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Principles of Recruitment & Selection. Efficient Effective Fair. Stages of Recruitment & Selection. Preparing to Recruit. Recruitment. Selection. Starting an Employee. Advantages Increases productivity Assists with the existing workload Increases sales
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Principles of Recruitment & Selection • Efficient • Effective • Fair
Stages of Recruitment & Selection Preparing to Recruit Recruitment Selection Starting an Employee
Advantages • Increases productivity • Assists with the existing workload • Increases sales • Contributes to the success of the business • Allows a business to expand • Enables you and/or employee to conduct new activities Disadvantages • Salary & ENIC costs • Training • Additional equipment & resources required • Space/working area required • Time • Legal implications • Insurance • Management implications
Job Analysis Stage 1 • Define tasks of the job • Identify activities and responsibilities relating to the tasks Stage 2 • Identify skills, knowledge, experience, aptitudes and attitudes required to perform each task
Available Options • Full-time • Part-time • Temporary workers • Overtime for existing workers • Sub contractors • Associates • Training schemes
Job Description Content • Main purpose of the job • Who the employee is responsible to • Main tasks of the job • Scope of the job • Conditions of the job
Person Specification • Skills, knowledge, aptitudes • Length and type of experience necessary • Competencies • Education & training • Personal qualities • Personal circumstances – e.g. clean driving licence, access to transport • ‘Essentials’ & ‘desirables’ should be defined
Costs of Employing Staff Traceable Costs • Salary • Employers National Insurance contributions (ENIC) • Recruitment • Training • Equipment • Space/working area Non - Traceable Costs • Lost productivity • Mistakes • Wastage • Time
Recruitment Sources • Newspapers • Local radio • Job Centre • Recruitment & employment agencies • Training agencies • Universities/colleges • Trade publications • Internet • Internal sources • Online recruitment
Content of a Job Advertisement • Business name & activities • Job title/position • Requirements of the job • Qualifications • Experience • Personal attributes • Job tenure (e.g. contract length) • Job location • Salary & benefits • Application process • Contact details Essentials & desirables
Short-listing Interview Candidates The short-listing process Compile applications/CVs Identify selection criteria Compare applications against criteria Short-list candidates Invite candidates for interview
Interviewing Candidates • Be prepared • Set a structure for the interview • Ensure that the interview environment is appropriate • Devise appropriate timeframes • Ask appropriate questions • ‘Score’ answers/responses • Be prepared to answer candidates’ questions
Making a Job Offer • Obtain references • Organise a medical examination (if appropriate) • Offer candidate the job • Inform unsuccessful candidates
Contract of Employment • Job title • Reporting structure • Start date • Expected hours of work • Holidays • Sickness • Remuneration details • Benefits • Basic terms and conditions • Details of probationary period • Details of disciplinary and grievance procedures
Disciplinary Procedures • Informal discussions • Verbal warning(s) • Written warning(s) • Final written warning Proposed minimum/standard disciplinary procedures • Step 1. Employer sets out in writing the reason for the disciplinary action. A copy is sent to the employee and he/she is invited to attend a meeting to discuss the matter. • Step 2. The meeting must take place before the action is taken unless suspension is involved. • Step 3. If the employee wishes to appeal he/she must inform the employer.
Grievance Procedures How and with whom to raise the issue Next steps, if not satisfied Time limits to each stage Right to be accompanied Grievance procedures
Motivating Staff Financial motivational methods • Pay rise • Fringe benefits • Bonus payment schemes • Incentive schemes Non-financial motivational methods • Chance of promotion • Security • Flexible working patterns • Prestige and achievements • Training opportunities • Setting goals/targets • Job enrichment • Job enlargement • Working conditions • Working as a team
Performance Management Process Identify performance criteria Establish frequency Conduct the appraisal Follow up action
Why Employees Leave Voluntarily • Personal circumstances change • New job • Promotion • Dissatisfied • Constructive dismissal
Occurs when you close your business or there is no need for a particular type of work Occurs when an employee’s fixed term contract expires and is not renewed Occurs when an employee reaches retirement age or opts for early retirement. Redundancy Expiration of employment contract Retirement
Fair dismissal For a dismissal to be fair it must be related to one of the following reasons: • Capability or qualifications • Conduct • A legal requirement which stops the employee from carrying out the job or stops you employing them e.g. if a van driver loses their driving licence • Redundancy • Some other substantial reason of a kind such as to justify the dismissal
Automatic Unfair Dismissal Reasons • Grounds of pregnancy or maternal reasons • Are, or propose to become or refuse to become, a member of a Trade Union • Seek to claim their employment rights • Take certain specified action on health and safety grounds • Have disclosed certain kinds of wrongdoing in the workplace ("whistleblowing") • Exercised his/her right to be accompanied, or act as a companion, at a disciplinary or grievance hearing • Have taken part in lawfully organised official industrial action lasting eight weeks or less (or longer in some circumstances) • Enforced, or sought to enforce, a right under the working time regulations