He is the author of the book, Here Today Here Tomorrow: Transforming Your Workforce from High-Turnover to High-Retention.
He
speaks at conferences, conducts management training and is the President
of a management consulting firm called Chart Your Course International
located in Conyers, Georgia.
Phone him at +1 770-860-9464. More articles available at www.chartcourse.com
Ponder for a moment the last person you hired. After you selected them, did they work out as intended ? Or did they turn into somebody totally unlike what you thought when you interviewed them ?
The
most important aspect of any business is recruiting, selecting, and
retaining top people. Research shows those organizations that spend more
time recruiting high-caliber people earn 22% higher return to
shareholders than their industry peers. However, most employers do a
miserable job selecting people. Many companies rely on outdated and
ineffective interviewing and hiring techniques. This critical
responsibility sometimes gets the least emphasis.
Hiring
and interviewing is both art and science. Refusing to improve this vital
process will almost always guarantee you will be spending money and
time hiring the wrong people. Here are several reasons why traditional
techniques are inadequate:
Hire
the best and avoid the rest. Cisco CEO John Chambers said, "A
world-class engineer with five peers can outproduce 200 regular
engineers." Instead of waiting for people to apply for jobs, top
organizations spend more time looking for high-caliber people. An
effective selection and interviewing process follows these five steps:
Step 1 - Prepare
Prior
to the interview make sure you understand the key elements of the job.
Develop a simple outline that covers the job duties. Possibly work with
the incumbent or people familiar with the various responsibilities to
understand what the job is about. Screen the resumes and applications to
gain information for the interview. Standardize and prepare the
questions you will ask each applicant.
Step 2 - Purpose
Skilled
and talented people have more choices and job opportunities to choose
from. The interviewer forms the applicant's first impression of the
company. Not only are you trying to determine the best applicant, but
you also have to convince the applicant this is the best place for them
to work.
Step 3 - Performance
Identify
the knowledge, attributes, and skills the applicant needs for success.
If the job requires special education or licensing, be sure to include
it on your list. Identify the top seven attributes or competencies the
job requires and structure the interview accordingly. Some of these
attributes might include:
Step 4 - People Skills
The
hardest to determine, as well as the most important part of the process,
is identifying the people skills a person bring to the job. Each
applicant wears a "mask." A good interviewing and selecting process
discovers who is behind that mask and determines if a match exists
between the individual and the job. By understanding the applicant's
personality style, values, and motivations, you are guaranteed to
improve your hiring and selecting process.
Obviously
many jobs, particularly sales jobs, require a high degree of people
contact. By placing someone in this job who dislikes interaction with
others would be a mismatch, affecting his or her job performance.
Pre-employment
profiles are an important aspect of the hiring process for a growing
number of employers. By using behavioral assessments and personality
profiles organizations can quickly know how the person will interact
with their coworkers, customers, and direct reports. They provide an
accurate analysis of an applicant’s behaviors and attitudes, otherwise
left to subjective judgment. The D.I.S.C. Assessment and the Personal
Interests, Attitudes and Values are popular and useful tools.
Step 5 - Process
The
best interview follows a structured process. This doesn’t mean the
entire process is inflexible without spontaneity. What it means is, each
applicant is asked the same questions and is scored with a consistent
rating process. A structured approach helps avoid bias and gives all
applicants a fair chance. The best way to accomplish this is by using
behavioral based questions and situational questions.
Behavior Based Questions
Behavioral based questions help to evaluate the applicant’s past behavior, judgment, and initiative. Here are some examples:
Situational Based Questions
Situational
based questions evaluate the applicant’s judgment, ability, and
knowledge. The interviewer first gives the applicant a hypothetical
situation such as:
“You
are a manager, and one of your employees has just told you he thinks
another worker is stealing merchandise from the store.”
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Source:http://www.leader-values.com
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