HireBetter Blog

Does Facebook really play a big role in a Hiring Manager Decision?

April 3rd, 2012 | by | guest post, social media

Apr
03

Does Facebook play a role in the decision making process of Hiring Managers today?  And should it?

According to an article written in 2010, 70% of recruiters and hiring managers had rejected an applicant because of something they’d seen on Facebook.   Things such as “inappropriate” comments, “unsuitable” photos and videos, and “criticism” of employers, co-worker or clients.

But what else can Facebook reveal about a potential candidate?  According to a recent study done by Northern Illinois University, Facebook can help reveal the Big Five personality traits – openness, extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism.  For example, people who have lots of pictures and discussion about travel on their Facebook profile indicates that they are open to new things. While someone who has a large number of friends on Facebook is indicative of an extrovert.

However, Don Kluemper, one of the study’s authors, says that companies really shouldn’t use Facebook to screen applicants until more research has been done.  He suggests that hiring managers continue to use personality tests which do a better job of predicting performance.

As mentioned in previous blogs, HireBetter uses behavioral interviews to provide a superior snapshot of a candidate’s personality.

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What is Topgrading®?

March 5th, 2012 | by | hirebetter, hiring, human resources, interviewing, topgrading

Mar
05

In our previous post, we talked about behavioral interviewing and how it is a superior way to predict how your job candidates will actually perform inside of your company than traditional interviewing.  This week, we’re going to introduce you to a specific type of interviewing that we use here at HireBetter: Topgrading®.

Topgrading® basics 

Topgrading® was created by Brad Smart back in the 1970s while he was working on his Ph.D. studies.  He decided that many companies’ inability to consistently hire top performers was unacceptable, so he began to develop what would become the Topgrading® methodology.

Topgrading® is a method for hiring and promoting top performers.  It is an objective, thorough, and tested way to determine which candidates are most likely to become A Players.  At the center of the methodology is the Topgrading® interview.

 

A Topgrading® interview

A Topgrading® interview will probably look different from most other interviews you’ve seen before.  It is intense.  Very intense.  Lasting four hours and relying only on facts about your interviewee’s past behaviors, this interview cuts through to the core of your candidate.  Candidates can’t really prepare for a Topgrading® interview, because it is specifically designed to strip them down and make it impossible for them to fabricate a false image of themselves.  It helps you collect facts and use those to make your decision.

These interviews are Comprehensive, In-depth, and Structured.  By following this structure closely, we objectively create a picture of each candidate’s personality, motivations, and probability of success.

 

Why we Topgrade

HireBetter uses Topgrading® because it works.  Its history of success goes back decades.   While working with Jack Welch at GE, Brad Smart helped them hire and promote employees who ended up being high performers ninety percent of the time!  We have been using Topgrading® with our clients for years, and we can deliver this same kind of success to your company.  Contact HireBetter to learn more.

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The Three Huge Hiring Mistakes You Didn’t Know You Make

October 21st, 2011 | by | hirebetter, hiring, human resources, job descriptions, recruiting, talent

Oct
21

Every company can improve their hiring in some way.  And given how important successful hiring is, it’s scary to think that two-thirds of companies continue to make bad hires.  Here are three key hiring mistakes many companies make when hiring a new employee.  Are you making any of them?

 

Mistake number one: You pass off hiring duties to the wrong people       

You wouldn’t let an office manager design a factory or a chemist balance your budget.  You leave those jobs up to the experts.  But when it comes to hiring, many companies let just about anyone take charge of a hiring task. Building a great workforce is too important to leave in untrained hands, so make sure that only skilled talent experts run your search.

 

Mistake number two: You improperly define roles

The second big mistake is just as dangerous.  Maybe you are hiring good people, but the job just doesn’t match up with their skillset.  Or you’re settling because you can’t imagine what an ideal candidate even looks like.  If you can’t properly define a role and come up with an actionable plan to fill it, you’re doomed from the start.

 

Mistake number three:  You insufficiently assess the person you hire

When you make a hire, you’re not just bringing a collection of skills and experience onboard, you’re teaming up with a person.  Many companies get into trouble because they only look at easy to compare, conventional metrics and then hire the person who interviews the best.  You have to know how to thoroughly assess a candidate to get a good idea of who they truly are, and that’s not easy to do!  Very few know how to vet a candidate like that.

 

Bad hirers: There’s hope!

Luckily, these three mistakes are very curable.  HireBetter is committed to delivering the systems and expertise companies need to confidently make great hiring decisions.  We work with companies to define exactly what role they need to fill, determine what that ideal candidate looks like, and then deliver the very best candidates to you.  If you’re ready to start making great hires, contact us, and see how we can help you HireBetter.

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An Open Letter to The Staffing Advisor

February 19th, 2009 | by | interviewing, recruiting, topgrading

Feb
19

I’ve watched a dialogue occur over the last couple of weeks between Brad Smart, the Author of Topgrading, and Bob Corlett who owns a recruiting firm in Washington DC and refers to himself as The Staffing Advisor for his Blog.

I’m genuinely concerned that by responding to the initial post of Mr. Corlett’s called, “What Exactly is a Top Performer?” Dr. Smart provided some credibility to what was written and provided an opportunity for this blog post to get some notoriety that it didn’t deserve. After reading Mr. Corlett’s rebuttal I simply can’t stay quiet.

Disclaimer: Topgrading is not a novel. Topgrading is not an easy read. Topgrading is not a page-turner. Honestly, Topgrading is about as dry as a piece of burnt toast without butter. With that being said, it’s still one of the best business books ever written.

Before I begin, I’m going to take a small tangent. The book Freakonomics sold more than 3 million copies when it was released 4 years ago. Buried within those pages was a chapter about the imperfection of the commission model for Realtors. It closely assessed the value of a Realtor’s contribution to the home selling process and found, in short, “the commission you pay your Realtor is in essence a big fat tip”.

I’ll complete my thoughts on why I’ve included this random snippet from Steven Levitt in my conclusion but I wanted to make sure I got that in on the front end to get you thinking.

On to the Open Letter…

I’d like to point out that I’m going to be jumping back and forth between both of Mr. Corlett’s posts on Topgrading (the second being his rebuttal) and his website. I’ll lead in with a direct quote as a precursor to that section to make it easy to follow.

Part 1

“I freely admit that I gave up and only made it halfway through [Topgrading] (worst beach read ever).”

“I found nothing that would help my clients make better hires, short of implementing a massive, formal, top heavy initiative to learn how to conduct a Topgrading interview. And that is simply not practical when you are hiring only one or two of each kind of person.”

I’ve grouped these quotes together to try to point out a very significant element of my counter to Mr. Corlett. If you’re [Bob Corlett] positioning yourself as an expert in the world of “Results Based Hiring” and you’re choosing to bash your “competition” in a very public forum, might it make sense to actually read the entire book before making blanket judgments and heavy-handed criticisms of a process and methodology that is proven to be wildly successful when implemented properly? You’ve lambasted every CEO who shares with you that they want to hire A-Players through Topgrading after admitting that you personally have an inability to finish the foremost book on the topic. Is this at all indicative of how you screen candidates whom you are considering presenting to your clients – that is, seeing a resume that is more than a page long, making a judgment after reading their address and then choosing to wholeheartedly endorse or count an applicant out?

Here’s the thing: if you can’t find a single item in this book to help your clients make better hires I truly doubt that you even read half of it. My guess is, you got to page 63, read the section about Search Firms and Brad’s suggestions on due diligence, and stopped.

Here are some examples of things that we have implemented and have helped our clients implement as well that we learned from inside the pages of Topgrading:

1. Take the time to build Scorecards. When we know what we’re looking for and then we can show the new hire what we screened them on and what we expect of them, the likelihood of their success (in our experience) improves exponentially. Interestingly enough, Mr. Corlett, you even mention this exact idea later in your blog when you said, “Here is a strategy that will dramatically improve both your results and the quality of your life: set performance goals [and] manage your people against the results.”* My guess is that you weren’t able to get far enough into the book to read that part.

  1. TORC (threat of reference checks). We always check references but not the ones that our candidates are interested in giving us. We require and only talk to previous managers and we don’t let candidates advance in the process until that is finished. Geoff Smart, Brad’s son, suggests that about 25% of the information you learn about a candidate is obtained during reference checks. I think he’s right on.

