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As Published in Business
2 Business , June 2004
Testing
for Cognitive Skills - Fluid Intelligence or IQ
Which
Intelligence Should Employers Test?
By
Ira S. Wolfe
I recently began to encounter
a few problems with my laptop. That seems to happen to me routinely,
about fifteen months or so after I purchase a new laptop. I'm
told the reason is because I have so many programs installed and
software conflicts are inevitable.
The fix is quite simple
according to my computer guys – backup all the data, re-format
the hard drive, re-install Windows, and then re-load all my programs.
I tried that a few years ago and vowed never again. Although I
didn't lose any data, the time to re-install all the programs
cost me far more in time (and frustration) than just going out
and buying a new laptop. What was most frustrating was that I
didn't have the original discs and CD-Roms for several programs
and since we re-formatted the drive, I wasn't able to use the
data we saved. Ever since that time, I just purchased a new computer
with faster processing speed, more storage and more mobile features
and used my old one as a digital filing cabinet.
By purchasing a new laptop,
I had the latest and the greatest - but as I found out that means
little without the right software and data loaded on the hard
drive. Until I can load the right software and transfer the data,
my new laptop is functionally useless.
Now
you may be thinking - who cares about my laptop. You probably
have your own troubles and really don't want to read an article
about my computer troubles. I use the computer analogy because
scientists compare two kinds of our intelligences, fluid
and crystallized, to the components in a computer. Differentiating
between these two intelligences is very important. Why? Because
they can determine if an employee might be “smart” enough or too
smart to do a job.
Fluid
intelligence is defined as our on-the-spot reasoning ability,
the ability to think on our feet, learn on the fly. It includes
the speed and accuracy with which we can analyze information –
with accuracy. Crystallized intelligence, on the other hand, is
our accumulated information and vocabulary acquired from school.
It also encompasses the skills, experience and knowledge acquired
from everyday life.
Think of fluid intelligence
as the computer hardware, specifically the processing chip. Now
think of crystallized intelligence as the computer software, the
programs that control the computer. Finally think of the data
stored inside the computer as an individual's lifetime of accumulated
knowledge. For instance, let's say that you want to create a budget
using MS Excel®. You install the same version of the software
(crystallized intelligence) on two different computers. One computer
is a Pentium® 4 Processor at 2.66GHz, the other is a 486 Processor
with 133 mHz. You input exactly the same data and hit “query”.
No one could doubt for
a minute that the Pentium® 4 Processor wouldn't get the answers
faster. But what if time wasn't a concern? Is it possible that
both computers could reach the same conclusions and therefore
be equally effective? The answer is yes.
Now let's say that you
had two computers with similar processors but different software
programs and data of different quality and reliability. Would
it really matter if the processors were state of the art? Only
if speed was the only critical factor and accuracy and reliability
wasn't.
In an older person, his
or her processor may become worn out or obsolete just like an
old computer. But the older employee still possesses a great deal
of data and powerful software from his many years of living. He
might run slower but he still gets results. What that means is
that the old person's "system" (strong software and
an extensive body of data) may prove superior to a younger system
(young person) that has faster "state of the art" hardware
unless the younger person also can acquire the information quickly.
When is this important?
In this information economy, knowledge and skills requirements
will continue to change. Employees need to become "life-long-learners"
and constantly renew their abilities to add value to the services
they perform. This requires a bigger hard drive, more memory and
faster data access to keep pace with demand. Historically this
is a problem. Older workers have had decreased learning rates
(and often times older workers have been less motivated to learn
new things). In computer-ese, the processor is slow and the hard
drive is full.
There is good news though
- tasks that use well-practiced skills or familiar information
are generally not affected by age. That means that employees of
any age don't require the highest level of cognitive skills for
many jobs. The aging workforce however often displays superior
performance by relying on "crystallized intelligence"
(routine thinking). The bad news is that when routine practices
and skills don't work anymore, these employees still may rely
on past experiences and old information to solve problems that
never existed before.
