The Recruitment and Selection Process of HR

HR departments can even improve their employee retention rate if their recruitment and selection methods are performed efficiently since hiring the right employee for the right position can reduce the rate of employee turnover and improve morale by promoting from within when appropriate. There are many steps in the recruitment and selection process, but they're necessary for ensuring that the ideal candidate is hired for the position.



Recruitment and Selection Definition

When discussing the importance of the recruitment and selection process in human resource management, it's important to first establish what these processes actually mean to a business. The simplest recruitment and selection definition is the process of identifying and filling a position. But the process is a lot more complicated than it sounds.

In order to properly recruit candidates, you must recognize that a position is available, research and document what the job entails and determine what ideal qualifications a candidate should have. Then, decide where and how to recruit for the position and encourage people to apply.

Whereas recruiting involves trying to attract a large pool of qualified candidates, selection involves trying to filter out those applicants until you find the one person you actually want to fill the position. In order to do this, you need to go through the applications to find candidates who best meet your requirements.

You'll then conduct interviews with these prospects, short list the most qualified applicants and eventually narrow down the pool of applicants until you choose the right person.

Recruitment and Selection Objectives

It's important to recognize that the ultimate goal of the recruitment and selection process isn't just to hire someone to do the job but to hire the right person. That means not just finding someone with the abilities and knowledge to fill the vacancy but someone who can also do it with a good attitude and fit in with his coworkers and the overall company culture.

Failing to consider these important goals may leave you trying to fill the same position over and over until you actually find someone who has a good attitude and fits in.

If you have a super laid-back company culture where everyone is expected to leave at 5 p.m. and not take their work home with them, a highly motivated worker who wants to stay on the clock 24/7 will be miserable, just as an employee who wants a well-defined distinction between her work and private life will be unhappy working at a company that wants her to be available at all times.

Aside from helping you to find the right candidate, there are other things you may accomplish through a thorough recruitment and selection process as well. These may include:

·         Creating a large talent pool of potential employees that you may be able to pull from in the future.

·         Meeting your diversity objectives by hiring based solely on ability and how someone fits into the company culture.

·         Building a reputation for fair, unbiased hiring practices.

·         Making the recruitment and selection process faster and more efficient in the future.

Identify Your Hiring Needs

Before you go about hiring someone, you need to know that there's actually a position for them to fill. That's why the first step of recruitment is to recognize that there's either a vacant position at the company or you need to create a new position.

In large companies, this may begin with a requisition for recruitment being filed by a manager who needs a new employee.

This document will detail the required duties, responsibilities, qualifications and desired experience related to the position. The sourcing manager will then determine if the position is actually necessary and if it is, whether it should be full or part time and permanent or temporary. In smaller companies, the owner or department head may simply tell the HR manager that he'd like to hire for a position and if he has any specific requirements for the position or the potential job candidate.

Analyze the Position

While a requisition for recruitment may have some details about the position and the desired candidate, it's important to know the full extent of everything required for the job.

That's where the job analysis comes in. This process should look at similar positions at other companies, past job analysis for the business and information from former employee's exit interviews in order to know what work environment, duties, responsibilities, skills, abilities and experience are necessary for the position.

You'll need these details to create the job description, person specs, and recruitment methods and interview questions, as well as to decide on the proper pay, benefits and training program for the employee. It can even be used for performance appraisals in the years to come.

Evaluation, Description and Person Specs

Once you have the job analysis, you can use this information for your evaluation, description and person specs, which are all necessary before you can create a job listing. The job evaluation requires looking at similar positions in your company and at similar local jobs in the area to come up with a fair pay range and benefits package.

The job description should cover everything a person needs to do and what tools they'll use to perform their duties.

This should include the job title, location, a simplified summary of the responsibilities and specific duties. You may also choose to include details about special machines, materials, working conditions, equipment or health hazards that are associated with the position as well as who the new recruit will be reporting to.

The person specs are to the new employee what the job description is to the vacancy. In other words, it lays out everything you hope to see in an ideal prospective applicant. This should include a candidate's qualifications, work experience, skills, education, training and even traits that could make them fit in well, such as a good personality, positive outlook, ability to handle stress, etc.

Develop a Recruitment Strategy

Your recruitment strategy is how and where you plan to source applicants for the position, starting with whether you'd like to hire internally or externally.

Internal sourcing involves recruiting from former employees, applicants and employee referrals, or promoting or transferring current employees. The majority of positions are filled through external recruiting sources, such as job sites, employment agencies, headhunters, job fairs, professional associations, etc.

There are benefits to both internal and external recruiting, and which option is best will vary by situation. Internal recruitment can result in increased loyalty and morale among employees, as well as the knowledge that your new hire will already be familiar with company culture and policies.

Unfortunately, if you promote or transfer an existing employee, you'll also have to fill her former position, and by only looking at internal sources, you may be limiting your applicant pool and miss the opportunity to find a truly outstanding employee.

Public recruitment strategies can open you up to the largest candidate pool, but you may end up with far more unqualified applicants.

Therefore, you'll need to do more work to create an intriguing and interesting job listing that includes the information from your job description and person specs. It's critical that you have someone proofread your ads to make sure they're grammatically and factually correct as well as free from anything that could be interpreted as discriminatory, especially if you wrote your listing in a unique or fun way.

Whether you recruit publicly or privately, internally or externally, it's also of the utmost importance that your recruitment strategy is fair, professional and unbiased.

 

References

     AHRI.COM( 2020). Recruitment and selection . [Online] Available at: https://www.ahri.com.au/resources/ahriassist/recruitment-and-selection/ [Accessed 30 May 2020].

     Tutorialspoint.com(2020).Recruitment process. [Online] Available at: https://www.tutorialspoint.com/recruitment_and_selection/recruitment_process.htm [Accessed 20 June 2020]

     Video [online], Available at : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNU2ZMOnf1I [Accessed 21 June 2020]


Comments

  1. Hi,Dilanka.Do you think your company use best method to recruit the people.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not yet I think we are not there yet,Here's how to recruit the best of the best in a job market that favors the candidate.

      Take advantage of social media.
      Market your compensation package (beyond salary)
      Optimize for mobile
      Expand your search area. Increase your hiring speed
      Use existing employees to market your company

      Delete
  2. Hi,
    I think there should be the following difference between recruitment and selection. Recruitment refers to the process where potential applicants are searched for, and then encouraged to apply for an actual or anticipated vacancy. Selection is the process of hiring employees among the shortlisted candidates and providing them a job in the organization. are you agree with me ?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Dilanka, I think adopting to a company culture in a recruitment plays a vital role. How can we identify candidates in that aspect.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Dilanka, Today's recruiting process redefined as "Right people for Right places" . please comment over the same.

    ReplyDelete

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