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Until now, the vast majority of recruitment research has been con-
ducted in college placement offices and has focused on new college grad-
uates (Breaugh, 1992; Rynes, 1991). In many ways, the emphasis on
college recruiting has been both justifiable and highly useful. College
recruitment is clearly a major source of hiring for professional, man-
agerial, and technical jobs (Lindquist & Endicott, 1986)^obs that are
increasingly important to the economic success of bothfirmsand nations
(Frank & Cook, 1995; McClelland, 1982; Miner, Ebrahimi, & Wachtel,
The authors thank the National Association of Colleges and Employers for financial
and professional support of this project. We are also grateful to Gale V^rma for sug-
gesting this research topic, and to Michael Forrest, Karen Lyness, Ken Pearlman, Norita
Rehrig, Use Saari, and Gale Varma for comments and suggestions on early versions of
the questionnaire. Finally, we thank Tim Judge and two anonymous reviewers for helpful
comments on earlier versions of this manuscript.
Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Sara L. Rynes, De-
partment of Management & Organizations, College of Business Administration, Univer-
sity of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242-1000 or e-mail Sara-Rynes@uiowa.edu.
309
310 PERSONNELPSYCHOLOGY
Both trends would be expected to favor workers who have already ac-
quired some on-the-job experience. For example, the demand for speed
would be expected to increase the desirability of recruiting individuals
who will be immediately productive, and immediately available (rather
than available only in December or May). In addition, recent meta-
analyticfindingshave established that work experience is positively asso-
ciated with job performance, particularly when the experience is specifi-
cally related to the job in question (Quiiiones, Ford, & Tfeachout, 1995).
Even when prior experience is not perfectly transferable, both theory
and research suggest that workers with some initial experience are better
able to absorb information from on-the-job training (e.g., McConnell &
Brue, 1992; Morrison & Brantner, 1992), further increasing experienced
workers' competitive advantage in environments that require immediate
productivity. Given thesefindings,it is not surprising that recent descrip-
tions of what organizations are looking for in job applicants include an
increased emphasis on previous experience (e.g., Lindquist, 1992; Na-
tional Association of Colleges and Employers, 1995; Sebolsky, Brady &
Wagner, 1996).
Changing market conditions also appear to have reduced the strength
and viability of many internal labor markets (Breaugh, 1992; Kanter,
1989; Lawrence & Dyer, 1983). In organizations with strong internal
labor markets, outside hiring is typically constrained to entry-level po-
sitions (such as those filled by new college graduates), while higher-
level jobs are reserved for internal candidates through promotion op-
portunities. Because internal labor markets are typically associated with
long-term relationships and strong enculturation processes, new gradu-
ates are typically preferred over experienced workers who have been
socialized in other corporate cultures. Thus, strong internal labor mar-
kets provide career paths in which both new college graduates and cur-
rent employees are largely protected from competition with experienced
workers from other firms (Doeringer & Piore, 1971). As a result, any de-
crease in the strength of internal labor markets, or of business strategies
associated with them (e.g., "defender" strategies; Miles & Snow, 1984),
would be expected to enhance experienced outsiders' prospects relative
to those of both current employees and new graduates.
tion for organizations seeking to improve their hiring processes and out-
comes (Rynes & Boudreau, 1986). Such analyses also provide an oppor-
tunity to determine the extent to which practices that have been found to
be effective via previous research (e.g., use of valid selection devices) are
actually employed by organizations, or associated with higher degrees of
perceived success (see also Ostroff, 1995; Terpstra & Rozell, 1993).
Based on advice from a number of corporate staffing professionals,
experienced hires were defined as "college-educated individuals with 2
or more years of post-college work experience." Given this definition,
it is important to recognize that the distinction between experienced
hires and new college graduates does not translate into "old" versus
"young" applicants. First, because an individual would be defined as
experienced with only 2 years of post-graduation work, we might be
talking about experienced workers who are still in their early-to-mid 20s.
Second, because many new graduates are individuals who have returned
to college after earlier employment or homemaking experiences, new
graduates cannot necessarily be assumed to be "young," either.
