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Kartei Details

Karten 113
Sprache English
Kategorie Marketing
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 26.06.2025 / 26.06.2025
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What is the Downside Risk regarding risky workers

The more potential to destroy value, the less likely it is to hire a risky worker

What is the Upside Potential regarding risky workers

Greater potential profits mean higher option value if much to gain and little to lose

What are the Termination costs regarding risky workers

The more costly it is to fire a worker, the higher the cost of hiring a risky one

What are three ways to make decisions with imperfect information

1. Guessing, 2. Estimating scenarios, 3. Experimenting

What are the five steps of an Experiment

1. What to learn, 2. Impact on profit, 3. Needed data, 4. Cost, 5. Reliability

What is the problem with adverse selection in recruitment

The firm may attract both low and high quality applicants and can't distinguish

What are the Termination costs regarding risky workers

The more costly it is to fire a worker, the higher the cost of hiring a risky one

What is Risk Aversion regarding risky workers

If a firm is risk-averse, risky workers are costly in a different way

What is the Length of the Evaluation regarding risky workers

The longer the evaluation period, the less valuable a risky hire becomes

What is the Length of Employment regarding risky workers

The younger the hire and the lower the turnover, the greater the value of hiring a risky worker

What is a big counterargument regarding hiring risky workers

If a risky worker is a superstar, we must pay based on productivity so we gain nothing unless we benefit from asymmetric information or firm-specific productivity

What is the deal about countries with low labor costs

The real issue is not low wages but whether labor is cost-effective with low cost per unit of output

What three methods of production are there

1 Productivity independent of coworkers 2 Depends on coworkers 3 Independent but depends on capital

How many workers to hire

Hire up to the point where marginal benefit equals marginal cost

What are other factors that impact how many workers to hire

Availability of workers and the financial condition of the firm

How can you avoid adverse selection regarding Recruitment

Use credentials and evaluate productivity through screening and probation

What two kinds of information may credentials provide about the holder

Specific job-related skills and general ability to learn new things

What are three screening methods

Application tests, psychological profiling, and personal interviews

For whom is screening profitable

Both the employer and the employee share the benefits and costs

What is Probation

Hiring workers temporarily and keeping them only if performance is sufficient

What is the problem with probation

Termination can be costly, so hiring via a temp agency may reduce risk

What are the three implications of probationary screening

1 Up-or-out promotion, 2 Only survivors are promoted, 3 Large raise after promotion

What is the idea behind signaling

Workers reveal type by accepting offers that allow firms to screen and match better

What incentives must exist for the signal to be effective

Low ability types are discouraged, high ability types are motivated to apply

Who pays and who benefits from signaling

Employees pay most costs and receive most benefits, firms may also benefit

What are the two general properties of adverse selection models

Low quality types imitate high quality, high quality types try to stand out

What is the pooling equilibrium regarding signaling

No distinction between types, no one has incentive to signal or get credentials

What is the separating equilibrium regarding signaling

Quicks signal and distinguish themselves, slows do not signal

Which type of firm is more likely to use signaling

Firms where differences in employee talent strongly affect productivity

What are the workers attributes regarding matching

Workers skillset, personality, and geographic preferences

How is human capital defined

Knowledge, skills, and traits in people that enhance well-being and productivity

What are the costs of on-the-job training

Direct costs like materials and trainer pay, indirect costs like time away from work

What is the difference between General and Firm-specific Human Capital

General is valuable everywhere, firm-specific only valuable in current firm

What are the exceptions when the workers do not pay for education

Quitting costs, strong match, specific training, or cost advantages

What are the reasons for turnovers

Normal flows like hiring or retirement, or layoffs and buyouts

What are the five factors affecting a firm's optimal turnover

Sorting, technical change, organizational change, hierarchy, specific capital

What are the four retention strategies

Better pay, treat as partners, meet preferences, consider implicit contracts

What are the five tools to reduce the cost of turnover

Noncompetes, collaboration, rotation, standardization, knowledge management

When is turnover good

Up-or-out firms, motivation in volatile sectors, reputation building

What are the two criteria to raid a firm for an employee

Raider must value the worker more, and current firm must not overpay