Get Psyched
Psychological testing doesn't have to lead to padded walls and straitjackets—it could lead to smarter hiring decisions.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2001/january/35704.html
" It was a $50,000 mistake," says David Sanso, CEO of
Lakewood, Colorado-based medical equipment engineering firm Carsan
Engineering Inc. The company was expanding quickly, and Sanso
needed a high-level manager to handle the $5 million firm's
"fast forward" direction. He interviewed someone who came
on good recommendation and looked good on paper. Sanso had a few
gut-level reservations based on the interview, but he went ahead
with the hire.
But it was soon clear things weren't working out. Sanso, 42,
was a high- energy entrepreneur who interacted constantly with his
26 employees; his new manager had a corporate mentality and
preferred to sit aloof in his office. It was a hiring decision gone
wrong on many levels. Sanso had to let the manager go, he says,
because "one person can set the tone for the whole
place."
Hiring is like playing with fire-just ask any entrepreneur
who's been burned. While the potential salesperson you're
considering may look good on paper and in the interview, will he or
she really fit into your work culture and get the job done? Will
that prospective administrative assistant enjoy the work and stay
committed? It can be difficult to tell on the basis of a resume, a
few rounds of interviewing and reference checks that limit what can
be said about an applicant.
Some employers have compensated for the risks with testing.
Although the practice is controversial, some experts contend
it's not necessarily the evil that employee advocates make it
out to be. Says Lew Maltby, president of the National Work-rights
Institute in Princeton, New Jersey, "A good psychological test
might not be a bad investment if a company can use it fairly and
knowledgeably."
Chris Pentilla is a freelance journalist who covers workplace
issues from her mone base in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, area. She
can be reached at chris@sitting-duck.com or
through her Web site, www.sitting-duck.com.
What exactly is psychological testing? One type is the
personality test, in which applicants or employees are given a list
of 100 adjectives and asked to decide how well each of the words
describes their personalities. Another technique is the integrity,
or honesty, test, where the employee taking the test responds
"true" or "false" to a series of statements. (A
commonly used test of this type is the MMPI, or Minnesota
Multi-phasic Inventory exam.) Test takers' mathematically
averaged responses are supposed to give you details about their
character, work ethic and personality. The fees for psychological
tests range widely, from $5 to $250 per test.
Jim Sirbasku, CEO and co-founder of Profiles International Inc.,
an employee-assessment company in Waco, Texas, says that while
clients also use his company's products for promotion,
self-improvement, coaching and succession planning, a good
percentage use testing to aid in hiring decisions. Profiles'
"Job Match," which assesses individuals'
tem-peraments and suitability for certain types of work, determines
whether, for example, applicants for a sales position might be
introverts who will be unhappy in the job. "If you're
hiring in customer service, a field that has 200 percent turnover
every year [according to The American Teleservices Association
Inc.], you want to know how applicants handle frustration, stress
and conflict," Sirbasku says. "Testing lets you know and
makes some recommendations."
Some small companies are sold on psychological testing.
"Hiring is always a guessing game," says Marika Hamilton,
28, co-owner and human resources director of Fort Wayne,
Indiana-based Britannia Inc., a $5 million computer products
company founded in 1989. To Hamilton, it's a very important
guessing game, one she felt needed more backup than just her
initial impressions of job applicants. "We'd rather leave
a desk empty now than make the wrong hire," she says.
Surfing the Net about one year ago, Hamilton came across
Indianapolis-based Hire Success, a company that sells various types
of aptitude tests, including a personality test based on four basic
personality types: director, socializer, thinker and supporter. Job
applicants take the personality test online, then e-mail it to Hire
Success, which scores it and sends the results to the
applicant's interviewer or supervisor. In ad-dition to a
summary of the person's personality type, the report includes
interview questions tailored to the applicant's responses. The
cost per test averages $10 to $13.
Hamilton ended up taking one of Hire Success' online
personality tests and feeling it offered a fairly accurate
portrayal. In fact, she was impressed enough to have
Britannia's 28 employees-who work either in the company's
engineering or customer support departments-take the test. Hamilton
saw certain patterns emerge and believes the test gave her a way to
spot common traits in her successful (as well as her
not-so-successful) employees that she can now look for in job
applicants. Does testing make a difference? Although Hamilton
can't directly measure the impact on turnover, she thinks
she's seen a decrease.