In addition, we recognize that new college graduates are not neces-
sarily devoid of work experience. Indeed, most college graduates have
had at least some experience, particularly in summer, part-time, intern-
ship, or co-op positions. However, organizations typically use substan-
tially different market intermediaries for locating the two types of appli-
cants (e.g., experienced hires are rarely recruited through college place-
ment offices, while new college graduates are rarely recruited through
private search firms; Breaugh, 1992; Granovetter, 1974; Rosenfeld,
1975; Schwab, 1982). This early sorting by labor market intermediaries
has considerable implications for which particular applicants will actu-
ally receive consideration for any given vacancy (e.g., Doeringer & Pi-
ore, 1971; Rynes & Barber, 1990; Schwab, 1982), suggesting that college
graduates and experienced hires compete in substantially segmented la-
bor markets. Thus, although the conceptual boundary between "experi-
enced" and "new graduate" hiring is inherently somewhat fuzzy, the op-
erational definition used here is based on definitions used by employing
organizations, and reflects the fact that new graduates and experienced
hires tend to be recruited through different channels.
Hypotheses
Another factor that may be associated with the decision to hire ex-
perienced workers versus new college graduates is the age of an orga-
nization's current workforce. Theories and research on organizational
demography (Pfeffer, 1983), person-organization fit (e.g., Kristof, 1996),
and attraction-seiection-attrition processes (Schneider, 1987; Schneider,
Goldstein, & Smith, 1995) all suggest that in general, individuals will pre-
fer to hire others who are similar to themselves (see also Jackson, 1991).
Because age is on average associated with experience, one might expect
organizations with older employees to seek applicants who, like them-
selves, can be presumed to have been already socialized in work envi-
ronments and to hold similar work values and expectations (e.g., Schein,
1978). On the other side of the process, applicants also appear to pre-
fer coworkers who are similar to themselves (e.g., Meyer, 1994; Rynes,
Bretz, & Gerhart, 1991), suggesting thatfirmswith older employees may
be less successful in attracting or retaining new college graduates even if
they desire them. In combination, these factors lead us to predict that:
One might also expect preferences for experienced versus new grad-
uate hiring to vary with age of the organization and, by implication, its
life cycle. On average, older organizations are more likely to have for-
malized hierarchical structures (e.g.. Gray & Ariss, 1985) which, in the
career domain, translate into stronger internal labor markets with norms
against hiring experienced workers from other organizations (Doeringer
& Piore, 1971). Older organizations also tend to have narrower and
more specialized job descriptions (Doeringer & Piore, 1971), which are
less likely to require broad previous experience. Thus, we predict that:
Hypothesis 4: The older the organization, the lower the relative proportion
of experienced hiring.
Method
Dependent Variables
dents who indicated some degree of change over the past 2 years also
provided an open-ended explanation of the main reason for the shift.
Success of experienced hiring was measured subjectively, due to the
previously documented difficulty of obtaining comparable objective mea-
sures in the recruitment area (e.g., Breaugh, 1992; Miner, 1979; Rynes
& Boudreau, 1986). Two types of subjective measures were obtained: a
single-item holistic evaluation (5-point scale) and a 9-item scale reflect-
ing success on various dimensions of experienced hiring (e.g., identifying
candidates, attracting candidates, retaining new hires, cost containment;
fv = .88). The two measures correlated r = .67.
Independent Variables
the dynamism score for all firms in that SIC code, because large stan-
dard errors reflect a high degree of environmental turbulence and un-
predictability.
Use of high-validity selection devices (Hypothesis 6a). Based on previ-
ous validity evidence (e.g.. Hunter and Hunter, 1984; McDaniel, Whet-
zel, Schmidt, & Maurer, 1994; Noe, Hollenbeck, Gerhart, & Wright,
1994), the following selection devices were included in an index assess-
ing the extent of use (1 = never; 5 = always) of high-validity selection de-
vices: ability and aptitude tests, work samples, trial work periods, assess-
ment centers, biodata, drug testing, and structured interviews. Excluded
were selection devices with more modest validities (reference checks,
unstructured interviews, and grade point averages).
Use of effective recruiting sources (Hypothesis 6b). Respondents in-
dicated the extent to which they used (1 = not at all; 5 = a great deal)
each of nine recruitment sources for experienced hiring (e.g., newspa-
per advertisements, private search firms). In addition, they indicated
the effectiveness of each source on a 5-point scale. These assessments
(effectiveness and extent of use) were then multiplied to estimate the
extent to which each firm used the most effective sources.
