Is At-Home Pre-Employment Testing as Effective as On-Site Testing?

David Daly of DeGarmo Group will be facilitating a session titled “Is At-Home Pre-Employment Testing as Effective as On-Site Testing?” as part of HR.com’s Online Sourcing and Staffing conference on April 19th, at 12:30pm ET. The session description and registration information follows below.

The use of web-based, at-home applicant assessment is not just on the rise, it is the new norm. In fact, many clients will not even consider tests that do not offer at-home options, because at-home testing provides a faster, more convenient, and more cost-effective process. Ultimately, the question remains: is at-home testing still a valid predictor of valuable outcomes like turnover and job performance? In this session, we will explore the true meaning of test validity, and how the validity of a test is determined. Additionally, we will discuss recent research conducted by the DeGarmo Group regarding the validity of pre-employment assessments administered exclusively at-home.

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Filtering Applicants via Pre-employment Assessment & Interview Technology

Adam Bradshaw of DeGarmo Group will be facilitating a session titled “Filtering Applicants via Pre-employment Assessment & Interview Technology” as part of HR.com’s Online Sourcing and Staffing conference on April 18th at 12:30 ET. Session overview and registration information is provided below.

How can we bring in top-tier talent efficiently, while aligning the talent acquisition process with organizational goals? During this session we’ll walk through some examples of how to leverage web-based technology to decrease time-to-hire, bring in top-tier talent, establish how to gate candidates to occupations, and hire for leadership potential. Additionally, we’ll touch base with what to keep in mind to align the process with the goals of your organization. Based on the information provided in this session, you’ll be better equipped to ensure your organization is properly leveraging web-based technology during the talent acquisition process enabling you to bring in top-tier candidates!

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Customizing Personality Assessment to Predict Job Success and Leadership Potential

DeGarmo Group will be sponsoring an HR.com webcast titled Customizing Personality Assessment to Predict Job Success and Leadership Potential facilitated by Anthony Adorno on March 8th, from 1pm-2pm ET.

The session is going to focus on innovations in the use of personality assessment. As part of the session, we’ll talk about how to analyze and understand the different personality requirements of jobs. Next, we’ll discuss how to customize personality assessment as part of the talent acquisition process for different occupations, as well as to forecast leadership potential.

Register Now

 

Introducing the DPI and the End of Ordinary Personality Assessment

DeGarmo Group will be hosting a webcast titled “Introducing the DPI and the End of Ordinary Personality Assessment“. The session will be held on March 15th, 2012 from 1:00 – 2:00 pm ET.

Learn about how DeGarmo Group has leveraged technology to advance the science of personality assessment with the DeGarmo Personality Inventory (DPI) by enabling the creation of custom profiles for every occupation. During the session we’ll talk about how job analysis drives the custom profile development process, and how organizations can profile candidates against multiple occupations at once. Finally, we’ll review how organizations can forecast leadership potential for every candidate who completes the DPI as well.

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DeGarmo Group unveils innovative assessment for custom personality profiling and dynamic interview generation: DeGarmo Personality Inventory (DPI)

Bloomington, IL – DeGarmo Group, a global provider of talent acquisition solutions, today announced the release of the DeGarmo Personality Inventory (DPI). The DPI advances the science of personality assessment by enabling organizations to create and use custom personality profiles for every occupation, and supports dynamic interview production based on assessment data.

Talent acquisition professionals understand that the goal of the hiring process is to find candidates who best align with the unique demands and requirements of a specific job. To that end, DeGarmo Group offers occupation-specific profiling for the DPI at no additional cost. The solution leverages two primary options for creating custom profiles. Organizations can quickly and efficiently collect survey data from SMEs using the DeGarmo Personality Requirements Form (DPRF), or they can use standard occupation data from the US Department of Labor’s O*NET database. Continue reading

The Uniqueness Effect

Job interviews are the age-old, strategy based, “survival of the fittest” in the business world. Now more than ever, people are entering the job market with university degrees, which can often make most job applicants appear to be the same. Because of this, many applicants seek to distinguish themselves by providing unique answers to interview questions.

The important question, however, is whether or not it is beneficial (or even appropriate) to “stand out from the crowd” in a job interview? Do the conventional or unconventional applicants receive job offers?  Continue reading

Vocational Interests: An Alternate Approach for Personnel Selection

Personality assessments are often used to help identify the applicants who are likely to succeed in a perspective job.  However, they are not the only solution available to help select an applicant that will be successful in the available position. Vocational interests may also serve as strong predictors of a job applicant’s future job performance, job knowledge, and intentions to continue with an organization.  Continue reading

Leveraging Work Value Alignment to Drive Patient Satisfaction in Healthcare

DeGarmo Group recently published a whitepaper relating to talent acquisition in the healthcare industry.

“Leveraging Work Value Alignment to Drive Patient Satisfaction in Healthcare” is a report on the use of talent acquisition strategies to identify top-tier candidates for positions in healtcare settings.

To request a copy of the paper, please click here.

DeGarmo Group also will be hosting an informative webcast session on this topic on Tuesday, November 15th at 11am CT. To register for this session, simply follow this link:

https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/438797449

How Can Organizational Citizenship Behavior Influence Selection Decisions?

Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) is thought to be one of the many factors that influence managers as they make selection decisions based upon job interviews. OCB is the behavior of an employee which may not be a part of the job role, but supports the work environment at large by supporting fellow employees and the organization as a whole. Applicants who display OCB during job interviews are less likely to voluntarily quit, are likely to be more productive, and are likely to be more efficient than their coworkers.  Questions that attempt to gauge OCB can be included in the job interview to help with selection decisions.  Continue reading

Reducing Employee Turnover in Front-Line Jobs

DeGarmo Group announced today that Anthony Adorno will be facilitating an HR.com webcast titled “Reducing Employee Turnover in Front-Line Jobs“. The session will be held on October 20th, 2011 from 1:00 – 2:00 pm ET. Provided below is a description of the session, as well as registration information.

 

 Session Overview

Ever hire an employee with all the right skills for the job, only to watch that person walk out the door for good three weeks later? Where did you go wrong? What did you miss?

Most organizations often overlook the importance of measuring an applicant’s work tolerance as part of the talent acquisition process. Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter if the applicant has the skills to do the work if they can’t tolerate the demands of the job!  Continue reading

Predicting Turnover and Performance

As the poor economy and the associated decrease in employee raises and bonuses make it more difficult to retain high-performing employees, organizations need to make pre-hire determinations of which candidates are most likely to stay with the organization. Finding indicators for both performance and turnover enables organizations to use fewer resources when selecting applicants. But, based on the idea that past behavior is the best indicator of future behavior, what are the most useful predictors for high performance and low turnover?

Pre-hire Predictors

Are pre-hire predictors of turnover also effective indicators of work performance?

Several indicators, such as biodata (biographical data) and pre-hire attitudes, have been explored for the purpose of answering that very question. In particular, three types of information are especially strong indicators of job performance and turnover.

  • Biodata- predictors that represent pre-hire embeddedness in the organization (employee referral; number of friends and family) and habitual commitment (tenure in prior job; number of jobs in last five years)
  • Pre-hire attitudes- includes the applicant’s self-confidence and confidence with decisions, as well as the applicant’s desire for a job and pre-hire intent to quit
  • Personality traits- Conscientiousness (being dependable and reliable) and Emotional Stability (ex. Individuals who have low emotional stability tend to have negative perceptions of themselves and their environment.)

Turnover Decisions and Job Performance

Some notable indicators of which employees are likely to remain working for a company six months after hire include: pre-hire embeddedness, habitual commitment, personal confidence, motivation for employment, conscientiousness, and emotional stability. Further, beyond the period of six months post hire, up to two years later, the remaining two indicators for voluntary, avoidable turnover are conscientiousness and emotional stability.

The number of jobs held over the previous five years was a better indicator of early turnover, whereas tenure on the most recent job was more predictive of early job performance.

The good news is that most turnover decisions are “functional,” meaning that those employees who tend to stay in an organization tend to be the better performers.

Practical Implications

Learning how to do the job (conscientiousness), meeting the “right” people from whom to learn about the organization (embeddeness), and figuring out the power structure of the firm and the organization’s goals and values are important to employee success and lead to lower turnover during the early stages of an employee’s adjustment to an organization.

While so many of the factors listed above serve as suitable indicators for high performance and low voluntary, avoidable turnover, hiring managers should mainly consider them when hiring for a short-term or seasonal position, due to the fact that most of the indicators are useful for six months post-hire.

Ultimately, personality (conscientiousness and emotional stability) is a useful indicator of voluntary, avoidable turnover up to two years after hire. Further, a personality assessment enhances the usefulness of biodata when the two are used together. Hiring managers should note that with the exception of personality, the importance of all other predictors weakens over time.

Interpretation by:

Kandace Waddy

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Barrick, M. R., & Zimmerman, R. D. (2009). Hiring for retention and performance. Human Resource Management, 48(2), 183-206.

Rapport-Building in Structured Interviews

Structured interviews have long been considered valuable tools for gathering information about job applicants. Although they are comprised of structured questions, these interviews also include an initial rapport-building stage, during which the interviewer briefly engages in small-talk with the applicant.

Three types of information are intuitively gathered by the interviewer in this initial rapport-building stage:

  • Competence – How competent does the applicant appear to be initially?
  • Affect – How likable is the applicant?
  • Similarity – How similar is the applicant to the interviewer?

Each of these three types of information impact subsequent interview scores and outcomes (e.g., job offers). Initial impressions of affect and similarity are irrelevant to job performance and may have a biasing effect on interview scores. However, initial impressions of competence formed during the rapport-building stage may contain job-relevant information.

Rapport-Building Findings

The interviewer’s initial impressions of affect and similarity did impact interview scores and the likeliness of a job offer. Furthermore, initial impressions of the applicant’s competence influenced interview scores and the likelihood of receiving a job offer above and beyond initial impressions of affect and similarity. Overall, better initial impression ratings led to higher interview scores and greater likelihood of receiving a job offer.

Practical Implications

 

Initial competence ratings may be useful pieces of information when made early in the selection process, such as during career fair recruiting or during a screening interview. These intuitive impressions of the applicant’s competence are more suitable as a “select-out”, rather than a “select-in”, decision aid.

Secondly, initial competence ratings may prove useful for jobs that require a lot of brief, meet-and-greet interactions with a variety of people. In this case, the applicant’s ability to interact effectively during the rapport-building stage of the interview may lend credit to the applicant’s social competence at handling similar social interactions on the job. As a way to capitalize on initial competence ratings, the DeGarmo Group would suggest implementing a structured scoring system that will guide interviewers in rating this interpersonal skill.

Finally, organizations should be cautious about eliminating the initial rapport-building stage altogether from the structured interview for two reasons:

  • Interviewers tend to naturally form initial impressions of applicants no matter what.
  • The initial rapport-building stage can increase the applicant’s satisfaction with the interview and can function as an opportunity to further recruit the applicant.

Interpretation by:

Mackenzi Harmon

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Barrick, M.R., Swider, B.W., & Stewart, G.L. (2010). Initial evaluations in the interview: Relationships with subsequent interviewer evaluations and employment offers. Journal of Applied Psychology, 95(6), 1163-1172.

