Why did I choose this resource?
I chose this resource to help me create a recruiting process that will make it easier for us to hire top notch employees.
What did you learn from it?
I learned methods for hiring grade A employees and other methods to avoid. This includes a series of interviews and questions to help differentiate A players from B and C candidates as well as how to attract these types of people. I also learned how to find what we need so we are hiring people that are also a good fit for our company.
Key Knowledge
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It’s Who not What
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What are the strategies, products, and services.
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Who is the person who decides on the What decisions
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“The average hiring mistake costs 15 times an employee’s base salary in hard costs and productivity loss.”
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Better Who choices → more pleasurable career → increased salary → more available time
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Hire only people who have a 90% or better chance of success in the position you are trying to fill
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Voodoo Hiring – 10 Methods to avoid
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The Art Critic –thinks they can “read” someone; most of the time they are wrong
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The Sponge – allows too many people to interview; do not receive any valuable information
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The Prosecutor – aggressive questioning; most knowledgeable, may not have best ability
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The Suitor – tries too hard to impress candidate; all talking, no listening
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The Trickster – uses “tests” to see a candidates behaviors
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The Animal Lover – Sticks to the same questions; usually not relevant to the job
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The Chatterbox – enjoys conversing with the person; forgets they are hiring for a position
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The Psychological and Personality Test – answers can be faked by cunning individuals
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The Aptitude Test – good for finding correct skill set; should not me the only deciding factor
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The Fortune-Teller – asking the person’s view of the future in the company; great if they make it there
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ghSMART A Method for Hiring (A Method) – Four Steps
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Scorecard – Define the role and create a picture your candidate should fit into.
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Source – Have a sourcing system in process to make sure you have great candidates available when you need them.
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Select – Series of organized interviews and relevant questions.
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Sell – Helps keeping people with the talent you desire from going elsewhere.
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Scorecard – Blueprint
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Mission – A summary of the jobs focal point written in easy to read language.
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Outcomes – Tasks/goals that need to be met by a candidate. Set these high enough to scare away B and C players, and challenge A players.
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Competencies – How a candidate is expected to conduct themselves in a job
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Core competencies include: Efficiency, honesty/integrity, organization and planning, aggressiveness, follow-through on commitments, intelligence, analytical skills, attention to detail, persistence, and proactivity.
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Cultural Competencies – Know your companies’ culture and hire someone that fits!
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Source
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Internal
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Ask personal and professional networks for referrals
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Talented people know talented people
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Offer employees incentive for finding great talent
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Changes their view from What to Who
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External – Recruiters and Researchers
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Only works when you are open and honest about who you are, the issues, and what is needed
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Sourcing System – Final step in sourcing process
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Spend 30 minutes EVERY week to recognize and support A players
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Select
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The Screening Interview – phone interview ,no longer than 30 minutes
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What are your career goals?
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What are you really good at professionally?
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What are you not good at or not interested in doing professionally?
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Who were your last five bosses, and how will they each rate your performance on a 1 – 10 scale when we talk to them?
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The Topgrading Interview – in person, can take up to 3 hours
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Encourages you to perform a great screening interview and reduces the hiring failure rate
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Begins with asking about highs and lows of the person’s educational career
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Moving from past to present, ask these five questions about each previous job:
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What were you hired to do?
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What accomplishments are you proud of?
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What were some low points during that job?
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Who were the people you worked with?
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Ask bosses name, what it was like working with them, and finally ask what their old boss will say are their strengths and weaknesses.
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Why did you leave that job?
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Five Master Tactics
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Interrupting
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The Three P’s
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Push versus Pull
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Painting a Picture
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Stopping at the Stop Signs
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The Focused Interview – possibly multiple interviews, 45 – 60 minutes each
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Focuses on the scorecard you created
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Team members can assist with these interviews
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The Reference Interview – 4 performed by you, 3 by your team (7 total)
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Only performed when you have already decided you would like to hire a canidate (as long as the reference check goes well)
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Choose the right references and then ask the candidate to set up the calls.
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Five main questions you should ask each reference.
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Sell
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Five F’s of Selling
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Fit – most important point, show the person their talents and values aligns with the companies’.
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Family – make the candidate feel accepted
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Freedom – show that your organization allows for growth; A players will thrive
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Fortune – Award increased/improved performance with top compensation
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Fun – this is your corporate culture.
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Five Phases of Selling
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When sourcing
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During interviews
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After an offer, before the candidate accepts
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Between the acceptance and start date
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During the hires first 100 days
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Legal Traps to Watch Out For – 4 Areas of concern
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Relevance
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Standardization
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Nondiscretionary Language
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Illegal Questions
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Anything related to marital status, children, pregnancy, age, birth place, race, ethnicity, or sexual orientation.
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Medical condition and physical or mental health may only be questioned if it is directly relevant to the performance of the job.
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How are you using what you learned?
I am using what I learned to create a recruiting process. This process will include the types of interviews and the questions that will be asked; as well as the way in which we search for and retain a great employee.
Key Changes / Key Actions
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Search for new talent from within the company
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Incorporate selling into the hiring process
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Create a written process for finding, interviewing, and retaining grade A employees
Source
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Name : Who
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Author : Geoff Smart and Randy Street
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Summary.com: Link to Book