Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Determining your needs
Recruiting new employees
Following interviewing do’s and don’ts
Evaluating candidates
Making the big decision
Finding and hiring the best candidate for a job has never been easy. Your challenge as a business owner is to figure out how to not just find the best candidates for your job openings, but also to convince them that your company is the best place to work. This chapter guides you through both sides of that challenge.
Is the position new, or are you filling an existing one? In either case, before you start the recruiting process, you need to ask yourself some questions. Do you know exactly what standards you’re going to use to measure your candidates? Do you have a designated pay range for this position? The clearer you are about what you need and the boundaries you need to work within, the easier and less arbitrary your selection process becomes.
If you’re filling an existing position, you probably already have a detailed job description available. Review it closely and make changes where necessary. Again, ensure that the job description reflects exactly the tasks and requirements of the position. When you hire someone new to fill an existing position, you start with a clean slate. For example, you may have had a difficult time getting a former employee to accept certain new tasks — say, taking minutes at staff meetings or filing travel vouchers. By adding these new duties to the job description before you open recruitment, you make the expectations clear and you don’t have to struggle with your new hire to do the job.
If the job is new, now is your opportunity to design your ideal candidate. Draft a job description that fully describes all the tasks and responsibilities of the position and the minimum necessary qualifications and experience. If the job requires expertise in addition and subtraction, for example, say so. You’re not going to fill the position with the right hire if you don’t make certain qualifications a key part of the job description. The more work you put into the job description now, the less work you have to do after you bring in your new hire.
Finally, before you start recruiting, use the latest-and-greatest job description to outline the most important qualities you’re seeking in your new hire. Consult and compare notes with other owners of similar businesses to get input on your descriptions, and ask employees for their feedback as well. Use this outline to guide you in the interview process. Keep in mind, however, that job descriptions may give you the skills you want, but they don’t automatically give you the kind of employee you want — finding the right person is much more difficult (and is the reason you spend so much time recruiting in the first place).
Employers look for many qualities in candidates. The following list gives you an idea of the qualities employers consider most important when hiring new employees. Other characteristics may be particularly important to you, your company, and the job you’re looking to fill. This list gives you a good start in identifying them:
People are the heart of every business. The better people you hire, the better business you’ll have. Some people are just meant to be in their jobs. You may know such individuals — someone who thrives as a receptionist or someone who lives to sell. Think about how great your organization would be if you staffed every position with people who lived for their jobs.
Of course, as important as the interview process is to selecting the best candidates for your jobs, you won’t have anyone to interview if you don’t have a good system for finding good candidates. So, where can you find the best candidates for your jobs? The simple answer is everywhere.
Your job is to develop a recruitment system that helps you find the kinds of people you want to hire. Here are some of the best ways to find candidates for your positions:
Personal referrals: Whether from co-workers, professional colleagues, friends, relatives, or neighbors, you can often find great candidates through referrals. Who better to present a candidate than someone whose opinion you already value and trust? You get far more insight about the candidates’ strengths and weaknesses from the people who refer them than you ever get from résumés alone. Not only that, but research shows that people hired through current employees tend to work out better, stay with the company longer, and act happier.
When you’re getting ready to fill a position, make sure you let people know about it. Your employees and co-workers may well mount their own Twitter and Facebook campaigns for you, getting the word out to a wide audience.
Temporary agencies: Hiring temps, or temporary employees, has become routine for many companies. When you simply have to fill a critical position for a short period of time, temporary agencies are the way to go — no muss, no fuss. And the best part is that when you hire temps, you get the opportunity to try out employees before you buy them. If you don’t like the temps you get, no problem. Call the agency, and it sends replacements before you know it. But if you like your temps, most agencies allow you to hire them at a nominal fee or after a minimum time commitment. Either way, you win.
One more point: If you’re using temps, you can complete your organization’s necessary work while you continue looking for the right full-time employee. Doing so buys you more time to find the best person for the job without feeling pressure to hire someone who doesn’t really meet all your needs.
The proliferation of job search tools, corporate web pages, and online employment agencies has brought about an entirely new dimension in recruiting. Your own website lets you present almost unlimited amounts and kinds of information about your business and your job openings — in text, audio, graphic, and video formats. Your site works for you 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Consider a few of the best ways to leverage the power of the Internet in your own hiring efforts:
Email campaigns: If you set up the email function on your website just mentioned, you’ll soon collect a large number of addresses from potential job candidates. Don’t just sit there — use them! Be sure to email an announcement to everyone on your list every time you have a job opening. Even if the people who receive your email message aren’t interested, they may know someone who is and may forward your announcement.
