InitiativesSkills Assessments for IT WorkersBy Minda Zetlin
This is a sample of the type of question put to IT job applicants at RTTS, a professional services firm that specializes in software quality and testing: A boat on the river in spring has a ladder hanging over the side. The bottom of the ladder is two feet above the water. The river is rising three inches per hour. How long will it take for the water to reach the ladder? Because successful candidates will work on-site at RTTS's clients -- many of them Fortune 500 companies -- they must have both top-notch technical abilities and excellent communication skills, explains Bill Hayduk, director of professional services. "We won't get that just by speaking to people," he says. To make sure RTTS gets exactly the employees that it wants, hiring is a five-phase process that begins with reviewing resumes. Phase two is an interview in which applicants display their technical acumen by discussing their most recent projects or describing their home computer setup. Each is asked the same set of questions, designed to elicit specific types of responses (for instance, a description of working with others on a project). Each answer is given a grade between one and three. In phase three, those who pass phase two are asked eight easy technical questions: if they answer at least five correctly, they proceed to phase four, which includes a written programming test and 25 math and logic questions, such as the one about the ladder on the boat. (The correct answer is forever, since the ladder will rise at the same rate as the water level.) If they can do the programming and get 18 or more questions right on the test, they advance to the final phase. Phase five consists of one more interview in which the applicant is asked to write code on a whiteboard while four or five RTTS executives look on -- a test designed to reproduce the high-pressure atmosphere at some of RTTS's clients. "Some people do really well," Hayduk says. "Others crack completely." For RTTS, skills assessment ensures that the product it delivers -- its programmers and technicians -- will meet or exceed customer expectations. But there are lots of good reasons besides hiring to measure IT staff members' skills. Among them:
Getting assessment right "A well constructed exam has a lot of science behind it," says Eric Wenck, vice president, IT and corporate business segment for Prometric, which provides testing to corporate, academic and government clients. What goes into an effective assessment? Here are some elements to consider:
"Can someone be reduced to a formula? The answer is no," Hayduk says. "We do our best to measure and to quantify. But there has to be some kind of fudge factor in there, too." Minda Zetlin is co-author, with Bill Pfleging of The Geek Gap: Why Business and Technology Professionals Don't Understand Each Other and Why They Need Each Other to Survive (Prometheus Books). |
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"Our ultimate goal is someone who is very pleasant, has good communication skills and is very technically adept. We won't get that just by speaking to people." Podcast Audio ContentCIO Strategy Center is now available in audio format. This week's feature topic is: Risks of Wireless EmailPlaytime: 8 min 23 sec |