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STATE
OF WASHINGTON
EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DEPARTMENT
WORKFORCE INVESTMENT ACT
INFORMATION
AND GUIDANCE #4021
Job-Development
Activities
(Revised 01-02-90)
DEFINITIONS |
WEB SITE | REFERENCES | SUPERSEDES
| INQUIRIES
This communication has been
formatted for use on this web site. It contains hyperlinks that enable the
user to jump directly to specific areas within the document or to related
documents. The information it contains has not been revised. There are definitions
for terms that may be unfamiliar.
This communication has been
developed as Information and Guidance rather than Policies and Procedures.
The development of Policies and Procedures communications will continue,
but on a more selective basis. Information and Guidance communications are
a new means of sharing information with all WorkSource Washington staff.
This includes partner staff as well as ESD staff. Information and Guidance
communications are not prescriptive or directive. They are provided to
inform and guide.
The development of local
Policies and Procedures or other directives related to this or any other
administrative Information and Guidance communication is at the
discretion of the Workforce Development Councils (WDCs)/local
partnerships.
Background
| Utilizing Job Development as a Placement Tool
| Techniques
for Job Development
Recording
Job-Development Contracts |
Recording Job-Development Placements
Background
Employer relations activities are directed primarily toward obtaining
employer job orders. Major emphasis is placed
on promoting the free public labor exchange so as to make more job
openings available for all job seekers. These
efforts, however, do not always provide an effective placement service for all
job seekers. Sometimes job development with public and private
employers on behalf of a specific individual is more effective.
Utilizing Job Development
as a Placement Tool
Local service delivery sites may wish, but are not
required, to solicit and secure job interviews for
individual job seekers who have marketable skills and abilities, but for whom there are no
suitable job openings available. Such
job-development activities are often a useful tool to increase
placement activity. The actual extent to which job-development is utilized
is to be determined by local Management.
Techniques
for Job Development
Consideration of Job
Seekers for Job
Development - Individual job seekers for whom job development can be performed effectively
include:
Job seekers who have outstanding or
unusual training or experience;
Job seekers who are hard to place because
few job orders are received for the kinds of work they can do; and
Job seekers with skills and abilities in
which specific employers are most likely to be interested.
Job development is a specialized,
selective process. Good judgment is needed to decide when and for whom job development
should be attempted.
Preparation for Job Development - The
job seeker's qualifications are described fully on the Applicant Registration, Key
Information, and Work History Screens so that staff can give the employer a clear
description of the job seeker's abilities. Job seeker acceptance factors, such as pay,
hours, working conditions, and limits on commuting distance, are also recorded.
Employer Interview - Knowledge of the
employer's needs and skill in selling the applicant's qualifications are both essential to
success in job development. The same general sales steps are followed as those used in
selling other services or intangibles.
Arouse the Interest of the
Employer - A favorable atmosphere is established in which the
job seeker and the job seeker's qualifications can be described to the employer.
Present Qualifications of the Applicant -
The job seeker's skills, knowledge, experience, and personal attributes
are stressed
in a realistic manner and specific examples are given of how these factors fit the
employer's needs. Also, if the job seeker gives verbal permission, any job-related limiting
factors concerning the job seeker's abilities are also brought to the attention of
the employer. If the job seeker does not give permission, limiting factors
are not discussed with the employer for reasons of confidentiality.
NOTE:
The job seeker must understand
that an honest presentation of qualifications is important. Normally,
job-development telephone contacts are made in the job seeker's presence, since they
may demonstrate how to sell the job seeker's qualifications objectively to the employer. It
is also important for the job seeker to know what background information the employer has
been given.
Close the Interview - The
closing step is to arrange an interview for the job seeker.
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Control of Employer Contacts - Controls
are maintained on employer contacts for job development. There are dangers inherent
in over-contacting employers, either by telephone or personal visit. Not only
are
excessive contacts generally unproductive, they are likely to be annoying to the
employer.
-
Sources of Leads for Job Development -
Sources of leads to employers having potential for successful job development include, but
are not limited to, open job orders; closed job orders; employer records; recent UI
Initial Claims that indicate a job opening could exist; Labor Market Information (LMI);
employers' advertisements in the newspaper; the business section of the newspaper; trade
and professional periodicals; and telephone and other specialized
directories.
In areas where job opportunity studies have been conducted, such as occupational indexes
or area skill surveys, data available from these studies provides an excellent source of
job-development leads.
Recording Job-Development Contacts
Job-development contacts are recorded in the automated system by entering the
employer name on the Add Applicant Services Screen. All job-development contacts made for
an applicant are entered by the end of the day following the day the contacts were
made. There is no limit on the number of job-development contacts that can be recorded as
long as a new screen is used for each contact.
NOTE: Local
service delivery sites
may also record job-development contacts on the Employer Contact Screen in order to
maintain up-to-date employer records.
Recording Job-Development Placements
When the local service delivery site learns that a placement occurred as the result of a
job-development contact, a job-development job order is entered in the automated
system using the Job Order and Job Order Special Information Screens. Particular attention
is given to the following items:
Job Summary - Enter an abbreviated job
description, which includes only the word "closed" on the first line, and a
reference stating, "This job opening is recorded as the result of a job-development
contact made (date) " (Job Order Screen).
Source - Mark Code 1 - Job Development,
or Code 3 - Job Development and Mandatory Listing (Job Order Special Information Screen).
Referral and
Placement - Once the job-development contact and the
job-development job order have both been recorded, the referral and placement
are
recorded on the Referrals and Placements Screen.
Other Requirements
- Placements made in this way must meet all
other requirements stated in the placement definition to be valid (see Policies and
Procedures communication number 4009, Placements). Also, the
job-development contact must have occurred within 90 days prior to job entry for the
placement to be valid.
DEFINITIONS
Job
Development - The act of soliciting a public or private employer's job
interview for a specific individual job seeker who has marketable skills and abilities, but for whom
the the local service delivery site has no
suitable job opening available.
WEB SITE
http://www.wa.gov/esd/policies
REFERENCES
The Workforce Investment Act
(WIA) of 1998 (WorkSource); the Wagner-Peyser Act as amended by WIA (Labor
Exchange); and the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Title 20, Chapter V,
Part 652 (Labor Exchange).
SUPERSEDES
This communication cancels and supersedes Policies and Procedures document
number 7007-3, dated November 6, 1984 and the "Training Copy" distributed in late
September, 1987, in conjunction with JobNet statewide implementation.
DIRECT INQUIRIES TO
Oscar Trevino
Employment Security Department
WorkSource Operations Division
Workforce Investment Act (WIA) Title III (Wagner-Peyser)
P.O. Box 9046, Mail Stop 6000
Olympia , WA 98507-9046
E-Mail:
otrevino@esd.wa.gov
Telephone: (360) 438-4653
Fax: (360) 438-4014
TTY: (360) 438-3167
(temporarily)

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