While employers like Hamilton say they see benefits,
psychological testing is not without its critics. Bob Schaeffer,
public education director of the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based
National Center for Fair & Open Testing, dismisses
psychological testing as too arbitrary, like trying to use
astrology to understand someone's personality. "You're
trying to quantify the unquantifiable," says Schaeffer, who
advises small employers to rely instead on probationary hiring
periods to confirm the right fit. He believes psychological testing
is a big turnoff to employees, who wonder about the purpose of the
questions.
Critics also point out the lack of federal regulation or content
standards for psychological testing. Without legal limits, they
contend, tests could include intensely personal questions. Maltby
says it's tempting for employers to go in blindly. Many
outsource to psychological testing firms, then defer to the other
party's expertise as they would with an accountant or a lawyer.
Those who do, says Maltby, often never look at the actual tests,
only the results. "Over-reliance is a major danger. Employers
need to do their homework," he says. He suggests employers
take the tests themselves: "If you're offended by the
questions, chances are employees will be, too."
Failing to pay attention can be costly. A number of lawsuits
have been filed over the years by employees complaining about the
integrity tests they were required to take. In one California case,
a male applicant applying for a security job sued Target Stores
after he was required to take a version of the MMPI. The 704
questions on the test included "I have often wished that I was
a girl" and "Was there ever a time in your life that you
liked to play with dolls?" which the applicant found
offensive. Target Stores lost the case in court, settled the
lawsuit for $1.5 million and discontinued use of the test.
California and Rhode Island have since outlawed making job
applicants take the MMPI. Both Sirbasku and Kendall agree that
employers need to make sure the tests they use don't go over
the line. Find out whether tests are certified and graded by actual
psychologists.
Maltby adds that employers need to be aware they may be losing
good potential workers by requiring them to take tests. "About
one-third of the time, the best candidates are being screened
out," he contends.
In today's tight labor market, employers may be more
concerned about filling empty desks than assessing the right fit.
That could be one reason why, according to AMA, the number of
companies using psychological testing decreased from 52 to 33
percent between 1998 and 1999.
Tom Kendall, vice president of Hire Success, says personality
testing should not be used as a litmus test. While it may give you
some basic insights, it's not a crystal ball and ideally should
be just one small part of a comprehensive hiring process that
includes interviews, resumes and references.
Hamilton agrees. "The interview is still the most important
part of hiring, and you still have to go with your gut," she
says. Today, Hamilton pulls out the test only when an interviewee
gives off good vibes. "I'm not going to waste it on the
wrong people," she says.
Sanso remains leery of psychological testing. He says it's
"faceless" and prefers to bring a potential employee in
for a day or two of shadowing-letting the applicant observe him
interacting with his staff and vice versa.
If you decide to try psychological testing, first you need to
know what you're after. "One size doesn't fit all.
Know what you're trying to achieve," Sirbasku says. Next,
find an established, certified testing company that has a reputable
psychologist on staff. Ask for a list of references, then take the
test yourself. If it makes you the least bit uncomfortable or if
the results seem questionable to you, keep looking. If you start
using a particular test, update it every so often to keep pace with
your company's growth and the times.
Finally, if you use testing as a part of your hiring process,
don't let it be the determining factor in your decisions. There
will always be an enormous amount of information you'll never
know about a person, and you can't eliminate all risk. But if
used wisely, psychological testing might offer valuable insights
about potential candidates that you can add to the decision-making
mix. "Every brick in the wall makes it a bit stronger,"
says Maltby. "This is just another brick."
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| |  www.fairtest.org: This
Web site is maintained by the National Center for Fair & Open
Testing, an advocacy group that works against abuses, misuses and
flaws in standardized testing.
www.dol.gov:
The Department of Labor's Web site includes a testing and
assessment manual, which offers employers a guide to good testing
practices. | | |
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| | | | |
Contact Sources
- Britannia Inc., (800) 274-5245, marikah@britanniainc.com
- Carsan Engineering Inc., www.carsaneng.com
- Hire Success, (877) 582-8378, www.hiresuccess.com
- National Workrights Institute, 166 Wall St., Princeton,
NJ 08540
- Profiles International Inc., (254) 751-1644, www.profilesinternational.com
- Radcliffe Public Policy Center, (617) 496-3478, www.radcliffe.edu/pubpol
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