How Challenging Tasks Contribute to Promotion Decisions

Understanding why certain employees are promoted is critical at both an individual and organizational level. At the individual level, it is important to understand what factors affect career advancement. At an organizational level, a thorough understanding of what factors lead to employee success in a higher position is imperative for succession planning and managing employees. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of the various factors that contribute to promotion can be beneficial at both the individual and organizational level. Continue reading

DeGarmo Group Client Receives J.D. Power 2011 Customer Service Champion Award

Bloomington, IL – DeGarmo Group (www.degarmogroup.com), is  proud to report that US Cellular (www.uscellular.com) was recognized as a J.D. Power 2011 Customer Service Champion—one of only 40 companies to have earned this distinction this year.

US Cellular uses DeGarmo Group’s talent acquisition systems to select employees who work in their front-line, customer-facing roles such as Customer Service Representatives and Retail Sales Associates, among others.

“We’re happy to see US Cellular recognized with such a prestigious award. We’ve worked very closely with their Talent Acquisition team over the years to ensure that our assessment solutions help to select the best people to fill those critical front-line positions” stated Anthony Adorno, Chief Operating Officer for DeGarmo Group.

To qualify for inclusion on this elite list, companies must not only excel within their own industries, but also must stand out among leading brands in 20 major industries evaluated by J.D. Power. Five key customer “touch points” measured included people, presentation, process, product and price.

To identify the J.D. Power 2011 Customer Service Champions, J.D. Power evaluated more than 800 brands. Companies were identified based on customer feedback, opinions, and perceptions gathered primarily from J.D. Power’s syndicated research as well as additional, supplemental research. This group of 40 represents the highest-performing companies that deliver service excellence to U.S. customers—both within their respective industries and across all industries measured.

According to Alan D. Ferber, executive vice president of operations for U.S. Cellular, “We are especially honored to be named a Customer Service Champion because it’s based on the opinion of our customers. They deserve excellent customer service, and we will continue to work hard to deliver it.”

About DeGarmo Group

DeGarmo Group is a leading provider of web-based assessment and training services to support talent acquisition and employee development processes. We employ a staff with expertise in Industrial and Organizational psychology that regularly contributes to, and draws upon, the latest scientific research to deliver innovative and compelling solutions for our clients.

About U.S. Cellular

U.S. Cellular is committed to fixing wireless one project at a time and recently unveiled The Belief Project, an array of industry-leading innovations designed to elevate the customer experience. The Chicago-based carrier provides the best cell phone service in the country according to survey results released by Consumer Reports, which found that wireless customers are more satisfied with U.S. Cellular than every other major wireless company. U.S. Cellular has the highest call quality and network satisfaction of any national carrier and was also named one of Forbes Magazine’s 2010 “Most Trustworthy Companies.” The Belief Project complements U.S. Cellular’s growing catalog of cutting-edge phones that are all backed by its high-speed nationwide network.

DeGarmo Group CRO to Speak at Educational Outreach Session

On Wednesday, April 13, 2011, John Binning, Chief Research Officer at DeGarmo Group, will participate in a pre-conference Educational Outreach program at the annual conference of the Society for Industrial/Organizational Psychology in Chicago, IL. Dr. Binning will be part of a panel of presenters explaining various aspects of Industrial/Organizational Psychology. He will speak specifically on “The Nuts and Bolts of Selection.” His slide presentation is available upon request.

The event information is provided below for anyone interested in attending.

The Educational Outreach (THEO) Program:  An Introduction to I/O Psychology
Wednesday, April 13, 201; 8 a.m. to 12 noon
Hilton Chicago (720 S. Michigan) – Joliet Room

Background: In an attempt to increase the awareness of I/O psychology in the general psychology curriculum, chairs from multiple committees within the Society of Industrial/Organizational Psychology are offering a 4-hour, half-day pre-conference to psychology teachers in the Chicago area free-of-charge.

Mission:  The goal is to introduce the field and/or teach basic principles of I/O psychology to local psychology educators (particularly those constituents who come from high schools or colleges where there are currently no I/O programs, teachers, or classes). This inaugural event will be held at this and future year’s SIOP conferences.

Logistics: During the course of four hours, approximately 6-7 speakers will briefly expose attendees to the field of I/O psychology and talk in general about the field and showcase some of the speakers’ interests.  The selection of speakers will come from previous SIOP teaching award recipients and other known effective speakers.

Costs:  It is free of charge to register and attend this event.

Why Attend? Data suggests that I/O psychology is one of the fastest-growing professions in the U.S., that most Americans spend more of their waking hours at work than anywhere else, and that SIOP is one of the largest divisions of the American Psychological Association.  This is a chance for you to learn about the field and be able to share it with your colleagues and students.

Interested individuals can register for this event at:  http://www.siop.org/theo/register.aspx.

Fit Index System Case Study at National Call Center Management and Collection Agency

FIS-LogosmallCASE STUDY 

The following is a case study examination of the Customer Serivce and Collections Fit Index assessments based on employee turnover data supplied by a large client organization.

 

The Company

 The company is one of the largest providers of call center management and collection agency services in the United States.

The Challenge

The project was organized to study the effectiveness of DeGarmo Group’s assessment solutions across locations and lines of business at the client organization.  The company suffered from higher than acceptable rates of voluntary employee turnover.

Client leadership was particularly interested in the impact of the solutions across locations that have a more substantial impact on the business operation. To that end, DeGarmo Group collected data using an experimental design which allowed for a direct comparison of the accuracy of employment decisions with and without assessment information.

Assessment Strategy

DeGarmo Group implemented the Customer Service Fit Index (CSFI) and Collections Fit Index (CFI) assessments to identify and screen out turnover-prone job applicants during the talent acquisition process.

In contrast to typical pre-employment assessments that measure job skills, the Fit Index System® focuses on job-related applicant differences in work tolerance and personality characteristics.

Study Design

For both Collections and Customer Service jobs, a group of applicants was hired without completing the appropriate Fit Index assessment. Separately, a group of applicants was hired after completing the appropriate Fit Index assessment, but the test results were not made available, and thus did not influence the hiring decision.

Assessment and criterion data for the case study was collected from 418 people from several call center locations. Specifically, there were 223 (53%) cases of data for the Customer Service Fit Index (CSFI), and 195 (47%) cases of data for the Collections Fit Index. Additionally, 396 applicants served as part of the control group and did not participate in the assessment process.

Comparison of results for the assessment versus control groups would provide insight regarding the effectiveness of the Fit Index System for the client organization. The success rate for the assessment process will be indexed as a percentage difference between turnover rates for both the assessment and control groups. For example, a success rate of 15% would indicate that turnover was 15% lower for applicants who passed a Fit Index Assessment, versus those who were in the control group.

Assessment Impact

Data was used where direct comparisons across locations or accounts of interest could be made, and where the proper assessment was administered for the target position.

For the Customer Service Fit Index (CSFI), results indicate that applicants with a passing outcome have a 26% greater success rate than failing applicants.  Two-thirds (66%) of all control group applicants (i.e., who did not participate in the assessment process) terminated employment. The success rate for applicants who passed the Customer Service Fit Index was 26% greater than for applicants who were not tested.

Applicants who passed the Customer Service Fit Index were much more likely to remain on the job than the control group for every account operated by the client organization. The impact of the CSFI was greatest for a telecommunications account, which also was the largest account group in the biggest contact center included in the study.  Specifically, the success rate was 31% higher for those applicants who passed the CSFI, than for the control group.

For Collections results indicate that applicants with a passing outcome have a 17% greater success rate than failing applicants. The CFI outperformed the control group in both collections contact centers by an average of 17%. That is, turnover was 17% lower among those who passed the CFI than for those who were in the control group.

Return on Investment

The information below provides a perspective on the relative utility of the Fit Index System as part of this case study. It is important to note that while this ROI analysis examines direct hire costs, there are far more costs to the business as a result of voluntary employee turnover (lost productivity, business continuity, etc.). Therefore, any results reported below should be viewed as very conservative underestimates of total utility.

Client leadership estimated that the average cost per hire for entry-level call center employees is $800 per person. This estimated figure is far below the industry average for similar positions.

Based on these figures, the estimated annual ROI for the Fit Index System in 2010, using a 3:1 selection ratio is $764,000 (saved an additional 955 hires).

Since the system was implemented in 2007, this client organization assessed a total of 55,764 people with the Fit Index System. Using the same process for extrapolating savings, at a selection ratio of 3:1 during that time, savings is estimated to be $3,297,600.

The case study results for the Fit Index System® (FIS) are quite favorable by all technical, professional, and legal standards.

Contact Information

Contact DeGarmo Group for more information on this case study or for information on the Fit Index or Fit Interview Systems using the information provided below.

The DeGarmo Group, Inc.
101 N. Main Street
Bloomington, IL 61701
(866) 433-4276
sales@degarmogroup.com
www.degamogroup.com

Be an Enabler… of Conscientiousness

Conscientiousness is a trait that affects job performance across almost all occupations. This is not surprising, as highly conscientious people tend to be very focused, orderly, planful, diligent, hard working and loyal, all characteristics that are valuable for success in most jobs.

The conscientiousness of job applicants is often assessed using interviews or personality tests during the selection process. However, recent research indicates that selecting the most conscientious applicants does not necessarily mean they will be highly effective performers. Two important factors must also be considered: (1) leadership and (2) how it interacts with a person’s level of conscientiousness to influence job performance.  In other words, conscientiousness often must be enabled by organizational leaders.

Goal-Focused Leadership

The work environment is significantly shaped by supervisors’ leadership behaviors. Supervisors demonstrate goal-focused leadership when they communicate to their subordinates the valued goals of the organization.

Goal-focused leadership influences the extent to which conscientious behavior is expressed in the workplace. Effective goal-focused leaders provide cues that shape expectations about work behavior. Workers higher in conscientiousness pick up on conscientiousness-valued cues provided by leaders, which allow them to express their natural personality tendencies toward achievement striving, diligence, planning, persistence, etc. On the other hand, people who are low in conscientiousness (i.e., more impulsive, less persistent, less detail-oriented) may not pick up on the same cues as well as their more conscientious coworkers.

Highly conscientious workers tend to receive higher performance ratings than low conscientious workers when goal-focused leadership is present. However, when goal-focused leadership is not present, employees low and high in conscientiousness tend to receive similar, average performance ratings.

Goal Congruence: Leadership-Person Interaction

One of the factors that partially explains why goal-focused leadership results in more conscientious employees receiving superior performance ratings is the effect of that type of leadership on aligning the goals of employees with the goals of their organization. Conscientious employees pay attention to the goal-focused messages delivered by their supervisors and act in accordance with them. Such goal matching does not appear to occur with less conscientious employees. As with performance, when goal-focused leadership is low, levels of employee-organization goal matching are similar for both low-level and high-level conscientiousness employees.

Practical Implications

Considering the above points, some recommendations can be drawn for best implementing these findings in the workplace:

  • Measure applicant conscientiousness as part of the hiring process. Although conscientiousness by itself may not be enough to increase performance, instituting greater goal-focused leadership can result in more productive outcomes if the employees being lead are more conscientious.  One of the best ways to measure conscientiousness is with reliable, validated personality inventories that were developed to assess that trait.
  • Promote a goal-focused leadership style among supervisors/managers. Supervisors should be encouraged to communicate goals that are clear, specific, concise, realistic, and aligned with the performance needs of the organization.
  • As part of goal-focused leadership, ensure that employees’ work goals are consistent with those of the organization.  Use employee surveys, focus groups, or even just informal discussion to assess to what extent goal-focused leaders are getting their messages across to workers.

