Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header
Share for a Cause









Conducting Job Interviews Made Easy

Written by: Ingrid Cliff

Article Overview: When you are hiring a new employee you naturally want the best person for the role. In a candidate poor job market you need to realize that while you are conducting job interviews with the candidate, they are also interviewing you to see if they really want to work for you. You need to be on your game – to make sure you leave candidates with a great impression of your company. So, let’s start with the basics. Interviews are not an exact science. They are not meant to be. The best you can do is to try and remove as much of the emotion of the process as possible and balance it with logic.

Free Download - Small Business Tips To Ensure Your Business Survives Christmas By Ingrid Cliff
Name: Email:

Conducting Job Interviews Made Easy

When you are hiring a new employee you naturally want the best person for the role. In a candidate poor job market you need to realize that while you are conducting job interviews with the candidate, they are also interviewing you to see if they really want to work for you. You need to be on your game – to make sure you leave candidates with a great impression of your company.

So, let’s start with the basics. Interviews are not an exact science. They are not meant to be. The best you can do is to try and remove as much of the emotion of the process as possible and balance it with logic.

Interviews should be about helping candidates show their best side, it is not about tricking them, putting them under added stress and seeing how they “perform”. They are not seals; they are human beings complete with human feelings. Interviews are of themselves inherently stressful – so even in the most relaxed interview you are getting a person operating under stress.

Here are some tips to help you with your job interviews

Before the interview:

1) Make time in your diary for the interview. You need to show candidates the courtesy of being fully “present” at the interview. If you need to, hire additional staff to cover for you or close the shop for an hour.

2) Make sure there will be no interruptions. If you allow yourself to be interrupted during the interview you are giving candidates the message that when they work for you they are unimportant and will always be second best. Is that the message you really want to give?

3) Work out exactly what you are looking for. Of course you have a position description for the role written. If you don’t, you need to write one before the interviews so that candidates know exactly what the role will entail. Once you know precisely what they will be doing, work out what skills and experience are essential in order to be able to perform the role.

4) Work out the sort of person you need for your team. Fitting a person into a team is a real jigsaw. If you are a scattered sort of person, perhaps you need to look for someone organized to balance your gaps. It is easy to get carried away with someone who is a nice person, but if they don’t have the skills or the right personality for the team then they are the wrong person for this role.

5) Make sure you are not directly or indirectly discriminating. Do you really need a “bloke” for the role if it involves heavy work? Gender is not a good predictor of strength – some of the weediest people I have met have been blokes and the strongest people who can bench-press better than everyone in the gym are women.

6) Contact the candidates. Let them know who will be interviewing them, how long they can expect the interview to last, where to come and where they can park. By showing them courtesy as if they are your top client, you are sending a very strong message about what it will be like to work with you.

7) Somewhere to wait. Make sure there is somewhere nice to wait before the interview. Some candidates can arrive up to half an hour early, so be prepared.

8) Work out the questions you are going to ask. These questions should be directly linked back to the duties of the position. You need to ask each candidate the same basic set of questions so you can compare answers. Of course you can prompt for more information, but the basic questions should be the same. Also work out the sort of answers you would expect to see from a great candidate.

9) Check your questions actually give you the information you need. If you ask “can you use Microsoft Word” – you will get a Yes/No response. If you ask – “tell me how you would go about setting up a mail merge letter to my database” and you get a better idea of their skill level.

10) Consider giving candidates the core questions 15 minutes before they come in for interview. Remember – you want them to be the best they can be. In most jobs people don’t have to answer off the top of their heads all day every day. People have time to think. By allowing people the chance to see and think about the main questions before the interview, you allow introverted people the chance to shine. Interviews traditionally favour extroverted people, which means that you are missing out on at least half of the population.

11) Consider having more than one person in the interview. Different people see different things in candidates. It can help to balance out viewpoints.

During the interview:

1) Introduce yourself and take some time to build rapport before launching into questions.

2) Allow the candidate space to be nervous. Make sure they have a glass of water to drink to steady their nerves.

3) If conducting a phone interview, periodically make some noise when they are talking such as “aha” or “mmnn”. Phone interviews can be disconcerting as often all the candidate hears is silence. Consciously fill the background and you will get a better interview.