3. Create a Virtual BenchJack Daly, an esteemed Public Speaker and former CEO is famous for saying, “It’s called RECRUITING, not ABSORBING”. We’ve got a list of people that we’re always recruiting and talking to in the event we need to hire them due to growth or turnover at HireBetter. Our clients do too!

Part 2

“In a job description you need to nail down exactly what you are looking for.”

“There is no universal set of attributes. It depends on the job.” “Most companies need a diverse mix of skills and work styles, but all with a common shared set of values.”

“Small organizations need to think hard, move fast, and make the best decisions possible with imperfect information.”

Really, I love Jack Daly. I bring him up again because I got to hear him recently and so much of it rang true. One of his favorite stories is about VISION and PLANNING. The story goes something like this:

Jack walked out of his house the other day and saw his neighbor filling his car with luggage. He was really cramming it in; filled up the trunk and then the back seat too.

Jack called out to him, “Hey, where you headed?”

“East!” his neighbor replied.

“How long you think it’s going to take you?” Jack countered.

“Quite a while, not sure really.” his neighbor shouted back.

“How much money you gonna need to get there?”

“Beats me, just hope I don’t run out!” said the neighbor.

I shared this story because I think that the next-door neighbor is a lot more like most small businesses than you could possibly imagine. Simply asking a hiring manager to write a job description when they have no experience doing it and hoping that they can “nail down exactly what they are looking for” is a lot tougher than it appears on the surface. Believing that your clients need to think hard and move fast while making decisions based on imperfect information as it relates to their hiring decisions is very, very dangerous. Not only does it adversely affect your ability to screen for the right kinds of people, it leaves your clients open to hiring based on “gut feel” and emotion instead of reality and strategy.

No, Topgrading is NOT easy. Neither is being an A-Player.

Part 3

“We’ll continue…developing faster, less expensive, less cumbersome ways to help our clients consistently hire people who will drive business results”.

There was a time when we thought about touting our speed to hire or cost per hire at HireBetter. Before we learned about Topgrading we were proud of our speed. Today, the focus isn’t on speed or cost at all. Rather, we focus on helping organizations change their methodology and expectations around hiring. We know that Topgrading has been effective when (1) our clients can hire the first or second person they interview – no matter what the role because the hiring managers know what they are looking for and (2) the employees perform as expected.

When Business Owners or Hiring Managers share with me that Topgrading is or was too hard it is almost always indicative of them being ill-prepared by not knowing what they actually want to hire or too reactionary in their hiring process (e.g. only thinking about new hires when someone leaves). As previously mentioned, these companies are simply absorbing new people, not recruiting them.

Part 4

“As someone who runs a search firm, I am also cognizant of the candidate perspective, which is generally not favorable toward Topgrading.”

Dave Kurlan, Founder and CEO of the Objective Management Group, has come up with the five major challenges that salespeople face and must overcome before they can be successful in sales.

The most significant of these challenges is something that he calls a “Need for Approval”. He describes it as, “Salespeople who have a high need for approval will avoid saying or doing the things which, in their mind, would change how the prospect feels about them. This includes asking tough questions, legitimate confrontation and the potential inability to handle rejection.”

At American Workforce we’ve actually had to screen out the Need for Approval from the people on our team who conduct interviews. Why? Our interviewers need to be able to interview with the clear understanding that it’s not their responsibility to make the candidates like them. Candidates don’t hire us – companies do. If the candidates can’t handle a company doing its due diligence and lose their temper or get easily frustrated, what does that say about how they will react under pressure in front of a client six months from now as an employee? Conducting Topgrading interviews takes focus and guts. Focus to stick with the plan and the guts to be able to ask the tough questions and not back off when someone gives a weak answer to a question because they either have something to hide or they’re too lazy to go into greater detail.

Conclusion

As promised, I want to finish my thought on why I included a whole paragraph about the commission structure of Realtors in the beginning of this Letter. When he really dug into it, Levitt found that Realtors aren’t really acting in the best interest of their clients. You can pretty easily figure out why when you consider the following:

-When they are selling a house their only incentive is speed, not getting the best price. They’re going to receive 3% of the sale price. To encourage a homeowner to reduce the cost of their home from $200,000 to $180,000 results in a net loss of only $600 to the realtor but they pick up a check for $5,400. The homeowner loses 10% of their value. If they [the Realtor] turn down a lowball offer and really stand up for the seller of the house, they risk not getting paid at all.

