Selection Procedure
The selection procedure
is concerned with securing relevant information about an applicant. This
information is secured in a number of steps or stages. The objective of
selection process is to determine whether an applicant meets the qualification
for a specific job and to choose the applicant who is most likely to perform
well in that job. Selection is a long process, commencing from the preliminary
interview of the applicants and ending with the contract of employment
(sometimes).
The selection procedure
consists of a series of steps. Each step must be successfully cleared before
the applicant proceeds to the next. The selection process is a series of
successive hurdles or barriers which an applicant must cross. These hurdles are
designed to eliminate an unqualified candidate at any point in the selection
process. Thus, this technique is called ―Successive Hurdles
Technique‖.Inpractice, the process differs among organisations and between two
different jobs within the same organisation. Selection procedure for the senior
managers will be long drawn and rigorous, but it is simple and short while
hiring lower level employees.
The major factors which determine the
steps involved in a selection process are as follows:
Selection process
depends on the number of candidates that are available for selection.
Selection process
depends on the sources of recruitment and the method that is adopted for making
contact with the prospective candidates.
Various steps involved
in as selection process depend on the type of personnel to be selected. All the
above factors are not mutually exclusive, rather these operate simultaneously.
In any case, the basic
objective of a selection process is to collect as
much relevant information about the candidates as is
possible so that the
most suitable candidates are selected. A comprehensive selection process involves
the various steps.
Evaluation congratulate
Adopt objectivity Check the reliability and validity
Steps in Selection
Process
1.Application
Pool: Application pool built-up through recruitment
process is the base for selection process. The basic objective at the
recruitment level is to attract as much worthwhile applications as possible so
that there are more options available at the selection stage.
2. Preliminary
Screening and Interview: It is highly noneconomic to administer
and handle all the applicants. It is advantageous to sort out unsuitable
applicants before using the further selectionsteps. For this purpose, usually,
preliminary interviews, application blank lists and short test can be used. All
applications received are scrutinised by the personnel department in order to
eliminate those applicants who do not fulfil required qualifications or work
experience or technical skill, his application will not be entertained. Such
candidate will be informed of his rejection.
Preliminary interview is a sorting process in which
the prospective candidates are given the necessary information about the nature
of the job and the organisation. Necessary information is obtained fromthe
candidates about their education, skills, experience, expected salary etc. If
the candidate is found suitable, he is elected for further screening. This
courtesy interview; as it is often called helps the department screen out
obvious misfits. Preliminary interview saves time and efforts of both the
company and the candidate. It avoids unnecessary waiting for the rejected
candidates and waste of money on further processing of an unsuitable candidate.
Since rejection rate is high at preliminary interview, the interviewer should
be kind, courteous, receptive and informal.
3. Application Blank orApplication Form:
An
application blank is a traditional widely accepted device for getting
information from a prospective applicant which will enable the management to
make a proper selection. The blank provides preliminary information as well as
aid in the interview by indicating areas of interest and discussion. It is a
good means of quickly collecting verifiable (and therefore fairly accurate)
basic historical data from the candidate. It also serves as a convenient device
for circulating information about the applicant to appropriate members of
management and as a useful device for storing information for, later reference.
Many types of application forms, sometimes very long and comprehensive and
sometimes brief, are used. Information is generally taken on the following
items:
(a) Biographical
Data: Name, father‘sname, data and place of birth, age,
sex, nationality, height, weight, identification marks, physical
disability, if any, marital status, and number of dependants.
(b)
Educational Attainment: Education
(subjects offered and grades secured), training acquired in special
fields and knowledge gained from professional/technical institutes or through
correspondence courses.
(c) Work
Experience: Previous experience, the number of jobs
held with the same or other employers, including the nature of duties,
and responsibilities and the duration of various assignments, salary received,
grades, and reasons for leaving the present employer.
(d)Salary
and Benefits: Present and expected.
(e) Other
Items: Names and addresses of previous employers,
references, etc. An application blank is a brief history sheet of an
employee‘sbackground and can be used for future reference, in case needed.
The application blank must be designed from the
viewpoint of the applicant as well as with the company‘s purpose in mind. It
should be relatively easy to handle in the employment office. Application form
helps to serve many functions like:
Its main usefulness is to provide
information for reference checking, good interviewing, and correlation with
testing data.
It helps to weed out candidates who are
lacking in education, experience or some other eligibility traits.
It helps in formulating questions to be asked in the
interview.
Data contained in application form can be stored for
future reference.
It also tests the candidate‘sability to
write, to organize his thoughts, and to present facts clearly and succinctly.
It indicates further whether the
applicant has consistently progressed to better jobs. It provides factual
information.
Weighted
Application Blanks
Some organisations assign numeric values or weights
to the responses provided by the applicants. This makes the application form
more job related. Generally, the items that have a strong relationship to job
performance are given higher scores. For example, for a sales
representative‘sposition, items such as previous selling experience, area of
specialisation, commission earned, religion, language etc. The total score of
each applicant is then obtained by adding the weights of the individual item
responses. The resulting scores are then used in the final selection. WAB is
best suited for jobs where there are many employees especially for sales and
technical jobs. It can help in reducing the employee turnover later on.
