eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 

Your Online Guide » »

Results Orientated Rules
by Richard Taylor Edwards, Ric
Think for a moment about what a recruitment agancy does. It's an agency, a specialist agency, standing (or more commonly sitting) in between people who want to hire managers and those people who want to be hired as managers. Why not just contact each other directly you might think?

Well, certainly, people can, but then there's hundreds and thousands of companies in, say, construction, or the automotive sector, so how is any one job seeker to know which are looking for people at present? Similarly, there are hundreds of thousands of qualified directors and managers out there and how is any company to know which of them is looking for a new job? The recruitment agency acts as the specialist that each side can deliver the problem to and then allow them to do some of the pre-filtering before interviews (on either side of course).

Good, excellent, so a national house builder is looking for a land director. What's this got to do with Milton Friedman, our Laureate above? The answer is that he's spent his whole career trying to drum into people's heads the point that it doesn't matter what motives and intentions are nor the process, we care only about the measurable results.

Which is why we have results orientated rules: the recruitment agency gets paid when the putative land director is hired by the national house building company. They're not sent checks because they are idealists, because they'd like to make the world a better place, rather, that they've achieved the measurable goal we set: recruiting the right person for a job.

This basic point holds throughout business (and how we wish we could get politics to work the same way): whatever the rules and incentives there are in a company or contract or transaction, we want to set them up so that they encourage the achievement of the goals we have set. One of the most obvious examples of this in recent decades has been the introduction of flexi-time. Under previous process based systems it was considered obvious that everyone should be there at the same time, work in the office the same hours and work for a set number of hours too. Now, being more results orientated, we don't actually mind whether someone starts at 6 am, or prefers to work until 7 pm, or four and half days a week: are they performing the necessary tasks to an acceptable standard? Great, carry on then!
Richard Taylor Edwards has sinced written about articles on various topics from LASIK Surgery, Careers and Job Hunting and Careers and Job Hunting. Richard Taylor Edwards, Managing Director of Talisman Executive Resourcing, the leading employment agency that offers industry.. Richard Taylor Edwards's top article generates over 135000 views. to your Favourites.
EditorialToday has 0 sub sections. Such as . With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors