Your thoughts on pre-employment personality testing
nietra
134 Posts
We have strgugled with this at work and especially after the recent rulings. Now I have to give a presentation for school so I'm asking for your thoughts as HR Professionals on pre-employment personality testing.
Thanks so much!!
Nietra
Thanks so much!!
Nietra
Comments
I do believe that these tests, especially the Meyers Briggs type tests, can provide insight as to why certain people have difficulty communicating - but even then, the value is limited, in my opinion.
I more or less like to depend on what Southwest Airlines calls "relational competence" or how well somebody will carry a positive attitude and fit the culture of the organization.
My thoughts.
In my opinion, the use of personality profiling is no guarantee of an individual's success on the job. It may be useful in determining how you might want to motivate or coach them once they're on board, but I don't think they're a reliable predictor of how well the person will do.
A cautionary note: Stay away from the MMPI. It was the subject of an article on this site a few weeks ago. It doesn't just measure preferences but rather also gets into psychological makeup, etc. and the courts weren't very happy about that.
An instrument that rates a candidate's propensity for honesty or gives an estimate of their proximity in profile with those successful in the occupation....those are one thing. Instruments such as personality tests are most frequently administered by licensed technicians and are used by licenced clinicians such as psychologists and phychiatrists and the results have no business on an HR desk. Or worse, on the desk of a CEO. Chances are you cannot get your hands on those instruments anyway.
There are companies that use personality profiling (or whatever the hell the latest buzzword is) and are VERY successful doing it. Nucor Steel is an example of one such company.