However, there are several problems associated with WAB e.g.
It takes time to develop such a form.
The WAB would have to be updated every
few years to ensure that the factors previously identified are still valid
products of job success.
The organisation should be careful not
to depend on weights of a few items while finally selecting the employee.
4. Selection
Tests: Many organisations hold different kinds of selection
tests to know more about the candidates or to reject the candidates who
cannot be called for interview etc. Selection tests normally supplement the
information provided in the application forms. Such forms may contain factual
information about candidates. Selection tests may give information about their
aptitude, interest, personality, which cannot be known by application forms.
Types of tests and rules of good of testing have been discussed in brief below:
A. Aptitude
Tests: These measure whether an individual has the capacity
or talent ability to learn a given job if given adequate training. These
are more useful for clerical and trade positions.
B. Personality
Tests: At times, personality affects job performance. These
determine personality traits of the candidate such as cooperativeness,
emotional balance etc. These seek to assess an individual‘smotivation,
adjustment to the stresses of everyday life, capacity for interpersonal
relations and self-image.
C. Interest
Tests: These determine the applicant‘sinterests. The
applicant is asked whether he likes, dislikes, or is indifferent to many
examples of school subjects, occupations, amusements, peculiarities of people,
and particular activities.
D. Performance
Tests: In this test the applicant is asked to demonstrate
his ability to do the job. For example, prospective typists are asked to
type several pages with speed and accuracy.
E. Intelligence
Tests: This aim at testing the mental capacity of a person
with respect to reasoning, word fluency, numbers, memory, comprehension,
picture arrangement, etc. It measures the ability to grasp, understand and to
make judgement.
F. Knowledge
Tests: These are devised to measure the depth of the
knowledge and proficiency in certain skills already achieved by the
applicants such as engineering, accounting etc.
G. Achievement
Tests: Whereas aptitude is a capacity to learn in the
future, achievement is concerned with what one has accomplished. When
applicants claim to know something, an achievement test is given to measure how
well they know it.
H. Projective
Tests: In these tests the applicant projects his
personality into free responses about pictures shown to him which are
ambiguous.
Rules
of Good Testing
Norms should be developed for each test.
Their validity and reliability for a given purpose should be established before
they are used.
Adequate time and resources must be provided to
design, validate, and check tests. Tests should be designed and administered
only by trained and competent persons. The user of tests must be extremely
sensitive to the feelings of people about tests.
Tests are to be uses as a screening device.
Reliance should not be placed solely upon tests in
reaching decisions.
Tests should minimize the probabilities of getting
distorted results. They must be ‗race-free‘. Tests scores are not precise
measures. They must be assigned a proper weightage.
5. Interview:
An
interview is a procedure designed to get information from a person and to
assess his potential for the job he is being considered on the basis of
oral responses by the applicant to oralinquiries by the interviewer.
Interviewer does a formal in-depth conversation with the applicant, to evaluate
his suitability. It is one of the most important tools in the selection
process. This tool is used wheninterviewing skilled, technical, professional
and even managerial employees. It involves two-wayexchange of information. The
interviewer learns about the applicant and the candidate learns about the
employer.
Objectives
of Interviews: Interview helps:
To obtain additional information from the candidate.
Facilitates giving to the candidate information
about the job, company, its policies, products etc. To assess the basic suitability
of the candidate.
The
selection interview can be:
One to one between the candidate and the
interviewer:
Two or more interviewers by employers
representatives-sequential;
By a panel of selections, i.e., by more than
representative of the employer.
The sequential interview involves a series of
interviews; each interviewer meeting the candidate separately. The panel
interview consists of two or more interviews meeting the candidate together.
Types
of interviews: Interviews can be classified in various ways according to:
(A)
Degree of Structure
(B)
Purpose of Interview
(C)
Content of Interview
(A)
Degree of Structure:
(1)Unstructured
or non directive: in which you ask questions as they come
to mind. There is no set format to follow.
(2)Structured
or directive: in which the questions and acceptable
responses are specified in advance. The responses are rated for
appropriateness of content.
Structured and non-structured interviews have their
pros and cons. In structured interviews all applicants are generally asked all
required questions by all interviewers. Structured interviews are generally
more valid. However structured interviews do not allow the flexibility to
pursue points of interests as they develop.
(B)
Purpose of Interview: A
selection interview is a type of interview designed to predict future job performance,
on the basis of applicant‘sresponses to the oral questions asked to him.
A stress interview is
a special type of selection interview in which the applicant is made uncomfortable
by series of awkward and rude questions. The aim of stress interview is
supposedly to identify applicant‘slow or high stress tolerance. In such an
interview the applicant is made uncomfortable by throwing him on the defensive
by series of frank and often discourteous questions by the interviewer.
(C)
Content of Interview: The
content of interview can be of a type in which individual‘sability to project
a situation is tested. This is a situation type interview. In job-related
interview, interviewer attempts to assess the applicant‘spast behaviours
for job related information, but most questions are not considered situational.
In a behaviour interview a
situation in described and candidates are asked how they behaved in the
past in such a situation. While in situational interviews candidates are
asked to describe how they would react to situation today or tomorrow. In the
behavioural interview they are asked to describe how they did react to the
situation in the past.
