Add You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Careers Employment > Why Selecting Candidates Who Fit the Job Is Critical!

Tags

  • emotional
  • broken
  • excel
  • within minutes
  • candidates versus
  • hiring activity

  • Links

  • Opening A Dollar Store - Tips on Investigative Due Diligence
  • Material Handling Alert -- The Top 10 Ways To Save Money On Carts and Racks
  • Discover the Missing Link in Weight Loss
  • Add You - Why Selecting Candidates Who Fit the Job Is Critical!

    Branding Junk Removal - He Did It, Can You?
    What does it mean to be remarkable?Brian Scudamore, CEO and Founder of 1-800-GOT-JUNK?, who in 1996 was operating the million dollar plus company at the age of 26, said it means, “You’ve got to get out there and be loud and proud... You’ve got to stand out. You have got to have a brand that is worth remarking about.”He learned much about this type of philosophy from the book Purple Cow, written by one of his mentors, Seth Godin.It’s kind of like Sir Richard Branson’s recent flying superhero-saving nurses publicity stunt to launch Virgin Mobile Canada.Like Branson, Scudamore takes risks. He and his company want to make sure they get noticed. After all, they’re “building the Fed-Ex of Junk removal.” He does know, however, that beyond the gorilla marketing, his strategies and his team of motivated employees and franchise partners are key to sustaining the brand. “It’s all about the people,” he said.After changing the company name, from Rubbish Boys to 1-800-GOT-JUNK (Scudamore was looking for a more professional name and was inspired by the Got Milk campaign and the 1-800-FLOWER model, wher
    information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduc

    A Difficult Life for Single Mothers With a Career
    We hear how difficult it can be to be a single mother and hold a career. A few fathers may have this problem so it applies equally to all those single fathers out there as well. Few of us know really how many hurdles these woman (single parents) have to go through in order to advance in their careers. Hurdles often include skills, wages and competing interests.The Department of Labor states that about 69% of all single mothers are working. This number shows some indication of decline as the economy sours. Since such woman have competing interests, have more problems, often less skills, and must balance between work & family they are typically one of the first groups to lose their jobs. Even while working they have some of the lowest income levels. The problems these woman face can be summarized as follows:SkillsMany of the working mothers have only sporadic prior experience. Since they have been busy raising children many of these mothers have not had the opportunity to attend trade schools or colleges. Furthermore, a career is developed over time and in many cases these woman have moved in and out of
    Anyone with the responsibility for hiring or promoting employees knows how aggravating it is to select a candidate that seemed right during the interview process only to realize later the new employee isn’t really a good fit for the job. Both the company AND the employee suffer for it. Poor job fit often results in lost productivity, the need for tough management, conflict, burdens placed on other employees, acceptance of sub-par performance, lack of engagement, poor retention and more – all costly issues for today’s lean organizations. Many companies calculate their costs associated with turnover; that is one measure. But the true cost includes all of the above and more.

    Admit it, we sometimes (or is it ‘too often’) hire the wrong person for the job.

    First, let’s acknowledge that selecting the right candidate to work for you is hard. Here are just some of the reasons (e-mail me with yours):

    • A number of people who make hiring decisions are not trained selection experts.

    • Candidates are often ‘less than honest.’

    • Resumes leave out all but the good and safe stuff.

    • There is a lack of clarity (by the hiring manager) about what is required – beyond hard skills, experience and training - to perform the specific job well.

    • Candidates are often hired because they have skills and are likeable.

    • Candidates know a lot of people in the industry often have an advantage – even when not justified.

    • Candidates are often better prepared for the interview than the interviewers (especially true of candidates presented by some recruiters).

    • Candidates who are not a good fit – and the hiring manager knows it – get hired anyway. It’s the “Who knows, maybe they’ll surprise us”. (How scary is this one.)

    How can you prevent hiring the wrong candidate in your organization?

    1. Define the ‘hard’ needs of the job including experience required (and in what), knowledge of industry, training and education, consistency of work history, willingness to travel, what they need to be proficient at (like using Excel or driving a truck). A review/background check is mandatory. Information provided needs to be verified. Examples include the candidate’s experiences, references, education, skills and training. All of this tells us WHAT they can do and whether it matches the requirements of the job.

