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Recruitment and selection in public service

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Title: Recruitment and selection in public service


1
Recruitment and selection in public service
  • Agata Austen-Tynda, PhD
  • Chair in Public Management
  • University of Economics in Katowice

2
Agenda
  • Precursors to Successful Recruitment and
    Selection
  • The civil service staffing process (recruitment
    and selection)
  • Public service motivation
  • Trends in recruitment and selection
  • Best practices in improving recruitment selection
    process

3
Definition
  • Recruitment can be defined as
  • all activities directed towards locating
    potential employees
  • the attraction of applications from suitable
    applicants.
  • The aim of recruitment is to get the best person
    suited to the job based on objective criteria for
    a particular job

4
Why is recruitment and selection so important?
  • Reversing the Erosion of the Public Service Ethic
  • Personnel has long been perceived (and even
    defined) in terms of control, rather than service
    to the broader organization
  • Civic Culture and Tradition
  • Sound recruitment and selection practices also
    depend on complementary HRM systems

5
Why is recruitment and selection so important?
Costs of mistakes engaging incompetent,
underqualified, unmotivated employees employing
another person requires repeating the process and
generates costs
Element of PR strategy
6
Rules of recrutiment and selection
  • Commonality
  • Openess
  • Competitiveness
  • Legality
  • Non-discrimination
  • Constancy of criteria
  • Neutrality
  • Objectivism
  • Transparency
  • Personal data security
  • Acting without delay

7
The civil service staffing process
Planning and approval for staffing
Position announcement
Recruitment
Selection of recruitment strategies
Selection of tests
Screen, interview, and checks (reference and
other)
Selection
Final selection / Negotiate and hire
Postselection considerations
8
Employer recruitment
  • Elements influencing effectiveness of
    recruitment
  • The breadth and quality of the process
  • The size of the labour pool and the location of
    jobs
  • Offered pay and benefits
  • Job quality and requirements of the position
  • Organizational image

9
Applicants perspective
  • Avoiding cold, unthoughtful and dilatory
    treatment
  • Timing to minimize anxiety
  • Feedback to optimize scarce job search resources
  • Information that makes distinctions
  • Enthusiastic, informative, and credible
    representatives

10
Planning and approval
  • Taking review of the need for the position to
    take into account the following
  • strategic and operational plans for the
    organization
  • funding
  • current staffing structure
  • targets for diverse staffing profiles across all
    levels
  • current staffing and skill levels
  • anticipations in terms of new positions,
    restructured positions, eliminated positions
  • how the needs for the position might best be met

11
Planning and approval
  • Labour market survey
  • trends in terms of availability, salaries,
    education levels

12
Position announcement
Title and agency affiliation Salary
range Description of duties and
responsibilities Minimum qualifications Special
conditions Application procedures Equal
opportunity employment Classification Career
potential Special benefits Time and place of
applications
13
Capabilities
  • Technical skills knowledge and abilities
    connected with particular job position
  • policy development and analysis,
  • improved systems for monitoring and evaluation
    and systems to improve financial management
  • planning,
  • budgeting
  • reporting.
  • Other criteria
  • Diversity and broad representation of minority
    and protected class
  • PSM

14
Manager Ministerial and Parliamentary Services
(516394)
  • Applications Close Friday, 12 September 2008.
  • Salary 76,007 per annum.
  • Community and Health Services (Public Sector)
    Award, Administrative and Clerical Stream Level
    10.
  • Permanent full-time day work.
  • Location Hobart.
  • Enquiries to Sharon Trueman, Department of Health
    and Human Services, phone (03) 6233 3761, email
    sharon.trueman_at_dhhs.tas.gov.au.
  • You are encouraged to apply online (below) or
    forward your hard copy application quoting the
    vacancy number to Recruitment Services, Human
    Resources, Department of Health and Human
    Services, GPO Box 125, Hobart, Tasmania, 7001.

15
  • Duties
  • Manage the operations of the Ministerial and
    Parliamentary Services function including
    provision of high level co-ordination,
    information and advice services to the Department
    and to the Minister including the timely
    preparation and provision of high quality
    correspondence, briefings, speeches and other
    documents for and on behalf of the Minister.

16
  • Desirable Requirements
  • High level analytical, conceptual, strategic,
    research and creative skills and the ability to
    understand the political, social and
    organisational environment in the context of the
    health and human services sector
  • identify relevant issues and priorities and make
    sound judgements
  • high level interpersonal skills including written
    and oral communication skills, negotiation and
    conflict resolution skills
  • the ability to develop, manage and maintain
    collaborative stakeholder and client networks
    and to work collaboratively with senior
    executives and peers to achieve common goals and
    objectives.