www.facebook.com
) and LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com
). Many millions of people have established accounts at both of these sites; however, LinkedIn was specifically designed to help job seekers network with one another to find new job opportunities. This makes it a particularly effective way for you to get the word out about your open positions. Although Facebook isn’t specifically set up for job networking, you can set up a fan page there and use it as an effective recruiting platform. There’s no charge to set up and use a Facebook or LinkedIn account.www.twitter.com
) as a real-time platform for getting out information to anyone interested in getting it. This includes prospective job applicants. The variety of information you can send out to the world is limited only by your imagination — and by the character limit for individual tweets. There’s no charge to set up and use your Twitter account.www.careerbuilder.com
), Indeed (www.indeed.com
), Simply Hired (www.simplyhired.com
), and Monster (www.monster.com
). You’ll likely have to pay to post your jobs on these sites — prices vary. For a free option, don’t forget your local Craigslist (www.craigslist.com
).After you narrow the field to the top three or five applicants, the next step is to start interviewing. What kind of interviewer are you? Do you spend several hours preparing for interviews — reviewing résumés, looking over job descriptions, writing and rewriting questions until each one is as finely honed as a razor blade? Or are you the kind of interviewer who, busy as you already are, starts preparing for the interview when you get the call from your receptionist that your candidate has arrived?
More than anything else, the heart of the interview process is the questions you ask and the answers you get in response. You get the best answers when you ask the best questions. Lousy questions often result in lousy answers that don’t really tell you whether the candidate is right for the job.
A great interviewer asks great questions. According to Richard Nelson Bolles, author of the perennially popular job-hunting guide What Color Is Your Parachute?, you can categorize all interview questions under one of the following headings:
Why are you here? Why is the person sitting across from you going to the trouble of interviewing with you today? You have just one way to find out — ask. You may assume that the answer is because he or she wants a job with your firm, but what you find may surprise you.
Consider the story of the interviewee who forgot that he was interviewing for a job with Hewlett-Packard. During the entire interview, the applicant referred to Hewlett-Packard by the name of one of its competitors. He didn’t get the job.
What kind of person are you? Few of your candidates will be absolute angels or demons, but don’t forget that you’ll spend a lot of time with the person you hire. You want to hire someone you’ll enjoy being with during the many work hours, weeks, and years that stretch before you — and the holiday parties, company picnics, and countless other events you’re expected to attend. You also want to confirm a few other issues: Are your candidates honest and ethical? Do they share your views regarding work hours, responsibility, and so forth? Are they responsible and dependable employees? Would they work well in your company culture? Of course, all your candidates will answer in the affirmative to mom-and-apple-pie questions like these. So how do you find the real answers?
You might try to “project” applicants into a typical, real-life scenario and then see how they’d think it through. For example, ask the prospect what she would do if a client called at 5 p.m. with an emergency order that needed to be delivered by 9 a.m. the next morning. This way, there’s no “right” answer and candidates are forced to expose their thinking process: what questions they’d ask, what strategies they’d consider, which people they’d involve, and so forth. Ask open-ended questions and let your candidates do most of the talking.
So what can you do to prepare for your interviews? The following handy-dandy checklist gives you ideas on where to start:
And try to avoid the temptation to draw pictures of little smiley faces or that new car you’ve been lusting after. Write the key points of your candidates’ responses and their reactions to your questions. For example, if you ask why your candidate left her previous job, and she starts getting really nervous, make a note about this reaction. Finally, note your own impressions of the candidates:
If you’ve gone through the hiring process a few times already, you know that you can run into tricky situations during an interview and that certain questions can land you in major hot water if you make the mistake of asking them.
Some interviewing don’ts are merely good business practice. For example, accepting an applicant’s invitation for a date is probably not a good idea. Believe it or not, it happens. After a particularly drawn-out interview at a well-known high-tech manufacturer, a male candidate asked out a female interviewer. The interviewer considered her options and declined the date; she also declined to make Prince Charming a job offer.
Avoid playing power trips during the course of the interview. Forget the old games of asking trick questions, turning up the heat, or cutting the legs off their chairs (yes, some people still do this game playing) to gain an artificial advantage over your candidates. Get real — it’s the 21st century.
Now comes the really fun part of the hiring process — evaluating your candidates. If you’ve done your homework, then you already have an amazing selection of candidates to choose from, you’ve narrowed your search to the ones showing the best potential to excel in your position, and you’ve interviewed them to see whether they can live up to the promises they made in their résumés. Before you make your final decision, you need a bit more information.
Wow! What a résumé! What an interview! What a candidate! Would you be surprised to find out that this shining employee-to-be didn’t really go to Yale? Or that he really wasn’t the account manager on that nationwide marketing campaign? Or that his last supervisor wasn’t particularly impressed with his analytical skills?
A résumé and interview are great tools, but a reference check is probably the only chance you have to find out before you make a hiring decision whether your candidates are actually who they say they are. Depending on your organization, you may be expected to do reference checks. Or maybe your human resources department takes care of that task.
Here are some of the best ways to do your reference checking:
Do some surfing. On the web, that is. Google your candidate’s name, perhaps along with the name of the company where the person last worked or the city where she lives. Or do a search for your candidate on Facebook (www.facebook.com
) or LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com
). You might be surprised by how much information you can uncover about a job candidate — good and bad — doing just a few simple web searches.
But be careful. Many people have the same name. Make sure you have the right person!
