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http://www.fordyceletter.com/2008/02/01/top-10-mistakes-employers-make-in-the-recruiting-and-hiring-process/
We have been here since 1952 and have been through literally thousands of hiring processes. We are asked about the biggest and most frequent mistakes that hiring authorities make in the recruiting, interviewing, and hiring process. Here they are:
1. Not having a clear idea of what they are looking for – that everyone understands.
Hiring authorities aren’t specific enough about the duties, skills, and competencies they need. They confuse amount of experience with competency: “8 to 10 years of experience” – does that mean that someone with six years of experience can’t do the job? Or what about the candidate who has had one year of experience 10 times? Putting any kind of numbers of years of experience limits them. What is important?
Employers would be better off defining the functions they want done very specifically, and then finding someone who can do it. This may mean someone who has done it well before or someone who has the potential to do it well. The specifics need to be written by the hiring authority who has the “pain,” i.e., the person who needs the help and is going to be responsible for the new employee.
Concocting “wish lists” of super-human attributes, combined with unrealistically low pay scales relative to expectations of the experience needed, will create havoc in a talent search. Hazy, ambiguous descriptions along with generalities like “good written and oral communication skills” don’t help either. Know your target.
2. Having an unrealistic idea of what kind of candidates might be available and the money it may take to hire them.
Just because everyone would like to hire Superman or Wonder Woman, that doesn’t mean they are available or will go to work at your company. There is no perfect candidate, and waiting for one is as unrealistic as searching for one.
The only way to become realistic about what the market might bear is to interview enough candidates to know what is available and the commensurate earnings expected. It may take quite a few interviews. The number of quality candidates is drastically lower than it was even two years ago. Our clients are often shocked that the salaries they are locked into won’t allow them to hire the quality or experience they wish for.
And just because you believe that your company is wonderful, it doesn’t mean: (1) everyone wants to go to work there, (2) they will accept any amount you offer, and (3) there aren’t four or five other firms like yours trying to hire the same candidates.
3. Having too many people involved in the interviewing process . . . and the wrong ones.
More than a number of studies have shown that hiring is just as successful when one person, the one with the “pain” (i.e., the direct manager), is the only person involved in the hiring process as opposed to more than one. In fact, other studies have shown that once the number of people in the interviewing and hiring process exceeds three, the probability of a bad hire is greater. The reason so many people are usually involved in the interviewing and hiring process is that people, naturally, want to spread the risk. So if it turns out to be a poor hire, people can justify their decision with “Well, you interviewed him too!” Few people have the courage to interview and hire alone and take the responsibility one way or the other, even though better hiring decisions would probably be made.
. . . and the wrong ones. Relying on people to screen, interview, or have a say in the hiring who have no personal, working benefit from the potential new hire’s performance (i.e., their position is in jeopardy if a poor hire is made) is a big mistake. Most managers will claim that hiring good people is the second or third most important function they have, right behind making a profit. We can never figure out why, if this is so, hiring authorities will delegate screening or interviewing of candidates to people, although wonderful people, who have no direct experience, knowledge, or “skin” in the position to be filled. “But I don’t have time to look at résumés and interview all those people,” is what we hear. Well, if hiring is one of a manager’s most important functions, he or she should take the time and make the effort to do the whole job from start to finish. How can they afford not to?
4. Process takes too long.
The average manager thinks that it takes about 30 days to fill a vacant position. Try the truth: between 90 and 120! Why? Because folks drag things out that should be simple – not easy, but simple. When the hiring process takes too long, good candidates are lost to more decisive companies, managers look inept at hiring, and it gets harder and harder to fill the vacancy. Managers, again, don’t give this the priority status needed – shown by action, not lip service. Time kills! The “shelf life” of quality candidates is shorter and shorter.
5. Poor interviewing techniques.
If hiring authorities would simply write out a simple (or complicated) list of questions and ask every candidate the same questions, record the answers, and compare the responses – quickly – hiring decisions would be easy to make.
“Tell me about yourself” is the first question down the wrong road. Most employers start with that, ask random questions to “get to know the candidate,” make notes on the résumés, and then three weeks later try to compare the candidates. They often spend hours with candidates and don’t remember the differences between them.
A structured, disciplined interview technique that is applied to every candidate in exactly the same manner is the only real way to compare candidates. It is so simple and yet so seldom practiced. (We have samples of structured interviews for the asking.)
