Quality Of Hire: Why Hiring Interviews Often Fail To Deliver?

Quality Of Hire: Why Hiring Interviews Often Fail To Deliver?

Quality Of Hire: Why Hiring Interviews Often Fail To Deliver?

Why Quality Of Hire Is A Crucial Business Issue

Despite the extensive use of the interview as a selection tool, evidence suggests that it can be a poor predictor of future job performance. Primary reasons are:

  1. Inability to define requirements in behavioral and measurable terms – often resulting in over or under emphasis on some key factors.
  2. Inability to follow a structured and standardized process – often resulting in biased judgment.
  3. Inability to frame questions that help predict performance on job – often resulting in assessment of knowledge rather than skill.
  4. Not capturing/noting down key observations in support of candidate assessment – often resulting in subjectivity.

Quality of hire is also becoming an extremely crucial business issue as a superior candidate can often outperform an average one by almost 300%. While how precisely quality of hire can be measured still remains debatable, broad indicators include:

  1. Quality of applicants in terms of experience.
  2. Time to be performance post joining.
  3. Performance level measured as against expected deliverables.
  4. Alignment with organizational culture and core values.

What Are Competency-Based Interviews?

The competency-based interview is conducted on the premise that "past behavior is the best predictor of future performance". It is hence meaningful to gather as much behavioral evidence during an interview to arrive at an objective assessment of the candidate's ability to perform the job.

The most effective way of gathering specific behavioral evidence is to use different styles of questioning and probing. One such widely practiced technique is called the STAR technique.

The STAR Technique

Structure Of The Interview

Working to a structure is a major step towards improving the quality of hire, as it helps to:

Questions must be planned in advance. It is usual to have a series of questions that are posed to every candidate with specific ones for individual applications based on information in their application forms. The need to raise additional questions will arise in order to probe candidates responses and these should be asked at the appropriate time. No question should be asked of a discriminatory nature e.g. asking a female candidate about her childcare arrangements.

The interview should be structured as follows:

Questioning Techniques

The interviewer should aim to keep the candidate talking about 70-80% of the time, as the key aim of the interview is to obtain insights from the candidate. Effective interviews depend on well-thought out and well-structured questions.

There are various types of questions:

In our next series of articles, we will share about other techniques of interviewing, career aspirations discussions, coaching, and more. Stay tuned.

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