Well personally I don't much care about "being fair" when it comes to a work environment. I used the word in place of perhaps something more apt, like "just". We are a business and we need to remain competitive in the market - and one of the best ways to do that is by having better skilled staff - because dropping fees can only go so far.
Fairness is an odd one. If everyone takes the test, one could argue that's fair - but then given the differing levels across those sitting it, is it really? I'm not writing different tests for different ranges of (perceived) aptitude. I want a level benchmarking process, and a level playing field, with an idea to set a barso I can identify shortcomings and strengths. It's all about finding out what (and who) I need to focus my training sessions on.
Good point - I would probably score horribly with my "system" as it's presently proposed - and "we" can't have that!
Well I've so far got a grading in the test itself - with each category being broken into basic/intermediate/advanced level tasks - that I've so far weighted to score 1/2/3 respectively. But certainly a "cap" would make a degree of sense - although I'd planned for the categories of each project not to accumalte anyway (ie. you only count "A" once)
I wouldn't say the figures are subjective - they're effectively yes/no checks (ie. you have or you haven't done it = so you should or shouldn't know it) but seeing as yes/no checks need to be converted to a figure if to be applied to an equation I simply thought "yes=100". I actually use said software to write a lot of conditional statements, and plan to use it/them to calculate the results* of each test file.
*I was also thinking of writing an easter egg into the test along the lines of
"Edit the formula of the test score to report "I know Revit back to front" as your test result"
I totally get where you're coming from Chris, and certainly until now that's how I have done it (ie. when asked who'd be best paired with you on what) - but we're reaching a point now where we
HAVE to start working more efficiently - the software is by no means cheap (around £5K a head) and the training were it outsourced even less so (about £2K a head for basic introduction) - so "the money" want to see what they're getting for the investment - and since I'm directly responsible for reporting on the ROI - and feeding back to HR on who's hot and who's not -
AND opinion counts for nothing, only evidence and fact, I
need a measure.