Recruitment evaluation (Hypothesis 6c) was assessed in two ways: an
overall assessment of the extent to which respondents' companies for-
mally evaluate the success of experienced hiring efforts (5-point scale),
and dichotomous responses indicating whether or not formal evaluation
is conducted in each of four sub areas (cost per hire, time to hire, em-
ployee retention, employee performance). Because employers did not
tend to be consistent in their evaluation of various outcomes (i.e., eval-
uation of any one dimension was not strongly associated with evaluation
of the others), the holistic measure was used in subsequent analyses.
Profitability (Hypothesis 8a). Average return on assets (ROA) over
the 3 years prior to the survey (1992-1994) was calculated using Com-
pustat-PC. A 3-year average was used to minimize high levels of single-
year volatility in this measure (Daft et al., 1988).
Organizatiormlgrowth (Hypothesis 8b) was provided by respondents,
who indicated whether their organization had grown in terms of number
of employees (coded 1), stayed the same (0), or downsized (-1) over
the preceding 2-3 years. Although some respondents also provided ex-
act percentage changes in the number of employees, large amounts of
missing data forced us to use the three-category measure.
Competitiveness of offers (Hypothesis 8c). Respondents indicated the
competitiveness of the company's job offers to experienced applicants,
relative to those of competing employers (1 = not very competitive; 5 =
extremely competitive).
SARA L. RYNES ET AL. 321
Results
TABLE 1
Respondent Characteristics
Industry Percent
Services (total) 53.2
Manufacturing 41.9
Government or nonprofit agencies 4.9
Oreanization size
< .SOO employees 10.4
501-1,000 7.8
1,001-5,000 30.3
5,001-10,000 14.7
> 10,000 36.8
Most freauent hirine catesories*
Engineering 45.3
Computer science/information systems 23.0
Sales 17.7
Management/management trainee 16.5
Accounting 14.0
Finance 8.2
Marketing 8.2
Consulting 2.9
Human resources 1.6
Respondent experience (In organization') (In staffing)
Less than 1 year 9.9 6.2
1-3 years 19.4 20.7
4-6 years 15.7 17.8
7-10 years 14.9 16.5
> 10 years 40.1 38.8
Respondent iob jitle
Mgr./dir. of staffing, recruitment or employment 62
Human resources manager 38
Mgr./dir. of college or university relations 36
HR generalist 30
Recruitment/employment/staffing specialist 13
Mgr./dir. of college recruiting 12
Corporate or regional recruiter. 12
Mgr. of training and organizational development 8
VP of human resources 8
Director of human resources 7
Other 11
* Some respondents checked more than one category, so percentages do not sum to 100.
TABLE 2
College Ursus Experienced Hiring Practices
Extent of centralization Ave. ratine Percent of resimndents (N = 2351
Centralized Decentralized
1 2 3 4 5
College hiring 2.39 47 14 11 9 19
Experienced hiring 3.13 25 11 17 20 27
Extent of formal evaluation Colleee hirine Experienced hirine
Overall extent of evaluation' 3.60 3.23
% evaluating cost per hire 67% 65%
% evaluating time to hire 51% 64%
% evaluating employee retention 76% 66%
% evaluating new hire performance 72% 68%
Use of selection procedure^ 1New grads Exp. t 95% confidence
interval for d
Grade point average 3.97 2.54 19.61** (1.29, 1.57)
TVial work periods (e.g., interns. 2.80 1.99 10.91** (.67, .96)
temps)
Structured interviews 3.99 3.84 3.50** (.07, .24)
Drug tests 3.44 3.43 .29 (-.05, .06)
Biodata/numerically scored 1.16 1.15 .19 (-.04, .04)
applications
Aptitude or ability tests 1.58 1.65 -1.55 (-.16, .02)
Unstructured interviews 2.92 2.98 -1.60 (-.14, .02)
Personality tests or assessments 1.45 1.56 -3.23** (-.19, -.05)
Assessment centers 1.16 1.30 -3.48** (-.22, -.06)
Reference checks 4.20 4.47 -5.24** (-.37, -.17)
Work samples 2.06 2.35 -5.29** (-.39, -.18)
' (1) = Not at all; (5) = To a great extent;
' (I) = Never; (3) = Sometimes; (5) = Always;
*p< .05; **p< .01
TABLE3
Relative Desirability of Experienced Applicants versus
New College Graduates on Various Characteristics
Characteristic Average rating' t 95% conf. interval for d
two findings are not very surprising, given that the use of GPA and trial
work periods (co-ops, internships, and summer employment) as screen-
ing devices is well established in college populations, but less so in expe-
rienced ones (e.g., many experienced workers do not list GPA on their
resumes). The slightly greater use of structured interviews in college re-
cruiting is probably due to the more centralized, concentrated, and cycli-
cal nature of the process, which facilitates formal training in structured
interviewing methods.
