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Category: Recruitment

Posted on February 24, 2012August 8, 2018

Lagging Economy Aside, Interviewees Say the Darndest Things

From job candidates asking what company they were at to one candidate painting graffiti on the employer’s building, CareerBuilder listed some of the most unusual interview experiences based on an online survey of more than 3,000 employers. Here are some of those experiences:

• Candidate brought a “how to interview” book with him to the interview.

• Candidate asked, “What company is this again?”

• Candidate put the interviewer on hold during a phone interview. When she came back on the line, she told the interviewer that she had a date set up for Friday.

• When a candidate interviewing for a security position wasn’t hired on the spot, he painted graffiti on the building.

• Candidate wore a Boy Scout uniform and never told interviewers why.

• Candidate was arrested by federal authorities during the interview when the background check revealed the person had an outstanding warrant.

• Candidate talked about promptness as one of her strengths after showing up 10 minutes late.

• On the way to the interview, the candidate passed, cut-off and flipped his middle finger at the driver who happened to be the interviewer.

• Candidate referred to himself in the third person.

• Candidate took off his shoes during the interview.

• Candidate asked for a sip of the interviewer’s coffee.

• Candidate told the interviewer she wasn’t sure if the job offered was worth “starting the car for.”

Filed by Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister company of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com.

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Posted on January 24, 2012August 8, 2018

CarMax Plans to Hire Nearly 1,000 in U.S.

The Richmond, Virginia, used-car retailer said Jan. 23 that it is recruiting for positions in sales and service operations, including detailers and technicians, with additional positions in purchasing and the business office. Full- and part-time permanent positions with day and evening shifts will be available.

CarMax is looking for candidates who are dependable, team-oriented, possess strong customer service skills and have high integrity,” Pam Hill, director of selection and recruiting for CarMax, said in a written statement. “We also look for individuals who have a willingness to work the varied hours of a retail work environment.”

CarMax CEO Tom Folliard said last year that the company plans to open as many as 55 used-car stores through February 2016, with 10 stores opened in its fiscal year that begins March 1 and 10 to 15 stores in each of the three following fiscal years. CarMax now operates 107 used-car stores in 52 markets.

Arlena Sawyers contributed to this report.

Ellen Mitchell and Arlena Sawyers write for Automotive News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com.

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Posted on December 28, 2011August 8, 2018

Survey Reveals Slight Climb in Full-Time Hiring

Twenty-three percent of employers surveyed plan to hire full-time, permanent employees in 2012, according to CareerBuilder’s annual job forecast. The percentage of employers planning to hire is relatively unchanged from 24 percent for 2011 and up from 20 percent for 2010.

Seven percent of employers expect to decrease headcount, the same percentage as did for 2011, and an improvement from 9 percent for 2010.

Fifty-nine percent anticipate no change in their staff levels. Eleven percent are unsure whether there will be change.

The survey also charted four trends to watch in 2012:

Compensation getting more competitive for skilled positions

Sixty-two percent of employers plan to increase compensation for their existing employee base while 32 percent will offer higher starting salaries for new employees. The greatest increases in compensation at organizations in 2012 are those tied to revenue generation, including sales, information technology, engineering and business development.

Voluntary turnover on the rise

Thirty-four percent of human resource managers reported that voluntary turnover at their organizations rose in 2011. Employers pointed to the desire for higher compensation and feeling over-worked as the top two reasons employees gave for resigning.

Employers bridging the skills gap by training

There is an increasing number of areas where demand for skilled positions is growing much faster than supply. Thirty-eight percent plan to train people who don’t have experience in their particular industry and hire them for positions within their organizations in 2012.

Employers targeting Hispanic workers, African American workers and women

Twenty-nine percent of employers said they will be diversity-focused when recruiting in an effort to expand their employee demographics. Twenty percent will be recruiting Hispanics and African Americans to work for their organizations while the same percentage will be recruiting more women. Forty-four percent plan to hire bilingual workers in 2012.

This survey was conducted online within the U.S. by Harris Interactive on behalf of CareerBuilder among 3,023 hiring managers and human resource professionals between Nov. 9, 2011, and Dec. 5, 2011.

Filed by Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister company of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com.

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on December 14, 2011August 8, 2018

Will A Checklist Help Us Recruit More Effectively?

