Recruit or Die: How Any Business Can Beat the Big Guys in the War for Young Talent
by Chris Resto, Ian Ybarra, Ramit Sethi.
The recruiting game has changed. It now takes more than simply attending a campus career fair, hosting an information session, and posting job descriptions to draw the best young talent to work for your organization. Companies often make simple mistakes that cost them recruits. They schedule information sessions on exam night.They are unclear about their most attractive features and often highlight the wrong ones.
Recruit or Die provides a powerful, inside look at the entry-level college recruiting game. You don’t have to be the biggest and most well known company to scoop up the best and the brightest on campus. Small, young, or even nonprofit companies can also get top graduates—without a Wall Street budget—if they learn the secrets of America’s top recruiters. Based on surveys and interviews of more than one thousand students, Recruit or Die provides dozens of anecdotes and case studies to show how successful recruiters work their magic and how unsuccessful recruiters blow it.
Straight from the front lines of elite recruiting, Recruit or Die shows how any company can conquer the campus.
Snakes in Suits: When Psychopaths Go to Work
by Paul Babiak, Robert D. Hare. Snakes in Suits is a compelling, frightening, and scientifically sound look at exactly how psychopaths work in the
corporate environment: what kind of companies attract them, how they negotiate the hiring process, and how they function day
by day. You'll learn how they apply their "instinctive" manipulation techniques -- assessing potential targets, controlling
influential victims, and abandoning those no longer useful -- to business processes such as hiring, political command and control,
and executive succession, all while hiding within the corporate culture. It's a must read for anyone in the business world,
because whatever level you're at, you'll learn the subtle warning signs of psychopathic behavior and be able to protect
yourself and your company -- before it's too late.
The Enthusiastic Employee: How Companies Profit by Giving Workers What They Want
by David Sirota, Louis A. Mischkind, Michael Irwin Meltzer.
Enthusiastic employees outproduce and outperform. They step up to do the impossible. They rally each other in tough times. Most
people are enthusiastic when they're hired: hopeful, ready to work hard, eager to contribute. What happens to dampen their
enthusiasm? Management, that's what.
The Enthusiastic Employee draws on 30 years of research and experience to show you exactly what managers do wrong - -- and
what they should do instead.
Drawing on detailed case studies and employee attitude surveys in hundreds of companies, the authors offer research-proven
solutions -- - not fads, nostrums, or phony shortcuts. Along the way, you'll identify the dollars-and-cents business case for high
employee morale, learn exactly what employee morale means, and discover the specific management practices that offer the greatest
positive performance impact.
The Sexual Harassment Prevention Workshop
by Stephanie West, J.D. Allen.
Promotes respectful, collaborative relationships between men and women. It addresses the most common learning styles, so employees
actually retain the information. And it links sexual harassment training to skills used in daily work life, like managing,
mentoring, and working in teams. Complete with overheads, handouts, and step-by-step instructions, this complete "train the
trainer" workbook can be used as an off-the-shelf course or as a springboard for designing more tailored programs.
Creating a Total Rewards Strategy: A Toolkit for Designing Business-Based Plans
by Michael Dennis Graham, Todd M. Manas.
Salary, bonuses, benefits and "perks" may be the most visible elements of a rewards program, but other components are
just as valuable to employees. This comprehensive book and CD-ROM package shows how nonfinancial rewards can be quantified and
combined with monetary measures in a way that complements business objectives.
Human Resource Leadership in the 21st Century
by Alan Weiss (Editor).
Serves as an authoritative guide through the three primary stages of human resource professional development: transactional
(benefits, compensation, training, etc); consultative (conflict resolution, need analysis, department building, internal
consulting, etc.); and executive (partnering with senior executives, strategy, executive coaching, etc.).
Follow this Path: How the World's Greatest Organizations Drive Growth
by Unleashing Human Potential
by Curt Coffman, Gabriel Gonzalez-Molina.
