Five Common Hiring
Mistakes
Small business owners struggle
everyday to find adequate time to address key business issues.
Not surprisingly when a hiring need arises, whether from growth
or turnover, a business owner’s time – or lack thereof – is a
major factor in the success or failure of the initiative.
Bad hires take a toll on an owner’s time and emotional energy,
the company’s overall productivity, and customer/supplier
relationships. It is better to invest adequate time in the
hiring process to ensure a good hire than to pay the painful
cost of a bad hire.
Increase your odds of a successful hire by avoiding the
following pitfalls:
1. Failure to Define the Position
If you don’t know what you
need, how are you going to find it? Identify key
responsibilities for the position and then build a required
skill set around these responsibilities. Don’t get bogged down
by a complete list of tasks
- Identify the top 4-5 job
responsibilities most essential to the position.
- Define a
behavioral style that best
fits the position.
- Set performance goals to
measure the employee’s success.
2. Failure to Write a Compelling Ad
Create a marketing message to target
your ideal candidate. Draft job ads which compel applicants to
respond. They must be able to envision themselves in the job.
Incorporate words reflecting the behavioral style or attributes
you are seeking. Write the ad from the perspective of “What’s in
it for them?”
Job ads which effectively answer the following questions
increase your chances of attracting top performers:
- What will I do?
- With whom will I work?
- What will I learn?
- What will I accomplish?
- What will I earn?
3. Failure to Create a
Corporate Career Site
One of your most effective
recruiting tools is your corporate career site. Just as
prospective customers evaluate your company with a visit to your
website, so do prospective employees. To attract top performers,
it is critical to promote your employer brand and your career
opportunities on your website.
Review your website and ask yourself the following questions:
- Do you have a “Careers”
button on the home page of your website?
- Does your “Careers”
button direct candidates to an information page that answers
the question, “Why would I want to work here?”
- Does your website provide
a listing of available job opportunities?
- Can a candidate view
specific details about each available job?
- Can candidates apply for
specific positions on your website?
4. Failure to Screen
Candidates Thoroughly
People like to work with people
they like or with people like themselves. Yet, hiring solely on
the “likeability” factor can be a serious mistake. Be sure the
people you hire match both the skills and behavioral profile you
have designed for the position. Candidates must not only be
“able” to perform the job, they must also be “willing” to do the
job.
Perform due diligence on each
promising candidate through pre-screening questionnaires, phone
interviews, and a multi-stage interview process. Once you finish
the interview process and identify a top candidate, it is highly
advisable to do the following before extending an offer:
- Check references.
- Run a background check.
- Conduct skills-based
testing.
- Perform behavioral
assessments.
5. Failure to treat Candidates Like
Customers
First impressions are important.
A relationship begins the first time an individual communicates
with your company as an applicant. If the hiring process is
performed well, a trusting relationship builds. If applicants
are treated poorly; they may assume employees are treated the
same way – and may share their assumptions with others.
- Be considerate – Respond
promptly to candidate inquiries about their status in the
hiring process.
- Be respectful – Don’t be
late, forget, or reschedule interviews.
- Conduct skills-based
testing.
- Be honest – Don’t
oversell the position responsibilities or the candidate’s
income potential.
In summary, improve your
hiring results by 1) defining the position, 2) promoting the job
opportunity, 3) creating a corporate career site, 4) performing
your due diligence, and 5) treating candidates like customers.
Ann Clifford owns
Indianapolis-based BrandoHR and Safari Solutions. Both are
companies committed to helping small to mid-size businesses hire
better and create a competitive advantage through people. She
can be reached at
clifford@brandohr.com.
To learn more about Safari
Solutions please visit
www.safarisolutions.com.