-When they are helping to buy a house, every dollar that they negotiate in savings for a buyer results in them making LESS money.

Here’s why I think this is so applicable to why nearly every recruiting company in America is denunciatory of Topgrading:

-If a company is paying a recruiter a percentage of the first year’s salary (akin to a Realtor receiving a percentage of the sale price), the ONLY incentive that recruiter has is to get someone hired quickly so they can avoid expending more than the minimum amount of effort. They are NOT incentivized to:

- ask tough questions

- conduct reference checks with past managers

- point out red flags on a resume or a career history form

-If a company is paying a recruiter to help negotiate compensation with a prospective candidate, every dollar they help the company save is costing them part of their commission.

Your recruiters should be partners with your company. Because they are truly incentivized against doing so, why should we expect any traditional recruiting firm, and especially ones like Staffing Advisors, to ever embrace the tenets of Topgrading?

Finally, Topgrading isn’t the ONLY way of recruiting and it can’t be implemented as an initiative from HR.  It must be adopted wholeheartedly and with the full endorsement of every Executive inside a company.  When this happens and it is implemented properly and executed on with precision, its results are staggering – no matter the size of the company.

*Geoff Smart & Randy Street released a little more user-friendly book entitled WHO in 2008. The quick and dirty version of their scorecard framework can be found on page 44.

 

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5 Things You Can Do To Improve Hiring (Part 2)

November 21st, 2008 | by | interviewing, recruiting, topgrading

Nov
21

Earlier this week I wrote a blog post that started a list of the Top 5 Things You Can Do To Improve Hiring. I am trying to offer simple but high-impact exercises that companies and Hiring Managers can engage in to improve their hiring predictability.

#1 was “Work Backwards to Create a Job Description”. Start from the 1 year review instead of trying to create a Job Description from Scratch.

#2 was “Write a Scorecard”. By knowing what the 5-7 things are that you’re looking for you’ll be less likely to hire someone because you really like their personality.

Here are the other three things that you can do today, without much effort, to have a significant impact on your hiring predictability.

3. Implement a screening process that allows you to rapidly “screen to exclusion”. A Topgrading interview is 4 hours long. Not many people can actually conduct more than 2 or 3 of those without getting burned out. To quickly screen your large candidate pool, try implementing 2 or 3 quick steps before conducting any “real” interviews. Remember through the process that you’re trying to find reasons to take people out of contention, not include them. Some examples:

a. Rapid Resume Review: have they had more than 3 jobs in the last 8 years? Have they changed industries more than once? Have they taken a demotion for no obvious reason?

b. 10 Minute Phone Screen: ask two or three quick questions and score the answers.

i. This role requires that you have experience establishing metrics around profitability of our various retail products. Are you qualified to handle this?

ii. Would you please share with me a specific example of how you’ve done this in the past?

iii. And what did you learn through doing this?

If they really impress you with their answers to these three questions you’ll gain the clarity of knowing that they’re worth spending more time learning about the rest of their background and how they might fit into your organization.

4. Ensure that your job postings are in places where people can find them. Significantly increasing the volume of candidates who apply for your role can make a huge impact on your ability to hire effectively. When you post, ensure that the website is tied in with some of the more popular job posting aggregators like Indeed.com or SimplyHired.com. Try to also find niche websites where the traffic will be much lower but the quality of the eyeballs is higher. Make an effort to seek out local associations or user groups (example: Java User Groups or JUGS exist in every major metro area).

5. Interview for behaviors instead of relying on a resume. Even if you’ve only created a rough scorecard and you’re trying some of these tactics for the first time, interviewing for specific behaviors will yield significantly better results than simply going from role to role on a resume and letting a prospective employee tell you about just the things they want to bring up. Ask why they were hired in a role? Were they successful? Why or Why Not? What specifically were they engaged in that would make them uniquely qualified for your position? Beware the applicants who have never made mistakes (or won’t admit them).

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