Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header about About Home Profiles articles Tools forums inspirational quotes About facebook Twitter YouTube Blog
Share for a Cause











Pioneers, Migrants and Sellers – How Hiring Managers keep getting it wrong

Guest post by: Jeff Ogden

Article Overview: “He just didn’t work out.” Hardly a day goes by that I don’t hear about a company’s hiring mistake. “He had great experience and industry knowledge, but he just didn’t work out.” Or at a social media company in NYC, a VP departs after just 90 days. Another one bites the dust. I hear this over and over and over.

Free Download - Marketing Made Simple TV is looking for a few good sponsors By Jeff Ogden
Name: Email:

Pioneers, Migrants and Sellers – How Hiring Managers keep getting it wrong

Why do companies continually keep making hiring mistakes? Maybe they are looking for the wrong things.

Why is this happening? Why do companies continually make hiring blunders repeatedly? Despite resumes, face to face interviews, reference checks, and credit scores. Why does such due diligence keep failing? MY CONCLUSION: THEY'RE LOOKING FOR THE WRONG THINGS.

To analyze the reasons why, let's examine a concept from Blue Ocean Strategy of Pioneers, Migrants and Settlers.

Before we examine those three personality types, it is useful to first explain what Blue Oceans means.

Blue Oceans are uncontested market space, while Red Oceans are hotly contested spaces. For instance, in the early car industry, cars were custom-built and very expensive. To compete in a Red Ocean, you custom build a car and maybe try to cut the price a bit. But Henry Ford used a different "Blue Ocean" approach. Using an assembly line, he cut the manufacturing time from four days to four hours and used standard parts. Henry Ford famously said "If I asked my customers what they wanted, they would have said a faster horse." Mr. Ford saw his competition as horses, not cars.

Red Ocean companies compete in a zero sum game - to grow, you take market share from your competitor. Blue Ocean companies focus on the demand size, competing on value to win non-customers. Henry Ford went after the horse and buggy crowd, not the early adopters.

Most companies live in Red Oceans but a handful of successful companies find and compete in Blue Oceans.

Another good example of Blue Ocean strategy is Cirque du Soleil. Think of the standard view of a circus. 3 rings, animals, clowns, etc. If you do a new circus, do you have better animals or clowns, and target children - to take business from Ringling Brothers/Barnum and Bailey?

Cirque due Soleil used a different approach. Rather than competing against circuses, they competed against other entertainment options, like Broadway shows, concerts and fine restaurants.

The book says they "very successfully entered a structurally unattractive circus industry. It was able to reinvent the industry and created a new market space by challenging the conventional assumptions about how to compete. It value innovated by shifting the buyer group from children (end-users of the traditional circus) to adults (purchasers of the traditional circus), drawing upon the distinctive strengths of other alternative industries, such as the theater, Broadway shows and the opera, to offer a totally new set of utilities to more mature and higher spending customers."

Now that we know what Blue and Red Oceans mean, we can go back to the personality types of Pioneers, Migrants and Settlers.

The authors point out that the skills needed to think outside the box belong to Pioneers. Only innovative risk takers can create the dramatic changes needed to find Blue Oceans. Migrants are less desirable, but if properly coached, they can become Pioneers. The least desirable by far is Settlers. - those risk adverse task-completers. The authors of the book advise avoiding Settlers. Their recommendation? Hire Pioneers.

Unfortunately, our entire hiring approach is designed to weed out Pioneers and hire Settlers. Case in point, one vendor of backup software insisted all candidates for a senior marketing position have experience in backup software. Not software. Not innovation. Not results.

Who fits? A Settler who has worked for the same backup software company for years and years. Do they bring fresh ideas and innovative insights? Certainly not.

Companies inability to find and recruit Pioneers is the main reason for repeated failures.

The problem is two-fold:

  • Hiring managers don't know how to find Pioneers in a pile of resumes
  • Hiring managers don't know the right questions to ask in the interview
  • Here a few tips to help hiring managers identify Pioneers:
Pioneers are risk takers. They start companies and often fail, but keep getting back up. Look for signs of self starting and resiliency in resumes.

Pioneers are action oriented. They learn new things continually. They are voracious book readers. Ask about things they have learns and what books they read.

Pioneers are fearless. They take on any challenge. Look for signs this person took chances and assumed responsibility.

Keep those tips in mind for the next job your company posts.

What do you think? Do you see Pioneers, Migrants and Settlers? Are companies struggling to identify personality types? We love comments and reTweets too.

Jeff Ogden is President of Find New Customers "Demand Generation Made Simple" Find New Customers helps companies rapidly grow revenue by transforming how they attract, engage and win new customers. Contact Find New Customers by calling (516) 495-9350 or send an email to sales at findnewcustomers.com.

