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: 

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.

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