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Hiring Tips - Picking
the Best Candidates
by Guy Harris
I often hear leaders from all types of organizations
ask questions about hiring the right person. Their questions
usually sound like these:
- What if their resume looks great but they have a bad
attitude?
- What if they put on a good act and then dont
work hard?
- How can I tell how they will perform after I hire
them?
A great way to answer these questions starts with a
well-defined interview process. I have heard the procedure
called many things. I first learned it as the Behavioral
Event interview process. The guiding thought behind
this system is that "while it is no guarantee of success,
past performance is the best indicator of future performance."
Here is the main idea -- develop an interview system
that forces the candidate to tell you, in direct and
specific terms, how they have worked in the past. You
want the candidate to do more than recount where they
have worked and what experience they have. You can read
their resume to get that information. You want the candidate
to tell you: how they think, how they work, and how
they relate to other people.
Actual implementation can get a little involved, but
the basic process goes like this:
- 1) Identify the key skills (attributes, attitudes,
etc) for success in your organization. In a big company,
you might develop the list by interviewing successful
people in the organization. In a smaller company,
you could brainstorm with the owner(s) about what
they want to see in an employee.
- Rank the competencies to separate the must-have
traits from the would be nice traits.
Write your list in the form of a checklist for use
during interviews.
- Develop a series of questions that get people to
tell you specifics about their experience. The best
series start with broad, open-ended questions and
lead to follow-up with questions that dig for specifics.
For example, the series could go like this:
Start with an open-ended question like Tell
me about a time in your high school (college, internship,
last job, etc.) when you had to convince another
student (co-worker, etc.) to help you?" or "Tell
me about a time from your last job (internship,
college, etc.) that you had to make a sudden change
in plans?" Let them pick the scenario; you probe
for specifics.
When they give you the scenario, begin the process
of "peeling the onion." Ask follow-up questions
like When that happened, what was the first
thing you did? Then, "Who did you talk to
to make the change happen?" Maybe you could follow
that with,"Did they react positively or negatively
to your request, and how did you respond to them?"
The idea is to get the candidate talking about how
they handled a specific situation (their feelings,
actions, and responses). By addressing a specific
situation rather than a hypothetical scenario, you
get a good feel for how they might handle a similar
situation in the future.
- As the candidate responds, look for evidence of
the core competencies you identified in step 1. Use
your checklist to keep track of your observations
- Train several people to conduct this type of interview.
Always have more than one person involved in the process.
I suggest having several people interview the candidate.
Each interviewer should ask about a different part
of the person's life and work experience (school,
work, volunteer work, etc).
- After the interview process, get each interviewer
together to compare notes and observations. If the
candidate demonstrates the key skills you are seeking
across several areas of their life, they are likely
to bring those skills into your business. Now you
have a good basis for deciding whether this person
fits you and your organization.
I have been through this type of interview on both
sides of the table. I find that it works very well and
creates a win-win scenario for both parties. For the
qualified candidate, the process feels good because
there are no trick questions. For the interviewer,
it gives you concrete information that you can use to
make an informed decision about the candidates
fit in your organization. Only the unqualified candidate
loses. For them, the process is uncomfortable. They
must give specifics; there is little room for shading
the truth to get the job.
About The Author
Guy Harris is the Chief Relationship Officer with Principle
Driven Consulting. He helps entrepreneurs, business
managers, and other organizational leaders build trust,
reduce conflict, and improve team performance. Learn
more at http://www.principledriven.com
Register for Guy's monthly Positive Principles
newsletter at http://www.principledriven.com/newsletter.htm
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