The myth of the Ideal Candidate

 – Patrick Edward O’Toole –

Internal resource management is one of the most referenced and discussed topics in business today, coinciding with a growing awareness of the strategic value of corporate culture as a competitive advantage, which will generate and define long-term success.

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This conversation reaches far beyond “fit” and requires a deeper understanding of personnel psychology and organizational dynamics. In an ideal environment, interviewing will involve a long-term relationship between both parties, with transparency and mutual well-being, as primary variables. The gaming, the stress, the struggle over money and status would largely disappear from corporate culture, as would many of the negative organizational dynamics which derail Corporate Mission and bottom-line objectives.

Properly conducted organizational psychology, which is to say, organizational human resource development (a.k.a. HR), would implement strategic, well-documented practices for the screening, hiring, training, developing, promoting, and releasing of internal resources, while tracking the results over time, to be reviewed and corrected, updated and re-worked, to increase life-cycle effectiveness.  As has been previously discussed in other Linkedin posts, there is a major and widely misunderstood difference between best practices (which promote organizational efficiency) and unique internal practices which create a real competitive advantage: i.e. that is long-term, and not simply and easily repeatable by your marketplace competition.

Without digressing into an academic exposé of evolutionary psychology, it is important to understand the psychology of human development regarding social interaction.

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Humans are hard-wired to sense/feel/intuit beyond linear empirical knowing, and have shown via earliest extant historical records a desire and attempt to predict the future through the use of signs and signals believed to explain what might happen, and the future and fate of individuals. This need to know is as pertinent today as it was long years ago; our lives are composed of 1000’s of interactions with strangers and groups and organizations whose character and intentions are unverified, and we look for indicators to help us predict the behavior of the unknown; in this case, the unknown person.

Hiring involves interacting with the unknown, and as discussed in the introduction, is usually conducted with pressing time requirements. HR doesn’t have the luxury of long-term rapport building, the lengthy process so often recommended before any large purchase or remarkable event, like home-buying and getting married. To resolve this organizational dilemma, systems are created and instituted and soon become standardized, best practices, that are adopted throughout institutional fields. Specifically, culturally specific (fast becoming globally specific) signs and signals become the standard indicators used to predict the outcome of the unknown person. Credit score. GPA. Ranking of educational programs. Status of references. GRE/GMAT/LSAT/MCAT scores, ect. Predictability is conducted through character judgment based on descriptive statistics gathered in socially relevant domains to assess the quality, credibility, and potential performance of a new hire. No business can afford a trial-and-error process hoping that at some point, someone will stick and stay.

These standards and expectations have become so institutionalized that we observe the same “character requirements” described for applicants to Masters of Arts Programs as we do in top medical, business, and law schools. We observe that employers solicit a set of variables that describe a particular individual, that is somehow the ubiquitous everywoman-hero of the entire workforce.

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What we are observing is the diffusion of current cultural beliefs that idealize the “right person” as the best candidate for most situations. In reality, HR is rarely conducted using scientifically tested and developed practices, relying instead on heuristic patterns that reflect internal-cultural beliefs systems and organizational patterns that survive through inertia and lethargy.

There is a wealth of well-vetted and scientifically tested practices and techniques available (Industrial-Organizational Psychology) to accurately determine the best people at the right time for the Firm. Do some digging and research, and find out the efficacy and limitations- the true validity- of standardized indicators before your HR department accepts them as universal truths. Many of the most widely accepted performance standards, from SAT/GRE/FICO/School Ranking to race, age, and gender- are highly sub-standard indicators of long-term performance yet are used as gold-standards in hiring and staffing, with very little substantive validity, to support the myths and belief-systems which hold them in place.

As long as Organizations use talent acquisition practices out of laziness, lack of ingenuity, a desire for legitimacy, or cultural lethargy and inertia, there will be no internal advantage available. There is no ideal person of the industrialized world, however convenient it may be to operate as if this is so. How many times will your business hire the wrong person because she met a set of watermarks on paper. How many times will the same set of assumptions, the same lack of firm-specific documentation and research, the same habitual organizational practices make the staffing decisions for your Firm, while better-fit candidates are screened out before they ever make an interview? If your HR Department does not actually know what the Firm actually needs, it has no idea who to look for, and relies on nothing less than popular myths to develop what many organizational strategists consider to be The competitive strategic advantage (don’t tell Porter) that any organization can have in the marketplace today.

