AND...
You
want employees who are dependable
In
1998, absenteeism cost employers $757 per employee, according
to a report in USA TODAY. This was the direct cost reported
by a survey of human resource professionals and does not include
the cost of hiring others or paying overtime to perform the
work of absent employees.
You
can be held liable for employees' behavior on and off the job
You
must know the nature of the people you hire because their criminal
behavior could cost your business millions of dollars. Every
time you hire without practicing due diligence, you may be accepting
liability for their actions - even when they are "off the
clock."
You
can be sued for illegal discrimination
In
the absence of objective data, how can you demonstrate a hiring/promotion
decision was made objectively, without discrimination because
of gender, race, religion, etc.
Résumé
writers write great fiction
In
a survey of recent college graduates, 95% said they would be
willing to make a false statement in their résumés
in order to get a job. Forty-one percent admitted they had already
done so, according to a report in Nation's Business (May, 1999).
Testing
is acceptable, even expected
As
reported in Molding Systems (May, 1999, v57 i5 p56(1)),
a survey found that 92% of job applicants accept testing as
part of the job qualification process. Only 3% resent it, while
5% were neutral.
Assessments
offer a solution
Historically,
employers depend upon résumés, references and
interviews as sources of information for making hiring decisions.
In practice, these sources have proved inadequate for consistently
selecting good employees.
When
training employees, a "one size fits all" approach
has failed to provide the desired results.
When selecting people for promotion, otherwise excellent employees
have too often been miscast into roles they could not perform
satisfactorily.
Clearly,
an essential ingredient for making "people decisions"
has been missing from the formula.
The
use of assessments has become essential to employers who