On the other hand, experienced hires were slightly more likely than
new grads to be screened via work samples (d = .29), reference checks
(d = .27), assessment centers {d = .14), and personality tests {d = .11).
However, with the exception of reference checks, none of these methods
was used very extensively in either applicant population.
Tkble 3 shows respondents' perceptions of the relative strengths and
weaknesses of new college graduates versus outside experienced hires in
their own organizations. Overall, experienced hires appear to be eval-
uated somewhat more favorably than new graduates (e.g., the average
rating across all items was 3.21, where 5 = experienced hires far superior
and 3= no difference; d = .21), particularly with respect to understanding
how business works (d = 1.15), knowledge of the competition (d= 1.13),
SARA L. RYNES ET AL. 325
TABLE4
Recruiting Success: College Hiring Programs Versus Experienced Hiring Programs
95% confidence
Success factor^ College Exp. t interval for d
Identifying qualified applicants 4.06 3.73 5.13** (.20, .46)
Getting adequate pre-hire 3.86 3.57 4.59** (.16, .41)
information
Containing costs 3.65 3.34 4.45** (17, .44)
Attracting candidates 3.79 3.71 1.25 (-.05, .22)
Acclimating new employees to 3.71 3.64 1.13 (-.05, .20)
culture
Hiring high-performing employees 3.89 3.88 .08 (-11, .12)
Getting new ideas from new hires 3.60 3.62 -.36 (-.12, .09)
Retaining new hires 3.63 3.67 -.66 (-.17, .08)
Speed in getting employees up & 3.45 3.94 -7.49** (-.62, -.36)
running
Overall success 3.90 3.82 1.52 (-.02, .18)
' (1) = Not at all successful; (3) = Somewhat successful; (5) = Extremely successful;
**P< .01.
and 1995 (p = .18, ns). However, the most notable thing about reported
changes in hiring patterns was their variability across employers. For
example, the number of employers that shifted away from experienced
hires was almost as large (n = 82) as the number that shifted toward
them (n = 87). Fifty employers reported no change in hiring patterns.
Among the 39.7% of respondents who had shifted toward more
experienced hiring, open-ended responses suggested that two reasons
dominated: either the jobs available in their organizations had become
broader, more skilled, or more demanding (n = 33), or they required
more immediate productivity from new hires (n = 22). This latter re-
sponse is consistent with the earlier finding that employers were more
likely to evaluate "time to hire" in experienced populations. Less fre-
quent reasons included the increased availability of experienced hires
(n = 7) and their greater maturity (n = 4).
Among the group moving away from experienced hiring (37.4%), the
reasons were more diverse. The inost frequently reported factor (n =
22) involved changes in management personnel and/or the implemen-
tation of new management initiatives believed to be compatible with
college hiring (e.g., internship, job rotation, or internal training pro-
grams). The interesting thing about this category of responses was that
in most cases, the root causes of the shift in managerial preferences or
programs were not identified. The second most common reason, how-
ever, was more tangible: the greater affordability of new graduates (n =
14). Other responses included the desire to revitalize the organization
by bringing in new blood (n = 11), an increase in the number of entry-
level jobs (/I = 7), inability to fmd or to attract experienced workers (n
= 5), and higher perceived quality or better skills of new graduates (« =
5).
The third research question concerned the factors associated with
higher proportions of experienced hiring. Tkble 5 shows the simple cor-
relations between experienced hiring and other major variables, while
Thble 6 reports the regression results.
Tkble 6 shows that, as predicted, higher proportions of experienced
hiring were associated with shorter-term staffing strategies (Hypothe-
sis 2), older current employees (Hypothesis 3), and less dynamic envi-
ronments (Hypothesis 5). Experienced hiring was also proportionately
greater in organizations that had experienced faster employment growth
(a control variable) over the past 2 years. This finding, although not
explicitly hypothesized, is nevertheless consistent with previous specula-
tion that the pursuit of growth strategies requires a higher proportion of
e^qjerienced outside hiring (e.g., Fombrun et al., 1984; Schuler & Jack-
son, 1987).
