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Author: Site Staff

Posted on June 4, 2000July 10, 2018

IDear Workforce-I Why Recruit From Other Cultures

Q


Dear Workforce:


Why do corporations seek candidates from other cultures?.
—Sammo, Australia.


 


A Dear Sammo:


Here are a few reasons why corporations seek employees from other cultures:


1) Generally speaking, people from one culture tend to be more similar to other people from that culture than to people from a different culture. Whew, a mouthful. Anyhow, the if you have only people from one culture in your corporation, the result is you could have a lot of people who think alike.


2) When you have a multi-lingual staff, it can be easier to communicate with customers and vendors of various cultures and languages. Cultural knowledge can also help when doing business globally.


3) It can be good media relations. For example, say a corporation talks about diversity, but everyone on the top management is white. The media (perhaps rightfully so) might look at that corporation with a skeptical eye.


4) It can be good customer relations — customers sometimes prefer interacting with a multicultural staff. Example: A Muslim customer calls a food company to inquire about what a product is made from. Sometimes it helps to be able to speak to someone at that food company familiar in that culture.


5) It deepens the pool of potential hires.


6) It can make the workplace more interesting.


 


SOURCE: Todd Raphael, Online Editor for Workforce, April 28, 2000.


E-mail your Dear Workforce questions to Online Editor Todd Raphael at raphaelt@workforceonline.com, along with your name, title, organization and location. Unless you state otherwise, your identifying info may be used on Workforce.com and in Workforce magazine. We can’t guarantee we’ll be able to answer every question.

Posted on June 2, 2000July 10, 2018

The Really Big Question

Everyone is asking, how can we attract and retain people in a period when unemployment is less than 2% in many states? Yes, it’s a big problem. But that’s a tactical question when the problem is strategic.


When there is a shortage of talent it does little good to spend one’s energy on recruitment and retention tactics. The really big question is, “How do we create an organization that naturally attracts and holds people.”


In short, how do we become an employer of choice? That is the more important strategic issue. When we solve that, short-term tactics become obvious.


The most common answer to becoming an employer of choice is to load up on new benefits. Companies now offer everything from valet dry cleaning and laundry services to bring-your-pet-to-work. Does this work?


Somewhat, but only until your competitor offers the same. It is akin to airlines offering frequent flyer miles. After the first one did it, everyone followed suit and now no one can afford to drop it, although there is no competitive advantage in it and all it did was raise operating costs.


What attracts people to a new church? Is it cushions on the benches? Is it freshly painted walls? Is it ample parking?


Being an employer of choice is not driven on innovative benefit programs. They don’t generate a sustainable competitive advantage. And don’t ever try to take away a benefit. Once a benefit, always a benefit. The professional literature is filled with horror stories of companies that tried to reduce or change a benefit.


The Boeing case is one of the best examples. Recently, when management decided to change the way it funded a benefit plan you would have thought that they were asking for the surrender of the employee’s first born child.


In reality, the proposed change would have hardly any noticeable effect on employees pocket books. Yet, this move spawned a unionization campaign which eventually cost the company a 40-day strike and $40 million more than the cost of the benefit.


Being an employer of choice is a cultural issue. It’s similar to starting a religious movement. What attracts people to a new church? Is it cushions on the benches? Is it freshly painted walls? Is it ample parking? None of those things hurt, but they do not elevate this church above all others. Cushions deteriorate. Walls need repainting and parking lots develop pot-holes.


People choose a new church because of the message that is coming from the pulpit. They like what the pastor stands for and the gospel that is preached. What does your pastor (CEO) stand for and what gospel (vision) is being preached and lived?


I submit that there are a few essentials that create an employer of choice. They are:


1. Fair treatment. Everyone preaches it. Some deliver it.


2. Interesting, challenging work. Thirty years ago Fred Herzberg said, ‘If you can’t enrich a job get rid of it (outsource it).’


3. An exciting, fun place to come to everyday. Look at the faces. Are your people excited and positive?


4. Opportunity for growth. Everyone promises it. Few invest in systems and tools for helping people achieve it.


5. MOST IMPORTANT AND AN ABSOLUTE REQUIREMENT: (Cue the bugles).


Honestly believe and act as though people are not hard-to-manage expense items, but rather are value-adding assets.


Nearly, but not quite, everyone now acknowledges that people are the primary lever in the service oriented, knowledge driven economy. Yet the management methods employed have changed little since the 1960s when the human relations movement said, “Give people a sense of involvement.”


The evidence is that


  • Few companies truly differentiate between better than average and less than average performers when salary increases are doled out.
  • Training is often denied people by supervisors who won’t let them take a few hours off the job to learn
  • Top management accepts hearty bonuses and stock options while holding annual salary budget increases to less than 5%.
  • Staff and line personnel are treated differently because staff personnel are labeled expense centers; the most ludicrous of all concepts. Who would create a function that does not add value?
  • When times get tough, what do we do with our “most valuable assets”; we dump them on the unemployment lines.

There is little logic and less common sense behind the way most top management treat their valuable human assets. They continually try to buy them off with expensive toys and then pout when the people leave for another place with better toys. If one wants to create a place that naturally draws and retains top talent, a long-term outlook and investment needs to be made in people.


