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The Essential Guide for Hiring & Getting Hired: Performance-based Hiring Series

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Description

This book is written for everyone involved in the hiring process. It will help hiring managers and recruiters find and hire more top-notch people for any job, from entry-level to senior executive. Using the two-question Performance- based Interview, anyone who is involved in assessing candidates will quickly be more effective and more accurate. Just as important, it will help job- seekers find better jobs by giving them an inside view of how most companies look for, assess and hire new employees. Hiring top talent starts by clarifying expectations up front. This has been shown to be the primary reason people perform at peak levels. This book is based on the Performance-based Hiring process Lou Adler introduced in his Amazon bestseller, "Hire With Your Head". Performance-based Hiring is now used around the world in small and large organizations and companies. However, it is a non-traditional hiring process. Performance-based job descriptions—which we call performance profiles—replace the commonly used skills- and experience-based job descriptions. Instead of emotions, feelings and biases, evidence is used to assess competency and fit within the organization. Rather than weed out people who don’t posses some arbitrary list of prerequisites, compelling career messages are used to excite and attract the best. Due to this unconventional but commonsense approach, David Goldstein of Littler Mendelson, the largest labor firm in the U.S., was asked to review Performance-based Hiring and provide a general statement of validity. Here’s his summary: "Because the Performance-based Hiring system does differ from traditional recruiting and hiring processes, questions arise as to whether employers can adopt Performance-based Hiring and still comply with the complex array of statutes, regulations, and common law principals that regulate the workplace. The answer is yes. In particular: A properly prepared performance profile can identify and document the essential functions of a job better than traditional position descriptions, facilitating the reasonable accommodation of disabilities and making it easier to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act and similar laws. Even employers that maintain more traditional job descriptions may still use performance profiles or summaries of performance profiles to advertise job openings. Employers are not legally required to post their internal job descriptions when advertising an open position. Nor is there any legal obligation to (or advantage in) posting boring ads. Focusing on Year 1 and Beyond criteria may open the door to more minority, military, and disabled candidates who have a less 'traditional' mix of experiences, thereby supporting affirmative action or diversity efforts. Conducting performance- based interviews ensures that the interviews will be structured and properly focused and minimizes the risk of an interviewer inquiring into protected characteristic. Moreover, since the performance-based interviews are conducted pursuant to a common methodology, one is assured that the candidates are being fairly compared. Performance-based interviewing promotes fair consideration of the different skills and experiences that each candidate has to offer—which is essential to promoting diversity." Performance-based Hiring can help companies find and hire the best talent available. On the other hand, understanding how companies make these critical decisions can help job-seekers navigate these tricky waters, the poorly designed hiring processes still in use. But no matter which side of the hiring desk you are on, hiring the right person or getting the right job will increase satisfaction, performance and motivation. All it takes is a little common sense, which surprisingly seems in short abundance in the world of hiring. Read more

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Workbench Media; 1st edition (April 24, 2013)


Language ‏ : ‎ English


Paperback ‏ : ‎ 280 pages


ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0988957418


ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 11


Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.8 ounces


Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.25 x 0.7 x 8 inches


Best Sellers Rank: #547,423 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #529 in Job Hunting (Books) #1,005 in Human Resources & Personnel Management (Books)


#529 in Job Hunting (Books):


#1,005 in Human Resources & Personnel Management (Books):