    2. Develop a list of 3-6 key accountabilities (goals) that the employee in this job will be held accountable for accomplishing. Accountabilities are the reason the job exists. They must be measurable. And these key accountabilities should occupy about 80% of the employee’s time and focus. (Note: From my work with clients, establishing key accountabilities is the most important pre-hiring activity and the one most often neglected.)

    3. Benchmark the job. We find that those companies that effectively benchmark the soft skills required for success in the job have the information they need to look for the right candidate. And the information is objective (helping to eliminate bias). Notice I did not say benchmark your top performers in the job (such as sales). The reason is that your top performers may just be top performers in your company. It is not unusual for a company to benchmark the job and then assess their top performers and find this to be the reality. All is not lost. Two opportunities present themselves:

    a. Using the benchmark you can upgrade the talent in the position.

    b. Using the benchmark and the reports generated from our assessment reports, you will have great information with which to coach your current top performers into even greater performance.

    Also, using a predetermined benchmark is fine for comparison sake, but it may not be accurate for the specific job you are filling or for succession planning.

    4. Assess top candidates versus the benchmark. By using validated, legal assessments designed for use in selection of top candidates, assessing candidates’ soft skills is easier today than ever before. You can have the candidate complete assessments via Internet access. And you will often have their reports within minutes. The candidate’s reports should align with the benchmark which makes your analysis easy and quick. In areas that are marginal, the candidate’s reports should guide you in asking interview questions that target the soft skills that are most important to success in the job.

    Soft skills are really important in all jobs?

    There was a time when it wasn’t very fashionable in business to focus on soft skills. The trend was to focus on hard skills (Can they DO the job?). Today, though, we have matured and understand that soft skills (sometimes called personal skills) often have more to do with success and failure in a job than hard skills. For example, I have heard more than one client say “We can train them to do X, but if they aren’t good team players (a soft skill), they can’t be effective.” One of the early proponents of soft skills was Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence. Soft skills comprise a person’s job attributes, their motivators and their behaviors.

    • Attributes are a cognitive measure of how strongly a person values certain competencies like customer service, leading others, quality orientation, flexibility, internal self control or self management. Attributes help us understand if the candidate WILL do the job. If a person does not value an attribute critical to success in the position, they will not consistently use that attribute.

    • Motivators tell us WHY a person does what they do. There are six primary Motivators: Theoretical, Individualistic, Social, Utilitarian, Traditional and Aesthetic. Here’s an example: Someone who is highly Utilitarian is motivated by results. They are profit-driven and bottom line oriented. They are driven by competition, challenges and economic incentives. If the job provides and rewards these characteristics, the individual will be motivated. If the job does not, the person will not be motivated by the job.

    • Behaviors tell us HOW the person prefers to and does work - were once thought to be the key to success performance in a job. While still seen as important, Attributes and Motivators are often more important because it is easier to adapt behaviors to the situation. That said, Behaviors can cause a person to fail in a job or feel a great deal of stress because their style is not a good fit for the job. For example, if someone is outgoing, putting them in a job that has little people contact will be very frustrating for them. Someone in a position of authority who has difficulty making decision will have trouble leading. In addition, an understanding of one’s behavioral style and that of others seems to be critical to effective interpersonal communication.

    (The right) assessments are the key to successful hiring.

    What is really powerful about the use of assessments in the selection process is that they can provide us with objective, job related information that can really help us make good decisions – information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduc

    Prolonged Unemployment: Reconnecting With The Labor Market
    We are reminded almost daily of improvements in the labor market and that jobs are now available, even if not plentiful. More workers than ever are quitting their jobs, worn out by the efforts that have been required over the past 5 to 8 years to be as productive as before with half the staffing of the past.If you have been unemployed for an extended period of time, you may find that when you apply for one of the positions now appearing, that you are competing with individuals who are either still working but looking to make a change, or with others who have been working until very recently. From experience, you know that potential employers are going to look at your long period of unemployment with a jaundiced eye.What approach can you take that will best allow you to compete and disarm that prejudice that interviewers seem to display against anyone who has not been in the competitive work force for an extended period?Confront the issue head on!It is a common expression in business that there's an elephant in the room but everyone walks around it, pretending that it's not there. When a major i
    >

    How can you prevent hiring the wrong candidate in your organization?

