only to find out that the
person fails? This scenario happens too often, only to disrupt the
whole department and have a negative effect on morale within the
company. Consequently, the promoted employee suffers from stress,
tension, and conflict because the position is unnatural to him or
her. The information derived from the assessment also plays a key
role in day-to-day management, training, and coaching. It gives
companies quantified and tangible information on their human capital
in order to better understand, manage, and measure their employees.
The U.S. Department of Labor endorsed the use of assessment
tools in 1999 provided that the tools are reliable, validated and
look at the "whole" person. Seeing both the inside and
outside of a person is very valuable information to ensure a successful
career for that person. Relying on an interview only rarely generates
the information needed to make wise employment decisions.
Advantage # 5: Economical
An increasing number of businesses are using multiple assessment
tools and getting a good return on their small investment. Here
are some of the more popular tools and payback…
• Preemployment Attitude Surveys: These tools are used only
with applicants. They take less than 15 minutes and measure important
attitudinal things like work ethic, honesty, substance abuse and
dependability. They are the least expensive of all assessments and
screen out potential problem applicants saving time and money.
• Total Person Job Matching Assessments: A good tool measures
many things about a person and compares their results with a "benchmark"
of those shared characteristics with top performers. It is good
for a tool to measure the total person: "cognitive abilities"
(thinking styles), motivational interests and key personality traits.
A good tool should take about an hour, give a percentage
compatibility fit, offer suggested behavioral-based interview questions
for applicants, and provide coaching suggestions for existing employees.
• Behavioral Tendencies: These tools are designed for use
with existing employees. They are very popular because they take
less than 15 minutes and can identify style preferences and teamwork
compatibility.Because of the importance and investment of people
in the workplace, the use of assessment tools is expected to grow
substantially. Is your company ready?
For questions or more information on which assessments
are right for your company, please contact Anthony Pantaleone, Regional
Vice President, Profiles International, Inc., (856) 642-4070, Anthony.Pantaleone@ProfilesInternational.com,
www.ProfilesNJ.com.
©2002 TABIC.
All rights reserved.
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