Shows you how the traditional ways to engage people no longer apply in today's world. Instead, it offers a system it calls The Gallup Path, based on the proven, revolutionary strategies of the most successful businesses. You'll learn the prerequisites of an effective workplace, forge unbreakable bonds between employees and customers with the book's 34 Routes to Superior Performance, know the three crucial links that drive productivity and growth, discover the best employee and customer motivators, and much more.
Masterful Coaching
by Robert Hargrove.
Answers questions like How do you establish the plan? What are the
fiduciary responsibilities of the plan administrator? What are the consequences of various choices? How should you compare plans to determine the one that best fits your needs?
Smart Choices: Selecting and Administering a Safe 401(K) Plan
by Matthew Gnabasik.
Answers questions like How do you establish the plan? What are the
fiduciary responsibilities of the plan administrator? What are the consequences of various choices? How should you compare plans to determine the one that best fits your needs?
Building Professionals: Creating a Successful Portfolio
by Tammy L. W. Freelin, Fresa J. Jacobs, Diane J. Orton, Robin R. Wingo.
One of the greatest challenges facing people entering the workforce is learning about themselves -- recognizing what skills and knowledge
they have developed for their chosen fields, and finding opportunities to use those abilities in a career. This easy-to-use tool assists
readers in collecting, managing, and organizing a professional portfolio. Helps readers understand how their individual experiences relate
directly to the skills and abilities that employers are looking for.
Retaining Top Employees
by J. Leslie McKeown.
Only those companies that recognize and hold on to their top-performing employees will thrive in a tough competitive environment.
Retaining Top Employees focuses on specific actions to make retention a top priority. From innovative recruitment and
compensation policies to making effective use of exit interviews, it outlines a complete program for becoming the employer of
choice and is today's most in-depth exploration of this increasingly essential topic.
Handle with Care Motivating and Retaining Employees: Creative, Low Cost Ways to Raise Morale, Increase Commitment, and
Reduce Turnover
by Barbara A. Glanz.
Internationally known motivational author and speaker Barbara Glanz provides managers and supervisors with innovative techniques
for engaging, developing, and motivating employees. Glanz outlines a framework based on the CARE model Creative Communication,
Atmosphere and Appreciation for all, Respect and Reason for being, Empathy and Enthusiasm for understanding what employees
really want from managers.
Coaching for Performance: Growing People, Performance and Purpose
by John Whitmore.
Since first published over a decade ago, the author has lead the way with this best-selling classic that has sold more than 200,000
copies worldwide. Translated into a dozen languages and considered a "must-read" by such international leaders as
Coca-Cola, this is the definitive guide to mastering the skills needed to help people unlock their potential and maximize their
performance.
The Complete Guide to Conflict Resolution in the Workplace
by Marick F. Masters, Robert R. Albright.
Explains step by step how to design a complete conflict resolution system and develop the skills to implement it. Packed with
exercises, case studies, and checklists, the book also supplies: an overview of workplace conflict, diagnostic tools for measuring
it, techniques for resolving conflict, such as negotiation, labor/management partnerships, third-party dispute resolution,
mediation, arbitration, more.
Rude Awakenings: Overcoming the Civility Crisis in the Workplace
by Giovinella Gonthier, Kevin Morrissey.
Addresses impolite business behavior, such as interrupting others, setting impossible deadlines, sending crabby e-mails and
bullying co-workers. The author, a former ambassador, offers suggestions for various situations, from conferences and meetings to
restrooms and copy machine areas. Although the likely audience for her book is managers who have to deal with impoliteness (will
ill-mannered employees really pick this book up?), the tips are valuable for anyone working in an office environment.
A Stake in the Outcome: Building a Culture of Ownership for the Long-Term Success of Your Business
by Jack Stack, Bo Burlingham.
