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Can Your Personality Get You Fired?
Job candidates rarely admit to being fired for poor
performance and they might just be telling the truth. A
Harvard University study found that for every dismissal based
on failure to perform, there are two dismissals due to
personality and communication problems. With the high costs of
employee turnover, it's no surprise companies are turning to
personality and behavioral assessments to help evaluate job
candidates, build teams and resolve workplace conflict.
The Right Fit
Ann Taylor Loft, the world's fastest-growing women's retailer,
recently began using testing to fine-tune its hiring process
and bring in top talent. Through a partnership with the Gallup
organization, Loft has developed a tool that profiles
employees who have been highly successful and identifies
candidates who have similar traits.
Desired characteristics vary by position. If you're applying
for a floor sales manager job at a Loft store, for example,
you would be asked to complete an on-line assessment gauging
your talents, traits, attitudes and behaviors related to
assisting and helping wardrobe clients. Your results would
then be benchmarked against profiles and test results of the
stores' best performers to help judge how you would fit into
the organization.
"We want to learn more about candidates as individuals," says
Wei-Li Chong, Ann Taylor Loft's vice president of
organizational effectiveness. "We want to know what makes them
tick.
"Once a candidate is hired, this same information helps us
understand and maximize their talents specific to the role
they have," Chong adds. "And we continue to work on developing
employees' self-awareness throughout their careers to help
create an environment that ensures success."
Why Can't We All Just Get Along? Hundreds of companies
including Hewlett-Packard and GM use testing to take advantage
of existing staff strengths and avoid personality-based
conflicts. And though there are a myriad of test instruments
to choose from, the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) remains
the standard-bearer of all personality assessments. According
to its publishers, Myers-Briggs is used by roughly nine out of
10 Fortune 100 companies and is administered to more than 2.5
million employees a
year.
Developed 60 years ago based on the theories of psychoanalyst
Carl Jung, the MBTI endures because it does a great job of
improving team relations by pointing out differences between
how personality "types" perceive and process information.
"People have different ways of making decisions and dealing
with stress," explains Lynn Ronchetto, human resources
administrator at New York-Presbyterian Hospital. "The
Myers-Briggs tool offers a conceptual framework for
understanding those who
are different from us and helps bridge differences between
team members by
showing there is more than one way to get things done.
"The tool is also very valuable from a personal development
standpoint, as it gives individuals a revealing glimpse of
themselves as others may see them."
You Can't Study For It What should you do when your boss or
prospective employer asks you to take a personality
assessment? Experts advise answering the questions truthfully,
not the way you think the company wants you to respond. There
is often a validity factor built-in where many questions are
asked solely to determine whether the subject is answering
truthfully and consistently.
Even if you do fool the test, you'll only wind up in a job or
assignment that doesn't fit or will make you - and those
around you - miserable. According to Bonnie Bass, vice
president of Professional Dynametric Programs testing
organization, "When people feel the need to act unnaturally,
they waste energy, experience stress and become unhappy and
less productive. People are at their best when they're doing
work that draws on their natural strengths and allows them to
be themselves.
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