Jobs are also becoming
more complicated and complex tasks that require taking in new
information at a fast rate and analyzing it quickly may become
more challenging with age.
The implications of cognitive
skills and an aging workforce for businesses has serious concerns
for business. Employers may have no choice but to replace their
talent. The workforce is aging. At the stroke of midnight, January
1, 2004, the youngest of the Baby Boomers began turning 40, the
official entrance to “middle age.”
Second, organizations have
encouraged aging workers to take early retirement or out-sourced,
re-engineered, and downsized them. In an attempt to innovate and
adapt quickly to market fluctuations, they attempted quickly to
“upgrade” their people “hardware”, their aging workers. Since
transferring knowledge and experience from worker to another has
not yet become a perfected science, employers lost much of their
knowledge and skills base in recent years. And every time an experienced,
older worker leaves, it is like buying a new computer but not
having any software to install or data to save.
With older workers leaving
and few young workers possessing enough knowledge and experience
to replace them, organizations are caught between the proverbial
rock and a hard place – how do they innovate and keep ahead of
the knowledge curve without losing the rich history of their company
and their clients?
Keeping up with continuous
learning and rapid-fire market changes requires the ability to
acquire new knowledge on the fly and the ability to adapt and
implement it quickly. That means hiring the right person requires
more than just personality; it requires an understanding of the
employee's skills and experience as well as his potential to learn
and handle a continuous flow of new and changing information.
But many employers make
the mistake of hiring individuals with high cognitive skills to
do jobs that require just average or even below average skills.
These individuals then become unchallenged very quickly in the
job. They get bored or quit. Many of our clients now suspect (after
assessing employees) that a significant cause for their turnover
in the past has been over-hiring for cognitive skills.
This confirms our own studies
and experiences. Several job benchmarking studies for clients
have shown that even in highly skilled and professional jobs like
engineering, technology, and financial services, the “ideal” cognitive
skills range for top performers falls in the lower 50 percentile
of the population. These top performer job profiles also revealed
that many of the most de-motivated and more challenging employees
to manage had the highest levels of cognitive skills.
This resulted in several
changes in the way these clients recruited, promoted and retained
employees. By identifying that many of their best employees had
average and even low cognitive skills, they were now able to recruit
individuals who were more than capable of handling the workload
and would be challenged enough by the complexity
and demands of the work to remain in the job and stay motivated.
A second advantage of identifying
the proper range of cognitive skills required to perform a job,
managers were able to expand the pool of available candidates.
Individuals possessing the highest levels of cognitive skills
make up less then 15 percent of the population; individuals with
average skills make up 68 percent of the population, nearly 4.5
times the labor pool than those with high cognitive skills.
A third advantage to understanding
cognitive skill levels is that you don't want to lose good talent.
While an individual might be a poor cognitive match for a job,
it doesn't mean you should avoid him or her, especially if the
personality and values matches are good. Individuals with the
right drives, soft skills, and attitude are hard to find. Recognizing
a diamond in the rough when they see one, managers who assess
cognitive skills hire these very bright people anyway but either
put them on the fast career track for promotion or challenge them
with additional responsibilities or projects.
On the other hand, if a
job requires higher cognitive skills than an employee might possess,
this alone should not disqualify him or her if the personality,
values, and skills (or potential) is a good fit. Less than optimum
skills don't mean the employee can't do the job but that it might
just take a little longer for him or her to become as proficient
as the next employee. But given time and proper training, this
employee (as long as the personality is a good job fit) can become
a steady, reliable and effective employee.
How can employers evaluate
cognitive skills? While the behavioral interview still remains
an excellent “test” of skills and experience, it is genuinely
ineffective at evaluating the general abilities associated with
fluid intelligence and personality.
For
information about TotalView™ Assessment System which assesses
cognitive skills and employee personality, contact Ira S. Wolfe
(iwolfe@super-solutions.com) at 717.656.4632. Ira is the founder
of Success Performance Solutions and author of Understanding Business
Values and Motivators ( www.understandingbvm.com
) and The Perfect Labor Storm ( www.perfectlaborstorm.com
).
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