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What’s a personality hire? Here’s the value they bring to the workplace.

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If you or a co-worker is extroverted, personable and highly endowed with other soft skills but low on technical experience, you could be what is known as a “personality hire.”

These employees are often charismatic and have stellar interpersonal skills, which can go a long way in the workplace. Indeed, so-called personality hires serve a valuable purpose: They boost morale, cheer on coworkers, and can seal deals with clients. 

And hiring managers are looking for people to champion corporate culture at a time when only one-third of U.S. employees say they are engaged at work, and nearly half of workers say they are stressed, according to Gallup’s annual report on the state of the workplace. 

“Personality hires refer to employees that were hired for their personality. Think about their charisma and their ability to cheer the team on,” said Vicki Salemi, career expert for Monster. “If it were baseball, they’d be on the top step of the dugout cheering on the team. They are hired for their approach to work and their attitude.”

Almost half of workers — 48% — consider themselves a personality hire, according to a recent survey from career site Monster. Of those, 85% say they bring with them the ability to strengthen relationships with clients, customers and coworkers. Another 71% said they improve work culture, and 70% said they lighten the mood and boost morale. More than half say they exhibit enthusiasm for company sponsored events like happy hours. 

Daniel Bennett, a 28-year-old founder of a creative agency, DX Creative, told CBS MoneyWatch he believes he was a personality hire in a former role at an advertising agency. 

“You get hired based on if people like you or not,” he told CBS MoneyWatch. “I got my job with zero experience, and I attribute my beating out other candidates to making interviewers laugh and have a good time with me, instead of being stoic and telling them what they wanted to hear.” 

“The right cultural fit”

There’s a relative consensus, too, among both personality hires and traditional employees that the former’s most valuable attribute is their ability to enhance relationships with clients and co-workers. 

“They are the person on the team who can get along with anyone, especially if a relationship is sour. They can repair it and turn it into positive one,” Salemi said. 

Of course, possessing soft skills or technical skills doesn’t have to be mutually exclusive. “The sweet spot is a candidate who has both. They have the technical skills to do the job and they are the right cultural fit,” Salemi said. 

“It is a balance. Imagine going to the office and no one has a personality, and you’re not having fun at all. That’s an extremely hard environment to be successful in,” Bennett, the founder of the creative agency said.

He added that personality hires are far from bad at their jobs. 

“Just because you’re a personality hire doesn’t mean you’re bad at your job; it just means your personality got you the extra oomph to get it,” he said. 


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Can build resentment 

On the flip side, workers who fall under the traditional hire category can sometimes be resentful when a colleague they deem inexperienced or simply too chatty in the office is rewarded for their likability. 

About four in 10 workers say they believe personality hires may receive opportunities and recognition they’re not deserving of, because their personality is valued more than hard work or the technical ability to do the job, according to the Monster survey. 

“Someone who is more of an introvert may still be positive about the work environment and have high morale, but not be as extroverted as a colleague, and might be passed over,” Salemi said. “They’d say, ‘I bring just as much if not more to the table, and here is this personality hire who is advancing,’ but not for what they consider to be actual work.”

But in the view of some, including personality hires themselves, chatting with colleagues in the hallway or at the water cooler is an integral part of the job, and does drive real value for companies. 

In a video on social media app TikTok, comedic actor Vienna Ayla pokes fun at personality hires while also highlighting their merits. 

“So this job calls for five years of experience and expertise in Excel,” Ayla said of a fictitious role she’s in. “I had no experience and thought that Excel, was for, like, astronauts or something. But you know what I did have? A can-do attitude, and I think they really saw that.” 

Ayla also said that the character she was playing had been insulated from numerous rounds of layoffs.

“There are rumors about some crazy layoffs coming. Am I nervous?” she said. “No. I’ve survived eight rounds of layoffs.”





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Watch Live: Biden awards Medal of Honor to 2 Union soldiers who hijacked train behind enemy lines

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Washington — President Biden is awarding posthumous Medals of Honor on Wednesday to two Army privates who were a part of a plot to hijack a train and destroy Confederate infrastructure during the Civil War.

The president will honor Philip Shadrach and George Wilson for their “gallantry and intrepidity” in carrying out a covert operation called the “Great Locomotive Chase,” which played out 200 miles behind Confederate lines in Georgia in 1862, the White House said. 

“In one of the earliest special operations in U.S. Army history, Union Soldiers dressed as civilians infiltrated the Confederacy, hijacked a train in Georgia and drove it north for 87 miles, destroying enemy infrastructure along the way. During what later became known as the Great Locomotive Chase, six of the Union participants became the Army’s first recipients of the newly created Medal of Honor,” a White House official said. 

The operation was hatched by James Andrews, a Kentucky-born civilian spy and scout. He proposed penetrating the Confederacy with the goal of degrading their railway and communications lines to cut off Chattanooga, Tennessee, from Confederate supplies and reinforcements. 

Andrews, together with 23 other men, infiltrated the South in small groups, coming together north of Atlanta. On April 12, 1862, 22 of the men commandeered a locomotive called The General and ventured north, tearing up railroad tracks and cutting telegraph wires as they went. The men became known as the Andrews’ Raiders. 

Shadrach, originally from Pennsylvania and orphaned at a young age, was just 21 when he volunteered for the mission. On Sept. 20, 1861, he left home and enlisted in a Union Army Ohio Infantry Regiment. Wilson, born in Ohio, was a journeyman shoemaker before he enlisted in a Union Army’s Ohio Volunteer Infantry in 1861. He also volunteered for the Andrews’ Raid. 

After the operation, both men were captured, convicted as spies and hanged.

“It is unknown why Private Shadrach and Private Wilson were not originally recommended for the Medal of Honor,” a White House official said. “Both were deserving in 1863, and on July 3, 2024, by order of the President of the United States both will be posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.”

The ceremony comes as questions mount over Mr. Biden’s future as the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, with his public appearances under intense scrutiny following his halting performance at last week’s presidential debate. After the Medal of Honor ceremony, the president is meeting with Democratic governors to address their concerns and chart his path forward. 


How to watch Biden present the Medal of Honor

  • What: President Biden awards the Medal of Honor
  • Date: July 3, 2024
  • Time: 4:45 p.m. ET
  • Location: White House 
  • Online stream: Live on CBS News in the player above and on your mobile or streaming device.



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Why Joey Chestnut is banned from 2024 Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest

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Why Joey Chestnut is banned from 2024 Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest – CBS News


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Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest’s reigning champion Joey Chestnut will not participate in this year’s competition, clearing the way for a new winner. CBS News New York sports anchor and reporter Steve Overmyer is following the latest in the competition.

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What the Democratic convention could look like if Biden drops out

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What the Democratic convention could look like if Biden drops out – CBS News


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As a growing number of voters, politicians and donors express concerns over President Biden’s debate performance ahead of the 2024 election, CBS News’ Lana Zak looks at what would happen at the Democratic National Convention if Mr. Biden drops out of the race.

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