The Interview Process
The interview process can be the difference between success and failure for your company. If good employees
are your most precious resource than the ability to choose them needs to be your most precious skill.
A good selection process has a number of steps but the most critical is the face to face interview.
Unfortunately, most business owners and managers have never been taught how to successfully choose prospective
employees.
In addition, there is a terrible problem lurking just below the surface. Most of us believe we are good at
reading people and can choose the winners from the losers.
If only it were so simple!
The truth is most of us are NOT very good at reading people. This combined with our lack of interview training leads to all kind of hiring mistakes. Interview training is not something many managers have been through in their
career.
Although I can't help you with reading people, I can help with a solid selection
process you can use to develop your skill.
Interview Process
1. Have a detailed profile
It is impossible to hire good people if you don't know what you are looking for. "I'll know it when I see it"
does not work. Instead, have a detailed profile that includes both what the person needs to accomplish along with
the critical skills and behaviors necessary for success.
2. Prepare Your Questions In Advance
You need your interview questions prepared in advance if you are
going to be effective. Trying to manufacture questions on the fly is too hard and leads to missed information.
Build your list of interview questions to ask(see the article on creating interview questions for a complete discussion) in correct
chronological order. Work from the beginning of the person's career to the present.
Make certain you have questions for each of the critical job requirements and get multiple examples for
each.
3. Ask Interview Questions In Order And Be Sure To Probe
To make a quality decision it is necessary to get as much quality data as possible. View your list of questions
as the starting point. Each question should generate many probing questions. The purpose of your probing questions
is to get more and better information.
Use your probes to eliminate ambiguity. When in doubt ask more questions.
4. Put The Person At Ease
The more at ease the person, the better quality data you get. Don't do anything that creates stress or anxiety
during the process. View the meeting as a productive conversation where you exchange information.
5. Control The Meeting
You need to maintain control throughout. Controlling the situation simply means getting the information you need
in the time allotted. The best way to maintain control is to to ask effective interview questions. See the article
best questions for a complete discussion of effective questions.
6. End On A Friendly Note
This meeting with a candidate is an opportunity to show off the quality of your company. The process needs to be
professional. And, treat ever person with absolute respect. Make every person you come in contact with want to be
part of your team.
The behavioral interview is something you hear a lot about. This is a
critical technique covered in great depth in the behavioral interviews
article. Briefly, a behavioral approach simply means you will explore how the person behaved in situations that are
the same or similar to those they will face on your job.
In conclusion, the interview process is critical to your
success in choosing top employees. Being unprepared leads to costly mistakes. Follow the process outlined in this
article and the related articles and you are on your way to hiring the best.
|