It should be acknowledged that, while not true in all cases, in many instances a lack of clear goals may leave many employees confused over their roles and expectations. Clearly communicating valued goals can enable conscientious employees to act on their work-related dispositional tendencies, which allows them do what they do best.

Interpretation by:

Don Johnson

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Colbert, A. E., & Witt, L. A. (2009). The role of goal-focused leadership in enabling the expression of conscientiousness. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94, 790-796.

Gauging Difficulty: Cognitive Factors that Affect Performance

As work tasks become more difficult, many people think that a person will generally set lower or more realistic expectations for performance progress, which should subsequently influence the level of performance success. While research has demonstrated relationships among task difficulty, performance expectancies, and performance outcomes, recent evidence is also pointing out that several cognitive factors complicate this relationship.  These factors are: Continue reading

What Makes A Leader Ready To Lead?

Organizations need leaders to move them in the right direction. Strong leaders can be developed, but how can organizations know when a person is ready for leadership development? Organizations must start by enhancing their capabilities for leadership development by focusing on individual’s “developmental readiness”.

What is developmental readiness?

Developmental readiness (DR) is a person’s ability and motivation to add new knowledge/information into the long-term memory. There are five factors that are generally related to one’s leadership developmental readiness.

  • The nature of one’s goals:

People who are learning goal-oriented see themselves as continuously improving through learning and are more likely to use/solicit feedback for developmental purposes, while those who are performance goal-oriented are more likely to view themselves as having less flexibility for development and avoid challenging opportunities where they may face failure or negative feedback.

  • The level of someone’s confidence in their developmental ability:

How confident a person is in their ability to improve (or develop) a particular skill or ability influences the way information related to development is interpreted and used, which can partly determine how engaged a person will be in leader development.

  • The level of self-awareness a person has:

How clear people’s views of themselves are can affect how well they are able to incorporate developmental experiences and feedback. The greater the clarity a person has, the better the ability to find meaning in developmental opportunities and feedback.

  • The level of self-complexity a person has:

Higher levels of complexity are indicative of greater cognitive and affective associations, and better ability to process and refine developmental information.

  • The possession of second-order thinking:

Having an awareness of personal cognitive strengths and weaknesses allows a leader to reflect on experiences and focus on how they are being interpreted.

How can organizations use DR for development?

Leadership is contextualized, meaning the organization’s environment has an effect on the DR of its individuals. The environment in which DR occurs can aid or retard an individual’s development.

Those responsible for developing leaders must be able to adapt their techniques/modes of development to the individual through providing individual consideration.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Avolio, B.J., & Hannah, S.T. (2009). Leader developmental readiness. Industrial Organizational Psychology, 2, 284-287.

How Honeymoons and Hangovers Relate to Job Satisfaction

A honeymoon is often thought of as a time of quintessential happiness. Whereas, the term hangover may conjure bad memories of overindulgence followed by an extreme “let down.” Surprisingly, in the organizational context, these two experiences can act as a metaphor to explain job satisfaction as it relates to new hires.

How Do Honeymoons and Hangovers Occur?

When examining job satisfaction in relation to new hires in an organization these terms are extremely relevant.

  • Honeymoon effect. Often a period of heightened satisfaction associated with a new position that occurs because the new hire has high expectations of the position. The employee may be trying to “put her best foot forward” with a positive attitude, or may be excited about new experiences, people, and challenges, making her content with the employment situation.
  • Hangover effect. After roughly six months, the employee has settled into the position, and everything is no longer new and exciting. The extreme satisfaction experienced during the honeymoon period begins to dissipate and the employee may reach a more “stable” satisfaction level.

Unfortunately, individuals who experience extreme satisfaction during the honeymoon period are often those who will experience a significant decrease in satisfaction during their hangover period – “the stronger the honeymoon, the stronger the hangover.”

Practical Implications

Because satisfaction can play an important role in motivation, behavior and turnover intentions, organizations should make all employees aware of this phenomenon. Organizations can:

  • Identify “risky periods” when employees are most susceptible to experiencing the hangover effect and work to mitigate this effect. Offering employees new opportunities or providing additional support and guidance can accomplish this.
  • Educate new hires on the possibility of experiencing these effects during the on-boarding process. Understanding these feelings are typical can help to lessen the extreme “let down” employees may experience, and give an accurate preview of the organization and position.
  • Educate supervisors to allow them to be aware of times when employees may experience heightened or decreased satisfaction. This will allow them to make extra effort to engage and encourage employees during these times.

Overall, organizations should not be concerned if the honeymoon-hangover satisfaction pattern is displayed in the organization. Simply understanding and acknowledging this phenomenon will be useful in overcoming any challenges that may arise.

Interpretation by:

Elizabeth Allen

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Boswell, W., Shipp, A., Payne, S. & Culbertson, S. (2009). Changes in newcomer job satisfaction over time: Examining the pattern of honeymoons and hangovers. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94 (4). 844-858.

Selection Strategies: Balancing Diversity and Performance

One of the greatest challenges that organizations face during the selection process is trying to hire both a diverse and high-performing workforce. Unfortunately, some of the best predictors of job performance (such as measures of cognitive ability) also tend to produce substantial differences between applicants of different races. This could result in lower hiring rates for minority groups. Continue reading

You CAN Handle the Truth: Reducing Applicants Response Distortion in Pre-employment Assessments

Have you ever been impressed with a job applicant’s test results or personality profile, only to find out that the person you saw on paper was nothing like the person you saw on the job? How did that happen? Could that person have “faked” their way through your assessments?

Many organizations are streamlining their application process – delivering many of their pre-employment assessments “remotely” or on-line, without an organizational representative present to administer their tests. Unfortunately, while streamlining this way can save organizations time and money during the application process, it increases the chances that some applicants may be less honest and forthcoming in the way they respond to questions on the assessments.

During this session we’ll discuss the concept of applicant “response distortion” as applied to jobs in several settings (including retail sales and customer service). We’ll talk about the ways to reduce an applicant’s likelihood to “fake” their way through assessments, particularly for those delivered remotely, so that the information we use to make hiring decisions is as accurate as possible.

Finally, we’ll share the results of research on different techniques used to reduce response distortion in several organizations.

What will participants learn?

1)  The different ways applicants can distort their responses to items on pre-employment assessments

2)  How administering assessments on-line, in an unproctored setting, can increase the likelihood for inaccurate information

3)  Techniques for reducing an applicant’s likelihood to try to fake their way through assessments.

4) The impact these techniques can have on applicant test scores.

Who should attend?

1) Recruiters, Managers, Directors, VPs, etc., responsible for HR, Staffing, and Talent Acquisition.

2) Those interested in learning about the ways we can reduce faking on job assessments.

3) Business leaders.

Registration Information

If you are already a member of HR.com, please login to register for the webcast.  If you are not a member of HR.com, you will need to sign up for a FREE HR.com membership, this will only take you a moment to fill in the required information. Once you have confirmation of your membership, you will be able to register for this complimentary webcast.

Tuesday, August, 24th, 11:00 AM ET

Register Here!

Measuring Work Tolerance to Reduce Turnover in Front Line Jobs

Ever hire an employee with all the right skills for the job, only to watch that person walk out the door for good three weeks later? Where did you go wrong? What did you miss?

Most organizations often overlook the importance of measuring an applicant’s work tolerance as part of the talent acquisition process. Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter if the applicant has the skills to do the work if they can’t tolerate the demands of the job!

During this session we’ll discuss the concept of work tolerance as applied to jobs in several settings including retail sales and customer service. We’ll talk about the process of analyzing jobs to discover their underlying work tolerance demands, as well as approaches for using work tolerance information to improve the talent acquisition process to reduce employee turnover, and increase levels of job satisfaction.

Finally, we’ll share the results of research using work tolerance measures in several organizations representing industries such as telecommunications and financial services, but the concepts learned during this session can apply to any job, in every organization.

What will participants learn?

1)  The difference between the work tolerance and skill demands of jobs

2)  How to analyze jobs to determine their underlying work tolerance demands

3)  Methods for using work tolerance demands for improving talent acquisition

4) The impact of work tolerance characteristics for reducing employee turnover in front-line jobs

Who should attend?

1) Recruiters, Managers, Directors, VPs, etc., responsible for HR, Staffing, and Talent Acquisition.

2) Those interested in learning about the impact of work tolerance on organizational success.

3) Business leaders

Registration Information

If you are already a member of HR.com, please login to register for the webcast.  If you are not a member of HR.com, you will need to sign up for a FREE HR.com membership, this will only take you a moment to fill in the required information. Once you have confirmation of your membership, you will be able to register for this complimentary webcast.

Tuesday, August, 31st, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Register Here!

Finding the Missing Piece: Creating Person-Job Fit Interviews

DeGarmo Group announced today that Mark Baker will be facilitating  an HR.com webcast titled Finding the Missing Piece:  Creating Person-Job Fit Interviews. The session will be held on August 17, 2010 at 1 pm ET.  Provided below is a description of the session, as well as registration information.

Session Overview

Organizations have a long standing love affair with the employment interview.   Unfortunately, the obligatory inclusion of an interview in any hiring process can potentially do more harm than good.  Even interviewers with several years of experience often make poor or inconsistent hiring decisions due to a lack of understanding of the purpose and best practices of interviewing.

During this session we will explore how to structure an employment interview to measure the degree of “fit” between applicants’ personal preferences, motivations, and “hot buttons”, with the specific demands and challenges they’ll face on the job.

Specifically, attendees will learn to identify and understand the basic elements of interviews,  learn what types of structured interviews are best suited for specific types of information, be introduced to person-job fit and learn how good “fit” contributes to reduced turnover and improved organizational functioning, learn about the importance of standardized training and follow-up calibration exercises for interviewers.

What will participants learn?

1)  How employment interviews can be designed to leverage their inherent strengths

2)  How person-job fit contributes to reduced turnover and improved organizational functioning

3)  The importance of interview training to ensure consistent decision are made across an organization

4)  The importance of follow up calibration exercises to maintain procedural and scoring consistency

Who should attend?

1)  Interviewers of all experience levels who wish to enhance their understanding of their role in the selection process.

2)  Recruiters, Managers, Directors, VPs, etc., responsible for HR, Staffing, Talent Acquisition and/or Organizational Development.

3)  Those interested in understanding how good person-job fit leads to smooth organizational functioning.

Registration Information

If you are already a member of HR.com, please login to register for the webcast.  If you are not a member of HR.com, you will need to sign up for a FREE HR.com membership, this will only take you a moment to fill in the required information. Once you have confirmation of your membership, you will be able to register for this complimentary webcast.

Tuesday, August, 17th, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Register Here!

The Value of Training and Selection

Human capital is the combined knowledge, skills, and other abilities of an organization’s workforce. Organizations that pay in to human resource development up front will reap the benefits of a more productive and knowledgeable workforce, as well as cost savings over time. Human capital can be broken down into two forms:

  • Generic Human Capital – general skills or abilities of employees such as writing skills and cognitive ability. These can be either inherent to the employee or learned through previous jobs or education. These skills can be selected for during the hiring process.
  • Firm-Specific Human Capital – knowledge and skills that are specific to a particular job or organization. For example, a specific protocol that employees are required to follow.  These skills must be trained by the organization.

Human capital is a valuable asset, especially as today’s jobs are becoming increasingly unstructured.   Organizations need employees who are able to fill a variety of roles and complete a large variety of tasks. These employees can be acquired and developed through selection and training.

