How Employers Hire
Hiring practices vary, but most employers use a few common
methods. Hiring is usually a process that goes: recruitment,
screening, selection.
Recruitment: Some of the most common ways employers recruit are:
- Referral—the method employers prefer. Having someone they know and trust
vouch for an applicant strengthens the applicant’s chances of being
hired.
- Social/professional networking pages on the web, such as LinkedIn—Make
sure you have a page with them, and maybe your own blog as well. Today’s
employers want to see evidence that you are comfortable with electronic
media.
- Advertising—on the company’s web site, in newspapers, job hotlines, trade
papers, the internet or radio/tv.
- Job Fairs—DWS holds job fairs around the state and large companies hold
their own job fairs too. Job fairs are used to recruit entry-level employees.
But the employers at job fairs may not always have current openings.
- Internal recruitment—Most employers will offer jobs first to their current
employees, then go external if a bigger pool of applicants is needed.
- Private and public placement agencies—some charge a fee, some don’t.
- Temporary services—Temporary and contract employees are used more by
companies now than in the past, and good temp workers often move into
permanent jobs.
- The internet—Used mostly for recruiting higher-level professionals, and
for technical occupations.
- “Head Hunters”—Professional recruiters who scout for promising applicants
to fill high-level jobs.
- Other—School placement offices, union halls, etc.
Screening
Once a pool of applicants is in place, employers screen or
select the few most-qualified for interviews. Usually this is done
quickly by skimming resumes or applications and deleting those that
have errors, are badly written, incomplete or do not show minimum
qualifications the employer has set for the job.
The employer may search resumes to select those with key words
that match the skills they are looking for. When the best of the
pool are screened from the rest, employers will look more closely
at their qualifications.
Education may be verified, and former employers and other
references from web pages or blogs contacted. The employer might
call the applicant for an additional telephone screening.
Selection
Most often, the interview is the tool used to make the final
decision on who to hire. Generally, all the applicants who get an
interview are qualified for the job. So the employer uses the
interview to determine which one is the most qualified, as well as
to assess personal qualities and how well the person will fit into
the organization.
References will be called at this stage. Final candidates may also need to
pass a test, come back for a second—or even third—i nterview, or demonstrate
their skills in a simulated job situation.