You can’t afford to hire someone who can’t do the job, do it with
minimal direction, or do it quickly. Fortunately, there are techniques
that you can use to ensure that the candidate you select can do the job.
We will examine four techniques here — demonstrations, simulations, problem
solving, and testing — and introduce a powerful interviewing technique — High
Performance Interviewing — that we will cover in more detail in the next issue
of Performance News.
Demonstrations
Ideally,
the best way to see if a candidate is able to do the job is to have them
actually do the job. To have them, in other words, demonstrate their
ability to do the work. Sales representatives can sell something;
software engineers can code something; machine operators can operate a machine;
secretaries can answer phones or type a memo; etc.
Simulation
Sometimes
demonstrations are not possible or appropriate. The next best thing to a
demonstration is a simulation. A simulation is like a demonstration
except that the situation is not real. In sales or customer service, for
example, you can role play an angry customer and have the candidate respond to
your anger. Another example of a simulation is having a telesales
representative call you (the “customer”) to sell you something. Or, if
you’re interviewing for a training position, you could have the candidate teach
you something.
Problem
Solving
Sometimes
demonstrations and simulations are not feasible. Then problem solving
might provide you with confidence in the person’s ability. Problem
solving is a technique many interviewers use to see how adept the candidate is
in addressing real or hypothetical problems and challenges. It is one
step removed from simulation because in problem solving the candidate describes
what s/he would do rather than simulating what s/he would do. A
cautionary note: problem solving by itself may only indicate what a person SAYS
s/he will do in a given situation, not how they actually will or did
behave. Still, problem solving is a good way to check a critical skill.
Test
Tests
are also sometimes helpful as part of the hiring process. Psychological
tests provide a way for some companies to identify key characteristics in an
individual. Other ways of testing include asking specific knowledge
questions such as “What commands might you use to initiate a subroutine?” or
“What are the advantages and disadvantages of common network protocols?”
Interview
However,
sometimes demonstrations, simulations, problem solving, or testing might not be
feasible; at the very least they -- by themselves -- are inadequate.
Interviewing is required. Effective interviewing requires that you have sharp
probing and listening skills to get the candidate to describe or explain
relevant experiences from which you can draw highly predictive
information. We call this type of interviewing High Performance
Interviewing.
Can
we maximize the traditional method of hiring candidates — the interview — to
hire more effectively? The answer is, “YES!”
Many
interviews result in a mutual exchange of meaningless information and a “gut
feeling.” The process we call High Performance Interviewing (HPI) helps
you gather meaningful, predictive information and substantiates your “gut
feeling.”
HPI is based on the premise that past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior. HPI is designed to extract highly predictive, accurate target data from candidates. Target data is:
•
Behavioral: The data must be about what the candidate did, said, thought, or
felt. We do not consider what the person “was responsible for” as target
data since it doesn’t tell what the person actually did. The data must be
about the candidate. We do not consider “we” data target data since we
don’t know what the candidate did.
•
Volunteered by the candidate: Target data comes from the candidate’s memory,
not the interviewer’s suggestions or prompting.
•
About a specific past situation: Focused on what actually happened, not on what
might have happened, or what generally happens. Having the candidate
state what they would do in specific scenarios may point out problem solving
and quick thinking but may not predict what the person actually has done in
similar situations. Only data based on past situations is considered
target data.
Step
1: General Opening Statement or Question
Begin
gathering target data with general opening questions or statements. The purpose
of this step is to get the candidate to talk about what we want them to talk
about. Here are examples of general openings. (The phrases in
parentheses are examples of specific skills I might be looking for in a
candidate.):
•
“I’m looking for (examples of when you managed multiple priorities).”
•
“I’d like to hear more about (your experiences in delegating).”
•
“I’d like to find out how (you respond to autonomy and little direction).”
•
“Can you think of a time when (you had a difficult deadline to meet)?”
•
“Do you recall an instance where (you were aware that another member of the
team was not pulling his or her own weight)?”
•
“Is there an example of (a challenge you faced in coding a new module)?”
Step
2: Get Deeper
The
next step in gathering target data is to get deeper in those areas important to
the job. Questions that help you get deeper include:
•
“How did it start?”
•
“What were the key points in the situation?”
•
“What were the results?”
•
“What happened first/then/next?”
•
“What did you do/say/feel/think?”
•
“How did you prepare/follow-up?”
•
“What do you believe was the most important event/decision/activity during that
time?”
Here
are several guidelines for getting deeper:
•
Ask what the candidate did, said, felt, thought.
•
Separate the candidate’s actions from others’ actions.
•
Ask “who”, “what”, “when”, “where”, and “how”.
What
is your role throughout this questioning? Take notes to help you guide
the conversation. Listen. Ask for clarity when necessary.
Remember, we cannot assess a candidate’s qualifications if WE do all the
talking!
What
You Don’t Do
It
is important that you as interviewer don’t:
•
Ask leading questions: Leading questions give you exactly what you want
to hear. And they typically result in inaccurate data.
•
Accept generalizations: Generalizations don’t tell you what the candidate
did. Target data must be specific.
•
Accept collectivisms: Collectivisms are the use of we, the group, my team,
etc. They don’t tell us what this individual -- the candidate --
did. Again, target data must be specific.
•
Assess the candidate before hearing all: Prejudging a candidate before
the data is heard is a serious mistake. The brain can easily “find” data
to support its prejudgment. Therefore, stick to the script; write down
what you hear as the interviewer. The time for assessment comes later.
How
To Get Back On Track
Because
HPI is a dialogue, it is sometimes easy for the candidate to digress. It
is your responsibility as interviewer to pull the candidate’s discussion into
more relevant and appropriate direction. Here are some pithy phrases that
will rein in or focus the digresser:
•
“If I was there, what would I see?”
•
“You said there were meetings. Could you tell me about one?”
•
“Can you give me the details?”
•
“Let’s backtrack a bit.”
•
“Who do you mean by ‘we’?”
When
you’ve gathered an appropriate amount of data for a particular skill, repeat
the HPI technique until you are satisfied with the results. Then close
the interview.

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