Shifting Focus

Traditionally, HR researchers have tended to assess the value of HR practices such as training and selection as ways to improve “micro” level outcomes, such as individual-level job performance and transfer of training. This type of research tells us little about the benefits of training and selection on a “macro” level – focusing on broad-level outcomes such as team and organization performance. Unfortunately, managers and HR professionals are typically held accountable for these broad level outcomes, rather than individually-focused results.

New Findings

New research has recently shown that selection and training do in fact lead to “macro”-level organizational outcomes. These include:

  • Customer Service Performance is influenced by selection and training. High quality customer service leads to a number of positive outcomes for organizations including customer satisfaction and retention.
  • Unit-level Retention is related to training. Employees who receive adequate training will be equipped with the skills necessary to perform their jobs effectively. Well-trained employees will be more likely to remain on the job.
  • Financial Performance is related to both selection and training. Customer satisfaction can lead to increased financial outcomes as a result of repeat business and word of mouth promotion. Increased retention will save the organization money because the valuable human capital obtained through training will remain with the organization for longer periods of time, thus reducing costs associated with hiring, training, and related administrative activities.

Changes over time

In addition to the macro level impact that selection and training have on organization-level outcomes, research has also revealed that changes in selection and training practices over time also result in changes in overall human capital quality. In essence:

  • When business units increase investment in selection and training, overall quality of human capital will increase.
  • When units decrease investment in selection and training, overall quality of human capital will decrease.

Practical Implications

The study’s authors offer practical implications that can be taken from this research:

  • Investment in human capital, through training and selection, can result in substantial payoffs for organizations in terms of increased customer service, increased retention within work units, and increased profits.
  • Because HR processes are often evaluated in terms of broad level outcomes such as financial performance, it’s important to emphasize to senior-level management other, non-financial benefits, such as improved performance, that investing in selection and training can have for the organization.

Interpretation by:

Michelle Toelle

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Iddekinge, C.H., Ferris, G.R., Perrewe, P.L., Perryman, A.A., Blass, F.R., Heetderks, T.D. (2009). Effects of selection and training on unit-level performance over time: A latent growth modeling approach. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94, 929-843.

More Than a Mission Statement: The Importance of Corporate Work Values

DeGarmo Group announced today that Anthony Adorno will be facilitating  an HR.com webcast titled More Than a Mission Statement: The Importance of Corporate Work Values. The session will be held on August 10, 2010 at 11am ET.  Provided below is a description of the session, as well as registration information.

Session Overview

Just about every organization has a mission statement that includes some reference to a set of work values, but how many organizations really believe in their values and use them to drive organizational success?

During this session, we’ll talk about the importance of core work values, how to measure them, and how to improve alignment between the organization and its employees through talent acquisition and development.

Specifically, this session will focus on the results of research conducted with more than 1,200 people in the United States, U.K., and Philippines on work value alignment and important outcomes such as organizational commitment, job satisfaction, job performance, and employee turnover.

What will participants learn?

1.  How work value alignment impacts corporate profitability.

2.  Metrics used for determining whether an organization’s leaders agree on the importance of work values.

3.  An approach for improving alignment in work values through both staffing and development models.

4.  How the impact of value alignment varies based on job level, job category or work experience.

Who should attend?

1.  Executives who determine and drive the values of their organizations.

2.  Recruiters, Managers, Directors, VPs, etc., responsible for HR, Staffing, Talent Acquisition and/or Organizational Development.

3.  Those interested in understanding how alignment with corporate values drives organizational success.

Registration Information

If you are already a member of HR.com, please login to register for the webcast.  If you are not a member of HR.com, you will need to sign up for a FREE HR.com membership, this will only take you a moment to fill in the required information. Once you have confirmation of your membership, you will be able to register for this complimentary webcast.

Tuesday, August, 10th, 11:00AM – 12:00 PM ET

Register Here!

Is Your Company Putting the Best Face Forward When Recruiting Minority Candidates?

In recent years minority recruitment has become more and more imperative for companies. A diverse company can avoid legal woes, improve public image, and legitimize itself to minority customers. With the increased importance of a diverse workforce, it has become important to consider the best practices for recruiting minority candidates. While it may seem that the same guidelines for recruiting majority candidates should be used, this is not entirely accurate.

Selecting an Employer

Consider yourself as a minority candidate deciding between two companies that have each extended a job offer. The companies are similar in a number of aspects, but they are not identical. Company A overtly displays the presence of minorities in the organization through recruitment literature, while Company B exhibits no such minority presence. Additionally, you were pleasantly surprised by the prevalence of minorities whom you were introduced to during your site visit at Company A, and you were equally disappointed to see minority representation only existed at the lowest levels of the organization in Company B. As a minority candidate, which company would you perceive as more friendly?

When minority candidates are selecting an employer they will, either implicitly or explicitly, more likely choose the company they perceive as the most positive toward minorities. While a company may try to portray an image that discrimination against minority candidates does not occur, the perception of a job seeker can be drastically different.

Changing Impressions

To make your company appear more favorable to minority job seekers, it is important for the job seeker to see that your company hires and promotes minorities. While this can be advertised through recruitment literature, it will not be fully accepted by the minority job seeker until the candidate visits the company.

The Site Visit

Site visits are generally a late step in the recruitment process, and candidates who have reached this point are more likely to be offered a job. However, this step in the process is also the point at which 75% of job seekers decide whether or not to accept an offer, if one is extended.

With the site visit being so important to a candidate’s choice of accepting an offer, it is important to maximize the chances of the candidate choosing your company.

To ensure minority candidates view your company favorably during the site visit, it is important for them to notice a minority presence in the company, both with potential coworkers and supervisors. This can put the candidate at ease, because they will see that your company has a culture that accepts and promotes minorities. Additionally, the candidate may be more at ease knowing that they are not the only minority in the workgroup.

The final important aspect of the site tour is meeting with the potential supervisor. While the recruiter cannot change who the supervisor is, the recruiter can take steps to ensure the supervisor’s behavior is inviting to the candidate. Many people can unknowingly display negative non-verbal reactions to minority candidates, like blinking excessively, being physically avoidant, or maintaining poor eye contact. Recruiters can help ensure that the supervisor avoids these pitfalls by discussing them with him or her in a tactful manner. For instance, the topic of minority recruiting does not need to be broached with the supervisor; instead, just remind the supervisor that the applicant is interviewing the company as much as the company is interviewing the applicant. In that context, the recruiter can remind the supervisor of some potentially negative non-verbal queues that should be avoided with all applicants.

Remember, recruiters have more contact with the candidate than anyone else in the company pre-hire, so recruiters should pay extra attention to avoid exhibiting negative body language and be as friendly and inviting as possible.

Interpretation by:

David Daly

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Mckay, P. F., & Avery, D. R. (2006). What has race got to do with it?  Unraveling the role of racioethnicity in job seekers’ reactions to site visits. Personnel Psychology, 59, 395-427.

Are Jobs Really Global? Job Similarities Across Countries

As companies seek to expand beyond national boundaries, one question becomes particularly relevant: is the “job” the same in different countries? Are the functions of a bank teller in the United States the same as those of a teller in Japan? When companies seek to become multi-national, it becomes increasingly important to determine if the job companies are moving from the United States (U.S.) will end up being the same job in another country.

The Global Movement

Services typically performed at corporate headquarters in the U.S. – e.g., technology, call center functions, product testing, and research & development — are increasingly being moved off-shore to other countries.

Global developments require the use of information about jobs to be applied across country boundaries. As such, an understanding of how job demands may differ across those boundaries is essential – particularly for the cross-country application of job models and competencies for performance appraisal systems. Typically job information has been developed using U.S. jobs/workers, which then is used by other departments and organizations overseas.

The Influence of Culture

Research has shown that cultural values, combined with the organization’s environment, influence human resource management practices. Specifically, the degree to which a country values individualism versus collectivism typically emerges as important.

While it is true individualistic/collectivistic value differences do exist, they do not appear to affect the importance of different work activities, skill requirements, and work-style requirements of the same job across countries/cultures.

The US Department of Labor’s O*NET is the most comprehensive and readily accessible repository of occupational information, available via http://online.onetcenter.org/. Thus, generally speaking, the detailed job information available on O*NET may be useful for a multitude of applications across countries, including the beginning stages of a global job analysis.

The implication for practitioners is that for uses like developing job descriptions, matching applicant KSAOs with those required by the job, and creating realistic job previews based on information measured from jobs in the U.S. , much of this information is likely to transport (or “translate”) for the same job overseas – regardless of the job’s – or company’s – country of origin!

A Word of Caution

One important caveat to keep in mind, though, is that the transportability of job information from the U.S. to other countries and cultures still depends on the level of precision and detail required by the situation.

For high-stakes applications requiring great levels of precision, such as validation of selection assessment instruments and creating norms/ranges for test scores, use of local detailed job analysis data is much more appropriate for ensuring that country or cultural differences do not negatively affect the results.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Taylor, P. J., Kan Shi, W.L., & Borman, W.C. (2007). The Transportability of job information across countries. Personnel Psychology, 61, 69 – 111.

A Better Way to Use Personality for Predicting Performance

Using personality assessments to help predict job performance is nothing new, but by understanding the factors that influence personality traits related to job performance, organizations can increase the effectiveness of their assessments.

Many personality assessments utilize “contextualized items”, meaning items are written to be answered within a particular context. For example:

  • I keep my desk and workspace very organized.
  • My coworkers would describe me as outgoing.

The example items above include a “workplace” context. For use in organizations, personality assessments using a context (like that illustrated here) are far more effective than assessments that do not provide a context for providing responses.

What both general, and contextualized, personality assessments fail to do is give real consideration to the situations people are in – the environment that draws out their personalities. Understanding the situations surrounding how individuals’ personalities affect their performance has the potential to allow for better predictions of performance.

Situational Aspects:

Whether or not a person will express a particular part of their personality depends on different aspects of the work situation:

  • Task aspects are the day-to-day demands of performing the job.
  • Social aspects are the interactions a person has with coworkers, subordinates, or superiors.
  • Organizational aspects are the most broad, and relate to the culture and climate of the organization.

Value of Personality-related Behaviors:

Along with the three different aspects of the situation, personality-related behaviors are evaluated as either beneficial or detrimental in value to job performance.

For example, if the behaviors of being social (an expression of the personality trait extraversion) is seen as contributing to job performance, then those behaviors will be positively valued and encouraged – whereas if being social is seen as being detrimental to performance, it will NOT be valued and therefore discouraged.

Situational Aspects and Behaviors Coincide:

It is important to note that different personality traits (e.g., extraversion, agreeableness, or conscientiousness) may be brought out by different aspects of the work situation. Additionally, a particular trait may be brought out by multiple aspects of the situation, but valued differently for each.

For example, being friendly and outgoing (extraverted) while serving customers (a task-related aspect) may be valued and beneficial; while those same friendly and outgoing behaviors may be distracting to coworkers (a social-related aspect) and viewed as detrimental.

How Can Organizations Use This Information?

There are three critical ways that organizations can get the most out of the information they collect through personality assessments. Each is focused on a detailed understanding of how a person’s personality drives his or her behavior.

  • Conduct a thorough job analysis, focusing specifically on how personality traits relate to job-focused behavior.

This is the best way for organizations to determine which personality characteristics are the most desirable in their workforce. The O*NET (Occupational Information Network) Resource Center contains tools that can be useful as a starting place for gathering this type of vital information.

  • Document the activities associated with the three aspects of the work situation.

Organizations should take the time to consider the task, social, and organizational aspects of their work situations to identify which personality characteristics are likely to emerge in each.

