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6 Strategies to Hire Right the First Time

Home Best Practices
May 19, 2013
Reading Time: 4 mins read

By Gregg Gregory

RISMEDIA, Feb. 2, 2008-When Rob extended the offer to Kyle, he was sure he had hired the best candidate for the position. Rob had checked all of Kyle’s references and previous employment records, and based on this information, along with his interviewing skills, Rob knew Kyle had the skills necessary to do the job. After all, Kyle had nearly four years of experience with another company performing many of the same duties.

About two months after Kyle started, Rob noticed that Kyle was not performing as he’d expected, and was actually performing at sub par levels. To top things off, he was showing up late to work. While Rob had gone through the interview process designed by his company, taking all the precautions did not seem to help, and somehow he ended up with the “evil twin” of the man he interviewed.

This situation is a common problem all businesses must deal with. All too often the interview goes great; the job-interview-web.jpgcandidate has the skill set and possesses the knowledge to perform the duties. You check the references and previous job history, and it all checks out just fine – what seems to be the problem? Remember, some people are just great interviewers.

While hiring a new team member can be a shot in the dark, it doesn’t have to be. By following a few simple strategies you can avoid hiring the “evil twin.”

1. Use an up-to-date (and accurate) job description
So many organizations take this for granted, even though it is the foundation to the hiring process. A job description should reflect what the employee is to do on a regular basis, not on a daily basis. In addition, a job description is not how the employee will be evaluated, rather it should define what his or her duties are.

2. Define a minimum skill set requirement
The key here is a minimum skill set requirement, not all of the skills necessary to do the job. If a candidate has all of the skills you run the risk of having them burn out more quickly, thus increasing your turnover rate.

Think about it this way – if you worked in the medical profession and the position required an RN certification, would you hire someone with an LPN certification?

A good tool to help with this is a skill set test, which will make sure the candidate has the skills necessary. This way when your candidate claims to be proficient in a software program, you can measure their skills. It’s important to have several of your current employees take the same test prior to interviews so you have a baseline to measure your candidates against.

3. Have members of the team assist in the interview
Chances are you won’t be the only person working with the new hire, so get a couple of senior team members to conduct a short interview to make sure the new hire will fit in. As an added benefit, having team members involved allows them to be part of the process and remain invested in their growth as well as the development of the company.

Have everyone involved in the interview process ask one or two of the exact same questions. This accomplishes two significant factors:

a. Shows consistency in the responses and the candidate’s message

b. Shows the candidate’s frustration level – If the prospective employee gets annoyed at the third time the question is asked, you need to ask yourself – Do you want that person on your team?

4. Ask probing questions
Think back to the basics of communication – the person who is asking the questions is the person in control of the conversation. If you have several preset open-ended questions to ask all of the candidates you will get a better understanding of each candidate from a comparative point of view.

Questions should evoke emotion when possible. This will allow you to see how the candidate reacts in stressful and even ethical situations. There are several good books strictly written about interview questions; take time and search these out. Find the questions that fit your industry or business. Remember not all questions will fit your business so find ones that best suit your needs.

5. Do a background check
A background check includes checking the references and in many cases, utilizing an outside company to perform the complete background check. Look at this example: Deborah appeared to be a great candidate, yet when the complete background check came back, it uncovered that Deborah did not graduate from the college she stated on her resume. In fact she never graduated from college. While the position did not require a college degree, the fact that she lied on her resume was enough to rescind the offer.

6. Hire on attitude
This seems like common sense (and it really is) but so many employers think that skills are the most important thing. However, the top reason employees leave an organization is conflict with a team member or supervisor, so attitude is very important.

If you say your employees are your most important assets, prove it, and make sure the person you offer the job to has the right attitude – also known as team chemistry.

The bottom line is this: the skill of a person drives the will of a person. A person who has all of the skills and lacks the will to push and perform at peak levels is just not the right fit. You can always teach new skills, but the will – well, they either have it or they don’t. You make the call.

About the Author:
Gregg, founder of Gregg Gregory, LLC, works with organizations to create a culture where people work together and perform at peak levels. Through his interactive workshops and consulting, Gregg’s clients achieve greater team focus, cooperation, productivity, and impact. His experience includes more than two decades of human resources, real estate, mortgage banking, as well as radio and television broadcasting.

For more information, call 866-764-TEAM or visit: www.TeamsRock.com.

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Beth McGuire

Beth McGuire

Recently promoted to Vice President, Online Editorial, Beth McGuire oversees the editorial direction and content of RISMedia’s websites, and its daily, weekly and monthly newsletters. Through her two decades with the company, she has also contributed her range of editorial and creative skills to the company’s publications, content marketing platforms, events and more.

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