|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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 http://leadershiphooks.com/ 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.
Wind Chimes and more... When approaching any decision, it's important for individuals to maintain... Read More Last month, my featured article was about creating a "Stop... Read More Pssst, want a stock tip that will make you rich?... Read More The Old Way ? Command and ControlAlthough workplaces and management... Read More Here are ten fundamental concepts that characterize an effective meeting.Definition:... Read More Meetings ? they are a fact of our business lives.... Read More However hard we try, we seem to make life more... Read More With client expectations higher than ever before, and the gradual... Read More Australians are loosing their laidback, carefree reputation, as we continue... Read More FINDING DIRECTION: An organization can't succeed without direction. Direction means... Read More Test your assumptions about everything.Assumptions have a way of creeping... Read More Ten or so years ago, an international consultant, specializing in... Read More Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More It was 7:30 on a Saturday morning, and I was... 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 Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More Over the past few weeks I've been developing plans for... Read More The role of a manager is evolving in response to... Read More In many ways there are no secrets to implementing effective... Read More Project management is a very important business concept because it... Read More According to a Gallup Poll, 80 percent of employees said... Read More Six Ways to Keep Things Simple We can have greater... Read More To develop and deliver a great Leadership Talk, you must... Read More Does this sound familiar? You were hired for the new... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
Burger on a Bun Decision Making
4 Simple Steps to Successful Delegation
Why Would Anyone Hold a Bad Meeting?
Management & Leadership - Doing it right in the 21st Century
10 Fundamentals for Effective Meeting
Got A Meeting Planned? Ask This Question
5 Questions Great Managers Ask (and they arent hard!)
Three Professional Services Resolutions for 2005
Work Life a Balancing Act
Setting Direction Within an Organization
Problem-Solving Success Tip: Test Your Assumptions About Everything
Why Management Kills Creativity
Business Innovation ? Core Competency and Competitive Advantage
Money, Motivation, Success and Who?
Identifying Potential in Ourselves and Others
Pricing Strategy for Retail Flower Shops
Innovation Management ? Raw brainpower versus experience
Strategic Clarity for Communication Management
Intercultural Management
Uncovering the Secrets to Effective Performance Management
Project Management 101
Choosing the Right Corporate Training
6 Ways to Keep Things Simple
Turbo Charge Your Career With The Most Powerful Leadership Tool Of All: The Leadership Talk Part 3
I Said Pareto Chart? Not Potato Chart!
Six Reasons to K.I.S.S. "Very often, people confuse simple with... Read More
I don't encourage managers to wear funny hats, appear in... Read More
A leader's role is to focus on those areas of... Read More
Do you ever meet with resistance from other people -... Read More
Avoiding inert measures that anaesthetise your performance management.INTRODUCTIONYou sit before... Read More
ISO 9001 2000, Getting startedBefore starting the ISO 9001 2000... Read More
Another IT White Elephant!It seems that almost every day we... Read More
Job interviews are easier for the interviewer or the interviewee... Read More
Picking people for a job is like going... Read More
Everyone involved in running a business from the smallest start-up... Read More
The following nursing home collections report outlines 11 guidelines you... Read More
SIX "HONEST BUSINESS FRIENDS" - THEY GUIDE ME IN ALL... Read More
Organizational structure can inhibit or foster creativity and innovation. The... Read More
Okay, be honest!Are you guilty of sticking in a few... Read More
It's been a pretty good weekend around the place -... Read More
It seemed like a good decision at the time. A... Read More
Employers have become so concerned about seeming "unfair" or worse... Read More
If you're old enough and were living in America about... Read More
More and more I hear and read about a looming... Read More
Organizations communicate in two directions: internally to staff and externally... Read More
In the call center environment we are often only as... Read More
When problem solving, you may recognize that you were working... Read More
Recruiting and hiring are often done in haste, leaving the... Read More
I recently received a most interesting phone call.When I answered... Read More
Industrial/clinical psychology and applied psychiatry have made tremendous strides in... Read More
Business Management |