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CS3.1.1 Profiling, Benchmarking and Selecting Effective Project Managers through the use of Psychometric Testing Gerard

CS3.1.1 Profiling, Benchmarking and Selecting Effective Project Managers through the use of Psychometric Testing Gerard Ferrara. TUESDAY 9 OCTOBER, 2007 Project Management - Setting the Standard Australian Institute of Project Management National Conference 2007

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CS3.1.1 Profiling, Benchmarking and Selecting Effective Project Managers through the use of Psychometric Testing Gerard

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  1. CS3.1.1 Profiling, Benchmarking and Selecting Effective Project Managers through the use of Psychometric Testing Gerard Ferrara TUESDAY 9 OCTOBER, 2007 Project Management - Setting the Standard Australian Institute of Project Management National Conference 2007 Hobart Tasmania October 7 – 10, 2007

  2. Selecting Effective Project MangersThrough The Use Of Psychometric TestingAIPM Conference 2007Presenter: Gerard Ferrara, Psychologist

  3. Presentation Outline • Background to PM testing study • Psychometric tests • Profiling PMs • Benchmarking PMs • Selecting PMs

  4. Background to psychometric testing PMs • Approached by a major recruiter of Project Directors and Project Managers who wanted to select and place high quality people in a range of key PM roles across Australia and overseas • Desire to improve their selection process and use “best practice” methods • Agreed that some form of objective testing of applicants should be part of the process

  5. Psychometric tests – current state of play • Increasingly being used in the selection and development of employees across Australia and the world • The internet and online testing have resulted in a dramatic increase in the use of testing • Most testing poorly conducted • Great deal of misunderstanding, confusion, mystery, suspicion, scepticism and fear associated with psychometric testing

  6. Research supporting the use of tests in selection • Meta-analysis of 85 years of research in personnel selection • Found that the 2 most valuable and valid approaches to predicting future job performance were: • The use of General Mental Ability (GMA) and integrity / conscientiousness testing (.65) • The use of GMA testing and a structured interview (.63) • Schmidt and Hunter (1998) Psychological Bulletin, American Psychological Association

  7. Performance TypicalBehaviour Types of tests Ability Skills Temperament / Personality (behavioural style) Motivation (interests / values)

  8. Selection of tests used to assess PMs • Combination of Verbal, Numerical and Abstract Reasoning to measure General Mental Ability (GMA). • ACER Select and TAR - “Professional” level of difficulty • Personality test to measure key personality traits associated with managerial performance • Total testing time approx. 1 hour 45 minutes.

  9. Work Personality Index The WPI measures 17 personality traits that research has shown are related to work performance. These are: Notes: p.4

  10. PM Testing Process • Initial ability and personality profiling of the ideal PM • 2. Benchmarking and validating of ability and personality scores of ideal PM profile • 3. Confirmed ability and personality PM profile • Testing PM candidates against the PM profile • Review results and next steps

  11. Ideal range of scores Actual scores compared with ideal WPI

  12. Test results – Ability (ACER Select and TAR) • Verbal reasoning – 57% mean percentile rank • Numerical reasoning – 54% mean percentile rank • Abstract reasoning – 42% mean percentile rank • Average reasoning score – 51% mean percentile rank

  13. PM mean reasoning test results, compared to the Australian population A N V

  14. Test results – (WPI) Personality • Mean score Mode score • Ambition 7 8 • Flexibility 7 6 • Rule Following 6 5 • Dependability 7 8 • Concern for others 5 6 • Teamwork 8 9 • Self-control 7 9 • Stress tolerance 7 8 • Analytical thinking 5 5 Sten scores – out of 10

  15. Thank you

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