    1. Define the ‘hard’ needs of the job including experience required (and in what), knowledge of industry, training and education, consistency of work history, willingness to travel, what they need to be proficient at (like using Excel or driving a truck). A review/background check is mandatory. Information provided needs to be verified. Examples include the candidate’s experiences, references, education, skills and training. All of this tells us WHAT they can do and whether it matches the requirements of the job.

    2. Develop a list of 3-6 key accountabilities (goals) that the employee in this job will be held accountable for accomplishing. Accountabilities are the reason the job exists. They must be measurable. And these key accountabilities should occupy about 80% of the employee’s time and focus. (Note: From my work with clients, establishing key accountabilities is the most important pre-hiring activity and the one most often neglected.)

    3. Benchmark the job. We find that those companies that effectively benchmark the soft skills required for success in the job have the information they need to look for the right candidate. And the information is objective (helping to eliminate bias). Notice I did not say benchmark your top performers in the job (such as sales). The reason is that your top performers may just be top performers in your company. It is not unusual for a company to benchmark the job and then assess their top performers and find this to be the reality. All is not lost. Two opportunities present themselves:

    a. Using the benchmark you can upgrade the talent in the position.

    b. Using the benchmark and the reports generated from our assessment reports, you will have great information with which to coach your current top performers into even greater performance.

    Also, using a predetermined benchmark is fine for comparison sake, but it may not be accurate for the specific job you are filling or for succession planning.

    4. Assess top candidates versus the benchmark. By using validated, legal assessments designed for use in selection of top candidates, assessing candidates’ soft skills is easier today than ever before. You can have the candidate complete assessments via Internet access. And you will often have their reports within minutes. The candidate’s reports should align with the benchmark which makes your analysis easy and quick. In areas that are marginal, the candidate’s reports should guide you in asking interview questions that target the soft skills that are most important to success in the job.

    Soft skills are really important in all jobs?

    There was a time when it wasn’t very fashionable in business to focus on soft skills. The trend was to focus on hard skills (Can they DO the job?). Today, though, we have matured and understand that soft skills (sometimes called personal skills) often have more to do with success and failure in a job than hard skills. For example, I have heard more than one client say “We can train them to do X, but if they aren’t good team players (a soft skill), they can’t be effective.” One of the early proponents of soft skills was Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence. Soft skills comprise a person’s job attributes, their motivators and their behaviors.

    • Attributes are a cognitive measure of how strongly a person values certain competencies like customer service, leading others, quality orientation, flexibility, internal self control or self management. Attributes help us understand if the candidate WILL do the job. If a person does not value an attribute critical to success in the position, they will not consistently use that attribute.

    • Motivators tell us WHY a person does what they do. There are six primary Motivators: Theoretical, Individualistic, Social, Utilitarian, Traditional and Aesthetic. Here’s an example: Someone who is highly Utilitarian is motivated by results. They are profit-driven and bottom line oriented. They are driven by competition, challenges and economic incentives. If the job provides and rewards these characteristics, the individual will be motivated. If the job does not, the person will not be motivated by the job.

    • Behaviors tell us HOW the person prefers to and does work - were once thought to be the key to success performance in a job. While still seen as important, Attributes and Motivators are often more important because it is easier to adapt behaviors to the situation. That said, Behaviors can cause a person to fail in a job or feel a great deal of stress because their style is not a good fit for the job. For example, if someone is outgoing, putting them in a job that has little people contact will be very frustrating for them. Someone in a position of authority who has difficulty making decision will have trouble leading. In addition, an understanding of one’s behavioral style and that of others seems to be critical to effective interpersonal communication.

    (The right) assessments are the key to successful hiring.

