Are Hiring Mistakes Costing You Real Money?
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According to the bureau of labor statistics, over the 12 months ending in May 2013, hires totaled $51.9 million and separations totaled $50.1 million. While it is reported that as we come out of the recession, employers have the upper hand in hiring many employers continue to make less than optimal decisions in hiring. A survey done for CareerBuilder.com found that 68 percent of employers said they were affected by a bad hire in the past year.
The survey which was conducted among 2,696 employers by Harris Interactive, found that a single bad hire can significantly affect an organization's bottom line. Forty-one percent of companies that made a bad hire estimate that it cost them more than $25,000 and one in four said it cost more than $50,000. The price of a bad hire adds up in a variety of direct and indirect ways.
When classifying what makes someone a bad hire, in the Harris Interactive survey employers reported several behavioral and productivity-related issues:
- Employee didn't produce the proper quality of work - 63 percent
- Employee didn't work well with other employees - 63 percent
- Employee had a negative attitude - 62 percent
- Employee had immediate attendance problems - 56 percent
- Customers complained about the employee - 49 percent
- Employee didn't meet deadlines - 48 percent
- Less productivity for the specific worker and their colleagues - 41 percent
- Lost time to recruit and train another worker - 40 percent
- Cost to recruit and train another worker - 37 percent
- Employee morale negatively affected throughout the department or division - 36 percent
- Negative impact on client solutions - 22 percent
- Fewer sales company wide - 11 percent
- Legal issues - 9 percent
- The employers were in a rush and took the "first warm body"
- The employers did not have good interviewing skills
- The employers limited interviewing to just one person rather than a few people
- The employers lack of understanding as to what true talents are needed for the job
- The employers were unwilling to apply standard profiles or assessments as part of their interview and decision-making process
- Needed to fill the job quickly - 38 percent
- Not sure; sometimes you make a mistake - 34 percent
- Insufficient talent intelligence - 21 percent
- Didn't check references - 11 percent
- Fully understand what talents and behaviors will work best for the job. If you have others who are successful in that position, find out why, and what talents and behaviors they exhibit.
- Take your time. Resist putting a warm body in place. You will only be starting over again soon.
- Train those involved in the hiring process in good interview techniques. Let them practice.
- Have your potential hires take a talent assessment, match it to the prospective employee and validate it during the interview process.
- Involve more than one person in the hiring process.
About the Author Susan Lauer, Principal at Aspire Consulting a company that assists in building or implementing plans that support necessary change, transform leadership, improve processes and sustain success for businesses and organizations. Please contact her at SLauer@AspireAdvantage.com or (845) 803-0438 to learn more. Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/8039523 |