Are You Winning the Talent Wars?

How many times have you heard or read, "Our employees are our greatest asset"?

What are the chances of any company surviving if it cannot find the right employees - or find enough of them? In 2003 Roger Herman, Tom Olivio, and Joyce Gioia wrote in Impending Crisis that by the year 2010 the U.S. economy will support 10 million more jobs than there will be people in the work force to fill them.

This future scenario could make the late 1990's volatile job market look like it was relatively stable compared to what we may soon experience.

Is your company currently at risk of finding enough good people? Can you predict whether or not your top employees are planning to leave? In this era of information on demand, drastically changing work environments and workforces, and employees that bring a tremendous network of resources with them to work every single day (and also take those same resources home with them at night), wouldn't it be good to know how you are really doing in the war for talent?

Peter Drucker states that, "66% of your new hires will turn out to be mistakes within the first 12 months", yet most companies continue business as usual as it pertains to employee selection, development and retention. Most companies are constantly looking to hire more productive employees, but most don't know the best place to start, as evidenced below:

• Most companies do not use any type of assessment tool prior to making an offer

• Of the companies that use assessment instruments, most use tools that focus only on personality traits

• Many of the personality style tools were not created for business use - they were intended to help identify deviant behaviors

• Many of the most commonly used personality assessments have reliability scores that are below the recommended minimums set by The Association of Testing Professionals and some are not intended for use as predictive tools

• Research on over 85 years of assessment history indicates that general mental ability (i.e., how a person processes information) has the highest validity in predicting future job success of any single characteristic measured

The Best Selling Authors Say the Same Things

Several best-selling authors over the recent years have boldly suggested where companies and individuals should be moving in terms of helping people find their right niche in the world. It doesn't matter whether you are coming from the individual's or the company's perspective, the results and conclusions are all the same.

All of the authors listed below agree that the best way to maximize productivity is to match people's gifts, abilities and interests to the jobs you ask them to do. An employee who is a good match for his/her role will be more productive, make more money for themselves and the company, and stay longer than one who is not a good match for their role. This sounds simple -- like good old common sense, but we all know common sense is not all that common.

In 1999 Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman wrote First, Break All the Rules. The book was based on data collected by the Gallup Organization from over one million employees and 80,000 managers. Some of the conclusions drawn from this research included:

• Great managers do NOT believe that, with enough training, a person can achieve anything he sets his mind to

• Human behavior can be divided into three distinct categories: skills (capabilities that can be transferred, or taught, from one person to another), knowledge (things a person is aware of, and can also be taught), and talents (recurring patterns of thought, feeling or behavior). This last category - talents - are either gifts bestowed at birth or developed before we reach adulthood, and can rarely be significantly changed after a person matures

• To best understand the talents that are most important in those occupying specific roles in your company, you should start by looking at the current top performers in those roles

Jim Collins wrote Good to Great in 2001, explaining through another extensive research project why some companies turned out to be truly great, while other companies who faced similar circumstances did not. One of his startling conclusions was that, "The old adage 'People are your most important asset' turns out to be wrong. People are not your most important asset. The right people are." His chapter 3, First Who, Then What, made many leaders stop and think about how they build their teams around themselves.

In 2002 Lou Adler released a revised version of his 1998 book Hire With Your Head. In it, Adler reviews a plethora of hiring practices and why some methods work better than others in building great companies. In his chapter about what to do after the first interview, Alder recommends using tools that have the ability to measure not only personality, but also cognitive skills and interests, and concurred with Buckingham and Coffman in saying that these tools should also be able to benchmark your company's top performers in a specific job function.

Also in 2002, Rick Warren wrote a best-seller called The Purpose Driven Life, in which he describes why people are better at some things compared to others. Warren was not attempting to explain success from a business perspective like the other authors listed above, and he used slightly different terminology. But there are many obvious similarities in Warren's SHAPE framework for what people should understand in choosing their vocations compared to frameworks suggested by the other authors.

S = Spiritual Gifts, abilities for serving God given only to believers

H = Heart, your desires, hopes, interests, dreams and affections

A = Abilities, natural talents you were born with

P = Personality, behavioral characteristics that make us all unique

E = Experience, or what we have been exposed to

Companies look at this information and usually think one of three things:

• We're doing O.K., we don't need to change our selection or retention practices

• We probably could do better in these areas, but it would cost too much

• We don't have the time to add this to our current processes

PeopleRight was founded in 2002 to help companies make more intelligent decisions in selecting, developing and retaining great employees. We show companies how they can take advantage of the latest research and technology in the assessment industry without breaking the bank or extending the selection process.

Our services normally cost less than the cost of one bad hire, and we are happy to measure our results to continue to earn your business. Over 95% of our clients have asked us back to do additional work after our first project.