6. Interviewing or not interviewing a candidate on the basis of a resume!
Forty percent of hiring a person is based on personality and chemistry! Then why do people rely on resumes instead of interviews? Because they don’t know how to use a resume.
I can’t tell you how many phenomenal candidates get eliminated because of a resume and how many poor performers get interviewed because of a well-written resume. “But I can’t interview every resume I get!” OK, right. But if a candidate even looks like a possibility of being a good one, at least pick up the phone and spend 15 or 20 minutes with him or her. Or, better yet, spend 30 minutes face to face with them. Get a quick take on who they are and what they can do. Do this with a number of candidates. You can then thoroughly interview the ones that are the best for your situation. This method is quick and efficient, but it takes discipline – no more than 30 minutes on the first one!
Hiring authorities and screeners put way too much emphasis on what is on a resume. They try to judge the total quality of a candidate by a resume. A resume is a “go by.” It should simply define a candidate as a “possibility”- and a broad possibility at that. The interviews have to be the qualifiers.
People who “qualify” a candidate and decide how he or she is going to perform should read Tony Romo’s resume a nobody; or Kurt Warner’s – a bagger at a grocery store; or Abe Lincoln’s – many failures. Don’t rely on resumes!
7. Not interviewing enough candidates – or interviewing way too many.
Most hiring managers err on the “too few” end of the spectrum. “I want to talk to the three best candidates!” “I don’t have time to talk to everybody!” No one person other than a hiring authority can tell who is “best.” Three or four is usually too few. The “bell curve” for most professional hires is about 9 or 10 candidates. This, of course, depends on the level of job and the availability of certain types of candidates. The key is to know what kind of availability there is in the marketplace for the kind of person being sought. Our banking division, for instance, may be lucky to find three or four qualified VPs at any one time. A mid-level sales position may require 10 or 12 candidates. Even recruiting a number of quality candidates for administrative positions, which traditionally would bear many quality candidates, isn’t as easy to do in this market.
The key is to interview a range of quality candidates and know what is available. If you want to wait for superman or superwoman, I guess it’s OK. It just depends on how badly you need to hire someone. Just be sure you know, firsthand, the quality of candidates on the market. The only way to do that is to do your own interviewing of the numbers necessary and available.
The other end of the spectrum is the hiring authority who wants to interview forever, thinking unrealistically that the quality of candidates will get better the more that are interviewed and the longer it takes. All too often, we hear from hiring authorities, “We have interviewed 20, 25, or 30 candidates.” There is something wrong here. They exhaust themselves in a “process,” forgetting the result, and then complain about it. It doesn’t get a good employee. They confuse activity with productivity.
Interview the number of candidates necessary. Don’t make the mistake on either end of the spectrum.
8. Not communicating with candidates after interviews and not giving honest feedback.
For some reason, hiring authorities don’t seem to mind being rude – even to candidates they are interested in hiring. Everyone is busy. The truth is that, to a candidate looking for a job, whether presently employed or not, finding a job is a very high priority. To a hiring authority, in spite of the lip service about how important hiring is, it is simply one of their functions. Hiring is a risk. Most employers don’t really like doing it. So the process often gets postponed, sloppy, and rather unprofessional.
As the market tightens, quality candidates will have many suitors. A good candidate will simply lose interest in a possibly good opportunity if they are treated rudely. We have had many candidates elect to pursue opportunities simply because they were treated with respect and courtesy.
Also, if the candidate isn’t going to be considered, he or she should be told as soon as possible. We are amazed at the number of hiring authorities who won’t return a candidate’s call, or multiple calls, just to say that they have found a more suitable candidate. We never know when that kind of lack of courtesy will come back to us. Years ago, I had a candidate who was rudely ignored by a hiring authority. A few years later, the roles were reversed. The candidate was now a hiring authority, and when I tried to get him to see my candidate, the hiring authority of a few years ago, my client laughed and said no with vengeful glee. He remembered how he had been treated. What goes around often comes around.
