Recruitment and Selection
Recruiting is the phase in which a firm develops a pool of interested, qualified applicants for a position. Selection is the process of filtering that pool to identify and hire those most likely to succeed. Together they form the staffing pillar of HumanResourceManagement.
How It Appears Per Course
ADMN 201
flowchart LR A["Job Analysis"] --> B["Recruiting"] B --> B1["Internal\nbuilds morale · Skills Inventories"] B --> B2["External\nads · campus · social media · job fairs"] B1 & B2 --> C["Applicant Pool"] C --> D["A — Application"] D --> E["T — Testing"] E --> F["I — Interview"] F --> G["R — References"] G --> H["O — Offer"] H --> I["Hired"]
Recruiting: Internal vs. External
| Type | Approach | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Internal | Consider current employees; use Skills Inventories | Builds morale; rewards performance; no onboarding cost |
| External | Ads, campus visits, LinkedIn, social media, job fairs, agencies | Brings new skills, perspectives, and fresh talent |
Realistic Job Preview (RJP): Giving candidates an honest picture of the role — including challenges. Failing to do this leads to early dissatisfaction and costly turnover. Replacing a mismatched hire at a 25,000 in training, lost productivity, and re-hiring.
The A.T.I.R.O. Selection Process
| Step | Method | Key Point |
|---|---|---|
| Application | Forms / résumés | Cannot ask about protected characteristics (age, race, religion, gender) |
| Testing | Ability, aptitude, personality; Assessment Centres | Best statistical predictor of job success |
| Interview | Structured or behavioural | Widely used but weak predictor without structure — bias reduces validity |
| References | Verification of candidate history | Confirms what the candidate has claimed |
| Offer | Final job offer | Last step — closes the selection process |
Assessment Centres: Candidates complete realistic management simulations (exercises, role-plays, in-basket tasks) and are observed by trained appraisers. More valid than standard interviews for management roles.
Behaviour-Based Interviewing: Asks candidates about past actions in specific situations rather than hypotheticals (“Tell me about a time you handled X…” not “What would you do if X…”). More valid because it anchors evaluation on concrete evidence rather than speculation.
Why Interviews Fail Without Structure
Unstructured interviews are one of the weakest predictors of job success:
- Interviewers form impressions in the first few seconds and spend the rest confirming them (confirmation bias)
- In-group bias: interviewers favour candidates who remind them of themselves
- Halo/horn effect: one strong or weak trait colours the entire evaluation → See Bias-PerformanceAppraisals for the full PHIL252 connection
Legal Constraints on Selection
- Cannot ask about age, race, religion, gender, national origin, or other protected grounds
- BFOR exception: protected trait may be used if it is genuinely required for the job
- See HRMLegalLandscape for the full legal framework
Cross-Course Connections
Bias-PerformanceAppraisals — PHIL252’s bias taxonomy explains exactly why unstructured interviews fail and why behaviour-based interviewing works as a fix
Key Points for Exam/Study
- Recruiting builds the pool; selection filters it
- Internal recruiting → morale and retention; external → new talent
- Realistic Job Preview prevents early turnover (wrong hire = costly)
- A.T.I.R.O.: Application → Testing → Interview → References → Offer
- Testing is the best predictor of job success
- Unstructured interviews are among the weakest predictors due to bias
- Behaviour-based interviewing: ask about past behaviour, not hypotheticals
- Assessment Centres: realistic simulations with trained appraisers
Open Questions
- How does the statistical validity of different selection methods (tests, structured interviews, unstructured interviews) compare?