About the author:

Mike McCormack is the President and Owner of PEOPLERIGHT. He is an expert at evaluating and categorizing human performance potential, especially as it pertains to the assessment and hiring of employees. With over twenty years professional experience dealing with personnel issues, Mike helps companies pinpoint the essential characteristics of their top performers, and then measure those characteristics in new applicants.

He says, "The success or failure of a company boils down to whether or not they have the right people in the right place at the right time." The author of multiple articles, Mike had been published in the Mays Business School CNVE newsletter, spoken to associations and business conferences, and been a guest lecturer at Texas Christian University and the University of North Texas. He has a B.S. in Engineering and a M.B.A. from Texas A&M University.

To learn more about how to improve your company's people equation call Mike at (214) 357-2505 or visit the PeopleRight web site at http://www.people-right.com


More Resources

How To REALLY Look For A Job
Are you looking for a job -- really looking? Or are you simply waiting for employment to fall into your lap?If you're like about 75% of the job seekers I've met over the past nine years, you're probably doing too much waiting and not enough searching.Stop.
Job Search 101
The whole job search effort is completely exhausting and at times just plain pathetic. It is what it is and if you are unemployed know that the job search experience is one familiar to everyone at some point and time, so don't feel alone.
So You Want A Promotion - What Do You Need To Do To Get the Champagne Corks Popping?
The champagne corks have been popping to celebrate your promotion.You have a well paid job you love - its really interesting.
Salary Negotiation: How To Earn More Money and Respect From Your Employer
Despite how important fair pay is to most of us, effective salary negotiation is an often misunderstood and avoided topic. Current research indicates the average duration of a position today is 3.
Finding Employees For Insurance Industry Jobs
Finding the right employee for any job opening can be a challenge to say the least, and this is no truer than in the insurance industry. With considerations ranging from experience and education to their personal skills, the decisions faced by recruiters and employers can be of critical importance.
Common Résumé Mistakes
Using a general résumé.DON'T DO IT! You cannot successfully use the same résumé to apply to several different jobs.
50 Things To Do To Your Boss That Are Fun For You, But Not For Them
1. You're eavesdropping and you hear your boss has reservations at his favorite restaurant.
How to Work Effectively With Recruiters
"R-E-S-P-E-C-T / find out what it means to me" is a line made famous by Aretha Franklin, and one that recruiters have adopted as their mantra. This is probably because there is a love-hate relationship between candidates and recruiters.
The 4 Job Search Facts You Need To Know!
Are you harboring bitterness or anger towards your current or past employer?Do you find it difficult to be upbeat when interviewing or networking because of past job experiences?Have you spent sleepless nights worrying about how to explain your choppy resume?If you are currently in the job market, you need to dump this baggage fast!Here are 4 key job search facts you need to know:Fact #1:Your past employer is not investing hours in a personal vendetta against you.Fact #2:Employers know that the demise of dot.
Acceptance is the Answer to All Our Problems
Many people today have lost jobs after decades of service; many others suffer within jobs they can see no way out of. In order to survive a painful job loss - indeed, any type of painful loss - we must come to some acceptance.
Job Interviews: Plan Your Appearance to Make a Great First Impression
Your personal appearance is a critical component of that all-important first impression when you walk into the room for your interview.So plan ahead!Some people don't think about what they're going to wear until the morning of the interview.
The 7 Tough Job Interview Questions That Can Make or Break You - and How to Answer Them
Some interview questions are asked so frequently that they've become classics. Practically every interview you go on you'll be answering one or more of these seven interview questions.
In Control - Inside Tips on Interview Success
No, you can't control how the interview will be conducted, nor can you control the outcome. But you can influence it greatly by the way you present your personality and your skills.
Top 10 Skills for New World of Work
There are many changes coming in the world of work, such as increased competition, the need for more education and certifications, and the trend to change careers 5-7 times in a lifetime. No matter what job or career path you decide to take, there are some basic skills that all employers look for.
Job Interviews: Ill File a Grievance!
I recently went to a retirement party with my husband for one of his co-workers. I worked at this same place six years ago (that's where I met my husband, but that's another story), so I knew most of the people at the party.
Can You Actually Fail A Personality Quiz?
Q. I didn't get a job that I interviewed for.
Job Interviews: Six Steps to Acing a Telephone Interview
Telephone interviews are becoming more popular these days. Whether that's good or bad depends on how you handle them!Sometimes telephone interviews are used as a pre-screening technique for all candidates.
Career Success: Get Ahead of the Crowd
Regardless of where you open your briefcase or palm pilot each day - at a large corporation, a small business or the end of your dining room table - the key to staying employable the rest of your life is your own creative action. The person who is going to be successful is not going to succeed just because of good work.
Personal Grooming: 8 Top Reasons Why You Can't Take It For Granted In Your Career
Most people when they landed "the dream job" after an interview or even got "the deal" of the lifetime in their businesses, sadly to say tend to slack on their grooming habits and it even goes to the point that they are wearing their pajamas going to the office. It seems that's very extreme but it happens.
Multiple Skills for the 21st Century
(excerpted from The Weekend Seminar - Skills for the 21st Century 1999 Version)I find it's important to not walk into the 21st Century without multiple skills. But what I also find is that if you are already in sales, network marketing or have an entrepreneurial business (or plan to in the future), you can gain the needed skills for the future while you create your income now.