9. Not selling the job and the company.
Although this isn’t the biggest mistake hiring authorities make, it is certainly the most prevalent one. We can never figure out why, in trying to find the best talent available, hiring authorities act as if they are doing someone a favor by granting them the privilege of an interview. They act as though they have the only job on the planet, and candidates are begging to work there. Wrong! Good candidates will have many choices. The days of the early 2000s, when there were endless numbers of candidates, are gone. The company and the hiring authorities that sell their job the best will hire the best talent. It is a candidate-driven market. We can also forget lowball offers, poor benefits, or a “take it or leave it” attitude when making an offer.
10. Not having “backup” candidates.
This means continuing to interview even though a great candidate may have been found. In fact, we recommend having three great candidates in the queue.
As happens too often, a hiring authority zeroes in on one candidate, and as the interviewing process drags on (see #4), the hiring authority quits interviewing because it is a pain. They get to the end of the process, make an offer, and it isn’t accepted. The frustration of having to start all over is astounding. So the solution is to keep interviewing until someone is hired – and has started the job. We simply expect that a good candidate is going to get multiple offers.
10 (a) Not firing a new hire when the hiring is obviously a mistake.
This is a tough mistake to make. Everyone wants to see a new employee make it. But too often, cutting new hires too much slack because they are new is a mistake. The numbers of failed new hires we have seen that were let go or quit six or seven months after their hiring, with the hiring authority complaining, “I saw it in the first week!” would make us all cry. It becomes disruptive to the business, it destroys the chemistry of the employees working with the new hire, and worst of all, everyone can detect it, but the hiring authority chooses to overlook it. Respect for the hiring authority diminishes, and eventually the new employee leaves or is fired.
The solution that better hiring authorities adopt is to keep new employees in line in the very beginning, even “over manage” a bit. If disregard for company policies, or poor work habits, like showing up late, missing work, having numerous “personal” problems, emerge in the first few weeks of employment, it isn’t going to get any better. Besides, the “honeymoon” isn’t even over.
There is a big difference between “rookie” mistakes and poor work habits, low integrity, bad manners, or serious personal problems that impinge on work. Even the most rigorous interviewing process and extensive reference, background, and credit checking can’t prevent this from happening.
One of the most successful hiring authorities we worked with years ago had a great philosophy. He was the most successful general manager of a nationwide insurance company. And he was that for 15 years in a row. He managed 110 people, directly and indirectly. He told me one time that he wasn’t successful because he hired better people than the other GMs around the country. The difference was that he fired people “when he first got the inkling.” He simply didn’t waste his time on people he knew weren’t going to make it.
The sense of when to fire a new employee is personal. Good managers know when to do it. Hire carefully, but fire quickly! If a bad hire is made, eliminate it quickly. The hiring authority will look like a true manager, and everyone is better off.
Tony Beshara is a legendary big biller and heavy hitter. He has been a major player in the search and placement business since 1973 and is the owner of Babich & Associates, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. He authored “The Job Search Solution” and has appeared on the Dr. Phil show several times. His new book, just released, is “Acing the Interview.” It’s chock-full of information for the job seeker, and I give it a two thumbs up for everyone in our business as well. Over 450 questions (and the optimum answers) are included. Available at your local bookstore or through Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com, and other Internet book-selling sites at an amazingly inexpensive price.
Since 1973, Tony Beshara has placed more than 7,000 people on a one-on-one basis, in more than 100 different job categories. His candidates have accepted positions earning minimum wage and salaries up to more than a million dollars a year. Tony has directly worked with more than 24,000 hiring authorities, at 21,000 different hiring organizations. The system he has developed has helped more than 100,000 people find jobs. Tony‘s first book, The Job Search Solution, was one of the top ten best sellers in 2005 in its category and its success led to the creation of TheJobSearchSolution.com, a web-based training program believed to be the first of its kind for people going through the job search process. His second book, Acing the Interview, was released in January of ‘08 and has received very positive reviews from critics.
在《企業招聘常犯的十種錯誤》(Top 10 Mistakes Employers Make When Recruiting and Hiring)一文中,作者──Babich & Associates公司總裁Tony Beshara從該公司成立近六十年來經歷的無數次招聘過程,看到當今企業以傳統智慧招募新人時面臨的種種挑戰,許多在高科技企業招聘過程中常犯的錯誤甚至反過來影響了企業原有的正常運作。除了本刊在上週重點介紹的「大忌」以外,Tony Beshara還提到了企業在招聘過程中常見的幾種錯誤:
回覆刪除‧對於要找什麼樣的人沒有明確的想法。
企業中的人力資源管理單位未能具體掌握招募的對象將負責什麼業務,必須具備什麼技術與能力。他們常把工作年資與工作能力混為一談,例如條件載明「需具備8到10年工作經驗」──難道這表示擁有6年工作經驗的人就沒法勝任這項工作嗎?如果能力更高十倍的理想人選只有一年的工作經驗呢?他們還是必須受到工作年資的限制嗎?年資與工作能力究竟熟輕熟重?
