Publication | Closed Access
Hiring for the organization, not the job
450
Citations
5
References
1991
Year
OrganizationsWorkplace PsychologyOrganizational CharacteristicStrategic Human ResourcesJob PerformancePublic Personnel AdministrationOrganization ScienceHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorEmployee AttitudeManagementManufacturing CompanyJob AnalysisCandidate SelectionExecutive OverviewPerformance StudiesPersonality AttributesWorkforce DevelopmentBusinessOrganization Theory
Executive Overview This article examines a new approach to selection in which employees are hired to fit the characteristics of an organization, not just the requirements of a particular job. Diverse firms—high and low-tech, U.S. and Japanese-owned—are using the approach to build cultures that rely heavily on self-motivated, committed people for corporate success. New, often expensive, hiring practices are changing the traditional selection model. An organizational analysis supplements a job analysis, and personality attributes are screened in addition to skills, knowledge, and abilities. We outline the basic steps of the new selection model and present a case description of a manufacturing company that used the model in hiring employees to work in its high-involvement organization. The new model works to its fullest advantage in organizations that allow employees enough freedom to use their unique attributes to influence job performance.
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