17
Who should work in public service?
18
Public service motivation
  • attraction to policymaking
  • commitment to the public interest
  • social justice
  • civic duty
  • compassion
  • self-sacrifice

19
Analysis Candidates
  • Who is the ideal candidate for the agency?
  • What has attracted qualified candidates to the
    agency?
  • How did those qualified candidates learn about
    openings?
  • Why is the pool of qualified candidates
    shrinking?
  • What is the value system of the new generation
    and how can the agency package itself to show
    potential candidates that the agency has what
    they desire?

20
Recruitment strategies
  • Job posting
  • Electronic posting
  • Personal contact recruitment
  • Recruitment by mail
  • Head-hunting
  • Noncompetive recruitment
  • Develop a recruiting DVD

21
Recruitment strategies Partnerships
University/college/high school communications,
art and computer science programs
Student Interns
Professional production companies and advertising
agencies
Other city departments or agencies to advertise
22
Analysis recruitment strategies
  • What has worked or not worked in terms of
    recruitment strategies and advertising in the
    past?
  • Are signing bonuses or other incentives
    important?
  • How can current employees be ambassadors for the
    agency and help recruit qualified candidates?
  • What recruitment materials does the agency
    already have and how current are they?
  • Does the agency have a recruitment website and
    how many hits is it generating?
  • Has the agency used paid advertisement in the
    past and, if so, what value did it ad to the
    recruitment process?
  • What strategies is the agency using to attract
    the interest of grade school up to high school
    students?

23
Selection criteria
  • Electoral popularity policy-making jobs
  • Patronage designating officials or employees
    without a requirement for a formalized
    application process
  • Merit based-system using processes that analyze
    job competencies and require open applicaton
    procedures
  • Seniority internal candidates provides sense
    loyalty
  • Representativeness minorities should get
    positions in areas of underrepresentation

24
Selection criteria
  • Selection criteria should be expressed in terms
    of
  • Essential requirements that are critical to
    successful performance in the position without
    which a person could not be appointed and
  • Desirable requirements that would enable the
    person to perform at a higher level in the
    position, but without which the person could
    still be appointed.
  • The total number of essential and desirable
    criteria shall not exceed 10.

25
Selection criteria
  • Selection criteria shall
  • be written in simple and clear language
  • be specific and not overlapping or repetitive
  • be based on the real requirements of the
    position
  • not be excessive in number (i.e. not more than 10
    in total)
  • not discriminate unlawfully either directly or
    indirectly against applicants
  • not favour either internal or external
    applicants and
  • be consistent with the classification standards
    of the position.

26
Screening
  • Retention Survey found that nationally small
    agencies took an average of 6.84 weeks to conduct
    the screening processes, while large agencies
    took an average of 11.51 weeks (U.S. Department
    of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Hiring
    and Keeping Police Officers)
  • GOAL reduce this time so that valuable
    candidates are still available

27
Screening
Discriminating among the qualified and the
unqualified
Identifying most highly qualified candidates
Screening particular candidates results in
offering position to the best candidate
Confirming the qualifications and ability of the
chosen candidate it may include the first period
of employment
28
Principles of the screening
  • A fair set of screening criteria
  • The criteria must be in line with the job content
    and appointment as well as advertised
    requirements
  • Applicants should be clear on the criteria that
    apply
  • The criteria should apply to all applicants in a
    consistent manner
  • Any waivers should be fully motivated and
    approved
  • Declarations should be made of whether any
    candidate is related to or friends of an official
    in the component where the vacancy exists
  • The various activities of the screening process
    should be documented and put on record

29
Initial reviewing and testing
  • Education and experience evaluations
  • Letters of recommendation
  • Self-assessment
  • General aptitude and trait test
  • Performance test for specific jobs

30
Reducing the pool interview
  • Plan how it should proceed persons, place, roles
  • Prepare list of written questions asked of all
    candidates
  • Use a work sample as part of the process
  • Critique or evaluate sth
  • Solve a problem
  • Deliver oral presentation, etc
  • Explain basic facts about the position
  • Use the job description and advertisement guides
    to ensure that the focus is on essential job
    functions

31
Reducing the pool interview
  • Set up interviews in private job-settings where
    distractions are unlikely
  • Concentrate on listening to applicants answers
    and take notes during the interview
  • Be careful that no oral commitments or
    suggestions about employment prospects are made
  • Complete your evaluation notes when impressions
    are fresh

32
Reducing the pool interview
  • Subjects to Avoid
  • Marital status
  • Children and other dependants
  • Religion
  • Politics
  • Ethnic origins

33
Final selection
  • 1. Keep a list of all applicants considered for
    final selection.
  • 2.Identify fair selection criteria for the final
    selection phase.
  • 3.Ensure that the criteria are in line with the
    advertised requirements as well as the job
    content.
  • 4. Ensure that each selection committee member is
    provided with all the relevant information
    pertaining to each short-listed applicant.