企業雇主最好先明確地定義出希望實現的職務功能,才能找到真正可用的人才。這意謂著理想的人選除了以前有經驗的老手以外,也可能是具有潛力可勝任的新人。亟需新員工的協助以及管理新員工的主管必須提出明確的求才的目標以及具體的需求條件。
然而,如果列出一大堆的條件清單,希望用超低的薪資待遇找到具有像超人般特質的人選,這種不切實際的想法將嚴重妨礙企業尋找人才。戶過來說,像是「良好的書寫與口語溝通技巧」這樣籠統模糊的描述也沒什麼幫助。
‧欠缺有效的面談技巧。
如果人力資源單位僅列出一些簡單(或複雜)的問題清單,要求每位求職者都回答相同的問題、再記錄並比較應試者的回應,那麼很快地就能做出明確的判斷。
「請談談你自己」,這樣一開始就問錯了。但大部份的雇主都會選擇先這樣開始,隨機問一些能認識求職者的問題,簡單地在履歷表上作記錄後,等過了三週再一起比較所有的求職者。但事實是,他們花了好幾個小時和幾位人選談過後,通常也不記得這幾位求職者之間有何不同。
針對每一位應試者都採用完全相同的一種有結構、有條理的面談技巧,是唯一真正能夠比較出求職者差異的方法。這種方法十分簡單,但卻很少人採用。
‧進行面談的人選不足或太多。
大多數的招聘經理人都錯在「太少」那一端。「我只想跟最好的三名人選面談!」、「我沒有時間跟每個人面談!」事實上,除了招聘經理人以外,沒有人能決定誰是「最好的」。只面試了3或4個人畢竟太少,最專業的招募過程大約要面談9-10人。當然,這還取決於職務層級以及人力市場上某種類型人選的多寡。關鍵在於掌握人力市場上究竟有多少這樣的人才類型備選。例如,我們公司的銀行部門,運氣好的話一次也只能找到三、四位符合資歷的副總裁人選。此外,中階銷售人員的職缺可能必須面談到10-12位的人選。但就算是招募傳統上有很多適合人選的行政職缺時,在市場上也不見得會很容易找到夠多的人來面談。
關鍵是要面談一些合乎資格需求的人選,而且瞭解人力市場上有什麼樣的人可用。如果一直想等待超人出現也沒有關係,這都取決於你有多麼急需人手。但無論如何都必須清楚地掌握人力市場上合適人選的第一手資料。要實現這一點,那就必須自己去面試一定數量的人選。
這個挑戰的另一個極端是招募經理人一直毫無止境地進行面談,不切實際地認為面談越多以及所花的時間越長,所能找到的理想人選就更優越。常常很多時候,我們聽到人資單位說:「我們已經面談20、25或30位求職者了。」這真的不太對。他們過於強調「過程」而把自己搞得筋疲力盡,忽略了所要取得的結果,然後才在那裡發牢騷。這種混淆行動力與生產力的作法並無助於找到理想人選。
面談一定人數的求職者是必要的,但太過與不及都不好。
‧面談後不回應或未據實以告。
不知道為什麼,企業的人力資源單位似乎不太在乎招聘過程應有的禮節-即使是對於他們感興趣且打算錄用的人選。每個人都很忙碌,但事實上,對於正在找工作的人來說,儘快找到工作總是最重要的事。對於人資單位而言,雖然口頭上常說招募有重要,但畢竟也只是他們的工作項目之一罷了。此外,招募新員工常有風險,除非有迫切需要,否則大部份的雇主並非真的很想找人。所以,招募過程常常受到拖延、推諉,甚至變得不夠專業。
當人力市場吃緊時,條件好的候選人將成為多家廠商爭取的目標但。但當感受到無禮對待時,就算是理想人選也會放棄好的工作機會。我就看到許多人才選擇爭取某些工作機會的原因只是由於他們感受到公司的尊重與禮貌回應。