More Careers & Employment Information:

Related Articles

Where Do I Go From Here?
Making Your Future Work Better For YouIt's the commonest concern people have about their careers. Where am I heading? Is this the right direction for me? How can I tell what will suit me best? Making good career decisions doesn't have to be agony if you clear away a few misconceptions.
College Labor is Available in Ohio
Ohio has always been big on education and that means a bright, energetic and reliable workforce for expanding businesses. A business which wants to expand its number of outlets should be looking strongly at the Ohio market place as there are many very strong and economically viable areas to do business.
Necessary Psychological Skills When Working in the Executive Protection Field
The "hard" skills necessary for an executive protection specialist (EPS) and/or personal protection specialist (PPS) are often perceived as being that of a policeman or (elite) soldier. Though there can be certain similarities i.
Top Ten Guidelines For Working With Executive Recruiters
1. Select the right type of recruitment partnerDetermine whether you would be best served by a retained, contingency, contract or research based partner at a global, national or local level.
Why Human Resources Are The Real Key To Success In This Information Age
The rapid changes that have mainly been brought about by the information age are numerous and irreversible. They have affected our way of life on virtually every front and have left many old companies in ruins while causing other new ones to swiftly emerge and grow to great unprecedented profitability, literally overnight.
What Did You Say?
My table-mates introduced themselves as the reciprocal protocol began. We chatted about what we did, where we did it and what we thought of the conference.
The Inevitable Job Interview Question: "Why Did You Leave (Are Planning To Leave) Your Last Position
This is a question that you can almost count on being asked at your next interview What the interviewer wants to know is, "Why are you available?"The answer you give could set the tone for the rest of the interview. For instance, if you were to indicate that you were bored or burned out at your last job, the interviewer would quickly become concerned about your performance at this company.
How to Answer The Most Difficult Interview Questions
The following 'difficult' questions are common to most tricky or adversarial interviews. In order to convince the interviewer that you are the best person for the job, you must prepare and rehearse your answers meticulously.
7 Tips to Deal With a Bad Performance Review
Q. "I wasn't happy with my last performance review.
Common Résumé Mistakes
Using a general résumé.DON'T DO IT! You cannot successfully use the same résumé to apply to several different jobs.
Employees, Get Used to Working under Surveillance
Let's face it. Monitoring employees' e-mail, tracking their Internet use, logging everything done at keyboards has become the norm in Corporate America.
Make Your Resume Keyword Rich and Scanner Friendly
If you haven't looked for a job recently, there are new tactics that hiring professionals are using that you should be aware of before updating your resume.Employers and recruiters increasingly rely on electronic resumes, resume posting boards and job banks to find job candidates.
Why Do Interviews Die: That Sinking Feeling and How to Prevent it!
Interviews die because a mistake occurred. Sometimes, you've made a mistake; sometimes they die because someone who screened a resume did.
Writing Great Cover Letters
Cover letters are an essential ingredient to your complete résumé package. This is the best opportunity for you to demonstrate your personal character, knowledge of the company and your business writing skills.
9 Tips on Creating a Professional Emailed Job Application
With the advent of the Internet, many of us have the opportunity to apply for work through email.However, just because this is the Internet and email is so fast and convenient, that does NOT mean you should give up professionalism and polish!FIRST IMPRESSIONS COUNT.
Make A Lasting Impression With Interview Etiquette
(Des Moines, Iowa - February 2, 2005) Behaving appropriately during every course of an interview is just one way to increase your success with finding a job. Here are some tips to consider before you're seated across from your interviewer.
Stepping Stone Jobs
What we name something matters.It sets a tone that alters our attitude.
Ask the Recruiter
We all have career goals, big or small. Here are some questions I have recieved over the last month from those actively seeking new employment.
You're Ready for a Career Change - Is Your Resume?
You finally did it. You made the decision to leave a career that makes you dread every Monday morning and pursue one that you feel is your true calling.
Searching for a Federal Job
Many years ago searching for a federal job was a long, complicated and drawn out process. Today, it has been become far less complex and is now just a three-step process.