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Nails It - Again!
Lou Adler's latest volume on performance-based hiring is a combination of a message Lou has preached for more than a decade with an update on some of the latest trends and issues that hiring managers in organizations face today. I deliberately say preach because Lou has fought a powerful fight to improve the hiring process for organizations based on sound management principles, powerful legal verification, and many years of overwhelming evidence that the techniques work for organizations that have implemented them. I also say preach because Lou's message contains a continuing increase in the frustration over why more hiring managers in organizations don't implement these practices. Lou has been calling for the elimination of traditional job descriptions in the hiring process since long before the publication of his first book. If the reader doesn't perceive a bit of frustration over the place they still hold in many hiring processes, they are either not reading the book carefully enough, or they haven't had the honor as I have of meeting and working closely with Lou in implementing performance based hiring concepts. The job description as a basis for recruiting and hiring guarantees the overall failure of the goals to hire top performers in an organization. In addition to Lou's powerful repetition on the danger of using job descriptions, he continues to provide sound advice on how to write better ads, craft a better recruiting strategies, and perhaps most important from my perspective provide excellent advice on how to conduct an interview. This is perhaps the area where my professional frustration will come into play and clearly illustrate why I so strongly support Lou's position. I remain amazed after being connected to performance-based hiring for almost 15 years now, how I can routinely find cases of interviewers, whether they be hiring managers or human resources staff, asking insanely stupid interview questions, particularly when Lou Adler has clearly nailed the power of the performance-based hiring questions. The two questions he so carefully details and demonstrates throughout the book can perform better than any collection of "700 Great Interview Questions." If I have any concern over the content of Lou's latest message I wish he would have made it clearer that the techniques and messages he outlines can be applied at all levels. Performance-based hiring has been implemented for entry-level positions in a variety of organizations, including those where the hiring process may be limited to a single interview. I also know that there have been successful applications of Lou's hiring techniques to environments like college recruiting. Lou makes brief references to these applications in the book, but the overall presentation that Lou presents as a professional recruiter is that of a multiple stage interview process with the recruiter referring candidates to the hiring organization. I would be remiss if I did not also mention the high quality, dead-on accuracy of the information that Lou presents to job seekers. I remember when the first edition of Lou's book, Hire with Your Head, appeared, it was dedicated to job seekers. I have always appreciated and honored Lou's dedication to helping them better understand the flaws of the typical hiring processes and how to use his excellent hiring techniques from the job seeker standpoint. The electronic only publication of Lou's new book presents a couple of minor obstacles. First of all, the book is so filled with excellent advice and clear statements of tactics that I found myself bookmarking almost every page. As I read the book electronically on my Kindle, it's a book I would also buy in hardcover form to have printed references to some of the key material. One final note on the electronic publication of the book. Lou provides excellent resources in the form of documents and checklists that he urges readers to use. The forms can easily be acquired for download by obtaining a password. However, the documents when downloaded are in a protected PDF format that does not allow them to even be printed for use. This restricts the application of these documents significantly, and I'm hoping that "able to print" versions of these forms become available in some fashion, quickly. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2013 by Jim Schreier

  • Outstanding book for job seeking candidates!
This book is tremendous! I was astounded with the wealth of great information for candidates and the straight talk and the serious nature of the book. I particularly liked the easy to find sections labeled "Candidate Advice" that each chapter contains. The fact that it contains information and guidelines on hiring quality people is also a real plus if you are a candidate. As the author states, you can reverse engineer yourself to really internalize what the thought process is from the employer perspective, which is immensely helpful if you are a candidate preparing for an interview. There is no sugar coating in this book. It is designed to give you the tools that you need to get the job you deserve. It will help you prepare in the right way. I have seen other good books on the subject that give general good advice for candidates, but this book knocks it out of the park by revealing the essence of a solid and thorough hiring process. There are many areas in the book where the author provides structure and advice for candidates and especially chapter 10 which is dedicated to candidates. It is easy to read, and easy to find what you are looking for. I raced through it in two nights (which for me is highly unusual) with many notes dog ears to go back and study. One example that I enjoyed reading about was the discussion on salary negotiation and accepting offers. The author gives good food for thought on maximizing career growth vs. a strategy which is focused on maximizing short term compensation. I came away with a fresh perspective that put my mind at ease in this area. I'm not sure if I have ever written a book review before but I felt compelled to congratulate the author on an outstanding and practical book. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2013 by Bill

  • Great insights
Plenty of useful insights if you are a recruitment professional but still very much US-focused. The world doesn't stop at the US border and has many more complexities and varieties that this book doesn't capture. Having said that, it's full of great ideas that you can adapt to your cultural setting by yourself. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2016 by Giorgio

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