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Interviewing Tips: Choosing the Best Employees
Chris joined Molar Family Dental Center about four years ago. With a few years of business office experience and an associate degree, Chris was hired. She was enthusiastic, personable and showed a positive attitude toward work.
It didn't take long for everyone to pick up that Chris was also very bright -- except for the occasional mistake she makes that requires everyone to check up on her work. Problems began to surface when you asked her if she was sure her numbers were correct. She was insulted. "If you don't trust me anymore, just tell me," she'd fire off. "Don't insult me by beating around the bush."
Chris was almost a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. You never knew which person would show up for work on any given day.
It's the same for working with her customers. Put her in a situation with an unhappy or persistent customer and look out. She becomes impatient and blunt, even abrasive at times.
Sometimes luck is on your side. Just about 18 months ago, your hygienist announced she was moving out of the area and in your e-mail box arrives a resume from Barbara. You can hardly believe it. Twelve years of experience and raving reviews from her previous dentists. Her husband was relocated with his company and recently moved to your area. You call her right away, schedule an interview, check her references and make her an offer -- and she accepts.
Barbara meets all your production goals for hygiene but for "the best hygienist we've ever had" in her previous practice, she is certainly not setting the world on fire. She seems to be coasting and blames the assistants, the patients and the economy for open appointments and low treatment acceptance.
You have a slightly different opinion about the reasons for Barbara's performance. You feel she lacks enthusiasm, isn't making much effort to get more sales, and shows little initiative.
What changed from the time of the pre-job interview for Chris and Barbara to their post-hire performance?
Dictionaries define the word "interview" as "a formal meeting in person, especially one arranged for the assessment of the qualifications of an applicant." But unlike personality and ability tests, interviews rely on the interpretation of human beings. The interview is no more than a verbal test and as few as 1 in 14 job candidates hired by the interview are successful.
A successful interview depends on three factors: the questions asked, the answers given and the interviewer's personal bias. To become a skilled judge of future performance and minimize the potential for error, a hiring manager needs to know which questions to ask, how to assess the response and do this without bias or prejudice. No wonder the odds are on the candidate to get a job even if he or she isn't quite that qualified.
What other process in business today has such poor reliability and continues to be the tool of choice to screen and promote an organization's most valuable asset? It’s people. This reliance on the traditional interview creates two very expensive problems for employers: the cost of hiring the wrong employee and the hassles and expenses associated with terminating a wrong hire.
The problem with typical interviews is that they just don't have structure. Even discarding personal bias, most hiring managers make decisions based on education, work history and how well they connect with the candidate. They can at least quantify those factors.
When observing hiring managers during interviews, I consistently find that they ask leading questions in order to see if the candidate will provide the answers they want. If the candidates answer the way that they hoped, the manager accepts the response and then moves on to question two, three, four, and so on without probing further. The candidate who takes the bait the best gets the job.
But these "right" answers don't always predict actual job performance if the questions are not based on competence. Without probing questions, you don't know if the candidate really performed the task in the past or if they can just talk like they did. If they did, you don't know if they can repeat it again in the future.
Worse than that, many interviewers focus solely on getting to know the candidate. One dentist just recently confided to me before the interview that he didn't like to ask probing questions because "in his experience," that makes the candidate uncomfortable. He felt that his role as a hiring manager was to sell the candidate on the company. WRONG! An interviewer's first responsibility is to evaluate job fit and IF there is a fit, then sell the candidate.
He is not alone. As it turns out, the traditional interview may be nice for social gatherings and public interest stories, but it has almost no predictive ability in the hiring process. According to the Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology, the success rate for predicting actual job performance is a dismal 7 percent. The rate jumps to 38 percent when personality tests are included, 54 percent when situational interviewing is the assessment of choice, and a whopping 75 percent when a technique called job matching is used.
Two solutions then emerge to enhance an interviewer's predictive accuracy in assessing employee performance and fit for a job: situational interviewing and assessments.
Both techniques rest on job analysis, a structured process that involves asking both job-holders and their managers a very detailed list of job-specific and results-focused questions. The sole purpose of job analysis is to develop a list of critical job competencies. These competencies become the target list against which each applicant is measured. By assessing what candidates know (competency) and how well they can apply what they know (proficiency or competence), managers can increase the predictability of selection up to ten-fold. Any system that skips this process will be highly inaccurate.
Regardless of which interview technique or assessment is used, accuracy in selecting employees for the right job on the right team depends on job analysis, interviewer training and assessing applicant responses properly.
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