How To Hire Dream Employees
Let me share a story with you. I used to be in the same boat as
you. Hiring good employees was as much a mystery to me as it probably is to you. If the person looked good, was
enthusiastic, and showed some interest, they got hired. And you would have a hard time counting my mistakes. One in
particular I want to share with you.
Someone was silly enough to promote me to my first management
job. The department needed to hire an administrative assistant. I did all the typical things. Ran the typical ad
(titled "Administrative Assistant") in the Sunday classified ads. Interviewed about 20 candidates throughout the
week. Finally, it was Friday afternoon and I had one more interview to go and the desperation was
mounting.
This final person walked into my office and announced that she wanted the job and
that I would be smart to give her the job. Having been beat into submission all week and liking aggressive people,
I threw up my hands and said, "You're hired!" And boy was that a decision that will go down in infamy. If ever
there was a walking nightmare, it was now working for me.
I know I am not the first person to have made that mistake. We
have all hired someone out of desperation at some point. And, if you are like me, you probably regret some of those
desperate decisions. Hiring people has to stop being a necessary evil and start being a key strategic part of
managing your business.
Hiring mistakes can kill your company. All the motivation, all
the coaching, all the training, all the total quality management and all the reengineering in the world can't make
up for a hiring mistake. You simply can't overcome it or train your way out of it. Yet, while business experts
agree on the importance of quality employees, not too many managers are very good at making the right hiring
decision.
Just think of the positive impact on your business... and more importantly, your
peace of mind (how many walking nightmares are you dealing with?) when you lower your number of hiring
mistakes.
Every time you hire someone who is not good, the entire
organization suffers. Bad hires not only create customer ill will, but they effect the people who must work with
them and manage them. Bad employees create stress and disruption in the entire company. Morale is lowered,
productivity decreases, and absenteeism increases. And, your life gets miserable.
What causes most bad hires? Ignorance. No one has ever shown
you how to do it. You are probably using a haphazard approach based on rumors, myths and some form of trial and
error. And you are probably basing your decisions on vague, indefinable factors such as chemistry, gut-feel and
guesswork.
Understanding Success
You need to have a mission if you are going to hire winners.
Think of it as your guiding principle. The mission is to have the right person in the right job at the right time
doing the right things. Take a minute, close your eyes and just imagine how nice life would be. Feels like success
doesn't it?
The person you hire is going to have to achieve on-the-job
success (satisfying your business needs). Just what is on-the-job success? Success on a job is a critical concept
that changes from company to company . . . from industry to industry . . . from department to department . . . and
even from one year to the next. How you define it, and predict it will determine if you end up hiring
winners?
The purpose of any selection process is to predict whether the
person you hire will be successful on the job.
Successful employees do the right things - they deliver results
in a particular position. But doing the right things is not enough - they also have to do those things the right
way. So if you clearly understand "what" the person has to do and "how" they have to do it, you have a template for
the successful employee.
The Best Predictor of
Success
Your entire focus in the interview should be to answer one
question: "How is this person going to handle the tasks and situations of my job?" A great way to get your answer
is to focus on past behavior. According to social scientists, past behavior predicts future behavior 88 percent of
the time. People are creatures of habit. People act and react to specific situations exactly the way they have done
in the past.
Find out how the person handled similar situations on previous jobs if you want to
predict how a candidate is going to handle the tasks and situations of your job (to have on-the-job
success),
Here is a 7-step process we have taught our Selecting Winners
clients:
7 Steps To Hiring Success
- Have a Process
- Know What You Are Looking For
- Develop a Recruitment Mentality
- Prepare Effective Questions
- Maintain Control of the Interview
- Evaluate Against the Profile
- Sell Your Job the Right Way at the Right
Time
Sell Your Job The Right Way
"Why should I work for you?" This is a question that every good
candidate has in the back of their mind. And, you better have an answer! Good candidates always have choices. How
is your job and company going to stand out from the crowd as the employer of choice?
Develop a list of compelling reasons if you are going to
convince a candidate they should work for your organization.. A good first step is to talk to your existing
employees and find out why they are working for you.
Also, it is important to sell your job at the right time -
which is at the end of the interview. There are two reasons to wait until the end to sell. First, you want to make
certain this is a good candidate. There is no sense in selling someone who isn't going to get the
job.
Second, you have the highest probability of packaging your job
in a way to close them after you know something about the person,. It is really difficult to sell to someone you
don't know anything about.
I hope this has given you a number of ideas about how to
recruit and hire the best employees. I know I have only scratched the surface so please check out the link below to
learn how you can get more information.
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