Dear Kept in the Dark:

The checklist is the easy part. Before tackling that, however, let’s first examine the underlying problem: that upper management isn’t informing your recruiters until well after positions become vacant.

This sounds like a “disconnect” in which human resources partners fail to keep each other informed, rather than an oversight by upper management. But learning about terminated employees earlier in the game is not the only condition you’ll want to address.

How prepared are you for downstream changes in your business (six to 12 months out) that may require you to recruit a huge volume of experienced professionals with scarce new skills—more people than your organization has experience recruiting?

Also, think about the problem of planned growth within divisions that possess solid succession plans, where you know who will step into newly created positions. If these high-potential, high-performance employees are scheduled to move from their current positions, maybe your recruiting effort should focus on looking for candidates to backstop these high performers now.

We could actually make a long list of situations where the added value of recruiting might resonate with hiring managers, HR partners, upper management and other stakeholders. Rather than a checklist, what you need is a mutual agreement that is written and signed by the different parties responsible for recruiting.

Here’s how it should look. First, it typically arises out of a series of discussions between human resources and other business leaders to establish the quality of your services. These service level agreements, or SLAs, are primarily a contracting tool keyed to establish and meet clients’ expectations. The client and the service provider (recruiting, for example, or more likely HR) determine in advance which services and performance levels will be provided, and decide how the success or failure of an SLA is measured.

In staffing, an SLA should essentially speak to the expectations of recruiters, recruiting coordinators, interviewers and hiring managers, since their partnership is essential to the attainment of your goals. Any worthwhile agreement would also describe the process, roles, timeframes, and accountabilities for all parties.

An SLA for recruiting might include an outline of the complete process used by recruiters and hiring manages to fill job openings as quickly and efficiently as possible. A staffing SLA takes managers step by step through this process—from submitting a requisition to extending an offer—and notes applicable turnaround times.

The most competitive corporations use SLAs to manage the quality of their process, and it isn’t unusual to have several SLAs in place between internal HR functions, i.e., recruiting and other HR services.

The solution isn’t to look for, and adopt, an SLA template (although there are many). Rather, you should engage all the stakeholders in your process: hiring managers, upper management, recruiters, recruiting coordinators, vendors, and candidates, and establish a level of service they can expect from you—and what you need in return to commit to it.

SOURCE: Gerry Crispin, CareerXroads, Kendall Park, New Jersey

LEARN MORE: Get more recruiting insights by reading “Tips for Fast Turnaround.”

The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

Posted on October 6, 2011August 8, 2018

Almost Half of All New Doctors Get 100 Job Offers

Seventy-eight percent of new physicians received at least 50 job solicitations during their training, and 47 percent received 100 or more, according to a survey by Merritt Hawkins & Associates, a physician search firm and division of AMN Healthcare Services Inc.

Merritt Hawkins had asked more than 300 physicians in their final year of training how many times they had been contacted by recruiters seeking to interest them in jobs by telephone, email or regular mail.

“Even in a stagnant economy, new doctors are being recruited like blue-chip athletes,” said James Merritt, founder of Merritt Hawkins. “There are simply not enough physicians coming out of training to fill all the available openings.”

Still, despite the favorable job market, some new doctors are unhappy about their choice of profession. The survey found that 28 percent said they would select another field if they had to do their education over again.

The survey also had bad news for rural areas. Only 4 percent of new doctors said they would prefer to practice in communities of 25,000 people or less.

Filed by Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister company of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com.

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on September 7, 2011August 9, 2018

Dear Workforce How Do We Calculate the ROI of Our Online Job Postings

Dear Ruminating:

When analyzing return on investment, first understand your goals. It ensures the data you produce is meaningful and that the data can support an action plan to meet your goals. What other factors outside of cost-cutting are central to your organization and your recruiting goals? Once you have clearly outlined your goals, the next step is to identify metrics to help you assess how effectively you are spending your sourcing dollars.

A variety of metrics apply, including the number of views per posting, the number of click-throughs to the job description and the number of online applications submitted.

While these statistics may not be available for all sources, major job boards or job- posting partners such as eQuest, RecruitUSA, TruStar Solutions or Job VIPeR will be able to help you gather useful data. You also will want to consider the number of interviews, the number of offers and the number of hires per source.Quality-of-hire and retention data will make your analysis all the more accurate.

