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Q: employment hirering interviews ( Answered,   0 Comments )
Question  
Subject: employment hirering interviews
Category: Business and Money > Employment
Asked by: wesms-ga
List Price: $2.00
Posted: 10 Mar 2004 14:24 PST
Expires: 09 Apr 2004 15:24 PDT
Question ID: 315436
what do the initals RJR stand for in the context of job offers and employment?
Answer  
Subject: Re: employment hirering interviews
Answered By: politicalguru-ga on 10 Mar 2004 16:25 PST
 
Dear Wesms, 

I found two meanings of RJR, and I must disclaim, that these two
appeared separately, and each in one HR source.

(1) 
RJR is a human resources form, whose meaning is "Request and
Justification for Reclassification" form. It is, at least sometimes, a
sort of job evaluation form.

SOURCES and Examples: 
Dallas County Community College District
<http://www.dcccd.edu/people/hr/hrpdf/itpmove.pdf> (PDF File, requires
Adobe Acrobat Reader).

And also (from the same source): 
<http://www.dcccd.edu/people/hr/hrog/pss/psspromo.htm> 


(2) 
RJR means "Reactivate Job Record", which is basically related to
computerise salary and employment records within an organisation: "Use
to create a new appointment on a Terminated employee record, when the
employee has at least one other Active record. Note: If all records
are Terminated, a Rehire action is required" (SOURCE: "HRMS
Action/Reason Codes", University of California Berkeley,
<http://hrweb.berkeley.edu/hrms/actionreason.htm>).

I hope this answered your question. Besides these two meanings, RJR is
a name of one of the largest tobacco companies, and I guess that in
some constellations, this could be also the meaning. I searched the
web using terms such as:
"human resources", vacancy, employment (and in each case, RJR). I also
used the minus (-) sign, to reduce tobacco related results.

Please contact me if you need any clarification on this answer before you rate it.

Request for Answer Clarification by wesms-ga on 10 Mar 2004 17:28 PST
I was told I would interview with the regional manager and he would give me an RJR?

Clarification of Answer by politicalguru-ga on 11 Mar 2004 01:46 PST
Dear Wesms, 

Naturally, that sounds like the first option. This is not a common HR
term, in any case - maybe you misheard it?
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