Transcript Chapter_011
Part 5
Staffing Activities: Employment
Chapter 11: Decision Making
Chapter 12: Final Match
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Part 5
Staffing Activities: Employment
Chapter 11:
Decision Making
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Staffing Organizations Model
Organization
Mission
Goals and Objectives
Organization Strategy
HR and Staffing Strategy
Staffing Policies and Programs
Support Activities
Core Staffing Activities
Legal compliance
Planning
Recruitment:
Selection:
External, internal
Measurement, external, internal
Job analysis
Employment:
Decision making, final match
Staffing System and Retention Management
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Chapter Outline
Choice of Assessment Method
Single Predictor
Multiple Predictors
Hiring Standards and Cut Scores
Description of Process
Consequences of Cut Scores
Methods to Determine Cut
Scores
Professional Guidelines
Methods of Final Choice
Random Selection
Ranking
Grouping
Ongoing Hiring
Decision Makers
Determining Assessment Scores
Validity Coefficient
Face Validity
Correlation with Other
Predictors
Adverse Impact
Utility
HR Professionals
Managers
Employees
Legal Issues
Uniform Guidelines on
Employee Selection
Procedures
Diversity and Hiring Decisions
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Learning Objectives for This Chapter
Be able to interpret validity coefficients
Estimate adverse impact and utility of
selection systems
Learn about methods for combining multiple
predictors
Establish hiring standards and cut scores
Evaluate various methods of making a final
selection choice
Understand the roles of various decision
makers in the staffing process
Recognize the importance of diversity
concerns in the staffing process
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Discussion Questions for This Chapter
Your boss is considering using a new predictor. The base rate is
high, the selection ratio is low, and the validity coefficient is high
for the current predictor. What would you advise your boss and
why?
What are the positive consequences associated with a high
predictor cut score? What are the negative consequences?
Under what circumstances should a compensatory model be
used? When should a multiple hurdles model be used?
What are the advantages of ranking as a method of final choice
over random selection?
What roles should HR professionals play in staffing decisions?
Why?
What guidelines do the UGESP offer to organizations when it
comes to setting cut scores?
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Choice of Assessment Method
Validity Coefficient
Face Validity
Correlation With Other Predictors
Adverse Impact
Utility
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Validity Coefficient
Practical significance
Extent to which predictor adds value to prediction of
job success
Assessed by examining
Sign
Magnitude
Statistical significance
Validities above .15 are of moderate usefulness
Validities above .30 are of high usefulness
Assessed by probability or p values
Reasonable level of significance is p < .05
Face validity
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Correlation With Other Predictors
To add value, a predictor must add to
prediction of success above and beyond
forecasting powers of current predictors
A predictor is more useful the
Smaller its correlation with other predictors and
Higher its correlation with the criterion
Predictors are likely to be highly correlated
with one another when their content domain is
similar
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Adverse Impact
Role of predictor
Discriminates between people in terms of the
likelihood of their job success
When it discriminates by screening out a
disproportionate number of minorities and women,
Adverse impact exists which may result in legal problems
Issues
What if one predictor has high validity and high
adverse impact?
And another predictor has low validity and low
adverse impact?
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Utility Analysis
Taylor-Russell Tables
Focuses on proportion
of new hires who turn
out to be successful
Requires information
on:
Selection ratio:
Number hired /
number of applicants
Base rate:
proportion of
employees who are
successful
Validity coefficient of
current and “new”
predictors
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Utility Analysis
Economic Gain Formula
Focuses on the monetary impact of using a predictor
Requires a wide range of information on current employees,
validity, number of applicants, cost of testing, etc.
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Limitations of Utility Analysis
While most companies use multiple selection
measures, utility models assume decision is
Important variables are missing from model
Whether to use a single selection measure rather than
Select applicants by chance alone
EEO / AA concerns
Applicant reactions
Utility formula based on simplistic assumptions
Validity does not vary over time
Non-performance criteria are irrelevant
Applicants are selected in a top-down manner
and all job offers are accepted
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Discussion Questions
Your boss is considering using a new
predictor. The base rate is high, the
selection ratio is low, and the validity
coefficient is high for the current
predictor. What would you advise your
boss and why?
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Determining Assessment Scores
Single predictor
Multiple predictors
Three models
shown
Multiple hurdles
model
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Relevant Factors: Selecting
the Best Weighting Scheme
Do decision makers have considerable
experience and insight into selection
decisions?
Is managerial acceptance of the selection
process important?
Is there reason to believe each predictor
contributes relatively equally to job success?
Are there adequate resources to use involved
weighting schemes?
Are conditions under which multiple regression
is superior satisfied?
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Ex. 11.4: Combined Model
for Recruitment Manager
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Hiring Standards and Cut Scores
Issue -- What is a passing score?
Score may be a
Single score from a single predictor or
Total score from multiple predictors
Description of process
Cut score - Separates applicants who
advance from those who are rejected
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Exh. 11.5: Consequences of Cut Scores
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Hiring Standards and Cut Scores
(continued)
Methods to determine cut scores
Minimum competency
Top-down
Banding
Professional guidelines
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Ex. 11.6: Use of Cut Scores in Selection Decisions
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Discussion Questions
What are the positive consequences
associated with a high predictor cut
score? What are the negative
consequences?
Under what circumstances should a
compensatory model be used? When
should a multiple hurdles model be
used?
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Methods of Final Choice
Random selection
Ranking
Finalists are ordered from most to least desirable
based on results of discretionary assessments
Grouping
Each finalist has equal chance of being selected
Finalists are banded together into rank-ordered
categories
Ongoing hiring
Hiring all acceptable candidates as they become
available for open positions
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Ex. 11.8: Methods of Final Choice
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Decision Makers
Role of human resource professionals
Role of managers
Determine process used to design and manage
selection system
Contribute to outcomes based on initial assessment
methods
Provide input regarding who receives job offers
Determine who is selected for employment
Provide input regarding process issues
Role of employees
Provide input regarding selection procedures
and who gets hired, especially in team approaches
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Discussion Questions
What are the advantages of ranking as a
method of final choice over random
selection?
What roles should HR professionals play
in staffing decisions? Why?
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Legal Issues
Legal issue of importance in decision making
Cut scores or hiring standards
Uniform Guidelines on Employee
Selection Procedures (UGESP)
If no adverse impact, guidelines are silent on cut
scores
If adverse impact occurs, guidelines become
applicable
Choices among finalists
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Discussion Questions
What guidelines do the UGESP offer to
organizations when it comes to setting
cut scores?
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Ethical Issues
Issue 1
Do you think companies should use banding in
selection decisions? Defend your position.
Issue 2
Is clinical prediction the fairest way to combine
assessment information about job applicants, or are
the other methods (unit weighting, rational
weighting, multiple regression) more fair? Why?
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