common hiring mistakes

2
© 2015 Next Level Up. All rights reserved. Common Hiring Mistakes When recruiting and hiring, there are bound to be mistakes. Knowing what to watch for, and planning carefully, will get you well on the way to hiring great people. Let’s take a look at some of the common hiring mistakes. Not being clear about what the position entails including the objectives of the position. Make sure that when you are in that hiring interview, you set out the responsibilities, and the standards. It’s very important to mention the standards expected and set them out clearly, and how the job and the results are going to be measured. Not being clear about the skills and experience required. Be clear in your own mind of what the required skills are and the experience. Not interviewing for the values that the business requires. Before you go into this meeting, work up a list of your values, and those of your business, and what you want in your employee. Look at the values you came up with in your strategic intent. Work out how you can ask questions to find out if those values are there. For example, if teamwork is an important value, you’re not going to just go in and say, “How are you as a team player? Or are you a team player?” They’re in an interview. Of course, they’re going to say they’re terrific and it’s important to them. You come up with a different way of phrasing it. Something like, “Can you give me an example of a time when you disagreed with a team member, or a supervisor, and how you handled it and what happened?” The answer

Upload: next-level-up-business-coaching

Post on 20-Feb-2017

111 views

Category:

Business


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

© 2015 Next Level Up. All rights reserved.

Common Hiring Mistakes

When recruiting and hiring, there are bound to be mistakes.

Knowing what to watch for, and planning carefully, will get you well on the way to hiring great people.

Let’s take a look at some of the common hiring mistakes. Not being clear about what the position entails – including the objectives of the position. Make sure that when you are in that hiring interview, you set out the responsibilities, and the standards. It’s very important to mention the standards expected and set them out clearly, and how the job and the results are going to be measured. Not being clear about the skills and experience required. Be clear in your own mind of what the required skills are and the experience. Not interviewing for the values that the business requires. Before you go into this meeting, work up a list of your values, and those of your business, and what you want in your employee. Look at the values you came up with in your strategic intent. Work out how you can ask questions to find out if those values are there. For example, if teamwork is an important value, you’re not going to just go in and say, “How are you as a team player? Or are you a team player?” They’re in an interview. Of course, they’re going to say they’re terrific and it’s important to them. You come up with a different way of phrasing it. Something like, “Can you give me an example of a time when you disagreed with a team member, or a supervisor, and how you handled it and what happened?” The answer

© 2015 Next Level Up. All rights reserved.

to that is going to tell you a lot more about that person than if you asked “are you a good team worker?” So, interview for values and the values that the business requires. Talking too much in the interview and trying to ‘sell’ the job to the applicant. Work out your questions beforehand. Prepare open ended questions that are going to color in the picture, if you like. Let them sell themselves to you, not the other way around. You may be desperate to get someone, but let them sell themselves to you. Ask them what difference they would make if they came to your business.

Not setting evaluation criteria so that all applicants are seen on a level playing field. Work out the things that you’re going to measure in order to assess the best applicant. Not checking references or having a clear set of questions to ask referees. Always do a reference check with a prepared set of questions. Even if it is your neighbor’s niece or nephew. “Oh, I didn’t feel I could because it’s my cousin, or it’s my best friend’s niece, or…” It doesn’t matter. Do a reference check. It will pay off in the long run. Ignoring the red flags. Notice any signs that tug at your intuition and dig further, and bring them up in your reference check. Not running any tests (if it’s important to your business). I knew a landscaper once who said he was looking for apprentices and he said, “There needs to be a common sense test.” Because common sense is important and he needed it in his business. We devised a common sense test which was fantastic and it worked really well. So, those are hiring mistakes. Look for them. We’ve all made them. Notice the ones you have made, notice how you made them and look to see how you’re going to address them, and how you’re going to do it differently in the future.