Recruiting and Staff Plan

 

Assess the opening case study from Chapter 6: “Amazon is Hiring…Big Time!” In a three- to five-page paper (not including the title and references pages), create a recruiting and staffing strategy for Amazon, and select one position from the given list to write a recruiting and staffing plan; consider how many of these positions Amazon needs to fill. You must select from the following full-time positions: Warehouse Supervisor, Delivery Representative, and Customer Service Manager.)

Your paper must include the following:

Write an introduction including the selected position, a preview of your paper, and a succinct thesis statement.
Discuss the legal landscape, including special legal considerations that the company should be aware of.
Create a recruiting plan for the position selected that includes the following:
Explain what recruiting is and why it is important.
Explain the tools that will be utilized to find candidates for filling the selected position, and state why each tool was selected.
Create a selection plan for the position that includes the following:
Explain what staffing is and why it is important.
State what assessments will be used and why.
Discuss the types of interviewing techniques that will be used and why.
List five job-specific interview questions for the position candidates.
Write a conclusion paragraph that reaffirms your thesis statement.

Sample Solution

ploring friendship, class, aspiration, and spirituality. Readers may wonder if the crux of the book was ‘The Piper at the Gates of Dawn’, rather it being an authorial distraction, or tangent. One may ask, was the book ever intended for children?

If The Wind in The Willows was a book intended for adults, then possibly the definitive childhood character from The Golden Age of Children’s Writing’ is Peter Pan. Again, there is a conflict arising from the adult perception of what it means to be a child, or if the subtext of the story is one intended for children as readers. Here, a wilful and spirited boy replaces the image of Pan as a horned, half man, half goat god. Fairies and mermaids replace the Nymphs of mythology, and the shepherds who worshipped Pan are now a tribe of lost boys.

Peter Pan is first introduced when ‘Mrs. Darling is tidying up her children’s minds’ as Barrie describes’ a child’s’ mind, which is not only confused, … it keeps going round all the time’ (Location 84 of 2074, Peter Pan and Wendy, Kindle edition.) Which suggests the author ultimately regards the minds of children and the state of childhood as a separate and unordered state, in need of organisation. Like Mr. Darling, Barrie feels compelled to reinstate order.

We learn Peter Pan comes from Neverland, a place where each child has their version of Neverland, seen in the moments before they go to sleep. Peter lives with the fairies and ‘when Children died he went part of the way with them so that they would not be frightened.’ Within the story, there are fights to the death, and a reference to Peter Pan thinning out the lost boys, though we do not know how this is achieved. The story suggests Peter kills for fun. If a literal interpretation, then he is cruel and controlling. One can also read Peter Pan is a representation of the fleeting dreams children have before deep sleep, imaginings fed by pocket magazines of the day, playing out pirates and Indians? An illustration, At Home in The Nursery, By George Cruickshank, from 1835, depicts children at play with a range of battle inspired toys. War and death are trivialised by play. Even before the story is established, the author makes the distinction that ‘Children have the strangest adventures without being troubled by them’.

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