34
Final selection
  • 5. Ensure that the interviews are conducted in a
    fair and effective manner and that each candidate
    is weighed comprehensively against the
    requirements as advertised.
  • 6. Ensure that a comprehensive motivation is
    compiled in respect of all the applicants
    interviewed.
  • 7. Ensure that all applicants are informed about
    the outcome of the final selection phase.
  • 8. Ensure that all relevant information is put on
    record.

35
Closing selection
  • Closing selection
  • Phone call and further clarification
  • Letter of intent
  • Completing employment forms
  • Protocols may be available for intetested
    individuals
  • Number of candidates
  • Names, surenames and adresses of 5 top candidates
  • Recruitment and selection criteria
  • Justification of the decision

36
Trends in recruitment and selection
  • Procedural Changes
  • Eliminating arbitrary rules and regulations that
    restrict the choices of hiring managers and
    supervisors
  • Adopting flexible and appealing hiring
    procedures.
  • Screening applicants quickly
  • Validating entry requirements and examinations.
  • Instituting worker-friendly personnel policies,
  • Creating more flexible job descriptions.

37
Trends in recruitment and selection
  • Improvements to the Recruitment and Selection
    Process
  • The decentralization movement "New Public
    Management" is known in many quarters as
    devolution, often characterized by the
    decentralization of HR responsibility.
  • Aggressive outreach efforts
  • Current employees as recruiters

38
Trends in recruitment and selection
  • Use of Technology
  • Many scholars believe that technology will be the
    most notable HRM trend of the next few decades
  • Many large public organizations use computer
    bulletin boards and electronic mail to improve
    recruitment process
  • Managers can have online access to applicants'
    test scores, qualifications and contact
    information
  • Software programs to administer online
    examinations, track applicants, match resumes
    with skill sets, expedite background checks, and
    shepherd job candidates through a paperless
    staffing process

39
Best practices
  • National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)
  • Problem
  • A review of the hiring practices found that job
    announcements were filled with jargon, lots of
    facts and information, and extensive list of job
    duties which made it difficult to identify major
    features and selling points of the job.
  • Recruitment was passive NNSA waited for
    applicants to apply.

40
  • Makeover
  • A new look to convey the importance and
    excitement of their positions, as well as why
    they were a great place to work
  • Added photos to depict the unique work
    environment at NNSA.
  • Implemented an internet-based targeted
    recruitment strategy to identify potential
    candidates from job boards and other locations
  • They sent recruiters to fifteen universities in
    the South and West to recruit interns with an
    emphasis on diversity
  • The results produced 28 qualified candidates, up
    from three unqualified candidates in the previous
    recruitment process 30 highly qualified
    interns

41
Best practices
  • U.S. Department of Education
  • Problem
  • The hiring process took too long and did not
    always deliver qualified candidates.
  • Upon mapping out the hiring process, it was
    discovered that there were discrete steps with
    over 45 handoffs between different managers,
    administrative officers and HR specialists.
  • Managers were disengaged from the hiring process.
    Job descriptions were problematic. When managers
    could not find good candidates they had a
    tendency to sit on the list, until ultimately it
    was re-posted.

42
  • Makeover
  • The hiring process was streamlined by eliminating
    redundancies and unnecessary steps resulting in a
    reduction of more than half of the stepsdown to
    53.
  • The automated process for assessing applicants
    has been overhauled and questions are more
    closely aligned with skills needed to be
    successful on the job.
  • The process of change has not been easy and has
    taken a commitment of time and effort on the part
    of leaders, HR, managers and others involved in
    the hiring process.

43
Best practices
  • Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
  • Problem
  • Federal law changed requiring the agency to add
    500 new positions. The length of time to complete
    the hiring process was long and the quality of
    candidates was lacking.
  • The automated staffing system in place was
    believed to be inadequate to meet the demands of
    the hiring needs. The agency wanted top talent
    and a faster process.

44
  • Makeover
  • The agency started with an end-to-end mapping
    of the hiring process and identified both short
    and long term fixes. They used focus groups to
    document the process, identify roles and
    responsibilities, and assess obstacles.
  • Through the process the agency eventually reduced
    the number of steps in the hiring process by more
    than twenty percent.
  • Other key things they did included better
    marketing positions using visually appealing,
    plain-English announcements, proactively
    targeting qualified candidates via internet,
    resume databases and built tools to effectively
    screen applicants to ensure they were a good fit
    for the position.
  • They eventually assigned responsibility for the
    process to one person at the executive level.

45
10 golden rules of recruitment and selection
  • Develop a Recruitment Plan
  • Conduct Research
  • Personalize the Recruitment Process
  • Select and Train the Right People as Recruiters
  • Build Strong Partnerships
  • Develop an Employee Referral Program
  • Improve the Selection Process
  • Develop an Advertising Plan
  • Develop an Internet Presence
  • Employ Effective Recruitment Strategies

46
  • Agata Austen-Tynda, PhD
  • Chair in Public Management
  • University of Economics in Katowice
  • aausten_at_ekonom.ae.katowice.pl
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