Hiring capable, talented people is universally recognized as a key element of business success and a major challenge for most companies. The fact that many interview processes favor a prepared candidate, not necessarily the right candidate, contributes to this challenge. A prepared candidate will excel in a typical interview, responding comfortably to predictable questions regarding their resume in a way that accentuates positive traits and highlights applicable experience. Despite their best efforts to interview effectively, hiring managers are often left with more than one candidate they feel positively about and rely on "gut" instinct to make a final selection. Although an experienced hiring manager's instincts are useful, a well-designed interview process dramatically increases the probability of selecting the right candidate.
Take for example a consumer packaged goods customer of mine who was experiencing consistent employee turnover in the customer service department. Their training programs were solid and the department was well managed. We reviewed the interview process and determined there were opportunities for improvement. The interview process in place could be summarized as follows:
- Define the characteristics of a desired candidate. Write a detailed job description. Post a job listing on Career Builder.
- Review resumes and choose three to five candidates for face-to-face interviews.
- Start interview with a request for the candidate to "tell us about yourself" and focus heavily on resume content and past job responsibilities for the remainder of the interview.
- Present two or three questions designed to gain an understanding of the candidate's character. For example, "tell me about a time when you disagreed with your boss and how you handled it."
- Schedule a second interview for "impressive" candidates and ask another manager to sit in.
- Repeat interview process to probe any areas of interest or concern uncovered in the first interview.
- Managers confer, select a candidate and make an offer.
Management's primary critique of the existing process was that it only provided a view of the candidate in a standard interview setting. As one manager put it, "All of the quality candidates seem to interview well." After a couple of brainstorming sessions the following additions were made to the existing interview process:
1. Require a cover letter: We added a clear statement in the job posting that only applicants submitting a cover letter would be considered for the position. Requiring a cover letter provides the opportunity to assess an applicant's written communication skills, tests the candidate's willingness to follow directions at the most basic level, and prioritizes the review of resumes to the most serious applicants.
2. Conduct a preliminary phone conversation: We chose a group of twenty of the most qualified applicants for open customer service positions and spoke to each of them on the phone. This initial call took less than five minutes, gave us a sense of the candidate's interpersonal skills and personality fit, allowed for a quick assessment of verbal communication skills, and served as a preliminary resume fact check. Our group of twenty was reduced to a top five in less than two hours.
3. Include "scenarios" in the face-to-face interview: Once we had selected candidates for face-to-face interviews, we developed one or two real world scenarios that might occur on the job. Each candidate was presented with the same scenario and responses were compared. For example, the following scenario was presented to customer service candidates:
"It's your second week on the job, you are entering a 'hot' order for a key customer and the system says the product is back ordered. You are pretty sure a shipment of the product came in yesterday but may not have been received in the system yet. You call the Shipping Manager to see if the product has been received and might be made available for shipment. The Shipping Manager rudely replies that he is too busy to check right now and you will have to call him back later. He hangs up before you can reply. What do you do?"
Scenario interviewing provided valuable insight into each candidate's problem solving skills, ability to resolve conflict, and general personality traits.
The customer implemented these additions to their interview process for three new hires in customer service and the results have been outstanding. Turnover has been eliminated over the last 18 months, productivity in the department has improved, and positive customer feedback has increased.
Contact us for more detail and let us know if your interviewing process could use some attention. We would love to assist!