Principles
of Interviewing
To
make it effective, an interview should be properly planned and conducted on
certain principles; Edwin
B.
Flippo has described certain rules and
principles of good interviewing to this end:
Provide proper surroundings. The physical setting
for the interview should be both private and
comfortable.
The mental setting should be one of rapport. The
interviewer must be aware of non-verbal behaviour. Plan for the interview by
thoroughly reviewing job specifications and job descriptions.
Determine the specific objectives and the method of
the interviewing.
Inform yourself as much as possible concerning the
known information about the interviewee. The interviewer should possess and
demonstrate a basic liking and respect for people.
Questions should be asked in a manner
that encourages the interviewee to talk. Put the applicant at ease.
Make a decision only when all the data
and information are available. Avoid decisions that are based on first
impressions.
Conclude the interview tactfully, making sure that
the candidate leaves feeling neither too elated
nor
frustrated.
Maintain some written record of the interview during
or immediately after it. Listen attentively and, if possible, protectively.
Questions must be stated clearly to
avoid confusion and ambiguity. Maintain a balance between open and overtly
structured questions.
‗Body language‘must not be ignored.
The interviewer should make some overt sign to
indicate the end of the interview.
Interviewing
is largely an art, the application of which can be improved through practice.
6. Background Investigation: The
next step in the selection process is to undertake an investigation of those
applicants who appear to offer potential as employees. This may include
contacting former employers to confirm the candidate‘swork record and to obtain
their appraisal of his or her performance/ contacting other job-related and
personal references, and verifying the educational accomplishments shown on the
application.
The background investigation has major implications.
Every personnel administrator has the responsibility to investigate each
potential applicant. In some organization, failure to do so could result in the
loss of his or her job. But many managers consider the background investigation
data highly biased. Who would actually list a reference that would not give
anything but the best possible recommendation? The seasoned personnel
administrator expects this and delves deeper into the candidate‘sbackground,
but that, too, may not prove to be beneficial. Many past employers are
reluctant to give any information to another company other than factual
information (e.g., date of employment).
Even though there is some reluctance to give this
information, there are ways in which personnel administrators can obtain it.
Sometimes, for instance information can be obtained from references once
removed. For example, the personnel administrator can ask a reference whose
name has been provided on the application form to give another reference,
someone who has knowledge of the candidate‘swork experience. By doing this, the
administrator can eliminate the possibility of accepting an individual based on
the employee‘scurrent employer‘sglowing recommendation when the motivation for
such a positive recommendation was to get rid of the employee.
7. Physical Examination: After
the selection decision and before the job offer is made, the candidate is required
to undergo physical fitness test. Candidates are sent for physical examination
either to the company‘sphysician or to a medical officer approved for the
purpose. Such physical examination provides the following information.
Whether the candidate‘sphysical measurements are in
accordance with job requirements or not? Whether the candidate suffers from bad
health which should be corrected?
Whether the candidate has health problems or
psychological attitudes likely to interfere with work
efficiency
or future attendance?
Whether
the candidate is physically fit for the specific job or not?
Policy on these physical exams has changed today.
Dale Yoder writes, ―Modem policy used the physical examination not to eliminate
applicants, but to discover what jobs they are qualified to fill. The
examination should disclose the physical characteristics of the individual that
are significant from the standpoint of his efficient performance of the job he
may enter or of those jobs to which he may reasonably expect to be transferred
or promoted. It should note deficiencies, not as a basis for rejection, but as
indicating restrictions on his transfer to various positions also.‖
8. Approval by Appropriate Authority: On
the basis of the above steps, suitable candidates are recommended for
selection by the selection committee or personnel department. Though such a
committee or personnel department may have authority to select the candidates
finally, often it has staff authority to recommend the candidates for selection
to the appropriate authority. Organisations may designate the MANAGEMENT
various authorities for approval of final selection
of candidates for different categories of candidates. Thus, for top level
managers, board of directors may be approving authority; for lower levels, even
functional heads concerned may be approving authority.
9. Final Employment Decision: After
a candidate is finally selected, the human resource department
recommends his name for employment. The management or board of the company
offers employment in the form of an appointment letter mentioning the post, the
rank, the salary grade, the date by which the candidate should join and other
terms and conditions of employment. Some firms make a contract of service on
judicial paper. Usually an appointment is made on probation in the beginning.
The probation period may range from three months to two years. When the work
and conduct of the employee is found satisfactory, he may be confirmed. The
personnel department prepare a waiting list and informs the candidates. In case
a person does not join after being selected, the company calls next person on
the waiting list.
10. Evaluation: The
selection process, if properly performed, will ensure availability of competent
and committed personnel. Aperiod audit, conducted by people who work
independently of the human resource department, will evaluate the effectiveness
of the selection process. The auditors will do a thorough and the intensive
analysis and evaluate the employment programme.
Related Topics
Privacy Policy, Terms and Conditions, DMCA Policy and Compliant
Copyright © 2018-2023 BrainKart.com; All Rights Reserved. Developed by Therithal info, Chennai.