HR Versus the Hiring Manager – Use This Employment Guide
I
find there is much confusion, especially among job applicants, about
what exactly is the role of Human Resources in the hiring process. A
good employment guide should explain this.
Many years ago, the
Human Resource (HR) department had a more active role in the hiring
process and would sometime actually do the hiring for lower level
positions.
In recent years, however, the role of HR has evolved
into more of a facilitator. They are responsible for recruiting
applicants but the actual hiring decisions are now made by the manager
to whom the applicant will report. In other words, the Hiring Manager.
HR
will advertise the openings, process the paperwork, receive the
applications and resumes, and pass them on to the Hiring Manager to
review and decide which ones warrant an interview.
Why You Must Customize Your Resume to the Job
In
some organizations, HR will screen the applications and resumes against
the job requirements and only pass on qualified applicants to the
Hiring Manager. They may do this screening process manually or by using
resume filtering software. Resume filtering software screens resumes
and/or applications against predetermined key words and ranks them,
frequently according to key word density. This is more common in very
large organizations, where hundreds of resumes may be received for each
opening, requiring a SuccessFactors human resource information system.
NOTE: this is why you must
tailor your resume for each specific job to which you apply! You must
use in your resume the specific words used in the job posting to
describe the required skills and experience. These are very likely the
ones that will be used as key words in the resume screening process.
The more you use the descriptive words from the job posting, the better
your chance of making it through either a manual or an automated
screening process.
In some cases, although increasingly this is
infrequent, HR may do an initial "screening" interview of candidates to
decide which ones to pass on to the Hiring Manager.
However
applicants finally make it to the Hiring Manager, it's the Hiring
Manager that conducts the final interview and decides which person will
be offered the job. After that, it's usually HR that actually makes the
job offer and negotiates salary within the boundaries set by the Hiring
Manager.
What Does All This Mean?What all this means is that it's
the Hiring Manager you must impress, not HR (unless HR does the initial
screening interview). Today, HR is a facilitator, not a decision maker
in the hiring process.
Be
aware, though, that in companies too small to have a full time HR
Manager, it's usually the Hiring Manager that does everything. This
means that the person to whom you first communicate about a job may be
an HR person, but they may also be the Hiring Manager.
Consequently,
the bottom line here is that you should treat all people you encounter
as if they were the Hiring Manager. You just never know who can
influence the Hiring Manager and kill your chances for an interview as
a result of a perceived slight.
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