ASK THE HEADHUNTER Kick the job candidate out of your office

Started by deanwebb, November 11, 2021, 12:12:42 PM

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deanwebb

Kick the job candidate out of your office

Question The current employment climate seems to be the new normal. At my company it's just very difficult to get new hires. There's a lot of speculation about why the labor market is so tight, but no one has really identified the reason. (Do you have any ideas?) That's why I'm reconsidering how I interview a job candidate. Once I get them to meet with me, I want to optimize my chances of actually getting them on board, assuming they're the right person! The traditional interview just doesn't do it. Can you offer any tips on how a manager can


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Question


The current employment climate seems to be the new normal. At my company it's just very difficult to get new hires. There's a lot of speculation about why the labor market is so tight, but no one has really identified the reason. (Do you have any ideas?) That's why I'm reconsidering how I interview a job candidate. Once I get them to meet with me, I want to optimize my chances of actually getting them on board, assuming they're the right person! The traditional interview just doesn't do it. Can you offer any tips on how a manager can run the job interview for a better outcome? I can't afford to keep wasting good applicants! If I can pull this off I'll be a hero. Thanks.


Nick’s Reply


job candidateI like a manager that realizes it's time to upend the recruiting, interviewing and hiring process. My compliments. (We covered your question about why it's so difficult to fill jobs and hire people in last week's edition.)


I think what motivates a good candidate to want to work for you is the depth of the interview experience. Most interviews are superficial, canned, and uninspiring. If you can make your meeting truly engaging and memorable, I think you increase your chances of an offer being accepted dramatically.


Don’t interview in your office


I'll offer you a specific tip that may help, and my guess is your HR department has never suggested it. The method is to break the script of the traditional interview entirely. The objective is to relax the job candidate so you can assess them more effectively, and to make it easier for you to get to know one another better in a realistic work context. I think this leads to wiser decisions about working together.



                           

                            Note: I’m not going to give advice limited to our “virus age.” I know much interviewing during this time is done as remotely as some jobs are. In-person interviewing and hiring will return. These ideas can fit in either case with a bit of bending and twisting. Let’s discuss how in the Comments section below!
                           

                       
The first thing to do once you and the candidate have met is to kick the candidate out of your office! Yup — I'm serious. The worst place to interview anyone is in your office. Why? Because it's a sterile box that's removed from the action. It's not where you're going to learn whether they can do the job. And it’s not where they’re going to learn what they need to know to take a job with you.


Take the job candidate for a walk


When the candidate arrives for the interview, don't sit down. Walk out of your office and take the candidate out onto your work floor. Whether it's a marketing department or a production plant, start by introducing the candidate to your staff and showing them the work. Let them see your department. Show them the tools you use and the products you make. Let them meet your people. Encourage everyone to start talking and asking questions.


Encourage everyone to talk shop.


This way of assessing a candidate will quickly reveal to you why traditional interviews don't work.


Traditional interviews don’t work


Typical interviews are indirect assessments, where you and the candidate spar over the Top Ten Stupid Interview Questions. What I'm suggesting is a hands-on experience where the focus is on the work of your department — and where you can directly assess the candidate's personality, skills, attitude, smarts and fit with the job and your team. For example:



  • Show the candidate your products (discuss how the job affects product quality, delivery, etc.)

  • Show the candidate the tools they would use (see what they know about how the work is done)

  • Have the candidate sit in on a “live” work meeting (observe how they participate)

  • If there is a company cafeteria, take them to lunch, where they can meet loads of other employees (do they click?)

  • Introduce the candidate to managers and staff in departments "upstream and downstream" from the job they’d be doing, so they can see how their work would fit into the business (does the candidate understand the business?)


You will learn more about the candidate by exposing them to the rest of your team than you ever could by sitting in your office. You'll learn how smart and how motivated they are by how they interact with you and your team, by the questions they ask, by the opinions they offer and by the skills they demonstrate. If you've really got a gem of a job applicant, they will dig in and show you how they'd do the job. You will also learn very quickly how they fit in with your other employees.


Help the candidate decide


If you’ve got a good job candidate, this approach should give them many data points, in a real, live setting, to help them decide whether to join up. Of course, this requires that you’re offering them a good job working with good people in a healthy company!


I call this Interviewing By Wandering Around™. When the job candidate and the manager are in the middle of the work, everyone relaxes and it's easier to talk about what matters because there it all is, right in front of you: your business. A bonus is that no candidate can fake it in front of you and your entire team. There are no clever “behavioral interview” questions or answers to memorize.


Of course, if you have standard interview questions you like to ask, you can still ask them during your "cook's tour." But I'm betting some of those questions will suddenly seem silly to you. Why ask what a candidate did last year, when you can let them show you how they'd do this job now?


Kick the candidate out of your office if you want to entice them to come work with you. Show them around. I think you'll both learn a lot about one another and your workplace.


Do traditional job interviews work? How about behavioral interviews? A job candidate often walks away from even a successful interview still unsure whether they want the job. What has a manager done to make you want to join up? How could my suggestions be applied if your interviews are not in-person?


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