Finding Employees |
Employment Taxes | Employment Law |
Employee or Contractor | Employee Benefits
Finding Employees
Once you have identified the skills needed for the positions you want to fill, there
are many sources that can help you recruit job applicants.
Public Services
Each State has an employment service (often called Job Service, Public Employment,
Unemployment Bureau, or Employment Security Agency). All are affiliated with the United States Employment Service,
and local offices are ready to help businesses recruit employees. The employment
service will screen applicants with aptitude tests if they are available for the
skills you specify.
Fee-Based Searches
Employment agencies specialize in finding industry or skill-specific employees.
The primary advantages are the professional screening services provided by such
agencies, including background checks and aptitude tests. Employers typically pay
a considerable fee to the agency for its services.
Online job sites such as Monster.com
are still the fastest growing method for employer-employee matchmaking. These specialized
sites, along with the online classified sections from major newspapers, often provide
the largest pool of prospective employees. However, most online sites do not offer
the professional screening services offered by employment agencies. Additionally,
businesses advertising on such sites are often inundated with applicants.
Interns
Colleges and universities usually have a distributive education program in which
students work for you part-time or volunteer as interns while they learn about your
business. Interns typically expect to learn skills or useful information relevant
to their chosen field of study. Prior to contacting a school regarding interns,
make sure that you have a clear idea of how an intern will benefit from working
with you. If you're looking for someone to do clerical work with little or no opportunity
for learning on the job, it's generally best to hire low cost help instead.
"Help Wanted"
If you have a traditional storefront and are seeking generalists, one of the oldest
and most reliable recruitment tools is a simple sign in your window. The most obvious
advantage to this recruitment method is that it is free. There are serious disadvantages,
however, including attracting unqualified applicants with a vast variety of skill
sets, and the difficulty of talking to prospective applicants while conducting business.
Alternative Staffing Solutions
How do you cope with unexpected personnel shortages? Many businesses face this question
because of seasonal peaking, inventory, special projects, several employees simultaneously
on sick leave, or an unexpected increase in business.
Entrepreneurs must also cope with the rising costs of employee benefits, as well
as all the payroll record keeping required by local, state, and federal government.
This section discusses alternatives available to meet these staffing challenges.
Options include temporary help services, employee leasing, professional employer
organizations, and service contracting.
Temporary Help Services
Most businesses need extra help sometimes, and temporary shortages are especially
difficult for smaller businesses. A temporary personnel service hires employees
and assigns them to companies requesting help. The service is responsible for payroll,
bookkeeping, tax deductions, workers' compensation, fringe benefits, and all other
employee costs. Most national temporary personnel companies also offer performance
guarantees and fidelity bonding at no added cost.
Workers supplied by a temporary service firm are quickly available. Usually they
can start the day after a request is made, and sometimes the same day. Although
the rate paid to a temporary service firm is higher than that paid to a permanent
employee, the costs of recruiting, record-keeping, training, overtime, and idle
periods are much less.
Evaluate temporary personnel services using these factors:
- Reliability: Is the service well established, with a history of
success and financial stability?
- Recruiting: The firm with an aggressive recruiting program is more
likely to have the most skilled and reliable employees.
- Testing and evaluation: How does it test and evaluate personnel?
Training programs: Does the company train personnel in modern office methods, word
processing, records management, and other important skills?
- Quality control: Does the company check the quality of work of
its temporary employees?
A temporary service will ask for information about the department the employee will
be working in, duration of the assignment, working hours, dress code, smoking rules,
and other important information. If possible, send samples of the work. Be sure
to give the exact location of your business, transportation available, parking information,
and the name and title of the person to whom the temporary employee will report.
Temporary help services are not appropriate for all needs. Businesses needing a
temporary worker for six months or longer should hire a full-time employee. For
jobs that require extensive supervision, it may be cheaper to pay overtime to a
regular employee than to use a temporary worker.
Employee Leasing
Employee leasing is sometimes confusing because it may refer to activities similar
to employing temporary personnel or it may be similar to the co-employment arrangement
of professional employer organizations (see below). If you are depending upon the
leasing company to provide personnel, (including identifying, skill sorting, hiring
and assigning them to your business) and these workers would return to the leasing
company for reassignment should your need for them end, then the service is basically
the same as temporary services. If, on the other hand, you are depending upon another
company to supply the management of human resources, employee benefits, payroll
and workers' compensation for all of your work force, then this is a co-employment
or professional employer organization arrangement as described below.
Professional Employer Organizations (PEOs) or Co-employment
In a professional employer organization arrangement, the PEO will co-employ your
existing work force and will become a legal employer responsible for payroll, record-keeping,
benefits and services, and participation in hiring, evaluation and firing. In the
PEO arrangement, employer responsibilities are shared or allocated, with the PEO
focusing on the management of human resources, employee benefits, payroll, workers'
compensation and related employment-related issues, while you focus on the core
operations of your business.
Advantages:
- Savings of time that was formerly spent on employment-related paperwork and meetings
with various outside agents (health insurance agent, payroll company and others).
- Improved access to employee benefits.
- Help with employment law compliance issues, personnel policies and employee handbooks.
- Records that are uniform and easily audited.
- Claims management for workers' compensation and unemployment.
- Professional advice on human resource issues.
Disadvantages:
- Employer retains responsibility for productivity and conduct.
- Certain labor union contracts or state laws might keep certain employers from using
co-employment arrangements.
- Co-employers require the value of one full payroll in an escrow or trust account
in addition to regular payroll costs.
- Additional federal protections may be available to workers as part of the PEO's
large labor force that is co-employed by multiple small businesses. This can impose
new requirements and costs on the small business.
Service Contracting
Because of the infrequency of the need or the specialized nature of the work, many
business needs are better met by contracting for the service rather than hiring
permanent employees.
Services often contracted include:
- Security
- Janitorial
- Waste management
- Equipment/mechanical maintenance
- Merchandise delivery
- Payroll accounting
- Printing
- Data processing
- Messenger
- Grounds upkeep
- Interior decorating
- Building upkeep (remodeling, roofing, painting)
- Specialized services (installation, servicing and cleaning of appliances, carpeting,
and furniture)
In these situations you enter a contract with a business to perform specific services,
during a specific period or at a specific time, for a specific price. The terms
of the contract cite responsibility for providing any materials or equipment necessary
to perform the service and other requirements for successful completion. It is the
contracting firm's responsibility to provide staff, pay them, and supervise them.
When contracting for services, it is wise to require:
- References from other companies that have used the contractor and will comment on
the quality of contract performance.
- Certificates of insurance demonstrating that the contractor has adequate liability
and other coverage for its employees.
- Copies of required licenses for performance of certain services.
- Appropriate warranty or guarantee on the quality of the work.
- Clear payment schedule including possible retainage (holding back of a portion of
payments) pending satisfactory completion of a project.
Proposals for services usually are presented and detailed on standard forms designed
by the contractor. It is wise to have your legal counsel review the terms of the
documents before you sign them, to avoid any misunderstanding of your obligations.
Such a review also may suggest amendments benefiting you that are also acceptable
to the contractor.