  • Evaluate people’s personalities and behaviors appropriately.

Personalities are expressed through behaviors in response to different aspects of the work situation (task, social, and organizational aspects). These behaviors are often evaluated by others, usually through annual performance appraisals. Problems may occur when the person conducting the evaluation relies too heavily on his or her own personal theories of what the best personality traits are for the position they are evaluating.

For example, a person in a sales position may behave in a confident and assertive manner, which contributes to her high level of sales. Yet this person’s performance ratings could be low if her supervisor thinks that being confident and assertive is a negative characteristic (because it makes that person difficult to manage), and allows this opinion to overshadow the evidence of the person’s performance.

Organizations currently, or considering, using personality assessments will be best served by spending some time to truly consider how the information they gather can be best utilized for predicting performance. This may take some time and effort, but it has the potential for creating a strong return on their investment.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Christiansen, N.D., & Tett, R.P. (2008). Toward a better understanding of the role of situations in linking personality, work behavior, and job performance. Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 1, 312-316.

Using Person-Organization Fit In Selection

Imagine a situation in which an individual has found an occupation that suits his needs, works for a pleasant supervisor, and receives a competitive wage and benefits. While this may sound like a storybook tale, if we further consider that the same individual enjoys working in teams, is excited by working to meet challenging goals, and cherishes the opportunity to make important decisions without asking for approval, all of which his organization does not foster, suddenly our storybook tale has taken a turn for the dark side: now our protagonist is unhappy, underperforming, and surfing the internet for a new place to work.

While this fictitious example may seem extreme, it is closer to reality than you think. When employees do not value the same things as the organization they work for, negative outcomes can result. Conversely, good fit between the values of an employee and organization can lead to positive outcomes, like higher levels of organizational commitment.

What is Person-Organization Fit?

Person-Organization fit (P-O fit) is a concept that goes back many years, and is generally defined as compatibility between employees and their organizations. Compatibility can result from one party supplying a need of the other party, similar values across parties, or both. Researchers have found meaningful relationships with P-O fit as a predictor of work attitudes, job performance, and turnover.

Why is P-O Fit Important?

The general idea behind the importance of P-O fit is based on the attraction-selection-attrition (A-S-A) theory. According to the A-S-A theory, individuals are attracted to organizations with similar values and organizations tend to hire such individuals during the selection process. Finally, attrition becomes important as the employee sees first-hand the extent to which he or she is actually congruent with the organization, leading to a choice to either continue working for or leave the company.

What does P-O Fit Predict?

As mentioned previously, P-O fit has demonstrated relationships with three very important outcomes:

  • Work attitudes
  • Turnover
  • Job Performance

While each of the three aforementioned outcomes is related to P-O fit, these relationships vary in magnitude; the strongest relationships are listed first.

  • Work attitudes - The link between P-O fit and work attitudes is the strongest and most robust: the more an individual fits with the organization, the more likely he or she is to display higher levels of job satisfaction and organizational commitment.
  • Turnover - Considering the high cost of turnover, this relationship is very important to the bottom line. It seems obvious, but individuals do not enjoy working for companies that do not align well with their personal values and often leave as a result.
  • Job Performance - When individuals do not feel they fit well with the organization, it often has negative effects on the effort they put forth at work, leading to lower levels of job performance. Researchers have found P-O Fit to relate to both task performance (performance on tasks required of the job) and contextual performance (performance on tasks outside of those required by the job, like Organizational Citizenship Behaviors).

Implications for Practice

With the relationship between P-O fit and important work outcomes firmly established, the question becomes, how can organizations leverage this knowledge?

Unfortunately, as it is currently conceptualized, P-O fit cannot be taught. The values and interests individuals have when they join an organization are longstanding, and will likely not change much as a result of employment.

The alternative option is to look for applicants who match the company and bring them aboard to increase overall fit. This option is gaining in popularity in the last few years and will likely continue on that trend.

To bring people aboard who match the organization, a P-O fit test, interview, or other form of selection tool will likely need to be implemented. Several consulting firms are available to aide in this type of selection.

Going back to our initial example, let’s say our fictions organization implemented a screening tool to help choose the right people for the organization. As a result, the organization hires a different employee, one who prefers to work individually, is partial to working towards less optimistic goals, and would rather fall back on management when making important decisions. Now the organization and employee fit very well and stay together for a long time, perhaps living happily ever after?

Interpretation by:

David Daly

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Arthur Jr., W., Bell, S. T., Villado, A. J., & Doverspike, D. (2006). The use of person-organization fit in employment decision making: An assessment of its criterion-related validity. Journal of Applied Psychology, 91, 786-801.

Expatriate Adjustment to New Environments

In today’s global economy, organizations are spreading talent across borders by asking professionals to spend time working at international locations. Individuals sent abroad, called expatriates, are generally on a short-term assignment to complete an organizational goal. The benefits of such practices can be far reaching, from unifying different company locations to increasing the organizational acumen of a rising star in the company.

Downfalls of Sending Talent Abroad

While the prospect of being an expatriate may sound exciting, many individuals have difficulty adjusting to their new environment. Expatriates can become lonely if they know very few people in the host country, and this can be compounded as they often do not speak the native language very well. This should be monitored closely, as an expatriate who does not like his or her overseas assignment may begin looking for a job elsewhere. There are three specific aspects of adjusting to the assignment expatriates can struggle with:

  • Work adjustment refers to the expatriate’s level of comfort with his or her work environment
  • Interaction adjustment involves the extent to which an expatriate is comfortable with his or her interpersonal contact with host country nationals
  • General adjustment encompasses the comfort of an expatriate with the cultural environment in the host country

Minimizing Adjustment Problems

The most obvious way to minimize adjustment issues is to integrate expatriates to their new environment before they step foot in a different country. Individuals who are given expatriate assignments should be trained on the language and culture of the host country long before they begin the assignment.

In addition to learning about the host country’s language and culture, expatriates should be immersed in the work environment of the host location before they actually travel to the location. This can be accomplished through videoconferencing which will allow the soon-to-be expatriate to learn more about whom she will be working with and help her to gain exposure to projects she will be working on abroad.

Additional Factors Affecting Adjustment

Interestingly, other factors can affect the adjustment of expatriates, such as the amount of decision autonomy they have (the level of freedom granted to an individual to make decisions that affect the company) and the level of global integration pressure that exists (the expatriate’s perception that his organization’s business strategy is global in nature). The more decision autonomy afforded to expatriates, the more easily they will adjust to the new environment; however, this is not true when global integration pressure is high.

Global integration plays an integral part in this relationship because global integration pressure often leads a company to standardize their procedures internationally. A strategy of standardization can have negative consequences when the cultural differences of the host country are not accounted for, which causes additional stress for the expatriate.

Summary

Expatriates working abroad can have problems with adjustment in general, as well as with interaction with host country citizens and with the new work environment. These problems can be mitigated through a number of activities,

such as language and cultural education, assimilation with host country employees prior to departure from the home country, and by affording the expatriate with more decision autonomy, when possible. Implementing these strategies for minimizing the difficulties for expatriates can help lead to a more unified and productive international company.

Interpretation by:

David Daly

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Takeuchi, R., Shay, J. P., & Li, J. (2008). When does decision autonomy increase expatriate managers’ adjustment? An empirical test. Academy of Management Journal, 51, 45-60.

Work Sample Tests and Potential Adverse Impact

Adverse impact in employee selection is a crucial concern for human resource management. Adverse impact occurs when a protected class of applicants is hired or selected at a substantially lower rate compared to other groups of applicants, which can potentially lead to costly court charges and lawsuits. Thus, reducing actual and potential adverse impact against protected groups is a key priority for most HR departments. This goal has led companies to search for the most effective selection tools possible that maximize differentiating among applicants of different qualifications and abilities while minimizing adverse impact.

Some selection tools, such as general cognitive ability tests, have reputations for producing adverse impact. Other tools, such as work sample tests, have generally been considered to be effective while producing little adverse impact. Work sample tests require applicants to perform brief exercises that are similar to functions they would be performing in their jobs.  Examples of work sample tests include:

  • Role playing exercises (e.g., supervisor or customer service roles)
  • In-basket exercises (e.g., writing memos or scheduling employee work hours)
  • Technical skills exercises (e.g., troubleshoot a computer problem or solve a work-related math problem)

Thus, work sample tests are often recommended for use by many sources in place of other tools and instruments that are seen as more likely to result in adverse impact. However, research has discovered that the risk of adverse impact using work sample tests may actually be much greater than once thought.

Problems with Past Research

Several studies have claimed that work sample tests exhibit less adverse impact than other HR tools. However, this research contained some important limitations, including:

  • Using only job incumbent ratings and not job applicants, which can affect statistical results by attenuating the range of scores.
  • Some research grouped minorities together for analysis (for instance, combining African American and Hispanic data rather than analyzing it separately).
  • Some of the research combined work sample tests with other types of selection assessments, which prevented adverse impact information from being calculated just for work sample tests.

Current Research Findings

Recent evidence indicates that incumbent work sample tests show higher adverse impact than was expected. Applicant work sample scores have nearly double the commonly expected difference between whites and blacks. Work sample tests demonstrating the largest differences are in-basket exercises and technical and scheduling sample tests. Oral briefings and role-playing exercises, however, both exhibit low difference scores.

The recent research also analyzed work sample exercises based on what constructs they were measuring. A construct here refers to underlying psychological attributes like personality, communication ability, cognitive ability, etc. Work sample tests that exhibit large group differences appear to tap into constructs involving cognitive ability and writing skills/knowledge, while work sample tests that exhibit lower group differences tap into constructs like leadership and interpersonal oral communication.

Implications for Practice

As research has indicated that adverse impact can be a bigger problem with work sample tests than previously thought, some recommendations for reducing the risk of adverse impact with work sample tests include:

  • Selection decision makers need to consider what constructs will be evaluated with a particular work sample test. Any given work sample test will likely involve several different constructs (e.g., in-basket exercise involving cognitive ability, personality, communication, and/or psychomotor skills).
  • Measured constructs must be closely aligned to key job functions and duties. For example, is general cognitive ability or certain social skills really necessary for satisfactorily completing the tasks of a particular job?
  • Record detailed information about applicants, incumbents, ratings, and specific types of work sample tests for adverse impact analyses.

The recent research does not indicate that work sample tests (or any other HR selection tool) will necessarily produce adverse impact. However, the results do indicate that HR professionals need to be more aware of the potential for adverse impact and to not take for granted the idea that work sample tests will be more acceptable.

Interpretation by:

Donnie Johnson

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Roth, P., Bobko, P., McFarland, L., & Buster, M. (2008). Work sample tests in personnel selection: A meta-analysis of Black-White differences in overall and exercise scores. Personnel Psychology, 61, 637-662.

Reducing Discrimination in Selection

Although great strides have been made in the past half-century to improve the representation of minority groups in the workplace, disparities still exist. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that men are 4 times more likely to hold a position at the highest levels of an organization than women. Additionally, white employees are 11 times more likely to hold a position of management than blacks and Latinos.

Although there are many factors that contribute to these disparities (poverty, education, etc.), the failure of organizations to select and promote minority applicants is partly responsible for this gap. Despite the best intentions of the organization, if individuals who are responsible for hiring and promotion give preference to higher status groups – either intentionally or unintentionally – this trend will continue.

