By: Dr. John Sullivan
Originally published via the Electronic Recruiting Exchange
(www.erexchange.com) on October 22, 1999. To receive new
articles via e-mail as they are published please visit the
Electronic Recruiting Exchange website and register as a
new member, then subscribe to ER Daily.
Note - Let me be clear, the single most important thing
you can do to improve ANY staffing function is to measure
and reward the quality/performance of the people you hire.
Everything else pales by comparison in changing the way
you recruit!
Most employment managers measure success in the wrong way.
Looking at the cost of a hire, the number or even the speed
of the hire is at best misleading and at worst an inaccurate
measure of hiring success. The primary (or perhaps sole)
measure of hiring success should be the quality/performance
of the hire. Unfortunately many employment managers can't
seem to figure out how to measure the quality of a hire.
So here it is...The definitive list of possible ways to
measure the quality of any hire. Most of the measures fall
into 5 categories:
Output and performance of the hire
Subjective assessment by managers and others
% of qualifications met
Compensation and promotional rewards given the hire
Retention rates of top performers
Of course when you are measuring the quality of hire you
do not need to use all of these measures. What I do recommend
is that you "triangulate" and get 3 - 5 independent
assessments to ensure initial accuracy. Firms usually start
with a longer list (6 - 10) and pare it down based on discussions
with managers and the CFO. Over time usually no more than
5 measures (that are combined into a single index based
on cost, accuracy, ease of assessment, and "face validity")
need to be used.
A LIST OF POSSIBLE QUALITY OF HIRE MEASURES
As a general rule the more powerful measures are listed
first in each section. Results and output measures are always
superior to other assessments.
Immediate Measures (on day of hire)
Did the actual hire's resume rank in the to 25% (did it
receive an A or A+) when the initial resumes were assessed/ranked?
% of qualifications on final job description that this candidate
met (including number of years of experience and education
the hire has compared to the req. and other recent hires).
When the initial finalist for the job were forced ranked
after interviews but prior to an offer, what rank was the
actual hire among those finalists?
Did the actual hire also get offers from other top ranked
recruiting competitors? (asked on first day)
Managers prediction of the quality of hire (based on a subjective
comparison against other recent hires). What percentile
do they forecast their performance level to be at?
Manager forced ranking comparison of this candidate compared
to other recent hires.
Manager satisfaction with the hiring process (responsiveness,
cost, time, etc.).
Surveys of new hire satisfaction on how they were treated
during the hiring process by the recruiter, this year compared
to last year.
Surveys of new hire satisfaction on how they were treated
during the hiring process by the hiring manager, this year
compared to last year.
Time from initial contact about this job to hire date.
Satisfaction of the other finalists (that were not selected)
with the hiring process.
Intermediate Measures (up to 6 months)
Output, production (quality and quantity) compared to other
recent hires and the all employee average after 1 month
and at 6 months (Ex. Productivity, output, sales volume,
% of projects completed, customer satisfaction scores, etc.).
Manager subjective assessment of performance of the hire
after 1 month and at 6 months.
Team and co-worker subjective assessment of performance
of the hire after 1 month and at 6 months.
Time to productivity (# of days until the minimum expected
output level is reached for a new hire).
How well new hires do on any required testing, certifications
or training, this year compared to last.
Satisfaction of the new hire after 1 month.
Longer Term Assessment (over 1 year)
Output and results (quality and quantity) compared to other
recent hires and the all employee average after one year
(Ex. Productivity, output, sales volume, % of projects completed,
customer satisfaction scores etc.).
Manager assessment of performance of the hire at their 1
yr. performance evaluation.
Year end surveys of all hiring managers on satisfaction
with the recruiting process this year, compared to last
year.
Retention - The % of above average performers that are still
with the firm (exclude terminations) after 1 year (this
year compared to last be sure to adjust for any "inflation"
in overall industry retention rates).
Customer 360 feedback or complaints, satisfaction or other
outside assessment.
Co-worker and team 360 (or forced ranking) of new hires
(this year compared to last).
Managers' forced ranking of this hire compared to others
in the same job.
Average performance appraisal (or forced ranking score)
of this year's hires vs. last year's hires.
% stock grants compared to other recent hires and all employees.
Number and $ value of any "spot" and year end
bonus (as a % of salary) compared to other hires and all
employees.
More nominations/awards compared to other hires and all
employees.
More salary increases compared to other hires and all employees.
The number of months until they are promoted or receive
a grade increase (with a lower number being better) compared
to other hires and all employees.
More lateral transfers compared to other hires and all employees.
Patents/Ideas compared to other hires and all employees.
Cost of their salary - How do the starting salaries (adjusted
for inflation) for this year's hires compare to last years
for employees rated at the same level of performance.
Over-all Assessment of the Quality of our Workforce
Revenue per employee compared to our direct competitors
as a "mirror" of the quality of your people.
Dollar of profit per dollar spent on people costs (this
year to last and compared to our direct competitors).
Survey of local recruiters and executive search professionals
on how we rank in quality of recruiting and hires (survey
conducted by HR advertising firms or market research firms).
Conclusion
Now that you know the quality of your hires the next steps
are to identify:
The source they came from (so you can drop the "useless"
ones).
The factors in the selection process that gave them high
and low scores (so that you can drop the measures that don't
predict success).
The recruiters/managers/employees that found them (so you
can reward them as well as to use them again).
Change the reward system for managers and recruiters so
that the quality of the hire is the main focus.
Don't be surprised when many of the traditional things
that you used to recruit (job fairs, newspaper ads) and
screen (references and interviews) don't add much value.
Now drop all of those "silly" cost of hire metrics,
stop feeling good when you "fill req's" with "butts
in chairs" and focus on bringing in better people!
Article Source: work911.com