|
Step by step recruitment
Use the BusinessHR guide to recruitment whenever you have a job vacancy.
The cost of employing the wrong person can be enormous: wasted time, wasted training,
mistakes, replacement costs, legal action ... the list goes on. Making the right
decision can therefore directly contribute to improving your business
performance. Our guide is here to help you and will:
- give you some standard documentation to use
- draw attention to the discrimination considerations

- enable you to attract and select the right person for the job
- minimise the risk of poor and costly recruitment decisions.
We will take you through the following essential steps to effective recruitment:
To display/hide all
(You will need to upgrade your access)
Decide what vacancy you have and create a job description  .
This will not only help you to decide what you need, it also provides a useful
summary of the job for potential applicants, agencies, job centres etc. See
our guide to writing a job description  .
Decide what skills, experience, qualifications and attributes someone
will need to do the job. Create a person specification  - this helps
you to clarify who you need to do the job. See our guide to writing a
person specification  .
There are a variety of ways in which you may do this:
- The Internet - an increasingly popular choice.
- Your local Job Centre - a big advantage here is that there's no cost and
it can be very effective.
- An internal advert or notice aimed at current employees who may
be keen to apply.
- An advert in local or national press or professional/industry publications.
- A file of any previous applicants.
- A notice in your window or that of a local shop or library.
- Schools or colleges.
When advertising, remember to:
- Make the job and the organisation sound interesting - but also don't
oversell the job - be realistic.
- Include key factors - location, job title, salary, overview of the role.
- include key essential skills from the person specification to avoid having
applicants from candidates who do not meet the essential requirements -
wasting their time and yours.
- Ask questions instead of making statements. Are you keen to work
with employees? Do you thrive in an environment of rapid growth?
Would you like to put your PC skills to full advantage? etc.
- Exclude any stipulations which could be seen as discriminatory
eg applying an age restriction which is not necessary. Don't
use words which could be considered discriminatory eg "lively, enthusiastic"
could imply "young"; "mature and experienced" could imply "older".
- Include, when possible, the closing date plus the date of interview.
See our guide to writing job adverts .
Make a shortlist. Use a matrix containing the essential and desirable elements
of your person specification  and consider each application against
this to establish who should be interviewed. Consider each applicant against
these elements. Candidates who don't have all the essential criteria should not
be shortlisted - unless training could be given in a relatively short timeframe.
Ideally get applicants to complete an application form (even if
you have their CVs) as it ensures that you get the same information in the same
format from each candidate. This reduces the possibility of bias and
discrimination - ensure that you select for interview those who
match the specifications, regardless of their age,
sex , race , sexual orientation ,
religion or belief , or disability etc,
and that the specifications are not themselves discriminatory.
If you are inundated with suitable candidates and cannot possibly interview
them all, the fairest way to select for interview is randomly, eg select every
fourth application from the pile.
You may wish to inform the candidates who did not make the
short-list, or you may wish to leave this until the interviews are complete.
Interview your short-listed candidates. Remember that your job is not only to
assess the best candidate for the job, but also to create a great impression
of your organisation. Try to set aside time to interview all of your candidates on
one day to ensure you have a fair comparison. Follow our step by step guide to
interviewing.
Select your candidate. Be objective and unbiased. Choose the person who
best fits your person specification  .
Inform ALL candidates of the outcome. It is extremely discourteous to
not bother telling those who have been unsuccessful. Each recruitment
exercise is also a PR exercise for your business. Inform candidates of the
outcome quickly and, if practical, offer each unsuccessful candidate feedback on
their performance.
Reject the unsuccessful candidates who did not make the short-list,
and reject the candidates who did interview, but were
unsuccessful.
Follow our step by step guide to making a job offer for your
chosen candidate.
Keep details of your rejected employees for at least six months so that you have
them should you receive a discrimination claim and need to justify your selection
decision. You may wish to keep some details longer if they
could be of interest when another vacancy arises, but bear in mind the
requirements of the Data Protection Act  and ensure that the
candidate has been informed that you are retaining the details for future
consideration for other vacancies.
For your successful candidate:
- prepare and send the appropriate documentation
- make up the employee's personnel file
and
- arrange the induction plan
.
- If someone leaves, take the opportunity to decide what you really
want to do next. It is an obvious option to go for a like for like replacement
but the best option could be to restructure, redistribute or automate tasks.
- Consider how you could give opportunities to your current team
members when you have a vacancy. They may require some
training, but this could be a better option all round than
bringing in someone new to do the job, and if staff can see the
opportunities for career progression this will assist your retention.
- Give applicants a balanced and accurate picture. Point out the terrific
things about the job and its less attractive features. Creating a realistic
expectation will help you to retain employees and not break the
psychological contract
.
- Do consider paying travel expenses.
|