Looking beyond job postings, data on other sourcing channels will help you make a more comprehensive analysis. Unfortunately, obtaining quality source data is challenging because organizations often rely on self-reported data at the front end (when the candidate applies). How good your source-of-hire data is can depend on the job-posting approach, your corporate Web site design and your talent-management system. It may be best to have the recruiter verbally confirm the source of hire when the candidate accepts.

If possible, capture all sources that affected the applicant. Perhaps the candidate saw a banner ad directed to your job posting on a major job board and then went to your corporate site to for further investigation–resulting in a résumé submission on your corporate career site. Knowing the full story provides you with a better understanding of the traction you are actually getting from each channel. You may want to look at benchmark data available from the Saratoga Institute on “advertising hiring percentage” to see how your organization compares to others.

As you develop metrics to evaluate your sourcing investment, you’ll need to determine the best way to classify the data you capture. It’s easier to spot trends and issues if you capture data at a detailed level (division, region, business unit, etc.) rather than as an aggregate. Factor in the types of jobs you hire for and determine at which level you want to capture data, including discipline and level as appropriate. What is important is to define your metrics clearly, and consistently track the data.

SOURCE: Sona Manzo, the Newman Group, June 30, 2005.

LEARN MORE: Read aboutHallmark’s quality-of-hire initiative or more oncandidate sourcing.

The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

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Dear Workforce Newsletter

Posted on September 7, 2011August 9, 2018

Dear Workforce How Could We Better Publicize Our Jobs to Would-be Recruits

Dear Stymied:

Large or small, your recruiting needs sound important enough to your company’s success to warrant a lot more attention than to simply rely on the sources you mention. If you really want to succeed without a third-party placement firm, then you have to stop thinking of yourself as a recruiter and start thinking of yourself as a talent scout.

First of all, take stock of what is really happening by collecting some data. Look at Salary.com and pretend you are the ideal candidate. Are you overpaying for the job? Search local and national job sites to see how many similar jobs are offered by firms like yours. How tough is your competition? What are competitors using for a hook? Call admissions offices at community colleges, pretending to be interested in training programs that produce top-notch graduates–the people who eventually become your best candidates. Inquire about how many students graduated from the college during the last two years, between two and five years ago, and between five and 10 years ago. Are there any alumni functions? Also, do any of your employees illustrate the types of people you want to hire? What can they tell you? Who do they know?

Second, examine what you have to offer. Be honest. Is your salary competitive? (Probably not.) Can you grow and develop into a larger company? Does the company boast competitive benefits, flexibility, and a great owner? Do its services make a significant difference to customers? What you note as important had better also be important to those job candidates. And how will you know if you don’t ask one or two of them?

Write a value proposition for why someone should join your firm, and why they should stay. Or even better, visit your local high school and ask the English teacher for the school’s advanced-placement class to get her students to do it for you, writing about jobs with your firm using data that you supply.

Lastly, think about strategies that do more than simply identify candidates when the need arises. Instead, start building a pipeline of qualified applicants well before you need them. This may seem like extra work but if you find two quality connections in advance, you’ll fill all your key positions “just in time,” either with the folks you’ve met or the information they provide about other job seekers. Take the chairperson of the local community college, or the professors of relevant courses, out to lunch to discuss their alumni. Contact professional associations or trade/industry organization to which your candidates are likely to belong. If there is a local chapter, offer to become its sponsor.

The principles to finding and attracting quality candidates are always the same:

  • Know who you are targeting, and then let them know you are looking for them.

  • Know why people come and why they stay–and market the hell out of it.

  • Build a pipeline by finding and meeting candidates even when you don’t have openings. A little preparation goes a very long way. Any of the people you meet along the way might refer you to your next great candidate.

SOURCE: Gerry Crispin, SPHR, principal and chief navigator, CareerXroads, Kendall Park, New Jersey, December 5, 2005.

LEARN MORE: Recruiting Vendors Take Cues From Dating Sites discusses how vendors are helping companies sort through the chaff to find the perfect match. Also of interest: Please read how a public-private partnership in New Yorkstate is trying to get more college grads to stay.

The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

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Dear Workforce Newsletter

Posted on September 7, 2011August 9, 2018

Dear Workforce How Do I Frame Character Questions During Behavioral Interviews

Dear Character Counts:

Behavioral interviewing is based on the assumption that one’s past behavior is an excellent indicator of the actions that person will take, and the results he will generate, in the future under similar circumstances. Behavioral-based interview questions enable you as the interviewer to focus on how a candidate handled a real-life situation in the past, instead of how the person might handle a hypothetical situation in the future.