Social Dominance Orientation

Within most human societies, there is a social hierarchy in which some groups hold more power than others. Social Dominance Orientation (SDO) is a tendency to support the social hierarchy in which some groups hold more social power and some groups hold less power.

High SDO is associated with prejudice against low-status groups such as women, blacks, and Latinos. This can be problematic when employees high in SDO are responsible for hiring or promoting within organizations. These individuals may tend to prefer candidates of high-status groups, thus preserving the social hierarchy.

Some individuals are higher in Social Dominance Orientation and some people are lower in SDO. People high in SDO are not necessarily members of a high status group. Minorities can also have high SDO. In a hiring context, a minority hiring manager with a high SDO may be just as likely to prefer a candidate from a high status group.

Directives from an Authority

Fortunately, organizations can use Social Dominance Orientation to their advantage. Because individuals high in SDO strongly support the social hierarchy, they tend to stringently follow directives from supervisors.  Recent research has shown that explicit instructions from an authority figure to focus on job qualifications during selection can mitigate high SDO employees’ failure to select qualified minority applicants.

Practical Advice

Failure to select a candidate based on his or her social status can potentially result in a number of undesirable outcomes for an organization. Some of these include the loss of a high-performing employee, absence of diversity within the organization, and possibly even legal issues resulting from discriminatory hiring practices.

However, because individuals high in SDO tend to follow directives from supervisors, organizations can take action to reduce the probability of these outcomes. Some of these include:

  • Develop a list of specific job requirements for each position.
  • Ensure that employees responsible for hiring and promotion understand the qualifications for each job.
  • Implement written policies that support these initiatives and communicate these policies to employees.

These recommendations can help to counteract high SDO employees’ tendency to discriminate against qualified minority applicants.

Interpretation by:

Michelle Toelle

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Umphress, E. E., Simmons, A.L., Boswell, W. R., & Triana, M. (2008). Managing discrimination in selection: The influence of directives from an authority and social dominance orientation. Journal of Applied Psychology, 93(5), 982-993.


Sustaining Your Talent Pool in the Midst of a Workforce Crisis

As the workforce continues to age and individuals in the “baby-boomer” generation begin to retire,  employers may be faced with a workforce crisis – there are more positions to fill than available, qualified employees to fill them.  This presents a challenge to employers – how to keep positions filled with qualified individuals? One solution is to encourage employees to participate in bridge employment.

What is Bridge Employment?

“Bridge employment is defined as the pattern of labor force participation exhibited by older workers as they leave their career jobs and move toward complete labor force withdrawal”

Bridge employment can include part-time positions where the employee continues to work in the organization, part-time positions in another organization or self-employment. Bridge employment may occur in either the same career or a different field entirely.

Can We Keep Our Valued Employees Involved?

Understanding what factors lead employees to pursue bridge employment is the key to maintaining the talent pool. Organizations should seek out employees displaying these “staying” characteristics. These characteristics include:

  • Individual characteristics related to age, education, and financial stability. Retirees who are younger, educated, healthy, and financially stable are more likely to participate in bridge employment.
  • Job related factors such as work stress and job satisfaction. Retirees who experience less job stress and higher job satisfaction are more likely to participate in bridge employment.
  • Retirement planning in relation to how much an employee has contemplated and/or made plans to retire.  Employees who have thought more about full retirement are less likely to participate in bridge employment.

Practical Implications

Employers faced with the dilemma of losing valuable employees should devote resources to developing “staying” characteristics within their organization. Redesigning or sharing jobs, providing more flexible work arrangements, helping older workers with their family care needs, allowing telecommuting, offering employee assistance programs and alerting employees to the option of bridge employment throughout the retirement planning process can decrease stress and increase job satisfaction.

Creating an older-worker-friendly environment by providing older employees with opportunities to grow professionally, avenues for maintaining good health, strategies for managing stress and positive experiences to increase job satisfaction will result in sustaining the talent pool in the midst of the workforce crisis.

Interpretation by:

Elizabeth Allen

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Wang, M., Zhan, Y., Liu, S., & Shultz, K.  (2008). Antecedents of Bridge Employment: A Longitudinal Investigation. Journal of Applied Psychology, 93 (4), 818-830.

New Revelations in Turnover

Turnover has long been considered to be detrimental to an organization. It has been assumed that, regardless of the job, no turnover is optimal, and organizational performance (profitability, sales, etc.) suffers as turnover increases.

In spite of the aforementioned longstanding view of turnover, researchers have begun to speculate that, depending on the job and type of organization, turnover can actually be helpful.

Why might some turnover be helpful?

Most intuitively, turnover can help the organization by removing lower performers and making room for potential star performers. This can occur as a result of the organization terminating poor performers, or poor performers becoming unhappy with their lack of success and quitting.

A less often considered benefit of turnover is to help an organization maintain an appropriately sized workforce as a response to market changes. This can allow organizations to grow and shrink their workforce at times that are most advantageous.

Turnover findings

Sales assistant turnover rates of a large retail chain in the United Kingdom were compared to store sales figures to determine the optimal level of turnover.

The staff in the organization consisted of full-time sales associates and part-time sales associates. Full-time sales associates (FTSAs) help with daily store operations and have the potential for advancement to management whereas part-time sales associates (PTSAs) typically do not intend to remain with the company long-term.  The FTSAs receive more training and are more integral to the success of a store.

Researchers found that any turnover, regardless of the amount, was detrimental to a store’s performance when the person leaving was a FTSA. However, the relationship was more complex with PTSAs; the PTSA turnover rate that yielded the highest store sales figures was about 30%, with store sales performance decreasing at both higher and lower rates. One likely explanation for this lies in the likelihood that the lack of career growth opportunities for PTSAs may reduce engagement.

Practical Implications

While it is important to remember that theories of optimal turnover rates are still in their infancy, large organizations should examine their performance numbers closely to determine the optimal level of turnover. This can be accomplished with a detailed statistical comparison of the success of individual stores in relation to store turnover rates. Knowing your organization’s optimal turnover rate can be very helpful in determining if further turnover reduction strategies would be appropriate for the organization.

Interpretation by:

David Daly

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Siebert, W. S., & Zubanov, N. (2009). Searching for the optimal level of employee turnover: A study of a large U.K. retail organization. Academy of Management Journal, 52, 294-313.

Knowing Not What One Does: Implications for Low Performers

Research has shown that, when compared to others, most people overestimate their own performance. Many, if not most, workers often say that they are above average or in the top percentage of performers. However, most people cannot be above average (i.e., only 50% can), which indicates that many people are overestimating their abilities.

Overestimating abilities seems to be most common for low performers. People with low levels of knowledge and skills have been known to grossly over-predict their performance in a variety of performance domains. This overestimation occurs even when people are given incentives to be more accurate in their self-performance assessments, which indicates that people are truly unaware that they are overestimating – they likely wouldn’t sacrifice compensation or rewards by intentionally distorting their assessments upward.

What makes this effect particularly troubling is that it occurs even when low performers are engaging in activities they routinely perform and receive some feedback on. Also, overestimation can occur in performance domains where low performers can be a danger to themselves or to others.

Why Does This Occur?

Low performers who truly overestimate their abilities may do so because they lack the metacognition necessary to accurately gauge how well they are (or aren’t) doing. In other words, these people overestimate their performance because they are unable to accurately recognize and distinguish between good and bad performance.

Such an overestimation of ability, combined with a lack of metacognition, can cause great difficulties for organizational attempts to improve performance. It can especially present challenges for productive performance appraisals and training interventions.

Implications for Practice

The following tips should help bring low performers’ assessments closer to reality, which is important for them to be able to regulate their actions and continue to improve their performance.

  • Improve selection procedures. Improving on the organization’s hiring and selection system better places the best skilled or most knowledgeable applicants into matching job openings, as well as identifies those employees who are most likely to benefit from training if it is needed (i.e., have the requisite ability to profit from learning experiences).
  • Frequent and productive performance appraisal. While some organizations have yearly performance appraisals, it can be beneficial for all employees (especially low performers) to have substantive appraisals more often. Low performers need to understand as soon as possible where they are underperforming and what actions can be taken to correct the problem.
  • Increase/Improve training and development. Some low performers may not have learned the knowledge and skills required for success. While it is an important element to employee training and development, feedback alone does not increase employee learning. Acquiring knowledge and increasing skills are also important aspects of training and development. Rehearsing and repeating information, combined with elaborating on how pieces of information tie together, encourages in-depth thinking about information which leads to a deeper understanding of material.
  • Comparative frames of reference. Providing clear examples of what constitutes poor, average, and excellent performance can help employees judge the quality of their own performance relative to a standard.


  • Encourage positive thinking. Hearing bad news is hard for many people to take, especially if they feel there is little hope for improvement. When training underperforming employees, it is important to emphasize that their knowledge and skills can be improved.

By improving how applicants are hired, evaluated, and trained, organizations can help ensure that all employees are in better positions to assess their own performance and adjust their behavior accordingly to increase productivity.

Interpretation by:

Donnie Johnson

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Ehrlinger, J., Johnson, K., Banner, M., Dunning, D., & Kruger, J. (2008). Why the unskilled are unaware: Further explorations of (absent) self-insight among the incompetent. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 105, 98-121.

Can Behaving in a Socially Desirable Fashion Equal Faking?

Many organizations utilizing a personality assessment as part of their selection system also include a measure of social desirability, to identify applicants who may be trying to “fake” the assessment.

The term social desirability is used to describe applicant faking as responding to items in ways that make the applicant appear more favorable in the eyes of the hiring manager.

Operationalizing applicant faking in this way has long been the norm for test developers, researchers, and users; however, there has been a recent push to take a step back and redefine what these social desirability scales actually measure.

How Social Desirability Scales Work

Social desirability scales typically contain items which resemble the following:

  • I try to follow the rules.
  • I would never cheat on my taxes.
  • I would never take things that aren’t mine.

The logic being that it is very unlikely for there to be a person who “always” follows the rules, “never” cheats, or “never” steals — thus the greater the number of these items an applicant affirmatively responds to, the more likely it is that they are engaging in socially desirable responding.

Why They Can Be Problematic

The difficulty present when using social desirability scales to identify applicants who may be trying to fake an assessment, is that there has been little research demonstrating a strong statistical relationship between scores on social desirability scales and observed applicant faking.

Additionally, social desirability scales are themselves susceptible to being faked!

For these reasons, it is unlikely that these types of scales will be useful for correctly identifying applicants who are purposefully attempting to fake, and particularly problematic for attempting to statistically “correct” assessment scores.

Implications for Practice

Organizations worried about applicants attempting to fake their assessments would be best served to follow these suggestions:

  1. Where possible, utilize multiple assessments in selection systems.
  2. Include assessments which are less susceptible to “faking”.
  3. Consider adding assessments which do not rely on applicant self-reports.
  4. Cease attempts to statistically “correct” applicant scores based on results from social desirability scales.
  5. Most importantly, follow up with applicants suspected of faking.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Griffith, R.L., & Peterson, M.H. (2008). The Failure of Social Desirability Measures to Capture Applicant Faking Behavior. Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 1, 308-311.

Does Education Contribute to Job Performance?

Organizations often use education as a measure/indicator of a person’s skills and abilities during the selection process. But does advanced education, particularly holding a bachelors degree or higher, actually indicate the likelihood of a person being a good citizen of the organization and not engaging in counterproductive behaviors? Is the higher salary required for employees with advanced education worth it?