A refreshingly sensitive and sensible guide to motivating employees, this new volume by Stack and
Burlingham (The
Great Game of Business) is a standout in its crowded genre. Stack is the president and CEO of
SRC Holdings Corporation, an employee-owned supplier of renovated engines to auto companies and a
celebrated business success story. In 1983, when it looked like SRC's parent company, International
Harvester, might shut down its southwestern Missouri "remanufacturing" plant, Stack and
12 other employees bought the place and fashioned a system of employee ownership that turned SRC
into a corporation of 22 companies with more than $100 million in sales.
Strategic Human Resources Management: A Guide to Action
by Michael Armstrong.
Designed to fill what is often a gap between the rhetoric of strategic human resource
management (SHRM) and the reality of strategy in action. The first guide to the realistic
implementation of the high-sounding HR strategies that every practicioner, academic and
consultant is now attempting to put into place.
Delivering Results: A New Mandate for Human Resource Professionals
by David Ulrich (Editor).
A collection of 15 Harvard Business Review articles on managing human resources. Dave Ulrich
wants human-resources managers to start doing "the real work" of companies: improving
customer service and increasing shareholder value.
Annual Editions: Human Resources 04/05
by Fred H. Maidment.
This reader of public press articles explores the current environment of human resources
management; meeting human resource requirements; creating a productive work
environment; developing effective human resources; implementing compensation and
security; fostering employee/management relationships; and international human resource
management.
The Strategic Human Resource Leader: How to Prepare Your Organization for the Six Key Trends Shaping
the Future
by William J. Rothwell, Robert K. Prescott, Maria W. Taylor.
The author says "We wrote it as a manifesto to argue for a new role for Human Resources as a
strategic leader of the human side of the enterprise. Just as engineers are not shy about exerting
forceful leadership about technology, we believe that Human Resource practitioners should not be
shy about exerting forceful leadership on the human side of the enterprise."
Tomorrow's HR Management: 48 Thought Leaders Call for Change
by David Ulrich (Editor), Michael R. Losey (Editor), Gerry Lake (Editor), Geraldine Lake
(Contributor) .
The Society for Human Resource Management presents the essential guide to human resources
as it moves into the twenty-first century. A distinguished international panel of contributors offers
invaluable insights on everything from the best human resource practices to important trends. Contains
38 insightful essays offering core ideas about Human Resources management.
Building Robust Competencies: Linking Human Resource Systems to Organizational Strategies
by Paul C. Green.
uses behavioral language to demonstrate how to clearly link everyday actions of workers in a way
that will allow an organization to achieve overall business goals. Describes and links the core
processes of interviewing, performance measurement, coaching, training, and compensation, and allows
managers to consistently identify and elicit desired behaviors to produce needed results.
Contented Cows Give Better Milk: The Plain Truth About
Employee Relations & Your Bottom Line
by Bill Catlette, Richard Hadden.
From the authors: Contented Cows is our effort to make the case, not with faith, but facts, that
if you treat people right, you'll make more money. In a profound but simple way\
it establishes, for the first time we're aware of, clear linkage between an
organization's employee relations practices and its bottom line.
1001 Ways to Reward Employees
by Bob Nelson, Kenneth H. Blanchard.
This chock-full guide to rewards of
every conceivable type for every conceivable situation, written by
management specialist Bob Nelson, offers over a thousand innovative ideas
beyond the expected raise and/or promotion.
Human Resource Champions : The Next Agenda for
Adding Value and Delivering Results
by David Ulrich.
The management of human resources, says the author, holds the key to an
organization's future success. HR people serve as strategic players,
administrative experts, employee champions and change agents. Full of
illustrations and examples from dozens of companies, this book show how
HR professionals can operate in all four areas simultaneously. .
96 Great Questions to Ask Before You Hire
by Paul Falcone.
Presented in a handy question-and-answer format, this book supplies 96
probing interview questions, plus helpful tips on interpreting the
responses. With questions covering 17 topics and applications to every
kind of job opening, the book serves as both a ready reference for
managers and a refresher course for seasoned human resources pros.