(Your shopping cart is empty)
FILM: Case Studies In Recruitment
Alternative Views:
DVD (schools and colleges) [£47.00 plus VAT]
DVD (universities and businesses) [£97.00 plus VAT]
1 year streaming (schools and colleges) [£23.50 plus VAT]
1 year streaming (universities and businesses) [£43.50 plus VAT]
IF YOU ORDER "DVD"
we will send you the DVD
IF YOU ORDER "STREAMING"
we will email you a password on receipt of order
Qty:
30 mins, 2006
[password required]
Key Topics
Recruitment
Interviewing
Careers
Communication
Getting a job is one of life's big challenges. But how does it look from the employers' point of view? This documentary looks at how a small business, a hospital, and a supermarket recruit their staff.
SMALL BUSINESS:
Small business SNS supplies computer networks to schools and has to work out their job specification for a new position from scratch. They advertise the job by means of word of mouth and look at how well presented the applicants' letters and CVs are.
HOSPITAL:
East Kent and Canterbury hospital is looking to fill a vacancy for an office job with important responsibilities - ensuring cancer patients get their treatment on time. Unlike the small business, the hospital advertises the job both in the local newspaper and internally - and the wording of the ad is a crucial consideration.
SUPERMARKET:
Giant supermarket Asda asks its candidates to fill in an application form - except it's more like a questionnaire designed to weed out people with the wrong personality. Asda also asks candidates to come to a group assessment which involves a form of psychometric testing.
THE INTERVIEW:
All three organisations make their final decisions at the interview stage. The small business interviewers mark their candidates under particular headings, such as enthusiasm and leadership. The hospital puts a lot of store by supporting statements. In the supermarket, body language and appearance turn out to be important factors.
DVD EXTRAS include an extra interview, the group assessment, plus: "The Problem with Interviews".