Citizenship Behaviors

Those with a higher education have been shown to be more likely to engage in general organizational citizenship behaviors (OCB), including those directed at the organization (e.g., describing the organization in a positive light to nonemployees) and supervisor (e.g., helping supervisor meet her deadline).

The reason for this may be that people with college degrees tend to value helping others and forming good relationships more than those with only a high school education. Therefore, in addition to gaining knowledge and skills, those with advanced education gain the work values that closely relate to citizenship behaviors.

It makes sense then that employees with higher educations have also proved to be more creative (a dimension of OCB). Creativity helps the organization get and keep their edge in the market.

Counterproductive Behaviors

Education level has been shown to be negatively related to undesirable work behaviors such as workplace aggression, on-the-job substance use, and absenteeism. This may be because college-educated individuals tend to adhere more to rules regarding attendance and protection of organizational property.

However, those with an advanced education who are in a high-complexity job (e.g., lawyers, engineers, doctors) are more likely to engage in counterproductive work behaviors as compared to those in low-complexity jobs (e.g., file clerk). This may be due to the added stress of being in a high-complexity job.

Take-home Message

To stay competitive in today’s market, organizations need much more than people who can complete the core job tasks; they need people who will go above and beyond for the organization, while at the same time will refrain from engaging in behaviors that are counterproductive to the functioning of the organization.

Investing in highly educated employees overall does increase the likelihood of these positive outcomes in addition to core task performance.  It seems that a college-education provides broader work values that are beneficial to organizational functioning.

An organization can feel more confident that by utilizing education as an indicator during the selection process, they are using a measure that predicts many aspects of overall job performance.

Interpretation by:

Lexy Adkins

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Ng, T. W. H., & Feldman, D. C. (2009). How broadly does education contribute to job performance? Personnel Psychology, 62, 89-134.

Perceptual Speed and Accuracy are More Useful Than You Know

Tests of perceptual speed and accuracy have stronger practical implications than many people realize. These tests are commonly used as part of selection systems for jobs requiring workers to quickly identify errors or mistakes, such as those in clerical, assembly, or warehouse positions.  Such positions generally require less intellectual complexity, but high ability to process information quickly and accurately – particularly under periods of time pressure.

Why perceptual speed & accuracy is important

With approximately 20% of the U.S. working in “low complexity” jobs, adding assessments measuring these constructs to the selection system has the potential to provide a massive ROI in terms of predicting job performance.

Many organizations utilize selection systems comprised of multiple predictive elements. They may include assessments such as:

  1. Biodata/applications,
  2. Ability tests, and
  3. Interviews.

The most effective way to use multiple predictors is to add predictors offering incremental validity (i.e., additional predictive power) above what is already included.

Perceptual speed & accuracy – two ways

Perceptual speed and accuracy tests measure the ability to focus attention and quickly process information.

The operationalization of perceptual speed and accuracy has typically focused strictly on the number of items correct (NC), for assessing the ability to quickly process information. Typically the items on these tests are very simple, allowing all respondents the opportunity to answer all items correctly, given enough time.

However, the scores can also be used to focus on the number of items answered wrong/incorrectly (NW) – since errors are likely due to the inability to focus attention. High levels of NW may indicate carelessness, distractibility, or recklessness on the job.

Implications for Practice

In organizations where the ability to focus attention is extremely important – in terms of accidents and safety violations – including a measure of perceptual speed and accuracy focusing on NW can offer great dividends.

By looking at the same information in different ways, separate predictions may be made.

  • Using the NC, predictions regarding facets of task performance are possible.
  • Using the NW, predictions regarding who is likely to be non-compliant to rules, tardy, or involved in accidents are possible

Thus the use of both sets of test information is able to provide more detail about a person’s total job performance than either one alone.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Mount, M.K., Oh, I.S., & Burns, M. (2008). Incremental Validity of Perceptual Speed and Accuracy Over General Mental Ability.  Personnel Psychology, 61, 113 – 139.


 

Emotional Intelligence Can Be Faked!

A number of organizations are utilizing measures of emotional intelligence (EI) as part of their selection systems, because of EI’s ability to predict performance. Emotional intelligence has been defined from two different perspectives, in terms of how it can be utilized.

Trait-based emotional intelligence.

The trait-based perspective defines EI as a personality trait “emotional self-confidence”, based on the characteristics of conscientiousness and resilience. From this perspective, EI determines how individuals cope with the demands and pressures of their environment, based on five main aspects:

  1. Awareness and understanding of one’s own emotions
  2. Awareness and understanding of other people’s emotions
  3. Flexibility and adaptability for changing one’s own emotions
  4. Coping with and managing stress
  5. Remaining optimistic and in a good mood

Ability-based emotional intelligence.

The ability-based perspective defines EI as a type of cognitive ability, similar to general intelligence, and focuses on four main aspects:

  1. Perception of emotion in one’s self, others, and inanimate objects
  2. Facilitating and using emotions for communicating feelings
  3. Understanding how emotions progress in relationships
  4. Managing feelings in one’s self and others.

Which perspective is the most appropriate?

While both perspectives have a fundamentally similar focus, the type of questions/items that are used to measure each type differ, and as such, the measures’ susceptibility to faking differs.

Faking on a selection test occurs when an applicant attempts to choose answers that they think are the “right answer” rather than answering truthfully about him or herself.

Trait-based measures of EI are particularly susceptible to faking, due in part to the items being so similar to personality test items (which have been shown to be fakeable). Additionally, trait-based items tend to be more transparent, in that the “right” answer tends to be more obvious to the responder.

With top-down selection systems, faking can alter the rank order of applicants, such that those whose scores are increased due to faking rise to the top, making them more likely to proceed to the next phase of the application process.

What should organizations do?

Organizations with a need for selecting or promoting employees on the basis of their emotional intelligence may wish to avoid problems associated with faking by utilizing ability-based measures of EI, as opposed to the more susceptible trait-based measures.

In instances where trait-based measures are necessary or preferred, the use of warnings against, or repercussions for, faking or distorting responses is encouraged. These types of “preventative measures” have been shown to reduce the incidence of applicant faking, and can help diminish the amount of faking on trait-based measures.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Day, A.L., & Carroll, S.A. (2008). Faking emotional intelligence (EI): comparing response distortion on ability and trait-based EI measures. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 29, 761-784.

Reducing Race and Sex Subgroup Differences in Selection

Using valid and cost-effective methods for selecting new employees is vital for organizations to remain competitive. However, some of the most valid selection procedures can result in lower scores for minority groups. This is problematic because it is in an organization’s best interest to employ a diverse staff, both because of the benefits to the organization – such as improved employee morale and increased creativity, but also because of the negative legal consequences that might result from unequal hiring practices.

Traditional Selection Methods and Trade-offs

Traditionally, tests of cognitive ability have been the most widely used and valid selection measures.  However, these measures often lead to significantly lower scores for females and non-white minorities than their male or white counterparts. By relying on measures of cognitive ability alone to select employees, organizations will likely hire a disproportionate number of white males relative to minority and female applicants.

There are many alternative methods to cognitive ability that can be used for employee selection. However, these alternative methods often involve trade-offs in the form of decreased effectiveness or other negative consequences. In order to minimize these problems, organizations should:

  • Ensure that alternative selection measures are valid predictors of job performance.
  • C hoose selection methods that reduce the likelihood of applicant faking.
  • Analyze time and cost investments of alternative selection methods.
  • Consider the practicality of implementation and fit with your organization.

Best Practices

The most effective strategies for reducing race and sex subgroup differences include:

  1. Using alternative methods such as interviews and assessment centers as selection measures.
  2. Assessing the entire range of knowledge, skills, and other abilities needed to perform the job effectively.
  3. Test banding – Grouping applicant scores rather than looking at them on a continuum. Applicants in the same “band” or group are considered to have the same score.
  4. Minimizing the verbal ability requirements of the predictor measure so that they meet, but do not exceed, the needs of the job.

Organizations should take this information into account and be aware of the trade-offs between validity and subgroup differences along with the organizational and legal consequences, when designing or choosing a selection system.

Interpretation by:

Michelle Toelle

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Ployhart, R.E., Holtz, B.C. (2008). The diversity-validity dilemma: Strategies for reducing racioethnic and sex subgroup differences and adverse impact in selection, Personnel Psychology, 61, 153-172.

How Can Telecommuting Work for You?

Telecommuting is a non-conventional work arrangement where employees work away from the office, usually at home, and communicate with their organization using technology like PCs and the internet. This type of work arrangement is popular with many businesses and employees because of the flexibility it affords to both. Telecommuting is becoming more and more mainstream and accepted in today’s business world (with an estimated 45 million American telecommuters in 2006), yet the research supporting telecommuting’s positive and negative effects on organizations and individual employees has shown mixed results. Also, many people worry that telecommuting may lead to social isolation or work-family conflict.  This article will discuss what research has found about the benefits and short-comings of telecommuting.

Telecommuting has been found to have a generally small to moderate relationship with several important business-relevant outcomes, including:

  • Increased employees’ perceived autonomy, or how much control employees feel they have over their jobs
  • Decreased work-family conflict
  • Increased interpersonal relationships between telecommuting employees and their supervisors
  • Increased job satisfaction
  • Increased supervisor ratings and archival records of job performance (but not greater self-ratings of performance than non-telecommuters)
  • Less employee turnover intention
  • Less employee role stress

It was also discovered that some of telecommuting’s effects appear to depend on:

Intensity

Intensity is number of days per week an employee telecommutes. Employees who telecommute more than half a week tended to have more negative relationships with their coworkers (but not supervisors).

One reason why supervisor relations are not affected with increasing telecommuting, while coworker relations are not, might be self-selection into telecommuting. In other words, employees who are already doing well probably have better relations with their supervisor, who would be more willing to let them telecommute. At the same time, employees might want to telecommute because they already have negative relationships with their coworkers and would not mind spending work time away from them.

Additionally, high intensity telecommuters tend to have even less role-stress than employees who telecommute less often.

Gender

Telecommuting samples that had higher proportions of women had greater objective and supervisor ratings of performance and also had greater perceived career prospects (rather than feeling like career prospects were being hurt by telecommuting).

Experience

Experience, as it relates to telecommuting, is conceptualized as how long an employee has telecommuted for work. Employees who have telecommuted for more than a year had even less role stress and work/family conflict than those employees with less experience.

Practical Implications

  • If feasible, consider offering telecommuting as an option to help retain or recruit more talented and qualified employees.
  • Be clear with your employees about how telecommuting may affect their future career prospects with your organization.
  • Employees who are just starting to telecommute may have a more difficult time learning to balance their work-family life at first. Consider offering some type of training or counseling to help ease the transition to telecommuting and make the experience more likely to be successful for both employees and your organization.
  • Take steps to ensure that telecommuting does not lead to or enhance negative relationships between telecommuting and non-telecommuting employees. Holding regular meetings or work lunches that include both your telecommuting and non-telecommuting employees may help ease tensions. Ensuring telecommuting seems normal and not just a special privilege can help reduce negative feelings between employees.

Telecommuting may offer your organization a great deal of flexibility in coming to a satisfying arrangement with your employees that takes into account both parties’ needs. The suggestions provided here can aid in successfully implementing telecommuting as a viable option for your organization!

Interpretation by:

Don Johnson

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Gajendran, R.S., & Harrison, D.A. (2007). The good, the bad, and the unknown about telecommuting: Meta-analysis of psychological mediators and individual consequences. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92(6), 1524-1541.

