THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING
HR Tech Outlook | Friday, September 27, 2024
Completing hundreds of applications to fill one post might be exhausting. Doing so manually might cause hiring delays or recruiting the incorrect individual for the job. One method for making the work more straightforward is to use pre-employment testing. This might help you limit your application pool so that only the most qualified candidates advance to the next step of your recruiting process.
Fremont, CA: Pre-employment testing allows you to cut down your candidate pool immediately. Depending on the type of pre-employment exam, it will enable you to analyze the applicants' talents and personalities to exclude those unqualified for the post. As a result, only those who meet your company's requirements can move on. While there are several advantages to pre-employment testing, there are also some drawbacks.
Reliability
Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.
A pre-employment exam is an effective way to assess an applicant's personality and skills. However, it is only sometimes trustworthy and constant. This is especially true for subjective assessments such as personality tests and ambiguous ones like integrity exams.
There are several reasons why the responses to these tests may give erroneous or inconsistent outcomes. For example, the questions might be excessively unclear, confusing the candidate. Another reason is that the candidate may lie in their responses based on what they believe you want to hear.
To avoid this, ask more objective questions. Exclude questions that might prompt several interpretations from candidates. Instead of asking questions like "is morality important?" for your integrity exam, you may provide a concrete case and ask participants what they would do in that situation.
Validity
Only reliable responses might result in correct results, rendering your pre-employment test invalid. For example, a graphics designer who applied said they knew how to use Photoshop, but it turned out they didn't. As a result, you wind up hiring an unqualified candidate for the job.
As a result, you must exercise caution when picking which examinations to give throughout the recruiting process. Before you base your whole choice on a pre-employment exam, you must demonstrate that the findings match work performance.
For example, you can offer a variety of pre-employment examinations to gain a better understanding of the candidate. You might ask them to take an objective exam to assess their skills and competencies for the role. Similarly, you may administer a personality test to see how they fit into your corporate culture.
Relevance
Generic pre-employment examinations may include questions irrelevant to your firm or the empty position. In reality, the exam itself may be improper for its stated purpose.
Try developing or customizing your assessments instead of depending on generic pre-employment evaluation tools. This lets you personalize the questions to your company's needs and expectations. For example, if the position they are seeking is high-pressure, you might ask them for concrete examples of how they managed challenges under pressure.
More in News