The typical behavioral interview question is based on the following framework: Problem/Situation –> Action –> Result. Ask candidate to outline a problem or situation they have faced that highlights the skill, trait or core competency you are seeking (problem/situation). Then, ask candidates to describe the action they took and the results it generated.

You can apply this technique to any question you find relevant to the role for which you are hiring by putting it in this problem/situation-action-results framework. For example, if you are looking to define integrity, you could ask the candidate to describe an actual situation or problem in their professional past that tested their integrity, what action they took, and what results they obtained.

Ordinarily we encounter two challenges when using this type of questioning. First, if the candidate is unable to come up with a similar situation or problem, it can take serious probing on your part to find it. Of course, that process in and of itself can be revealing about your candidate. Second, a candidate can potentially reframe your question to make some unrelated point about him or herself. When that happens, I simply redirect them to the original question.

If you are looking for character traits, an excellent complement to behavioral interviewing is personality and style testing. There are many excellent tools on the market to help you identify perfect candidates for your jobs.

SOURCE: David Peck, Leadership Unleashed, San Francisco, July 10, 2006

LEARN MORE: Please read a related article on gauging a person’s passion and commitment.

The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

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Dear Workforce Newsletter

Posted on September 6, 2011June 29, 2023

Financial Pros Add Expert Witness to Résumés

Sareena Sawhney is a detective of sorts. As a certified forensic financial analyst, she exposes a hidden world of fraud and negligence by analyzing financial transactions and reconstructing accounting records.

Sawhney, a certified fraud examiner, is a director in the litigation and corporate financial advisory services group at Marks Paneth & Shron in New York City. She investigates fraud for corporate and nonprofit organizations and determines if and how fraud took place.



Those findings can be used in litigation. To get a leg up on the witness stand, Sawhney recently took the National Association of Certified Valuation Analysts’ three-day expert witness training, known as Litigation Boot Camp, in Jersey City, New Jersey.

“In cross-examination, there can be some pretty grueling questions,” said Sawhney. “You learn what you can expect to be asked and how to avoid being tricked by the opposing attorney.”

The program not only improved her skills, she says, but also gave her a niche specialization that can be touted in marketing the accounting firm’s services to its clients. The cost ranges from $1,890 to $2,750 per individual, depending on factors such as membership in the NACVA.

Growing interest in expert witness skills training prompted the NACVA to partner last year with the American Institute for Expert Witness Education to offer the institute’s Expert Witness Boot Camp. They offered it to NACVA members and nonmembers, after introducing it on a limited basis in 2007.

Not surprisingly, the training has attracted interest from New York’s robust financial services community. To be sure, not every accountant or analyst will excel in the high-pressure role of an expert witness.

However, some of the city’s small and midsized firms hope that by giving employees specialized preparation for the witness stand in a boot camp, they will make their teams more attractive to clients in a sluggish economy.

Forensic CPA Michael G. Kaplan heads the AIEWE and teaches its boot camp classes in New York and other cities. The founder of Kaplan Forensics in Los Angeles, Kaplan has testified as an expert witness in more than 250 cases.

He says that, after the financial scandals at Enron and Arthur Andersen, “it became clear there was quite a bit of fraud going on in the world of accounting. Those cases raised the stature of forensic accounting, which continues to evolve. And the minute you move into forensics,” he said, “you get called into the courtroom.”

Finbarr O’Connor, a chartered accountant and executive director with Capstone Advisory Group in New York, took the training at management’s suggestion. Though he hasn’t yet had the opportunity to take the witness stand, he said that it “rounded out my skill set.”

O’Connor estimated that once a month someone from the firm, which has about 130 employees, is asked to provide expert testimony. “It certainly makes me more valuable to the firm,” he said.

Some company owners see value in getting expert witness training themselves. Tim Stickley, a partner at the 10-employee forensic accounting firm Boucher Stickley Group, with offices in New York and Mahwah, New Jersey, took a boot camp class in June in San Diego.

He is a CPA who primarily provides data and support for his business partner, David Boucher, when Boucher prepares to testify in court. Now Stickley is planning on stepping out from behind the scenes and taking the stand himself.