Business school and the Zombie Apocalypse

 – Patrick Edward O’Toole –

Life in the past two years has revolved around my post-graduation destination.  Having abandoned PhD aspirations for the sweet promise of an MBA, the question has been, of course, where to go.  I feel compelled to share my experience, as I believe that 99% of everything I’ve read on the “MBA subject” to be backward in its presentation and misleading in its recommendations.

Advice that seems contexted in a vacuum of idealized circumstances that do not reflect the reality of most people, and as such is a disservice to the average person interested in furthering her education.

My experience researching business schools reminds me of the “what’s the best weapon for the zombie apocalypse” question currently popular on Linkedin; a question asked – and answered- as if there were not financial, legal, regulatory, experiential and training requirements and limitations to the actual reality of procuring any particular item and any given place and time. Regarding the MBA question, the “vacuum of idealized circumstancesI mentioned above operates as follows.

“Ask and answer questions in a context of limitless access and timing” where considerations such as family, money, geography, money, career, money- the many faces of reality- are second shelf variables to the almighty Ranking of Programs and schools.  The big dilemma each pundit offers to solve: “What’s the ROI of an MBA” and “You’ve been accepted to the Marshal School of Business.  Should you leave your job even though it’s only ranked #11?”

Let me tell you how to NOT waste endless hours on this process.  Every business school worth its salt, and the 400 that are not, charge an average of $30K-$40K/year, and most MBA Programs are 2-3 years, especially the EMBA’s for working professionals.  There are “lower-end” programs in the $50K-$70K range, and many “top-shelf” programs that charge an astounding $150K-$200K. You can assume spending in the $75-$100K range for a respectable MBA Program.  Even the U.C. schools charge $100K+; enough to make one yearn for the gentle hand of the Reagan administration.

The first, and ONLY question for you to ask and answer: “How much money can I spend or borrow on a per year basis, and under what conditions?”  Until you are clear about how much money you have available- and if the terms are acceptable- questions of rankings and networks and ROI’s are as meaningless as “Marine Corps Sniper vs Navy Seal” (since we all know the Marine would win), and “what’s the best weapon for the Zombie Apocalypse.”

Until the money question is thoroughly explored, and exact numbers analyzed and considered, nothing else should be of consideration.  If it turns out that your boss offers to pay for an MBA, your work has a large education reimbursement policy, you are wealthy and have the money to spend- go to the highest ranked program you can get accepted to.  But, if you are like most people, there are limits to the quantity of money available, and limits to what terms you can accept.  Knowing what exactly you have to spend has to be the primary consideration before anything else.  

NOTE: In regards to the anecdotal “You’ve been accepted to the Marshal School of Business, should you leave your job even though it’s only ranked #11?” statement at the beginning of my rant.

MBA: $95K tuition + $25K in expected living expenses – EMBA: $127K+

The offering should have been: “You need to borrow $125 thousand dollars and maybe quit your job.  Is this in any way a possibility or a complete waste of your time and thought?”

Prompting people to consider rankings and networks and ROI’s instead of the financial realities of paying for a Program is simply bad advice.

Your next step is an accurate realistic assessment of your personal life-situation. This is in response to my “unlimited money and unlimited time” criticism of most Business school advice I have read in the past few years.  Again, if you have the means and the situation that will support evening and weekend classes, time off, corporate and family support, quitting your job and supporting yourself on your large savings, the ability to travel or close residence to your school of choice, you are fortunate…..it’s just that most of the working adults in the world have a host of logistics and commitments that make up their life.  The idea that the location, time-requirements, current job obligations, sacrifice of personal time, impact on marriage, health, and kids, ect, are not fundamental, primary considerations for most working adults makes me wonder to whom the mass of advice I have read was written for.

NOW: go find out if there’s a Program you can actually afford and realistically manage given your personal situation, and decide if its worth the money.  Yes, of course, ROI and rankings and networks is what this is all about; but the next time you find yourself reading expert advice on “magical hand-forged samurai sword vs titanium battle axe” when you should be looking for “aluminum baseball bat on sale at Target”, take a minute to reorient yourself to the reality of the moment, and remember that the Permanency spell required to manufacture magic items lowers the magic user’s constitution by 1 point; and that’s a lot of ROI to consider, even if you live in a world of wishes.