|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Picking people for a job is like going to the store to buy apples. Before you go, you ought to know whether the apples are to be eaten fresh, make into applesauce, baked into a pie or made into juice. Then, you can make the appropriate choices. This is also true for hiring winners.
The goal of selection interviews, buying apples, is to make the most appropriate choices...to hire the right people for the job. The goal is to match applicants with openings. More specifically to match applicant's qualifications with the job requirements. The interview is a subjective tool that attempts to forecast a candidate's performance.
No selection tool can predict future performance with absolute certainty. But, if you understand the job requirements, examine the applicant's past performance and use good interviewing techniques, you're more likely to avoid bad hires. These are people who turn out to be a round pegs in square holes; people who you train and then leave; and people who just aren't motivated to give their best.
So how can you avoid such costly hiring mistakes?
According to Roger Staubach, "In business or in football, it takes a lot of unspectacular preparation to produce spectacular results." Therefore, the first step to successful hiring is preparation. If you really want to know if that person you're interviewing has the requisite qualifications, you'll have to do more than a 30-second scan of the resume and "shoot from the hip" questions. A thorough, accurate, and focused job description is essential for effective interviewing. You may think it's a bureaucratic nuisance but it can be a valuable tool in deciding who is the best person for the position.
A job description is an outline of the primary responsibilities of the job. It should list the major task in order of importance. You need to have as complete a knowledge of the job as possible, not only the present "must have's" but the future needs of the position as well. Then you need to determine the skills required to perform the job. Job skills include technical skills and performance skills. Both are equally important.
Technical skills are typically learned through education, training, or on-the-job experience. For example, typing, computer programming, machine operation, financial analysis, and graphic design are all technical skills. You might think of technical skills as what a person "can do".
Performance skills are how a person will do the particular job. These are more like work habits and personal characteristics and are transferred from job to job. Flexibility, assertiveness, paying attention to details, ability to cope under pressure are all examples of performance skills. They are as important as technical skills.
Research has shown that many "bad hires" are due not for technical reasons but because of motivation, energy, values, or interpersonal skills. If you do not explore these skills, you may get a highly qualified person who is not able to work in a particular atmosphere or group of people.
Example:
In a recent conversation with a manager, who had just finished formulating a job description for the head of a growing information systems department, I was told: "Initially, I thought I needed someone who had technical mastery. But when I defined the job in terms of its objective, what I realized was that I needed someone who could develop the department and determine what the rest of the company required of it. I needed a communicator and negotiator, not an inspired computer wizard".
Three basic questions:
Remember, in any selection interview you need to know:
Get The Edge: Start Hiring Winners!
Marcia Zidle, the 'people smarts' coach, works with business leaders to quickly solve their people management headaches so they can concentrate on their #1 job to grow and increase profits. She offers free help through Leadership Briefing, a weekly e-newsletter with practical tips on leadership style, employee motivation, recruitment and retention and relationship management. Subscribe by going to and get the bonus report "61 Leadership Time Savers and Life Savers". Marcia is the author of the What Really Works Handbooks resources for managers on the front line and the Power-by-the-Hour programs fast, convenient, real life, affordable courses for leadership and staff development. She is available for media interviews, conference presentations and panel discussions on the hottest issues affecting the workplace today. Contact Marcia at 800-971-7619.
Teleconferences can be a boon or a bust. On the... Read More
Sometimes.In fact making some small changes to the circumstances when... Read More
Writing a Business Plan for your next entrepreneurial endeavor is... Read More
I saw Brian Kerr (the Irish national football coach) on... Read More
Do you have more projects than time? Help might be... Read More
This module focuses on the basics of Knowledge Mapping, its... Read More
INTRODUCTIONThe typical approach executive teams use to cascade, or roll... Read More
Various studies ? and common sense ? indicate that involving... Read More
"What do you mean you need to push back the... Read More
Here's an easy quiz to check the health of your... Read More
Escalating gas prices...tensions and turmoil in the Middle East...a struggling... Read More
If Baby Boomers can get botox and tummy tucks, then... Read More
If you are an executive, you may sometimes feel like... Read More
Most people just want to be appreciated. If you're a... Read More
Recently, I attended a webinar with nearly 400 other Chief... Read More
Managing the Human Being Behind the Business It's... Read More
Lack of Operations Manuals stunting your growth?CONTENTS:1. Do you lack... Read More
Businesses miss on growth opportunities and even close their doors... Read More
When we're selling to business people, our value proposition has... Read More
Being able to communicate effectively with others requires people skills,... Read More
Several years ago, I took over the supervision of a... Read More
If there is someone nearby as you read this look... Read More
When you create your profit and loss statement to assess... Read More
How would you handle communication if your business or practice... Read More
Inventory management may seem complicated to some, but if one... Read More
Performance Management is the act of managing personal or organizational... Read More
What principles should a company keep in mind when developing... Read More
This article relates to the Manager/Supervisor competency, commonly evaluated in... Read More
Want to hear a fascinating story? Let's sit in at... Read More
Everyone wants to succeed yet everyone has a different perception... Read More
I am not writing this to create a list of... Read More
What do people really find challenging about leading meetings? Here... Read More
Have you ever heard yourself say to a team member... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
Inventory management may seem complicated to some, but if one... Read More
There are wild variances in how much involvement organisations are... Read More
We all know that achieving better alignment, synergy and cooperation... Read More
Times of cost cutting and downsizing has dramatically impacted the... Read More
The day job as a manager is all about managing... Read More
As we near the end of summer, here is a... Read More
The higher you go, the cooler it becomes. Really? Let... Read More
As waves of organizational change sweep across the business landscape,... Read More
I have been working with leading Business Improvement guru, Tim... Read More
Six Sigma is a highly disciplined process focused on satisfying... Read More
This module focuses on the basics of Knowledge Mapping, its... Read More
Even a well-planned teleconference can go poorly. Some people treat... Read More
In our current world of rapid and amazing technological advances,... Read More
In September 2004, President Bush signed the $146 billion tax... Read More
An operations manual can act as a tool for training... Read More
Many managers believe that treating their team members as responsible... Read More
Business Management Business Management |