1 / 33

Recruit, select and induct staff

Recruit, select and induct staff. With Sue Cameron MBA AFAIM TAE Session 11 Selection and Induction. Agenda Session 11. Complete session 10 from Slide no 24 Revision on Session 10 Drawbacks of the interviews Screening applicants (the 5 stages) Induction Activity on Induction

cutter
Download Presentation

Recruit, select and induct staff

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Recruit, select and induct staff With Sue Cameron MBA AFAIM TAE Session 11 Selection and Induction

  2. Agenda Session 11 • Complete session 10 from Slide no 24 • Revision on Session 10 • Drawbacks of the interviews • Screening applicants (the 5 stages) • Induction • Activity on Induction • Selection criteria's • Selection panels

  3. Revision Q&A • What are the six stages of interviewing? • At what stage should you schedule interviews? • Where and when to conduct an interview? • What sort of preparation do you need to do before an interview? • When the candidate first arrives what would you do and how would you do this?

  4. Revision Q&A • How would you start the main part of the interview? What would you talk about? • What sort of questions would you ask? • What are some questions that you are not allowed to ask and why? • What do you want to find out in the interview? • How would you close the interview?

  5. Revision Q&A • What is the next step? • What would you tell each candidate? • What is a running order? • After closing the interview what do you do next and when? • After this stage what do you do?

  6. The drawbacks of Interviews • As we all have our own biases and prejudices, which affects our screening and selection skills we have to be aware of this • If we hear what we want to hear and have a positive attitude towards the candidate this is called the halo affect • However on the other hand it is negative this is called the ‘horns affect’

  7. The drawbacks of interviews • Both of these attitudes can affect your selection decision in a non objective way • You should be assessing their skills, attributes and characteristics • Also don’t make up your mind within the first few minutes of the interview as sometimes first impressions can be wrong

  8. The drawbacks of interviews • You must ask the candidates all the same questions relating to the job requirements • That is way you must be prepared for the interviews and have a set list of questions • ‘Getting the right approach’ read last paragraph on page 349

  9. The 5 Screening Stages Screening is checking on people to sort out who you want to interview • In the advertisement (Ad) • Once you have all applications screen them based on their resumes • Then do a short telephone interview to screen out any others • The interview • Check out referees

  10. Induction • Having spent time and money in recruiting a new employee, we want to do everything possible to ensure they ’feel at home’ an od begin contributing as soon as possible • This is the role of induction • Starting employees off ‘on the right foot’ helps them become a valuable contributor to the organisation

  11. Induction • Not only the new employee is on probation or a trail basis, so are the employers (organisation) • New employees will decide in the first few weeks whether the job and the organisation is right for them • It’s important to arrange for the induction to be carried out properly to help the new employee fit in

  12. What should induction cover? • There are 2 parts of an induction program • An introduction to the overall organisation • Introduction to their department or area of work

  13. Information to include in Induction • Introduction to the organisation (page 361) • General background information • Lines of communication • General industry information • Working environment , rules and work practices • Awards, agreements, superannuation etc

  14. Information to include in Induction • Pay systems, deductions, saving opportunities • Sources of advice and assistance • Organisation’s policies on smoking, alcohol, holidays, sickness and being late • A tour of the organisation • An overview of the grievance procedure etc

  15. Information to include in Induction • Introduction to the department • Assigning the new employee a physical work space or work station • Health and safety requirements • Hours of work, beaks and finishing time

  16. Information to include in Induction • Time-keeping and recording procedures • Security systems (e.g. fire drills, emergency procedures • Amenities, toilets, café or staff-room, car park • Tour of department , the work layout and new colleagues

  17. Setting up an induction program • A suggestion for the assessment question on creating a detailed induction program is to do it as a Induction Timetable • Remember to cover at least the following items as per the assessment Part 2 • It might look something like this • Remember it is based on your job description you submitted for Assessment Part 1

  18. Example of an Induction Program

  19. Induction Tips and Example • On e-learning there is now a handout on Induction tips (if sufficient time we shall go through it) • Also on e-learning there is copy of the Sydney Opera House policy on Induction (however it is now out of date as we have a new CEO)

  20. Selection Criteria • Selection criteria are statements that describe the qualifications, knowledge, skills, abilities and experience that are required in a job • When asked to respond to selection criteria, you are being asked to describe how you meet the requirements of the job, providing examples

  21. Selection Criteria Types of criteria • The kind of responses you will write for selection criteria will depend on the kind of job you are applying for. • Different employers will ask different kinds of questions • Usually advertised as Essential and Desirable • An example is on e-learning

  22. Selection Criteria • Some employers will focus on your qualifications or your work skills • Others will be based on your experience • You will be asked how you have responded to specific situations • For example, you may be asked if you have attained a specific qualification or if you have a licence for a certain kind of vehicle

  23. Selection Criteria • You could be asked to explain how you have met deadlines and prioritised tasks • You might be asked how you have dealt with difficult people, or how you have shown leadership Reference: Australian Government Job Access Website (November 2012) http://jobaccess.gov.au/Jobseekers/Getting_work/How_to_apply_for_a_job/How_to_write_selection_criteria/Pages/home.aspx

  24. Selection Criteria • Some common examples of selection criteria include: • demonstrated capacity to communicate effectively • good organisational and administrative skills • proven ability to work as part of a team • well developed customer service skills • proven ability to manage projects

  25. Selection Criteria What is the STAR model? • The STAR model is one way of presenting information against selection criteria • For each criterion think about the following and use these points to form sentences: • Situation - Set the context by describing the circumstance where you used the skills or qualities and gained the experience

  26. Selection Criteria • Task - What was your role? • Actions - What did you do and how did you do it? • Results - What did you achieve? What was the end result and how does it relate to the job you are applying for Video on Interview Techniques - STAR Method (6 mins) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nN7Q7DrI6Q&feature=related

  27. Selection Panels • Many managers find themselves part of a panel of interviewers where two of more people are in the selection interview and decision • Panel interviews require pre-planning to: • determine who will chair the interview

  28. Selection Panels • determine the procedure by which each panel member will ask questions • Agree on the ranking criteria for candidates against the personnel specification Video on How to Handle a Panel Interview : Job Interview Tips http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBj3n3p2r0U

  29. Group Interviews • These involve several applicants being interviewed together as a group by one or more interviewers • This type of interview usually takes the form of the applicants interacting with each other, as well as the interviewers

  30. Group Interviews • This technique is often required when the personnel specification requires ‘people skills’ such as good communication, tact, poise, leadership and the ability to cope with stressful situations • Consider assigning the role of a recorder to one person and be well prepared

  31. Interview videos • Interview Dos and don’ts http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=S1ucmfPOBV8&feature=endscreen • How to Conduct A Job Interview - Conducting Interviews – Vook http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3fAX5tA5iQ Funny Example of a Bad Interview http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWh_MreYwgc • Monty Python Silly Job Interview Sketch (4.07 mins) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_bsMGsBjWc&feature=endscreen&NR=1

  32. Screening & Selection Videos • Pre-Screening Phone Call: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLjYKvuHNzM • Top 3 Phone Interview Questions Even a Monkey Should Know! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_GJEVIaEk7k&feature=related • Pre-screening using video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6D2riPudUY • Selecting the Right people (on e-learning) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RqkcnZVzW1Q

  33. Next Session 12 • Revision Q&A • Conditions of Employment • Performance reviews for new members

More Related