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Speak about a recruitment as a way to find new people to work in a company or organization

When a company needs to recruit or employ new people, it may decide to advertise the job or position in the “NEED HELP" section of a newspaper. People who are interested can then apply for the job by sending in a letter of application or covering letter (US cover letter) and a curriculum vitae or CV (in US — resume) containing details of their education and experience. A company may also ask candidates to complete a standard application form. The company's Human Resources department will then select the most suitable applications and prepare a short list of candidates or applicants, who are invited to attend an Interview. Another way for a company to hire is by using the services of a recruitment agency (in US — search firm) which provides a list of suitable candidates.

A growing number of companies are no longer satisfied with traditional job interviews. Instead, they are requiring applicants for many white-collar jobs to submit to a series of written tests, roleplaying exercises, simulated decision-making exercises. Others put candidates through a long series of interviews by psychologists or trained interviewers.

The tests are not about mathematics or grammar, nor about any of the basic technical skills for which many production, sales and clerical workers have long been tested. Rather, employers want to evaluate candidates on the following qualities:

· Is the candidate creative and entrepreneurial?

· Can the candidate lead and coach?

· Is the candidate flexible and capable of learning?

· Does the candidate have enough skills and knowledge?

· How will the candidate function under pressure?

· Will the potential recruit fit the corporate culture?

These tests, which can take from an hour to two days, are all part of a broader trend. Companies are getting much more careful about hiring. Ten years ago, candidates could win a top job with the right look and the right answers to questions such as "Why do you want this job?". Now, many candidates are having to face questions and exercises intended to learn how they get things done.

They may face questions such as "Who is the best manager you ever worked for and why?" or "What is your best friend like?" The answers, psychologists say, reveal much about a candidate's management style and about himself or herself. The reason for the interrogations is clear: many hired candidates work out badly. The cost of bringing the wrong person on board is sometimes huge. Searching and training can cost from $5000 for a lower-level manager to 5250,000 for a top executive. With the pace of change accelerating in markets and technology, companies want to know how an executive will perform, not just how he or she has performed. Years ago, employers looked for experience — has the candidate done this before? Most companies have not changed this practice until now.

Research has shown that most decision makers make their hiring decision in the first five minutes of an interview and spend the rest of the time rationalizing their choice.



Even companies that have not started extensive testing have toughened their hiring practices. They make the comprehensive testing aimed to measure skills in communications, analysis and organization, management style and personality traits.


Date: 2015-12-11; view: 2467


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