SARA L. RYNES ETAL. 327
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328 PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY
TABLE 6
Regression Analysis Predicting Extent of Experienced Hiring
Variables Reduced model Full model
beta t beta t
Controls:
ROA(avg., 1992-94) .01 .14 .01 .17
Organizational size (In.) .02 .30 .01 .16
Organizational growth .22" 3.43 .26" 3.91
Consulting -.06 -.86 -.03 -.47
Computer science/info, systems .11 1.57 .09 1.37
Engineering .05 .73 -.06 -.81
Finance .01 .08 .00 -.06
Mgnit./mgnit. trainee .09 1.33 .07 1.06
Marketing .11 1.56 .12 1.75
Sales -.03 -.38 -.02 -.36
ft' .08
Adj. ft' .04
F 3.12^
Theoretical variables:
Salary premium -.03 -.43
Lxjng-term focus -.13" -2.11
Median employee age .26" 3.72
Organizational age (In.) -.10 -1.46
Environmental dynamism -.14* -2.27
ft' .18
Adj. ft' .12
F 3.12"
Incr. F 5.14"
•p< .05; " p < .01
TABLE 7
Regression Anafysis of Experienced Hiring Success
direct responsibility for it. A similar finding was reported by Rynes &
Boudreau (1986), whose respondents (corporate HR professionals) re-
ported higher success for college recruiting when recruiting activities
were centralized in headquarters and conducted largely by staff (vs. line)
professionals. Alternatively, those with lower familiarity might have
been more inclined to give noncommittal (less positive) evaluations be-
cause of their more limited information. It should be remembered, how-
ever, that the vast majority of respondents reported themselves to be very
familiar with experienced hiring.
Discussion
Limitations
Given the lack of both previous research and publicly available data
332 PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY
on this topic, conditions dictated that we obtain most of our data from
a single source—organizational members of NACE. In any study where
a substantial portion of the data are provided by a single individual, it
is always possible that some observed results reflect common method
variance rather than true relationships among variables (e.g., Campbell,
1982; Crampton & Wagner, 1994; Podsakoff & Organ, 1986). Although
this possibility can never be entirely ruled out, we did take a number of
steps in the design phase to try to minimize the likelihood of contamina-
tion from common method variance.
For example, in many cases, our measures were obtained from pub-
licly available databases (e.g., organizational profitability, dynamism,
size, and age), or required relatively objective information on the part
of respondents (e.g., age of current employees, extent of source us-
age). Second, many of the items would not have caused respondents to
feel that they themselves were being evaluated (e.g., relative desirabil-
ity of college-versus-experienced hires, usefulness of different recruiting
sources, extent of experienced hiring), hopefully minimizing pressures
on subjects to present a good face or a consistent story throughout the
questionnaire. Third, a variety of different response formats were em-
ployed (e.g., open-ended, yes-no, percentages, Likert scales).
Beyond the steps taken in the design phase, our analyses revealed
that in only one instance did any individual respondent characteristic
explain a significant portion of the variance in any dependent variable
(respondent familiarity with experienced hiring was associated with its
perceived success). In addition, in no case did the results for theoretical
variables change, depending on whether or not respondent character-
istics were included in these equations. Still, because many of the ob-
served effects involve respondent-reported variables (e.g., median em-
ployee age, long-term focus, source usage), the possibility of contamina-
tion from method variance can not be ruled out.
Another limitation of the database concerns the relatively high pro-
portion of single-item measures. In some cases (e.g., median employee
age), a single item seemed to be the most appropriate operationalization.
However, in other cases, the use of single-item measures resulted from
the low internal consistency of possible multi-item alternatives (e.g., ex-
tent of formal evaluation), or from a desire to minimize survey length
and complexity. For example, in cases where organizations conduct
hiring in several job categories, it would have been preferable to use
salary differentials that were estimated separately for each job type, and
then weighted by hiring proportions. However, maximum survey length
requirements, uncertainty about data availability, and concerns about
questionnaire complexity prohibited such detailed data collection.
SARA L. RYNES ETAL. 333
Future Research
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