You did take interview notes, didn’t you? Now’s the time to drag them back out and look them over. Review the information package for each candidate — one by one — and compare your findings against your predetermined criteria. Take a look at the candidates’ résumés, your notes, and the results of your reference checks. How do they stack up against the standards you set for the position? Do you see any clear winners at this point? Any clear losers? Organize your candidate packages into the following stacks:
When you’re a busy business owner, you have pressure to get things done as quickly as possible, and you’re tempted to take shortcuts to achieve your goals. It seems that everything has to be done yesterday — or maybe the day before. When do you have the opportunity to really spend as much time as you want to complete a task or project? Time is precious when you have ten other projects crying for your attention. Time is even more valuable when you’re hiring for a vacant position that’s critical to your organization and needs to be filled right now.
Depending on your organization’s policies or culture, or if you’re undecided on the best candidate, you may decide to bring candidates in for several rounds of interviews. But keep in mind that the timeline for an offer differs depending on the job you’re interviewing for. Lower-level job hunters cannot afford to be unemployed (if they are) for long, and they often get and accept job offers quickly. A higher-level position — say, a general manager — gives you more time.
The ultimate decision on how many rounds and levels of interviews to conduct depends on the nature of the job itself, the size of your company, and your policies and procedures. If the job is simple or at a relatively low level in the company, a single phone interview may be sufficient to determine the best candidate. However, if the job is complex or at a relatively high level in the organization, you may need several rounds of testing and personal interviews to determine the best candidate.
With today’s increased emphasis on national security and immigration status, employers are required to take some steps to verify the eligibility of employees to work in the U.S. You should obtain USCIS Form I-9 (Employment Eligibility Verification) from prospective employees. This form is used to collect information on the employee and document the verification steps. Be aware: An employer can be fined for failing to follow the process. In addition, there is a program called E-Verify, which allows employers to verify an applicant’s work status online. You can obtain Form I-9 and related information from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) website at www.uscis.gov
. The E-Verify program is free, and you can find out more about it at www.e-verify.gov
.
Immigrants can be a good source of workers, and you may be able to sponsor employees through various programs. For example, there are H-1B visas for specialty occupations, such technical or scientific workers. The USCIS website mentioned in the preceding paragraph has additional information about these and other employer-sponsored worker visas.
Rank your candidates within the groups of winners and potential winners that you established during the evaluation phase of the hiring process (see the earlier section “Reviewing your notes”). You don’t need to bother ranking the losers because you wouldn’t hire them anyway — no matter what. The best candidate in your group of winners is first, the next best is second, and so on. If you’ve done your job thoroughly and well, the best candidates for the job are readily apparent at this point.
The next step is to get on the phone and offer your first choice the job. Don’t waste any time — you never know whether your candidate has interviewed with other employers. It would be a shame to invest all this time in the hiring process only to find out that your top choice accepted a job this morning with one of your competitors. If you can’t come to terms with your first choice in a reasonable amount of time, go on to your second choice. Keep going through your pool of winners until you either make a hire or exhaust the list of candidates.
The following sections give you a few tips to keep in mind as you rank your candidates and make your final decision.
In some cases, you may prefer certain candidates because of their personalities or personal charisma, regardless of their abilities or work experience. Sometimes the desire to like these candidates can obscure their shortcomings, while a better qualified, albeit less socially adept, candidate may fade in your estimation.
Be objective. Consider the job to be done, as well as the skills and qualifications that being successful requires. Do your candidates have these skills and qualifications? What would it take for your candidates to be considered fully qualified for the position?
Don’t allow yourself to be unduly influenced by your candidates’ looks, bubbly personalities, high-priced hairstyles, or fashion-forward clothing ensembles. None of these characteristics can tell you how well your candidates will actually perform the job. The facts are present for you to see in your candidates’ résumés, interview notes, and reference checks. If you stick to the facts, you can still go wrong, but the chances are diminished.
Sometimes you’re faced with a decision between two equally qualified candidates, or with a decision about a candidate who is marginal but shows promise. In such cases, you have weighed all the objective data and given the analytical side of your being free rein, but you still have no clear winner. What do you do in this kind of situation?
In reality, rarely are two candidates equally qualified, although often one or more people seem to have more to bring to the job than anticipated (for example, industry focus, fresh ideas, previous contacts, and so forth). This is again where your pre-work can be so valuable in keeping you focused. Can they both do the job? If so, the bonus traits can tip the scale.
Other options:
What do you do if, heaven forbid, you can’t hire anyone from your group of winners? This unfortunate occurrence is a tough call, but no one said hiring is an easy task. Take a look at your stack of potential winners. What would it take to make your top potential winners into winners? If the answer is as simple as a training course or two, then give these candidates serious consideration — with the understanding that you can schedule the necessary training soon after hiring. Perhaps a candidate just needs a little more experience before moving into the ranks of the winners. You can make a judgment call on whether you feel that someone’s current experience is sufficient until that person gains the experience you’re looking for. If not, you may want to keep looking for the right candidate. After all, this person may be working with you for a long time — waiting for the best candidate only makes sense.