此外,如果不打算錄用某位面試過的人選時,企業也應該儘快地通知他們。我們十分驚訝地發現,有太多的人事單位不曾回覆求職者的電話,或未能通知對方公司已經找到更合適的人選了。誰也不知道這種無禮的事何時會發生在我們自己身上。幾年前,我們有一位求職者曾遭到某家企業人事單位無情的冷落。十年風水輪流轉。這位求職者後來成為某家企業的招募主管,而當我試著請他面談我所推薦的人選──剛好是幾年前冷落他的那位人事主管,他夾雜復仇般的快感,笑著拒絕了。他一直都記得自己曾經受到什麼樣的對待。
‧未能善加推銷自己的公司以及職缺。
雖然這並不是人力資源單位所犯的最大的錯誤,但卻是最常見的。我實在不明白為什麼企業在試著找到最優秀的人才時,招聘人員們總是採取高姿態──只是為求職者安排一場面試就好像是施捨人莫大的恩惠似的。他們似乎自認為所提供的是地球上唯一的工作機會,而求職者都乞求能在這裡工作一樣。大錯特錯!理想的人選通常有好幾個選擇。2000年時那種處都是求職者的時代已經過去了。能夠最有效率把公司的這份職缺推銷出去的公司或人資單位才能找到最優的人才,才是在此招募過程中的最大贏家。在這個以求職者為導向的人力市場,企業在提供工作機會或尋找英才時,必須拋棄傳統「希望待遇越越低越好」、「要不要做隨便你」的高傲態度。
‧未能儲備可用的人選
即使在找到不錯的人選後,人力資源單位仍必須持續進行面談。事實上,我們建議企業可同時儲備三位可備用的理想人選。
企業的人力資源單位一旦鎖定某位人選後,往往就不再面談了。為了避免麻煩,他們很快地結束整個招募程序,並且開出工作條件給理想人選,但最後也常常面臨不被接受的窘境。整個人才招募過程又必須再重新經歷一次,實在很令人挫折。因此,最佳的解決之道是持續地進行面談,直到企業錄取某位新員工,而且真的開始工作以後。因為,優秀的人才通常也會被多家公司錄用。
附帶一提的是,如果所錄用的人明顯不適任卻仍繼續聘用,這也是不對的。每個人都希望新員工能儘快進入狀況。但常見的情況是,解雇新員工時常常過於拖泥帶水。我看過好幾次失敗的例子是新員工在工作六、七個月後被解雇,而人力資源單位還抱怨說:「從他來上班的第一週我就發現問題了!」這真是讓我們哭笑不得。
這種情形不但會影響到整個公司的正常運作,甚至破壞公司員工與新人一起工作的氣氛,最糟糕的還是公司中每個人都感受到問題,而人力資源單位卻選擇視而不見。但終究,不適任的新員工還是不得不離職或被解雇。
人力資源單位可採用的最佳方案是一開始就保持與新員工之間的工作接觸,甚至是「有一點過度干預」也無妨。如果新人在上班第一週就無視於公司的政策或工作習慣不好,例如總是遲到或忽略某些工作等等出現太多的「個人問題」,那以後的情況應該也好不了多少。
值得注意的是,對於「菜鳥」犯錯,以及新人的工作習慣不好、不可靠、態度差或具有可能影響工作的嚴重個人問題,這兩種情況之間有著很大的區別。即使是最嚴格的面試過程和具有強力的推薦、背景與信用檢查,都無法避免這種情況發生。
這麼多年來,我看過最成功的招募經理人是具有一個很棒的哲理。他曾經是一家保險公司最成功的總經理,直接或間接負責管理110個人員。他曾經告訴我,他之所以成功的原因並不在於他錄用的人比公司其它總經理找到的人更好,而是他一察覺新人不適任時隨即解雇。他就是不想把時間浪費在明顯看得出來並不適任的人身上。
什麼時候該解雇新人這種感受是很主觀的。但優秀的經理人員總會知道時候到了。謹慎招聘以遴選新人,但決定解雇時則要堅定迅速!如果所用非人,總得儘快解決問題,才能維持整個企業的正常運作。
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回覆刪除