I’m constantly quite amazed at the level of ignorance, and
often arrogance, which exists with some hiring supervisors. Do you ever ask
yourself how a person got into the position they occupy? I know I do. I
constantly hear the overplayed and overstated “people are our most important
asset” cliché - yet actions seldom back up this widely accepted ideology.
Recruiting great talent, even in a down economy, isn't easy and we’re not even
going to talk about retaining them once they arrive. We make it hard enough
just to get candidates to take us seriously during the interview process. Down
economy or not, great people always have options.
So, for those of you who still need some help in figuring out how to completely
sabotage your recruitment efforts, I've compiled a quick guide of six easy
steps that will get you there faster then you ever thought possible.
Step #1: Beat up your recruiters about the lack of “qualified”
candidates and then decline candidates based on your “gut” feeling about the
resume.
Excuse me, but what does “overqualified” mean? Or, what does “not the right
fit” mean? Often, I’ve found that the
term "overqualified" means one of a few things. But usually it’s
either the hiring manager is afraid the candidate could take her job or she is
discriminating based on some other assumption that lacks any evidence
whatsoever. “I just think this candidate would be bored here, so I’d rather not
talk to them.”
As your recruiter leaves your office, please disregard the pounding sound on
the wall outside your door. That’s just her head repeatedly meeting the
drywall.
Step #2: Once you finally find someone that passes the
"fit" test and set up an interview, don’t make yourself available to
interview. Pride goes before the fall.
I’m reminded of a recent example where a hiring manager had a very difficult,
highly-specialized position that had been vacant for almost 11 months. Finally,
a candidate surfaces that meets all the requirements and is greatly interested
in the opportunity. The catch is that this candidate is on the market and other
organizations are also aggressively pursing her. Does your hiring manager care?
Of course not! She’s not available, and won't do anything to make herself
available, to see the candidate for three weeks. And, despite your best efforts
to convince her that she needs to move quickly, she responds with, “well, if
the person doesn’t want to wait to see
us, then he must not want to work here, so it’s probably ‘not the right fit.’”
I’m starting to hate that line.
At this point, please remove all sharp objects from your recruiter’s office.
Step #3: Be late for your scheduled interview time. Or better yet,
just don’t even show up. After all, if the candidate doesn’t want to wait to see us, then he must
not want to work here, right?
It’s 10:00am and I’m standing outside
the office of a Vice President with a Director-level candidate. At 10:20am, we decide that we’ll just be early
for the next person on the itinerary. What message does this send to the
candidate? We are disorganized, we don’t care about how we are perceived, we aren’t interested in how top talent views us,
and we really don’t give a squat about the candidate’s time. These incidents
are usually followed by the explanation that some blip in the matrix or wobble
in the space-time continuum caused a random IT error that removed the
appointment from the VP’s calendar. You’d be amazed at how many IT errors are
responsible for missed interviews. I wonder if IT realizes how much they get
blamed.
Scratch that – I’m sure they do.
Step #4: Don’t prepare for your interview. After all, you have more
important things to do - like the work of the employee you are trying to hire.
How many times do we have to send you the resume? How many times do we have to
come to your office with the candidate only for you to tell us, in front of the
candidate, that you never received their information? How many times do you
need to embarrass yourself, your recruiter, and the organization before you
take just a few minutes to be responsible for yourself in the recruitment
process? Your lack of preparation for the interview speaks louder than any
words ever could about the level of importance you place on hiring the best talent.
And your recruiter really enjoys forwarding you the e-mail he sent you last
week with the candidate’s information just to prove a point. We’re
passive-aggressive like that sometimes.
Step #5: Ask stupid questions.
Why is a manhole cover round? I’m sorry, are we dealing with manhole covers in
the Accounting Department? If you ask any hiring manager whether or not they
consider themselves a good interviewer and predictor of talent and success,
most will sing their own praises from the mountaintops. I’m sorry, but most
hiring managers have no formal training and, subsequently, not a really good
grasp on how to conduct a successful interview. Especially when you ask
questions like, “if you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be?”
I’d be an oak tree. And I would fall on you.
Step #6: Don’t make a decision.
It’s three weeks after your candidate's final interview and your hiring manager
still needs to “get feedback” from the team. Um, what? How is this possible?
And then we are hit with the dreaded, “well, if the candidate doesn’t want to wait to hear from us, he must
not really want to work here.”
Kill me now.
So, there you have it. Six sure-fire ways to ensure your organization never
hires the best and brightest talent and you continue to fill your ranks with
people who don’t care and just want a job. The best thing about this
instructional guide is that you only have to do just one of the six steps to
lose your top candidate. But, if you’d really like to make sure you drive
talent away from your organization like deer from a burning forest, make sure
you do them all.
Happy sabotaging! Feel free to add
to the list!