    What is really powerful about the use of assessments in the selection process is that they can provide us with objective, job related information that can really help us make good decisions – information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduc

    How To Energize Your Business Everyday
    Where do we find the physical, mental and spiritual energy to create and sustain our business and stay true to our vision? Besides the obvious advice about diet, exercise and minimizing stress, there's a whole different area of energy that we can benefit from. That's the creative vital power of our personal vision and the way we bring it out to the world.Everything is energy. Even things we think of as solid and immovable, such as rocks and dirt, are chock full of energy. The more alive the energy, the more power that's manifested. That goes for anything from tsunami waves to megastar personalities.It's all a matter of freeing up the energy and expressing our innate talents and strengths. The key is to be able to find ways to nurture and keep expanding our creative energy. When we start out with our inspiration for our business or career we're often exuberantly excited and inspired. If we see it clearly and put our full energy behind it, we can create a great expression of who we truly are.Over time with daily repetition and stress, our vision and creative energy can fade. With constant demands of
    ssment reports, you will have great information with which to coach your current top performers into even greater performance.

    Also, using a predetermined benchmark is fine for comparison sake, but it may not be accurate for the specific job you are filling or for succession planning.

    4. Assess top candidates versus the benchmark. By using validated, legal assessments designed for use in selection of top candidates, assessing candidates’ soft skills is easier today than ever before. You can have the candidate complete assessments via Internet access. And you will often have their reports within minutes. The candidate’s reports should align with the benchmark which makes your analysis easy and quick. In areas that are marginal, the candidate’s reports should guide you in asking interview questions that target the soft skills that are most important to success in the job.

    Soft skills are really important in all jobs?

    There was a time when it wasn’t very fashionable in business to focus on soft skills. The trend was to focus on hard skills (Can they DO the job?). Today, though, we have matured and understand that soft skills (sometimes called personal skills) often have more to do with success and failure in a job than hard skills. For example, I have heard more than one client say “We can train them to do X, but if they aren’t good team players (a soft skill), they can’t be effective.” One of the early proponents of soft skills was Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence. Soft skills comprise a person’s job attributes, their motivators and their behaviors.

    • Attributes are a cognitive measure of how strongly a person values certain competencies like customer service, leading others, quality orientation, flexibility, internal self control or self management. Attributes help us understand if the candidate WILL do the job. If a person does not value an attribute critical to success in the position, they will not consistently use that attribute.

    • Motivators tell us WHY a person does what they do. There are six primary Motivators: Theoretical, Individualistic, Social, Utilitarian, Traditional and Aesthetic. Here’s an example: Someone who is highly Utilitarian is motivated by results. They are profit-driven and bottom line oriented. They are driven by competition, challenges and economic incentives. If the job provides and rewards these characteristics, the individual will be motivated. If the job does not, the person will not be motivated by the job.

    • Behaviors tell us HOW the person prefers to and does work - were once thought to be the key to success performance in a job. While still seen as important, Attributes and Motivators are often more important because it is easier to adapt behaviors to the situation. That said, Behaviors can cause a person to fail in a job or feel a great deal of stress because their style is not a good fit for the job. For example, if someone is outgoing, putting them in a job that has little people contact will be very frustrating for them. Someone in a position of authority who has difficulty making decision will have trouble leading. In addition, an understanding of one’s behavioral style and that of others seems to be critical to effective interpersonal communication.

    (The right) assessments are the key to successful hiring.

    What is really powerful about the use of assessments in the selection process is that they can provide us with objective, job related information that can really help us make good decisions – information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduc

    Differences in Carwash Types in the US Market
    There appears to be quite a discrepancy of data about the number of carwashes in the United States. Then there are different types of carwashes; Fixed and mobile. Amongst the fixed site carwashes there are coin-op self serve washes, Flex Service Robotic, Conveyor Conventional, Gas Station Rollover and the Touchless automatic.You can pick up a carwash survey from any of the four major industry magazines or the co-marketed service industry magazines like; C-Store News, Oil and Lube News or any of the Auto Service Industry Association magazines and there are about seven of them. Some of the surveys in these magazines have broken down by region. Percentages of course are worthless unless broken down by area, even a manufacturer, better know that if it is going to set up a dealer network, sales teams or use existing channels of distribution. Those who study the industry need to be cognizant of the available data and its worthiness.Can you even define what a Conveyor is? Most cannot and even if you could, does that mean your definition equates to the survey you are reading this week; if not how can you quote numbe
    nternal self control or self management. Attributes help us understand if the candidate WILL do the job. If a person does not value an attribute critical to success in the position, they will not consistently use that attribute.

