Competency Based Recruitment & Selection
Competency Based Recruitment & Selection
Competency Based Recruitment & Selection
Selection
• Recruitment is the process of attracting as many qualified applicants
as possible for existing vacancies and anticipated openings. It is a
talent search, a pursuit of the best group of applicants for an
available position.
• Selection reduces the list of applicants to those who are most
qualified to achieve the desired outputs or results. During the
process, HR practitioners try to predict which applicant will be most
successful and will best fit the job and the corporate culture.
Traditional Employee Recruitment and Selection
• The traditional starting point for recruitment is a job description and a
job specification.
• The job description describes the work activities or job responsibilities of
the successful job incumbent.
• The job specification specifies the qualifications an individual should
possess in order to carry out the work. Qualifications are usually
expressed as the minimum education, experience, and other
requirements necessary to do the job.
• Some employers also use a job requisition, which justifies the creation
of a new position or the replacement of a departing worker.
Traditional Recruitment Process
Step 1
Clarify the position to be filled through recruitment
Step 2
Review and update job descriptions and specifications for the position
Step 3
Identify possible sources of qualified candidates
Step 4
Select the most effective means of communicating with and attracting
qualified/desired applicants
The Traditional Selection Process
Competency based recruitment
Competency-based recruitment begins when the organization's leaders identify the
key work roles, positions, or other work designations in need of recruitment efforts.
This involves setting priorities. Decision makers must also decide on the time span
over which the recruitment process will take place.
• Decision makers are unwilling to make the substantial investments in time, money, and effort that
are necessary for researching and validating competencies for any of the organization's jobs.
• The organization's need is for unskilled or semiskilled workers with whom a competency-based
approach is not that useful.
• Candidates' competencies have already been documented or verified through a comprehensive and
systematic process, as is the case with medical doctors, and only minimal additional competency
assessment must be completed in order to select a capable job candidate.
A competency-based approach to employee recruitment and selection is
probably most appropriate in the following situations:
• Decision makers will commit the resources needed to carry out the
competency-based recruitment and selection processes.