Employer Tips
In today's candidate driven market, it is crucial that the employer is
as prepared for the hiring process as is the candidate. Below we
have added some important information to help you, the hiring
manager, succeed in selecting the best and brightest talent for your
company. Feel free to contact us with any questions or for
additional information.
Post Jobs -- How to post jobs in Omaninfo Job Center
To be able to post your Job opening in Omaninfo Job Center, You will need to register first
Once you register, you will need to become a Company. Simply click on Become a Company link. This will require you to put some extra details about your organization
Once you become a company, A link will appear to you telling you to Post a New Job.
Simply enter the Job Name and Job Reference, then choose from the list of skills available that suite your Job. Also you will be provided with a section to include a Job Description. HTML format is accepted in this field if you wish to.
Suitable candidates for you Job will automatcaly be informed if their skills matches your job requirements.
Tip #1 -- What
Candidates are looking for in a new Company
What will motivate them towards your company if
they have two offers in their hands for the same amount of
money?
- Financial stability of your company
- Geographical location
- Working environment
- Challenge
- Reputation of the company
- Chemistry of co-workers
- Opportunity to learn
- Opportunity to grow
- Flexibility
- Recognition
- Excitement
- Technology
- Status
- Workplace diversity
- Work ٌ Life balance ( * NEW FOR 1999*
)
Tip
#2 -- Nine Pitfalls of
Employment Interviews
The interviewing process can be a very unnerving
situation for many hiring managers. In fact, when surveyed, over 90%
of people indicate they hate to interview. It is no wonder why the
interview itself yields only a 14% accuracy rate.
Is your situation hopeless ... doomed to an 86%
failure rate? It can be, or you can improve your odds by avoiding
nine pitfalls.
Consider these common mistakes:
-
Personal attitudes, mental alertness , and
biases. Your personal mindset plays an integral part in the
success of any interview. Every time you conduct an interview, you
must be alert and attentive to the applicant. Yes, we all have our
pre-dispositions. However, if you are biased against a person for
any reason ... you miss out on a potential employee that could
impact your company positively. Keep your mind open; it creates a
world of possibilities.
-
Decisions made too
slowly/quickly. Ever been rushed into making a decision and
regretted it later? How about the great applicant that got away
because the decision making process took too long? There is
absolutely no magic when it comes to timing your decisions. Up
front, advise each candidate the process that they will go
through. Clarify the length of time it will take to make a hiring
decision. The applicant will let you know if that time frame works
for them ... and it will save you a lot of headaches.
-
Applicant data misinterpreted. Ever
been surprised when the person who shows up for work is not the
same person you interviewed? What happened? You may have
misinterpreted the information they gave you, in part because of
factors No.1 and No. 2. You have to listen to each statement the
applicant says. Avoid placing your interpretation on it. Record
information factually and you will stop hearing what you want to
hear. Make sure your pre-employment tests are yielding the results
you want and unmask the real person, not just the interview
person."
-
Negative information sought too
readily. Knowing that hiring mistakes have been made in the
past, perhaps by you, you want to avoid the same mistake again.
Yet, mistakes are repeated over and over. Why? People, too
quickly, look for negatives about a candidate so that the
applicant can be eliminated from consideration. No applicant is a
perfect "10". They all come with blemishes. You must look for
positives and weigh them against the negatives.
-
Pressure to fill position which affects
judgment. You have a major project to complete ... The current
employee is about to leave; you are pressed to hire someone so
that the current person can train the new one ... The boss is
demanding you to take action ... You're tired of interviewing so
many candidates.
All these business pressures can lead to
hiring mistakes. Everyone is placed in a pressure cooker situation
in their jobs. However, would you go out on a blind date and after
15 minutes propose marriage? Yet, hiring managers often decide to
hire a person and enter into Marriage this quickly. Succumbing to
pressure has its costs.
-
Don't look for patterns and a main
theme. Statistically, over 80% of employment terminations are
a result of behavioral and value mismatches. However, the only
patterns that many hiring managers look for, if they look for them
at all, are work experience patterns. All too often, managers
neglect to compare the patterns that exist in the resume to the
patterns that develop during the behavioral interview. Everyone
has at least one main theme and clear behavioral patterns in their
life.
Do you use a validated assessment tool to
verify your expectations against what the applicant can't
articulate?
-
Interviewer talks too much. The old
80-20 rule clearly applies here. The more the interviewer talks
the less the interviewer learns. You can never learn anything
while you are talking. Ask a question, then listen. You will be
amazed what you will actually learn.
-
Jumping to conclusions and failing to see
candidates as having strengths and weaknesses. True story. One
Vice President of a major company, while interviewing, quickly
jumped to a hiring decision ... would the applicant play
basketball and softball on the company's team? Once you have
decided to hire the person mentally, nothing negative that the
person says afterwards will matter. The result - another hiring
mistake.
-
Telegraphing correct responses expected by
the way you ask questions. Ever been asked, "Can you work
overtime or travel?" (While the interviewer is asking this
question, their head is nodding up and down.) The logical
response, (if the applicant wants the job) will be, "Of course, I
can work overtime and travel. No problem." You, the interviewer,
have learned nothing. You have not discovered the true answer. The
applicant has given you exactly what you want to hear. Avoid
closed ended questions.
Tip #3 Cost per
Hire (figuring your actual cost to hire an employee)
Take a look at your department budget of last
year and add the following costs/expenses:
| Advertising |
__________________ |
| Agency Fees |
+_________________ |
| Job Fairs |
+_________________ |
| Internal referral bonuses |
+_________________ |
| College recruiter |
+_________________ |
| Candidate travel reimbursement |
+_________________ |
| Special projects i.e.; billboards,
etc. |
+_________________ |
| Testing costs |
+_________________ |
| Relocation |
+_________________ |
| Credential verification |
+_________________ |
| Temp. fill pending hire |
+_________________ |
| Direct cost of company recruiting Staff;
salaries, space, overhead |
+_________________ |
|
=_________________ |
Total divide by the total number of people hired
last year is your Cost per Hire.
Tip
#4 -- Counter-Offer
Counter Measures
In today's market, it is not uncommon for
candidates to receive several offers at once. One of which will be
the dreaded counter offer by the candidates current company. If this
happens, your time, our time and the candidates time is all lost.
It's a lose-lose situation, and therefore one that you and I need to
work together on to prevent.
It is important for you to gain as much info and
knowledge of the candidate, with our help, as you possible can. I
will discuss in great detail the subject of counter-offer with the
candidate and measures to overcome that counter-offer. By you
supplying me with ALL the info. I request from you and keeping
communication open between you and I during interviewing, and during
the offer preparation stages, we can work together to obtain a
successful offer acceptance.
|