    • Motivators tell us WHY a person does what they do. There are six primary Motivators: Theoretical, Individualistic, Social, Utilitarian, Traditional and Aesthetic. Here’s an example: Someone who is highly Utilitarian is motivated by results. They are profit-driven and bottom line oriented. They are driven by competition, challenges and economic incentives. If the job provides and rewards these characteristics, the individual will be motivated. If the job does not, the person will not be motivated by the job.

    • Behaviors tell us HOW the person prefers to and does work - were once thought to be the key to success performance in a job. While still seen as important, Attributes and Motivators are often more important because it is easier to adapt behaviors to the situation. That said, Behaviors can cause a person to fail in a job or feel a great deal of stress because their style is not a good fit for the job. For example, if someone is outgoing, putting them in a job that has little people contact will be very frustrating for them. Someone in a position of authority who has difficulty making decision will have trouble leading. In addition, an understanding of one’s behavioral style and that of others seems to be critical to effective interpersonal communication.

    (The right) assessments are the key to successful hiring.

    What is really powerful about the use of assessments in the selection process is that they can provide us with objective, job related information that can really help us make good decisions – information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduc

    Phishing Scam
    A lot has been written about all known kinds of scams including “Phishing”. But criminals keep on throwing their nets and having quite a good take. Therefore we have to continue exposing the phishing attempts. And since “it is better to see once than hear 10 times” I want to share with you 2 emails that I have recently received.These are really similar letters (in fact it is almost the same one with tiny differences). The letter(s) are as follows:Subjects:1. We were unable to authorize charges to the Credit Card Number you provided.2. Your Amazon Account will be Closed!“Dear AOL Client, (Dear Client)As part of our security measures, we regularly screen activity in our network.We recently noticed the following issue on your account: A recent review of your transaction history determined that we require an update of your account in order to provide you with secure services.We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.You must click the link below and fill in the form on the following page to complete the verification process.http://webmail.aol.com
    information that is very hard to get to in interviews. The right assessments are designed to help you understand a candidate’s attributes, motivators and behaviors. Comparing a candidate’s assessment reports to the job benchmark can help you understand how good – or poor – a fit the candidate will be for the job. Assessments help you get under the resume and the candidate’s interviewing persona. The right assessments will unearth a wonderfully rich body of information which you can use to help you continue the interviewing process and make your decision. The information you get from a candidate’s reports can even serve as a coaching guide for those candidates you hire or incumbents you are working to develop. One of my clients, who has been using assessments for the past three years, says “I don’t know how we could effectively make a hiring decision today without the information we get from these (assessment) reports.” Another client says “These reports have saved me, more than once, from making a terrible hiring mistake.”

    The benefits of hiring employees who fit their job.

    Managers who are clear about the requirements for success in a job - including the ideal profile of personal attributes, motivators and behaviors - will have high levels of success when they select the candidate to hire. Filling each of your job openings with candidates who really fit the job is simply good business. It improves productivity, morale, and ultimately, the success of your organization. It reduces the burden on the manager because the employee will like their job. It creates energy for those who work around someone who likes their job. It creates loyalty (yep, there is still such a thing as loyalty). It inspires creativity. And finally, it saves money and reduces disruptions to the business which is the result of having to fire someone or having them quit (whether they actually leave or not).

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.addyou.info/article/12585/addyou-Why-Selecting-Candidates-Who-Fit-the-Job-Is-Critical.html">Why Selecting Candidates Who Fit the Job Is Critical!</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.addyou.info/article/12585/addyou-Why-Selecting-Candidates-Who-Fit-the-Job-Is-Critical.html]Why Selecting Candidates Who Fit the Job Is Critical![/url]

    Related Articles:

    Making the Merger a Success

    The 5 Most Important Things to Know When Writing Your Resume

    Your Communication Type - Take A Brief Quiz To See How Other People See You At Work

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com