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Integrity Personnel,
Inc.
Our motto is
"Doing What Is Right In Hiring"
Part of that is to help our clients and contacts in
what you do best everyday,...recruit, hire, and retain top
professionals!
Additional Information:
- search candidates - post jobs - salary
comparisons - employer of record
Do you have
comments, questions regarding hiring, or topics you would like
us to address?
Contact Terri@IntegrityPersonnelInc.com
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A monthly online
publication designed to help employers recruit, recognize, reward
and retain their workforce.
Create More
Time to Hire the Right Candidates
(By Terri
Wilson)
It’s
no secret that we live in a candidate-driven market these days. Superstar
candidates are at a premium, and those companies that can find
a way to uncover them and hire them will be the ones that thrive
during the coming labor shortage. Although you can’t
create more candidates, there is one thing you can create—time.
Time that you can use to assess whether or not a candidate is
the right person, and time to hire candidates more quickly.
One way to
do that is to streamline your interview process. Wasting
time during the interview stage of your candidate search is the
easiest way to miss out on a great hire, somebody who might bring
incredible value to your company. There are six key techniques
for accomplishing this, which I’ve listed below:
- Re-evaluate
the job description after someone leaves. The
person who left that role brought their own talents with
them, and most likely that role “evolved” into
something different than what it was previously. Make
sure that the description is accurate and reflects the current
needs of the company in every way—not the company’s
needs prior to the previous employee.
- Circulate
copies of the job description so that everybody is on the
same page. If there are issues with the job
description, get those worked out before beginning
the search. Miscommunication is the surest way
to derail any process.
- Conduct
phone interviews to eliminate candidates. You
don’t want to waste your department’s time in
face-to-face interviews with candidates you could have eliminated
via phone interviews. In order to move the process
along more quickly, schedule phone interviews during early
morning, lunchtime, or early evening so that work schedules
do not have to be rearranged.
- Combine
steps of the interview process. Instruct candidates
to fill out an online application prior to the interview,
or e-mail the application so the candidates can fill it out
and bring it with them to the interview. If testing
is needed, have the candidates come in a few minutes early
instead of asking them to come back at a later date.
- Show
everyone involved the advantage of keeping the process moving. Candidates
now have multiple offers, and if your interview process bogs
down, you will lose top talent. Instead of saying that
you want to hire somebody “ASAP,” decide on a
firm date you need someone employed and work backwards. Make
sure to deal in specifics, not generalities.
- Become
more “results-oriented” or “ability-oriented” in
your job description. Utilize this approach
instead of asking for X-amount of years of experience. These
days, what a candidate did during their
years of experience is more telling than how many years they’ve
have.
There are two
more related aspects of the overall process that you should keep
in mind. First, be sure that everyone
in your organization is actively selling the company. They should
know how to differentiate your company, stress its benefits,
ensure its street reputation is a good one, and be able to recite
their 30-second “story” of what they like about
the company and why they stay.
Second,
arrange exit interviews with those employees who are leaving
the company. These interviews should be conducted by an
unbiased third party. By knowing why candidates are leaving,
you can correct any potential problems that may exist within
the organization and be able to position the company in its best
light.
Everybody knows
the saying, “He who hesitates is lost.” Well,
he (or she) who hesitates in this market can lose excellent candidates. There’s
another saying in our industry: “Things that drag get
dirty.” Sometimes it’s easier to get the process
rolling, but more difficult to bring that process to a close. Don’t
hesitate to streamline your interview process with the steps
outlined above. You’ll position yourself to hire
more of the talent you need to take your company to the next
level.
If you have
any questions about this topic, feel free to contact me.
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