Examples of candidate in the following topics:
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- Special thanks as well to Taissia Belozerova, Graphic Designer, Artist, MBA Candidate at Pepperdine University Class of 2009.
- Image created by: Taissia Belozerova, Graphic Designer, Artist, MBA Candidate at Pepperdine University Class of 2009
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- Recruiting workers consists of actively compiling a diverse pool of potential candidates which can be considered for employment.
- First, this recruitment technique simply posts the question to existing employees on whether anybody is aware of qualified candidates that they know personally which could fill a position.
- External recruitment focuses resources on looking outside the organization for potential candidates and expanding the available talent pool.
- The primary goal of external recruitment is to create diversity among potential candidates by attempting to reach a wider range of individuals unavailable through internal recruitment.
- For instance, the NCAA allows all of its member schools and conferences to post jobs on their website at a minimal cost, allowing for a more specialized selection of candidates.
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- Likewise, the marketing disciplines associated with branding and brand management have been increasingly applied by the human resources and talent management community to attract, engage, and retain talented candidates and employees.
- The stages in selection include sourcing candidates by networking, advertising, or other methods.
- The HR recruiter utilizes professional interviewing techniques to understand the candidate's skills, motivations to make a move, and to screen potential candidates using testing (skills or personality).
- The process is meant to evaluate the candidate and also evaluate how the candidate will fit into the organization.
- Recruiters play an important role by preparing the candidate and company for the interview, providing feedback to both parties, and handling salary and benefits negotiations.
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- After the job analysis, the process moves onto sourcing, which involves 1) advertising, a common part of the recruiting process, often encompassing multiple media, such as the Internet, general newspapers, job ad newspapers, professional publications, window advertisements, job centers, and campus graduate recruitment programs; and 2) recruitment research, which is the proactive identification of passive candidates who are happy in their current positions and are not actively looking to move companies.
- This initial research for so-called passive candidates, also called name generation, results in a contact information of potential candidates who can then be contacted discreetly to be screened and approached on behalf of an executive search firm or corporate client.
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- The future Supreme Court justice did an interesting thing that graduation day: he turned away from the professional degree candidates toward the business degree candidates, and said:
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- Our selection committee had just interviewed eight candidates for three empty Resident Advisor slots in our residence hall.
- Before I could get a word in edgewise, and before the other committee members could get up from their chairs, our candidate circulated briskly to each of them.
- But he differed dramatically from all our other candidates—including the ones we'd decided we'd hire.
- First, though, let me set forth some rules and principles I think any candidate can profitably follow in a job interview.
- Daniel Searles proved two major points in his job interview: 1) that he was different from all the other candidates and 2) that he was better than they were.
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- This can take the form of contributions to the campaigns of political candidates and parties, contributions to "issue" campaigns not tied to a candidate or party, and lobbying legislators to support or oppose particular legislation.
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- In many Western public service bodies, when a manager wants to promote an employee, they must follow a number of steps, such as advertising the position, accepting applications from qualified candidates, screening and interviewing candidates, and then documenting why they chose a particular candidate.
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- As an employee over this same period, I've also served on committees which interviewed at least five times that many candidates for various positions.
- One supervisor quoted in a Midwestern survey said job portfolios distinguished between top-notch and mediocre candidates "like a hot knife going through butter."
- Here are reasons why candidates should bring portfolios to job interviews, according to one recent article by Betty Aderman and JuWon Choi:
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- A simple Google search will turn up many candidates for you in your locale.