Recruitment and Selection in the Public and Nonprofi t Sectors 183
management departments and department
managers should work together and make
workforce projections based on the current level
of employee skills. They should review trans-
fers, retirements, promotions, and termination
patterns and do succession planning in order
to identify individuals who might fi ll positions
when an incumbent leaves. This requires keeping track of and updating
the records of each employee ’ s KSAOCs and the demands required of
each position. A human resource information system can sort employee
data by education, career interests, work histories, occupation fi elds, and
other factors.
Many organizations favor internal recruitment because administra-
tors have the opportunity to review and evaluate the KSAOCs of internal
applicants prior to selection. Choosing internal candidates also enables
agencies to recoup the investment they have made in recruiting, select-
ing, training, and developing their current employees. Promoting qualifi ed
incumbent employees rewards them for their performance and signals to
other employees that the agency is committed to their development and
advancement.
Before organizations limit recruitment efforts to internal recruitment,
however, other factors should be considered. Some positions in public and
nonprofi t organizations require specialized skills that may not be found
within the agency, and for such positions it may be necessary to recruit
and hire from outside. Organizations with homogeneous workforces — that
is, agencies composed of all women, men, or Caucasians, for example —
should also consider outside recruitment to increase the demographic
diversity of their staff. Another important reason for the organization to
consider external recruitment is when it wants to change its internal cul-
ture. Applicants hired from outside are not hampered by sacred cows,
relationships with colleagues, or the agency ’ s history.
External Recruitment
External recruitment is the seeking of qualifi ed applicants from outside the
organization. Typically, the agency would seek qualifi ed applicants from
the relevant labor market, defi ned by the skills required for the position
and the location (geographical region) where those skills can be found. The
nature of specifi c occupations or jobs often demarcates the labor market.
Local labor markets, for example, are small areas, cities, or metropolitan
For internal recruitment to
work, agencies need to be
proactive and incorporate
strategic planning into their
human resources practices.