EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
298
bureau claims that its choice was a good one but that the
man selected was not properly handled. The foreman or
superintendent maintains that the choice was a poor one.
Each side claims to be in the right, but since there is no defi
nite basis or standard upon which to rest a decision, the
matter remains indefinitely unsettled. Moreover, in the
very nature of the case it must remain unsettled, because
the personal opinion of one man is balanced against the
personal opinion of another. In the long run, however, the
employment bureau is usually found at fault, not because
the final fault necessarily rests there but because the
weight of numbers is against it. The employment bureau
is like a man surrounded by accusers on all sides, and for
the lack of any reliable criterion, the majority rules.
In order to illustrate roughly the intricacies of this prob
lem, the following series of typical situations is given:
1. The employment manager may select an applicant
whom he considers the right man for a place, but the fore
man, for any number of reasons, may object to the selec
tion.
2. The foreman may accept the man, but discharge him
at the end of a week or a month as unfit or undesirable.
3. The foreman and employment manager may both
agree on the value of a man, but the man himself may
leave because of dissatisfaction with his work or salary,
or for some other personal reason.
4. The employment manager may hire a man for one
kind of work and the foreman may put him on a different
kind of work, causing him to leave.
5. The employment manager may refuse to hire a man
because he judges him to be unfit. In this case all trace
is usually lost.
6. The employment manager, the foreman, and the