First Time? Sign Up or Login to your My Jobing Account
|
Colorado
Change Location
|
|
Home > Jobing Community Blogs > Blog Post: Hiring the Right Employe...
Blog Post: Hiring the Right Employees
posted Tuesday, February 12, 2008 8:43 PM
People tend to hire people they like – people who look like them, sound like them and potentially think like them. This is a risky proposition. You need people in your organization who think and act differently from you, with different skills, abilities and interests.
There is nothing more important than hiring the right people. The right people need coaching, development and hands-on management, but not nearly as much as the ‘wrong’ people. The right people grow with your company, developing their careers over time. The wrong people jump to the next seemingly exciting opportunity before adding value in their current role and to your company. Recruiting and hiring is the single most important thing managers do, besides manage their employees. And yet, we don’t do it deliberately, with disciplined rigor. A few uncommon hiring tips:
Consider adding a few questions to your interviews like:
Many hiring managers are unnecessarily and unpleasantly surprised after bringing on, training and developing new employees – read investing valuable time and resources – to learn that they can’t meet employees’ needs and desires. And thus those newly found employees leave the organization within a year of being hired, when they are still on the debt side of the business. 4. Require a writing sample. Most professionals, regardless of the job they’re in, need to be able to write using proper grammar, syntax and structure. You don’t have time to teach people the basics. If candidates don’t know and practice these rules by now, they’re not going to in the near future. 5. Require candidates who are in the final stages of interviewing to demonstrate that they have the required transferrable skills by including a chance to demonstrate the skills you are seeking. Ask potential trainers to do a formal presentation during which they teach a panel of interviewers a skill. Ask potential sales people to conduct a mock sales call. Ask potential project managers to design a project plan based on information you provide. Spend more time learning about candidates and less time figuring out how to get rid of staff who aren’t a good fit, don’t work hard and don’t have the skills and experience you need. A few common hiring tips:
If your track record for hiring the right talent is weak – your staff stays less than a year and/or aren’t strong performers; the people you’ve hired aren’t a good fit with the organization and/or you regret some of your hiring decisions – get help. Have someone you trust with a good hiring track record screen your candidates. Debrief each interview with him and understand how he formed his impressions, so that you make better decisions next time. Hiring the right staff is too important to not get it right. Everyone at some time in his/her career makes bad hiring decisions. Candidates are elusive and most will say anything to get hired. The more thorough, disciplined and deliberate you are, the better decisions you’ll make. Shari leads The Harley Group International, a Denver-based speaking, training and consulting firm focused on helping organizations onboard, develop and retain key talent. Shari can be reached via at shari@harleygroupllc.com, at her website http://www.shariharley.com, or check her out on YouTube: www.youtube.com/shariharley.
Community Comments
|
Recent posts by Shari Harley
Shari Harley Blog Archive
Bookmark & Share This Page
|
|||||||||||||||||||
This younger generation wants immediate success with higher paid salaries regardless of the training that is involved to get there.
So what I see happening is that technology is changing so rapidly, but our current generation will not be able to keep up because their preference is starting at the top with the highest paid salary instead of learning from the bottom up and hence this has made them less valuable to any technically advanced organization.
As a Plant Manager I have a hard time talking to individuals that fit this mold and moreover respect for those who work their way up from the bottom regardless of their education. Education is only as good as how it specially applies to an organization and this is not to say that education is not important, but rather what kind of education and how it is applied.
So my synopsis is that we need to educate our current generation to find out what their interest are, train them accordingly. This is all tied to our rapidly changing world; basically they don’t have the time we did from our former generation