“We expect the need to testify will come up more often, and this certainly boosts our marketability,” Stickley said. “I would like some of our employees to go through the training because I expect this part of our business will grow.”

Even if they never expect to take the witness stand, they will become more effective in helping others in the firm prepare for court.

“They understand the questions that will be asked and the thought process that happens when answering,” he said.

Workforce Management Online, September 2011 — Register Now!

Posted on August 16, 2011August 9, 2018

Unemployed Applicants in the Hiring Process: Ensuring Proper Treatment and Documentation

Of course your company’s policy is not designed to discriminate against unemployed job applicants or exclude them from the hiring process, but with a soft job market and today’s regulatory environment, a blanket nondiscrimination policy may not be enough.

The combination of high unemployment rates and increased governmental scrutiny of hiring practices, particularly with regard to unemployed job applicants, means that employers should review their hiring processes with a specific eye on the outcomes for unemployed applicants.

The regulatory environment is trending toward higher levels of scrutiny around hiring practices as they relate to the currently unemployed. In 2011 alone, there have been several legal developments that are indicative of this larger trend.

In February, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission held a hearing “to examine the practice by employers of excluding currently unemployed persons from applicant pools.” The news release stated, “Today’s meeting gave the commission an important opportunity to learn about the emerging practice of excluding unemployed persons from applicant pools.”

Testimony from several experts indicated that the use of current employment status to distinguish candidates in the hiring process was on the rise and was likely to have a disparate, adverse impact on minority and disabled job applicants.

Then in March, Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Georgia) introduced the Fair Employment Act of 2011 that would amend the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect against discrimination on the basis of employment status.

In May, the U.S. Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs requested revisions to the data it collects for compliance evaluations of federal contractors that include a listing of all applicants and hires during the year for each job title and each job group. This revision is part of a broader increase in OFCCP review of employment practices.

In June, a New Jersey law took effect that outlaws job advertisements requiring applicants to be currently employed.

Even if company policy does not prohibit or restrict hiring unemployed candidates and provides for an individualized assessment of each applicant’s employment history, hiring rates of unemployed applicants may nevertheless be lower for legitimate reasons. Further, this might impact hiring rates for minorities or the disabled because these groups have higher unemployment rates.

Suppose unemployed, unsuccessful applicants come forward and charge they were not hired because of their unemployment status. They will likely allege that, despite the absence of any written policy, hiring managers abide by an “unwritten policy” to exclude unemployed applicants. In essence, the “proof” is in the data.

To prepare for this type of claim, a company must first capture the information necessary to respond to such a claim and then assess the data patterns that already exist between applicants’ employment status, hiring outcomes and protected characteristics. Below are four questions, and corresponding actions, that can help your company:

1. How well are noninterview/nonhire reasons documented to establish that unemployment was not a factor?

• Accurate disposition codes are always important, but even more so given the large number of applications received in a soft job market.

Action: Review documentation of hiring process outcomes to ensure that all nonhires are properly identified with an accurate, valid reason.

2. What feedback is provided to unsuccessful applicants?

• The conveyance of accurate, timely and appropriate feedback to unsuccessful applicants can avoid erroneous conclusions and inaccurate allegations.

Action: Provide prompt, valid reasons for nonselection that are consistent with the disposition codes/documentation, especially for unsuccessful applicants who progress through the initial stages of the hiring process.

3. How well are job offers vs. hires (i.e., accepted offers) documented?

• Because the cost of applying over the Internet is low, as the economy improves many job applicants selected by your company will have interviewed for positions or received job offers from other companies. Consequently declined job offers and interview requests are likely to be more prevalent.

Action: Review employment offers and decisions to ensure that all offers and decisions are documented and that declined offers are correctly recorded.

4. Is unemployment status correlated with being hired?

• Although not collected explicitly, this information is likely available from the current/previous employment listing(s) on your company’s employment application.

Action: Given the availability of this information to the EEOC—and others who can review your employment applications—it is prudent to examine, under the direction of legal counsel, the relationship between unemployment status, hiring and protected status in advance of litigation or an EEOC inquiry.

In a time when unemployment and frustration with the job search are high and regulatory agencies are tightening their grip, it is important for companies to fully comprehend the implications of their hiring and record-keeping practices for protected groups. The evidence, both for the plaintiff and for the defense, will lie in the data.

Workforce Management Online, July 2011 — Register Now!

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