The payoff is reduced turnover disruption, lower operating cost and higher productivity.


Let me put it in the simplest terms I can think of. If you want someone to love you, do you give them toys? Or do you give them respect and support and listen to them when they talk to you? That s what an employer of choice does. This is the really big answer to the really big question.


 


Other columns by Jac Fitz-enz:


  • Knowledge Management Isn’t Just a Technical Job
  • Blueberries from Chile
  • Are You a Leader?
  • The One Right Way
  • The Courage to Play the Game
Posted on June 1, 2000July 10, 2018

iSearch

iSearch

Posted on June 1, 2000June 29, 2023

Workforce

The Workforce team will be at the show and we’d love to meet you. Stop by and see us at booth #1114 so we can show you all the ways our site and magazine can answer your toughest HR questions and move your business forward. If you’re already familiar with Workforce, just stop by and say hello.


While you’re at the booth, make sure you register for our drawing. See you in Boston!



 

Posted on June 1, 2000June 29, 2023

ijob

ijob is a Web-based recruitment management service that improves relationships, information, and speed throughout the hiring process. ijob provides organizations automated sourcing, profiling, matching, tracking and hiring. The ijob service saves money and time, giving recruiters the tools needed to deliver the perfect candidate for any position-every time. SPECIAL OFFER: Sign up for an ijob subscription by 8/25/2000, and receive the ijob “baker’s dozen”, 13 months for the price of 12. ijob can save you time and with this offer – ijob can save you money!


Posted on June 1, 2000

Table of Contents June 2000

BODY

Posted on May 31, 2000July 10, 2018

iDear Workforce -IWhen Must I Transfer 401(k) Money

Q


Dear Workforce:


Is there a law or standard time frame a company must follow when transferring employees’ money to the company 401(k) plan? We sometimes allow up to 10.


–Anne Harney, Human Resources Director, Collins Engineers, Inc.


A Dear Anne:


You have little to fear.


You have 15 business days from the time you received the money or the money was placed in your general business account.


 


SOURCE: Todd Raphael, Online Editor for Workforce, and the United States Department of Labor, April 26, 2000.

Posted on May 31, 2000July 10, 2018

Questions to Consider When Evaluating a Personality Test Product

Here are some questions to consider in evaluating specific personality-test products:


  • What methods are available to administer and process tests. Pencil-and-paper? Software? Web-based? Can results be returned by email?
  • If software-based, what additional charges are involved (can add several hundred dollars)? How user-friendly is software installation and set-up?
  • Are products bonded? Backed by psychologists or attorneys? Generally guaranteed?
  • Is the instrument job-specific or developed with customized client input?
  • What are the validity coefficients? That is, how reliably does the test measure what it purports to measure? A reasonable range is 0.4 to 0.55.
  • Are quantity discounts provided? Generally such discounts are available beginning as low as 10 or 25 quantity.
  • How has this product fared with legal challenges?
  • What are the projected overall costs to your company associated with a particular assessment tool? Begin to track expenses, including administration costs, from the beginning to get the most accurate picture of overall success of the testing approach.

 



Posted on May 30, 2000July 10, 2018

Benefit Management Group

Benefit Management Group

Posted on May 28, 2000July 10, 2018

Dear Workforce What if HR Isn’t Dressing Appropriately?

Q

 


Dear Workforce:


We are in a public sector environment where there is a fairly relaxed atmosphere regarding dress. While managers often wear suits, it is also common to see them dressed down.


The directors would like the HR manager to ‘transform’ her appearance. Most of her clothes are dated and simplistic. They are concerned that she may not be taken seriously. How they can insist one individual change the way she currently is dressing?
— HR’s Dress



 


A Dear HR’s Dress:



I’m a little scared to get too far into this one, as I’m not a lawyer and don’t want to give legal advice.

Having said that, I can say you ought to tread carefully.

If you’re going to her and asking her to transform her image, you may have a problem. If you’re going to her and saying, let’s transform everyone’s image, then that may be easier.

Now, I’m guessing you’re thinking, “But she’s the only one dressing this way. She’s the only one who needs to transform.”

If that’s the case, you’ll probably want to have something specific that’s evidence of her inappropriate dress. Her clothes may be “dated” but what if several other managers wear dated clothes, but you’re not addressing this with them? What if all those other managers are men — could you be setting yourself up for a legal headache?

My guess, from the tone of your notes, is that there must be another reason the directors are bothered by her performance — beyond her appearance — or the appearance would probably be less of an issue. The problems with her clothing are merely a manifestation of a larger problem. If that’s the case, can you address those problems?

Finally, you may want to see what other folks think — post this question in the General Forum or the Staffing Forum at www.workforce.com/community.

 

SOURCE: Todd Raphael, Online Editor for Workforce, April 17, 2000.

E-mail your Dear Workforce questions to Online Editor Todd Raphael at raphaelt@workforceonline.com, along with your name, title, organization and location. Unless you state otherwise, your identifying info may be used on Workforce.com and in Workforce magazine. We can’t guarantee we’ll be able to answer every question.

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