Schneiders main conclusion is that it is people and people's attributes and personalities who determine an organisation's behaviour and not the structure, technology or the external environment. In his thesis, he suggests that environments are a function of the persons behaving in them.
When attracting and selecting talents that don't fit in, they will naturally leave the organisation. Premack & Wanous conducted a meta-anaysis of realistic job previews (RJP) and found that the more of both positive and negative aspects you mention about a job upfront, the better the outcome would be for both the organisation and the talent. The candidate would then go in with eyes open, aware of the culture, what to expect of the job in terms of positives as well as negatives and would according to attract-select-attrition (ASA) theory be able to consider if these values and behaviors are compatible with oneself.
Same school of thought, also mean that it is the talent's behaviour who determines the processes and structures that evolves in an organisation, when trying to achieve the organisational goals. This group of people will as a result, over time, become increasingly more homogenous. Thankfully, sharing the same value-base is not bound by gender, ethnical group, age or nationality, it goes cross-border, Are women paying a higher price for a UN Career? It also means that organisational change will happen not by changing structures, systems or processes, but when people in the organisation change or their behaviour change.
This is one of the challenges, to attract and select the right candidates without becoming too uniform and at the same time preserve a culture and climate the encourages and embraces innovation and real change. But it does not need to be, as long as you are aware. Not all attributes requires to be the same, cultural background, nationality, gender, discipline, as long as you share the value base on which the organisation is founded. But it requires awareness.
As an example, if your are working in an environmental organisation, with the mission to reduce waste in the world, you may want to attract people who actually live their own life according to this belief, rather than those only paying lip service. There is however no need to overdo it. If you work for a product company within R&D, creativity and innovation is crucial for the organisational success or even survival. Then you want to find those individuals who are driven by finding solutions, enjoying problem-solving, being innovative and have a need for creativity in a culture that is embracing or even encourages failures and learning by doing. It might not necessarily mean that you can not embrace a diverse and inclusive organisation. You might only need to be aware of what are the main behaviours important for us in our organisation, that will make us successful. The rest can be diverse.
At Impactpool we using the Theory of Attraction - Selection - Attrition (ASA-theory) as the starting point of what is needed when building an employer brand.
Attraction: Talents are differentially attracted to careers as a function of their own interests and personality (Holland, 1985). Other signs of attraction are researched by Tom (1971) and Vroom (1966). They have stated that talents search environments that fit by their personality and that talents would like to obtain their outcomes by selecting a specific organization.
Selection: Organizations select talents who they think are compatible for many different kinds of jobs. In that way organizations end up choosing talents who share many common personal attributes, although they may not share common competencies.
Attrition: The opposite side of attraction. When talent do not fit an environment they tend to leave it. When people leave the environment a more homogenous group stays than those were initially attracted to the organization.
This said, we also know that people might stay in organisations for other reasons such as financial, job security, then sharing the value base, but believe that a culture that makes people thrive, is a culture built on the sharing the same fundamental values.
We believe people are the foundation when developing an employer brand and the approach to take for the induction of a new employee. We believe it is the success of the employer brand (as for the organisation) to explore, formulate and market the essence of that autenthic, attractive and true personality of an organisation. Not to create or invent a wanna-be culture, nor hide the struggles.
We are interested in learning what you believe are the right elements to succeed with your employer brand?
Are you looking for a partner that can help your organization to develop your employer branding strategy? Don't hesitate to Contact us