Related Articles
  A Reliable Predictor of Job Performance
  It is All About the People
  Create a Resume That Rises To the Top
  Expand Your Precious Time with Sales Meetings
  Africans on TIME’s 100 most influential people list
  Assembly a Successful Sales Team
  1.6 International migration and remittances: Economic Report on Africa 2007
  What are you hiring for?
  Guerrilla Pioneering
  The economic implications of global remittances for SMEs
  Is there a "C" in "See"?
  Interviews or interrogations?
  Make it About THEM: Sales Meetings That Engage
  The Top Ten Hiring Mistakes
  Leadership: These Seven Challenges Help Managers Succeed
  3 Powerful Excuses for Maintaining Mediocrity in Your Sales Hiring
  Three Interviewing Mistakes - And How To Avoid Them
  3 Powerful Excuses for Maintaining Mediocrity in Your Sales Hiring Process
  Do You Need a Business Broker to Sell Your Business?
  The “References Checks Are A Waste Of Time” Myth:

Home > Marketing > Jeff Ogden > Pioneers Migrants and Sellers How Hiring Managers keep getting it wrong >
Article Tags: b2b demand generation, b2b lead generation, btob demand generation, btob lead generation, demand gen, demand generation, demand generation companies, demand generation company, find new customers, lead gen, lead generation, lead generation companies, lead generation company, sales lead generation

About the Author: Jeff Ogden
RSS for Jeff's articles - Visit Jeff's website

President of the B2B lead generation company Find New Customers. Also the host of the B2B marketing show, Mad Marketing TV. We help companies rapidly grow revenue by transforming the ways they attract, engage and win new customers.

With 8 out of 10 companies saying the lack of quality sales leads is their biggest problem, they need help. SiriusDecisions also found that fewer than 1 out of 10 companies that implement lead management software went beyond the basics. They need help.

We help companies implement world class lead generation programs. Companies need quality sales leads, so they need sales lead generation programs including social media marketing. They need to implement lead nurturing programs. We are considered one of the best leads generation companies in business today.

Click here to visit Jeff's website
Dashed Line

More from Jeff Ogden
How to Find New Customers
7 Keys to Lead Nurturing
7 Keys to B2B Marketing Succes
Definitive Guide Making Quota


Related Forum Posts
Re: looking for experienced affiliate feedback Re: looking for experienced affiliate feedback - Hi Nancy, Hiring an experienced firm to market and sell your products is certainly a viable option. It all depends on whether you want to spend more of your time or money. Hiring a firm is going to cost a good bit I imagine. On the flip side, to do most of the work yourself and attract affiliates to sell your products for you will require much less money but a lot more time and effort. Do you have a budget to work within? Or perhaps maybe you have a loan to get things moving?
Re: Search Engine Optimization Re: Search Engine Optimization - Hi Thomas, So what would you recommend? Hiring an SEO expert or simply trying your hand at doing it yourself?
Re: When is it not the manager's fault? Re: When is it not the manager's fault? - [quote="dsoteros":eqwt1hwk] Must be a problem with the interview system as likely many of the other candidates could have been successful at this position. Were references called? Did you use behavioral questioning methods? Were processes clearly documented? Why did she want this job?[/quote:eqwt1hwk] All the right things were done - but she simply wasn't the same person once she started the job. Checked references, did behavioral questions and she did well, she had the most extensive training I've ever been involved with, she could do something one day and not the next or in the morning but not the afternoon. Strangest hire I've had in 20 years of hiring and training. She wanted to better her position in life and to improve her overall situation - being an assistant to a doctor seemed more appealing to her than a part time clerk in a convenience store. Hiring and training the wrong people is a huge waste of time, effort and money - that's why I include extensive hiring and training instruction in each of my management books. Not to mention the negative things it does to employee and owner morale. Shri
Re: Hello from Missouri Re: Hello from Missouri - [quote="MichaelH":gxmrz8rk] If anyone in those markets in a managerial or owner capacity would like to offer some simple numbers help I would be greatly appreciative. To be honest, I've actually posted an ad on my local Craigslist for help, and offer $5 PayPal to anyone willing to help... haven't had any results yet! [/quote:gxmrz8rk] Unfortunately, to get people to respond to anythign these days, you probably need to up the ante to at least $10. Managers to whom time is money aren't going to take even 5 minutes out of their day to answer questions and then just get $5 for it!
Re: Obama or Mcain will not change anything Re: Obama or Mcain will not change anything - I seriously hope I'm wrong, because I'm usually very positive about everything, but I have a BAD feeling that we're going to have to hit rock bottom before we can climb back to the top of this economical ladder. I think the US is blind to the fact that we are losing the war of economics. We owe so many other nations money (esp. China) that soon they will be able to take over everything and we won't have to worry about who WE want for president. We're posing PHYSICAL wars and not even realizing that we're getting stomped on MONETARILY. As I said, I hope I'm so wrong.......just got a strange feeling in me. Anyone else feeling it?


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



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

Work at home Opportunities for the Disabled

You Have A Website What Now

Four Reasons Why Entrepreneurs Should Blog

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.