Quality of Hire: The Top Recruiting Metric

Posted by RecruitingTrends.com on Jul 28th, 2010 and filed under Steve Lowisz, Thought Leadership, Tools. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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Steve Lowisz, President and CEO, Qualigence, Inc.

We talk about “top” talent and “top” performers, but how do you know you’ve reached the “top”? Is there some kind of altitude marker? A sign that reads “Welcome to the Top”? Unfortunately, no. But out of all the recruiting metrics in your talent capital toolbox one indicates a recruiting job-well-done above the rest: Quality of Hire.

Every CEO, manager and corporate investor knows that hiring the best people is what ultimately drives an organization’s long-term success. Yet, the recruiting metrics most companies employ evaluate efficiency rather than quality. Metrics like “time-to-fill” and “cost-per-hire” only tell us about the process, not its impact.

What matters most is how new hires perform and how much they contribute to your organization’s growth and goals. “Top” performers can exponentially increase your productivity and profitability, while those with lower standards can damage your bottom line and plummet your reputation. Those numbers far outweigh how much time it took to fill their position. Yet the question remains: How do you evaluate the quality of your hires?

Determining Quality of Hire: Across Your Organization

If you were to deduce a formula for calculating how well your organization is hiring overall, it would look something like this: Quality of Hire = (PR + HP + HR) / N

  • PR = Average job performance rating of new hires
  • HP = % of new hires reaching acceptable productivity with acceptable time frame
  • HR = % of new hires retained after one year
  • N = number of indicators

Example:

  • PR = Average 3.5 on a 5.0 scale = 70%
  • HP = Of 100 hires made one year ago, 75 are meeting acceptable productivity levels = 75%
  • HR = 20% turnover = 80% HR
  • N = 3
  • Quality of Hire = (70 + 75 + 80) / 3 = 75

The result is a quality level of 75% for new hires made in one year throughout an organization. Calculations can be modified to reflect hires made by quarter, bi-annually or in increments of two, three, five years, etc. It all depends on how much or how often you choose to measure and report.

This formula gives a good indication of how close or how far an organization is from reaching its collective hiring goals. However, filling in the variables can be a bit tricky.

Determining Quality of Hire: Per Individual Hire

When we sit and break down the above formula, we begin to see where calculations are cut and dry, and where they need further attention and work. “Number of indicators” and “number of hires retained” are easily quantifiable. But variables like “job performance” and “acceptable productivity” need to be further defined before they can mean anything numerically. How do you turn “job performance” into a number?

Most organizations use a numeric rating system to evaluate the performance and productivity of new hires. On a scale of 1 to 5, how well is Hire B performing X? This requires clearly outlining a position’s expectations and objectives, and what X’s are important to assess according to your organization’s goals. X can equal the new business leads generated, the number of sales increased, the number of findings submitted – you define the criteria. Only then will “quality” take on significant, measurable meaning when you tally up your hiring scores. The key is tying your talent management strategy and measurements to your business objectives and results.

Keep it as simple as possible. Don’t try to include too many X-factors in your metrics program. That can get overwhelming or dilute decisive outcomes. Work with key stakeholders (CFO, top managers, hiring manager, etc) to ensure credibility, and tie revenue per hire to dollar impact across your organization, whenever possible, to demonstrate the value of high-quality performers.

And keep track of your hiring progress! Identify a baseline. Measure annually (using your new handy-dandy formula). Note your best hiring sources and factors that indicated new-hire success (as well as those that didn’t). Share your results and reward your recruiters and hiring mangers along the way.

Because the best way to know you’ve reached the top is to look back and see how far you’ve come.

Steve will be presenting at onrec Expo 2010 on Tuesday, September 14 at the Sourcing Summit and again on Wednesday, September 15 on Perception vs. Reality – Do you Really Know what you are Looking for?

E-Mail: slowisz@qualigence.com
Web Site: www.qualigence.com/insight/industry.php

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  3. The Measurement and Valuation of Human Infrastructure: An Introduction to the CHI Indicators™


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2 Responses for “Quality of Hire: The Top Recruiting Metric”

  1. Carlo says:

    thanks for the great article and nice formula

  2. [...] Quality of Hire: The Top Recruiting Metric by Recruiting Trends (@RecruitingTrend) Steve Lowisz (@slowisz) [...]

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