Effective Affirmative Action

Equal employment concerns are a major factor in Human Resource and Management efforts, particularly for selection and placement programs. Some of the most valid approaches for selection (i.e., cognitive ability testing), also pose a potential risk for adverse impact. One way to reduce adverse impact in the selection process is to use test-banding, which equates people within a certain range of scores, to reduce group differences. Perhaps a more effective way is to implement a meaningful affirmative action plan (AAP) aimed at strengthening the organization by reducing group differences.

AAPs and Preferential Treatment

Affirmative action is defined as any attempt by an organization to rectify past and current discrimination against members of protected classes, as defined by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. There are four levels of AAPs. These are (in order of increasing preferential strength):

  • Ending discriminatory practice(s).
  • Providing enhancement opportunities (e.g., training) for protected/targeted groups that don’t affect employment decisions.
  • Selecting protected/targeted group applicants over equally qualified non-target group applicants.
  • Using quotas and selecting less qualified protected/targeted group applicants over more qualified non-target group applicants.

AAPs and Organizational Outcomes

Preferential AAPs, such as those described in the last two bullets above, are difficult to justify legally. The real (or perceived) use of preferential AAPS has negative psychological consequences as well.

When it is perceived that preferential treatment has been used in selection, the new hires are viewed as less competent. In fact, belief they were given preferential treatment because of their group membership can even lead to self-doubt and loss of confidence for some members of certain target groups.

Although limited, research has demonstrated that affirmative action in general has not had any negative effects on organizational performance.

Implications for Practice

Steps an organization can take to make their AAPs as effective as possible include:

  1. Gaining support from top-management.
  2. A culture that supports AA and also holds employees accountable for AAP success.
  3. Recruitment targeted at underrepresented groups, including use of diverse recruiters.
  4. Developing relationships with target group communities and schools.
  5. Showing organizational diversity in advertising materials, especially diversity among supervisors.
  6. Use of technical methods (such as test banding) for reducing adverse impact in selection.
  7. Establishing internship and mentoring opportunities that include target group members and are not preferential in nature.
  8. Developing and enforcing policies that decrease workplace harassment and incivility.
  9. Training managers in diversity-management (including better management practices in general).
  10. Providing employees with effective diversity training that emphasizes unintentional forms of discrimination.
  11. Providing training opportunities in skill areas that may especially benefit members of underrepresented groups (such as improving English composition skills), but are offered equally to all employees.
  12. Offering benefits to all employees that can be particularly attractive to members of underrepresented groups, such as day care.
  13. Work with suppliers and other organizations that are owned by members of underrepresented groups or that are successfully administering their own AAPs.

Practical conclusions from the research are that use of strong preferential treatment for AAPs is almost always counterproductive, both for legal and psychological-social reasons. However, there are several steps that organizations can take to increase the recruitment, selection, and retention of employees from underrepresented groups while not alienating majority and other non-target group members. Key tips include emphasizing that your AAP is not preferential in nature and reaching out to target groups on several levels.

Interpretation by:

Donnie Johnson

The DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Kravitz, D.A. (2008). The diversity-validity dilemma: Beyond selection – the role of affirmative action. Personnel Psychology, 61, 173-193.

A Leap of Faith: Why knowledgeable professionals rely on gut instinct to select employees

While much attention has been given to the perceptions of various selection tools by applicants, relatively little attention has been dedicated to how hiring managers, HR professionals, and other gatekeepers in organizations choose to make hiring decisions.  New research indicates that despite greater access to information and an abundance of valid, reliable selection tools, decision makers still tend to rely on intuition, gut instinct, and subjectivity to make employment decisions.

Subjective judgments about applicants are usually made during an unstructured interview.  Interviewers tend to approach the interview as a time to “get to know” the applicant by asking questions loosely aimed at uncovering an applicant’s personality, fit, and competence for the position or organization.  More often than not, however, these questions have relatively little to do with predicting success on the job (e.g.  “If you were a sandwich, would you be the meat or the bread?”) and seldom include any type of scoring model that the interviewer could defend or even explain.  The decisions made using such a philosophy are unlikely to fairly and accurately assess candidates and will leave an organization without a way to defend against a claim of unfair hiring practice.

The Satisfaction of “Going with Your Gut”

Two flawed beliefs and their associated facets have been identified that seem to drive hiring professionals’ preference for instinct over objective measures:

People believe that near perfect precision is possible when predicting success. This is operationalized by:

  • Belief that right person + right fit = certain success
  • Validated tools (such as paper and pencil tests) include measures of validity and thus a measure of success and failure.  Subjective measures do not and are often perceived as more accurate.

People believe in the Myth of Expertise; intuitive judgment is perfected through time and practice.

  • Decision makers may understand the accuracy of objective measures, but believe that their situation is unique and that these measures are not relevant.
  • Decision makers overestimate their ability to make judgments of others.
  • Use of objective tools may give the impression of incompetence of the decision maker by others (e.g. “if you really know what you are doing, you don’t need tests”).

The truth of the matter is that experience provides an opportunity for skill improvement, but  does   not   necessarily   improve   accuracy.

Prior research has indicated that raters who use subjective measures rely on few pieces of information, lack insight into how they make their decisions, become more confident when irrelevant information is presented, and show poor inter-rater agreement.

Implications for Practice

Organizations must be aware that any tools, or for that matter selection criterion must be relevant, fair, and legally justifiable to accurately and defensibly select the best candidates.  The use of intuition and subjectivity alone hamper this process and has been shown to actually reduce the validity of paper and pencil and computer based tools.  Practices which ensure the most accurate selection include:

  • Accurate measures of critical KSAOs through job analysis.
  • Selection of tools validated to measurement of job related facets.
  • Use of structured, behavior based interviewing.
  • Education and training in selection criterion for those responsible for the hiring process.
  • Communication of how subjective interviews can negatively impact the legal defensibility of selection systems.

Organizations need to understand that the feelings of empowerment and mastery that come from allowing hiring decision makers to “go with their gut” comes at the cost of accuracy, fairness and legal defensibility.  Efforts by organizations to replace “horse sense” with science should include communicating the greater value of expertise in selection issues over the value of good intuition.

Interpretation by:

Mark Baker

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Highhouse, S. (2008). Stubborn reliance on intuition and subjective judgment in employee selection. Industrial and Organizational Psychology: Perspectives on Science and Practice, 1(3), 333-342.

Impression Management Use and Effectiveness in Employment Interviews

Almost every organization uses an interview for making employment decisions. Hiring managers, and others conducting interviews are well aware of interviewee use of “impression management” – applicants’ attempts to create a favorable impression. Some typical examples of impression management during interviews include verbal self-promotion (“I’m a very hard worker”), adjustment of non-verbal behaviors (smiling, welcoming body posture), and “looking the part” (wearing professional clothing).

Types of Impression Management

The most frequent type of impression management attempts are verbal self-promotions – the statements an applicant makes regarding his/her skills and abilities. These types of statements are considered either assertive (applicant initiated) or defensive (applicant response to interviewer assumptions). Assertive self-promotion is typified by self-focused statements that indicate the applicant possesses necessary skills, abilities, and positive characteristics. Additionally, applicants typically try to get the interviewer to feel good about them (other-focused) by trying to demonstrate that they hold similar beliefs and values, and attempting to build rapport and familiarity with the interviewer.

Defensively, applicants try to “repair” their image when an interviewer appears to be dissatisfied or offended by something the applicant has said or done. For example, applicants may try to justify, or explain away, a gap in the employment history on their resume, or rephrase their response (“what I really meant was…”) to a question if they get the feeling their answer was not what the interviewer wanted to hear.

The Influence of Personality

Research on employment interviews indicates that personality is related to the way an applicant will think and act. Depending on the situation, some personality traits may be more pronounced, and influence impression management strategies. For example, very conscientious applicants may take advantage of the opportunity to describe accomplishments and achievements, while those especially agreeable applicants will try to win favor by behaving exceedingly thoughtfully and considerately.

The Strength of the Situation

One potential moderator to this relationship is the strength of the situation – the degree to which the expectations for how to behave are clear. In “strong” situations, people have certain expectations for how to behave (e.g., quiet and subdued at a funeral), and thus most everyone behaves the same way, no matter if they are a very shy or very rambunctious person. In “weak” situations, the expectations for how to behave aren’t as clear, and thus people must decide for themselves what they feel is appropriate.

What may be surprising to HR practitioners is that people may be predisposed to engaging in impression managing behaviors.

The employment interview tends to be on the “strong” end of the scale – most people have reasonable expectations about what is appropriate behavior during an interview. However, the different circumstances surrounding why applicants are interviewing may over-ride the “strength” of interview expectations and affect their likelihood to engage in impression management. For example, applicants who have been looking for work for months may be more motivated to make a good impression (compared to an applicant who is just starting the job search process), because they desperately need the job.

When Will Impression Management Occur?

Understanding the relationship between these different aspects of the interview process can help HR practitioners understand how employment interviews may be affected by impression management, and how negative effects can be minimized. When personality is measured prior to the interview process, the extent to which people exhibit different personality traits can be determined and taken into account. For example, highly altruistic individuals tend to be less focused on themselves and thus more likely to use impression managing behaviors related to ingratiating themselves with others than they are to use self-promotion or defensive excuses. Similarly, more self-disciplined people are further likely to prepare for interviews and dedicate additional time and effort to how they will respond to likely questions. In this way, they are more likely to use self-promotion – taking responsibility for actions – and thus less likely to need to make excuses.

Two Main Types of Interviews

Most employment interview questions are in one of two formats: behavior description or situational based. In behavior description interviews, applicants are asked to describe their behaviors from past experiences similar to those of the target job (how did you act when…). Conversely, situational interviews use questions regarding hypothetical situations (how would you act if…). As such, the format of the interview may make it more likely for an applicant to engage in impression management – such that describing past behaviors encourages applicants to boast/brag about themselves, as well as defend how they acted in a particular situation if the interviewer seems skeptical.

Applicant personality affects the use of impression management behaviors, which in turn affects performance on the interview. Particularly when the motivation for using impression management is lower, and there are unclear expectations for how to behave, the relationship between both personality and interview type with impression management behaviors is high.

Implications for Practice

The most relevant implication for HR practitioners, is that use of behavior description interview questions can result in greater likelihood of self-promoting and defensive impression managing behaviors. With many interviews relying on the use of behavior-based questioning because, according to the old adage, “past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior”, interviewers may be unknowingly allowing themselves to be “played” by applicants. This is not to suggest that situational questions are better than behavioral-based questions – it is strictly a reminder for interviewers to be aware of, and prepared for, applicants likelihood for using these types of behaviors when responding to interview questions. Remember, a well constructed interview will ask questions, of either type, that are relevant and predictive for the position, and criteria, at hand.

Summary

Interviewers would be best served to examine applicant personality profiles through a well-constructed and validated measure beforehand, so as to better prepare themselves to watch for and identify applicants’ use of different types of impression managing behaviors.

These issues are particularly relevant for organizations using unconventional selection processes (i.e., a very informal or casual interview environment). As more and more companies come up with novel ways to attract candidates, “messing with” the expected interview experience may be detrimental – in that placing applicants in situations where there aren’t clear expectations for behavior, leads to greater likelihood of impression management.

Interpretation by:

Kathleen Melcher

DeGarmo Group

This was a summary of the research and practice implications from: Van Iddekinge, C. H., McFarland, L.A., & Raymark, P.H. (2007). Antecedents of Impression Management Use and Effectiveness in a Structured Interview. Journal of Management, 33 (5), 752-773.