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I'm trying to imagine the meeting with American shareholders at which Manchester United's executives explain their choice of successor. "So you got someone lined up?" "Yes, we do, and we're very confident in-" "We heard the Real Madrid guy is...
Recent college graduates are lacking in professionalism in the workplace. College graduates laid back and falling victim to common mistakes of Gen Y.
Much of the trouble and overhead in recruiting starts with bad job requirements. If you can't accurately describe the qualifications for the job, you can't screen or assess and the candidates can't...
Research published by O’Boyle Jr and Aguinis (2012) challenges an alleged assumption made by professionals in the human resource management, organizational behaviour and I/O psychology fields that ...
Being an effective manager requires that you behave authentically. "Why?" you might ask. "Maybe the 'real me' isn't the most effective boss, but if I can just act the way an effective boss should act and get good results, what's wrong with that?
Special issue of the International Journal of Selection and Assessment dealing with Reruitment, Selection and Assessment issues in Europe, edited by Ioannis Nikolaou, Neil Anderson and Jesus Salgado.
The best managers have a fundamentally different understanding of workplace, company, and team dynamics. See what they get right.
Via Tom Haak
Research news from leading universities...
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Information to help organizations and their employees thrive.
THE problem with human-resource managers is that they are human. They have biases; they make mistakes. But with better tools, they can make better hiring decisions,...
Ο οργανισμός είναι οι άνθρωποί του. Πόσο καλά όμως γνωρίζουν οι εταιρείες αυτό το πολύτιμο asset; Η γνωριμία μπορεί να ξεκινήσει από τα πρώτα κιόλας στάδια της επαφής, από τη διαδικασία του recruitment και να συνεχιστεί κατά τη διάρκεια της παραμονής του ανθρώπινου δυναμικού στους κόλπους του οργανισμού. Τα Assessment Centers είναι ίσως ένας από τους καταλληλότερους τρόπους να «χτιστεί» αυτή η σχέση.
Job applicants with experience in voluntary roles may be tempted to report this to their prospective employers. But how favourably do recruiters regard these sorts of experience? Christa Wilkin and Catherine Connelly investigated this in a group of professional recruiters, providing them with CVs (resumes) constructed to differ systematically in the types of experience reported. They suspected that other things being equal, work experience may be favoured more when it comes with a wage, as duration in a paid role implies you have met performance and behavioural standards, whereas voluntary positions tend to lack appraisals and focus more on participation (hours of involvement) than evaluating outcomes. Wilkin and Connelly also predicted that voluntary work would be subject to the same 'relevance' criteria as paid: if it didn't obviously supply skills, knowledge and experience that were pertinent to the targeted job, it wouldn't make them more attractive to the recruiter.
In the competition for true talent, I often picture companies as robots donned in red or blue plastic, battling in a yellow ring to conquer and win the best of the best candidates. But my retro devotion to Rock’em Sock’em robots always reminds me that someone is controlling the levers. The moves of the Blue Bomber and the Red Rocker are really being choreographed by each company’s recruiters. Recruiters launch the battle, and candidates’ perceptions of the organization and its corresponding brand image must be considered throughout the process. If recruiters and organizations know what will keep applicants interested and continuing through the process, they have a better chance at getting the best talent on board. But what sorts of things matter to candidates? And do these things change as a function of the stage of the process?
Think you're a great leader? Make sure you aren't guilty of one of these three reality-distorting traits. Every great leader possesses a degree of what Walter Isaacson (in his biography of Steve Jobs) describes as "an ability to distort reality." What Isaacson meant is that Jobs forced his will on Apple, often pushing people to create things they never thought possible--a powerful asset in any leader. But that reality distortion effect works both ways. It also means that every leader, to a greater or lesser degree, distorts the reality around themselves, leading to tensions, inconsistency, and bad decisions. There are two reasons why leaders who live in a bubble become so dangerous to themselves and those they lead.
Via Belinda MJ.B, donhornsby, Tom Haak
Keeping it "weird" makes Method's employees happy, and contributes to the $100m company's success
Via Richard Andrews
By offering decision makers rich real-time data, social media is giving some companies fresh strategic insight. A McKinsey Quarterly Strategy article.
Via Tom Haak
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