Morgan Hunter Companies - Overland Park, KS

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Hire Power: Mistakes Can Be Costly for Companies
By Anne Stuart

The ultimate cost of making a bad hire—in any field—is typically far more than that worker’s annual salary, human resources experts say. It’s getting harder and harder to find top financial talent—and bringing the wrong person on board is likely to be a costly error.

The good news: A few smart strategies can go a long way toward improving your organization’s chances of making a good match.

The Talent Crunch


It’s no secret to anybody involved in recruiting and hiring that, even in the current economic downturn, it’s tough to find top finance and accounting candidates. In fact, that category is near the top of just about every “hottest jobs” list, and the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the number of available accounting positions alone will grow 18 to 26 percent by 2014. Specialties most in demand include internal auditors, public accountants, financial analysts and senior accountants—those with several years of advanced experience.

Experts attribute the finance and accounting talent shortage to several factors: As a result, of course, it’s more important than ever before to hire right the first time.

The Cost of Failure

Many human resources experts say that hiring the wrong employee can cost a company two to five times that person’s salary—possibly far more for a top executive or a position requiring highly specialized skills.

Besides the actual compensation, the employer’s hard losses often include: …and, of course, all the costs associated with finding a permanent replacement.

Hidden costs—those that are tough to quantify, but no less real—include decreased productivity, missed opportunities, dissatisfied customers, wasted management time and employee morale damaged by a bad hire’s poor performance or abrupt departure.

The Road to Success

Following are a few tips to help employers boost their chances for success right out of the gate with a new hire:

Take some time. Companies are often in a rush to wrap things up, but—as Benjamin Franklin told us more than two centuries ago—haste makes waste. The long-term damage from making the wrong match almost always outweighs any short-term gains from filling a vacancy as quickly as possible.

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