4) Check the referees are still current (you may want to ask the candidate what they think the referees will say about them – always enlightening).

5) Remember the no interruptions rule. Once you are interviewing allow no phone calls or people barging in. If someone does barge in, apologise first to the person you are interviewing. Tell the person who barged in that you are interviewing at present and will get back to them in half an hour.

6) Ask if they have any questions for you and be prepared for any curly question about you, your company, pay and conditions, development opportunities and promotional possibilities.

After the interview:

1) Check references of all candidates you are seriously considering.

2) Personally ring every candidate you interviewed to tell them they have been successful or unsuccessful. Give some basic feedback on how great they were at interview but the field was very competitive.

3) Follow it up with a short note thanking them for their time and interest in your company and wishing them well for future roles. It costs nothing for courtesy but builds a great image of you and your company.

When all is said and done, you need to balance logic with gut feel about the candidate. If your gut says no but they are a great candidate – check it out further with more questions or reference checks. Your gut usually has picked up something that you need to know more about, so trust its wisdom and dig a bit deeper.

Related Articles
  Employee Turnover - What is it costing you?
  Mistakes Most CEO's and Managers Make When Hiring Salespeople
  List Your Wants
  Yes You Do Need more Media Training
  Conducting Insightful Interviews

Home > Business-Coach > Ingrid Cliff > Conducting Job Interviews Made Easy
Article Tags: conducting job interviews, diary, emotion, exact science, game, human beings, human feelings, interruptions, jigs, logic, poor job, position description, seals, stress

About the Author: Ingrid Cliff
RSS for Ingrid's articles - Visit Ingrid's website

Ingrid Cliff is a Brisbane freelance writer and the Chief Word Wizard of Heart Harmony - her writing services studio that helps put your business into words. Ingrid writes a free weekly newsletter packed full of small business tips to help both you and your business grow www.heartharmony.com.au .

Click here to visit Ingrid's website
Dashed Line

More from Ingrid Cliff
Small Business Tips Energy Conservation Isnt Just For LightBulbs And Water
Motivating employees
Small Business Tips Why Keywords Are Critical For Your Website and Business
7 Reasons for Failed Employee Probations
Codes Of Conduct How To Make Them Worth More Than The Paper They Are Written On


Related Forum Posts
Re: e-Commerce and e-Payment providers Re: e-Commerce and e-Payment providers - When I came back to Japan in 1999 I sometimes used to ask my students if they would buy anything on the Internet and at that time most thought it was too risky. I'd encourage them to try by using well known sites such as Amazon.co.jp and also pointed out that using a credit card on a reputable site was safer than using it at a restaurant. I can't remember the last time I had that discussion or when the "tipping point" occurred in Japan. To answer your other question, I use Paypal for several reasons: 1. Brand familiarity 2. Easy to use 3. Free to withdraw 50,000yen+ to my Japanese bank account - a huge benefit (but maybe other systems also offer that...?) 4. Easy to cancel subscriptions On the down side, their transaction fees are quite costly, they are difficult to contact and when disputes arise you can sometimes lose even when you can prove via your tracking service that the disputed item was "delivered" to the customer's address!
Re: Domain name sugestion Re: Domain name sugestion - Hi Anelly, Support-Box.com sounds very good to me. Easy and catchy.
Re: HI EVERYONE Re: HI EVERYONE - HI All, I'm back too.. Was on a hiatus creating an online product. Made myself accountable for that by getting customers to pay for it first while I created it with them.
Delegating Delegating - Good info and interesting list. Easy to see how the authority or power is slowly passed to the person - the secret would be knowing WHEN to move to the next step. I like to avoid people who are stuck at the #1 level. Chris
Speed Networking anyone doing this? Speed Networking anyone doing this? - I ran a speed networking event in December and it was a phenomenal success. We had 38 attendees. Made lots of connections and had a great time. Has anyone else ran this kind of networking event? If so, what was your experience? .


Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article


Bottom Footer
Share for a Cause












Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

B2B PR – Planning for Success

When Living the Dream isn't enough!

What I Really Want Is...

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.