CloserQ Readers;
Been a while since I have posted a business topic vs. my family posts. Yesterday, Don Soucy, a VP of Sales sent me a Forbes article on three questions to ask interviewees. My personal interviewing style is to focus on the interviewees resume by walking backward through their job history and asking very focus questions to understand why he or she switched jobs. Because I plan on adding this questions to my next interview, I wanted to share with my readers:
1. Can you do the job?
2. Will you love the job?
3. Can we tolerate working with you?
Executive Search firm Heidrick & Struggles CEO, Kevin Kelly explained to me that it’s not just about the technical skills, but also about leadership and interpersonal strengths. Technical skills help you climb the ladder. As you get there, managing up, down and across become more important.
Please click the link below to access the Forbes article directly:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/georgebradt/2011/04/27/top-executive-recruiters-agree-there-are-only-three-key-job-interview-questions/
'Good Interviewing'. Reader Feedback, please click the comments
below to give additional recommendations and I want your feedback
on my response. Shaun Priest aka CloserQ
www.closerq.com
Been a while since I have posted a business topic vs. my family posts. Yesterday, Don Soucy, a VP of Sales sent me a Forbes article on three questions to ask interviewees. My personal interviewing style is to focus on the interviewees resume by walking backward through their job history and asking very focus questions to understand why he or she switched jobs. Because I plan on adding this questions to my next interview, I wanted to share with my readers:
1. Can you do the job?
2. Will you love the job?
3. Can we tolerate working with you?
That’s it. Those three. Think back, every question you’ve
ever posed to others or had asked of you in a job interview is a subset of a
deeper in-depth follow-up to one of these three key questions. Each question
potentially may be asked using different words, but every question, however it
is phrased, is just a variation on one of these topics: Strengths, Motivation,
and Fit.
Can You Do the Job? – StrengthsExecutive Search firm Heidrick & Struggles CEO, Kevin Kelly explained to me that it’s not just about the technical skills, but also about leadership and interpersonal strengths. Technical skills help you climb the ladder. As you get there, managing up, down and across become more important.
You
can’t tell by looking at a piece of paper what some of the strengths and
weaknesses really are…We ask for specific examples of not only what’s been
successful but what they’ve done that hasn’t gone well or a task they they’ve,
quite frankly, failed at and how they learned from that experience and what
they’d do different in a new scenario.
Not
only is it important to look at the technical skill set they have…but also the
strengths on what I call the EQ side of the equation in terms of getting along
and dealing or interacting with people.
Will You Love the Job? -Motivation
Cornerstone International Group CEO, Bill Guy emphasizes the
changing nature of motivation,
…younger employees do not wish to get paid merely for
working hard—just the reverse: they will work hard because they enjoy their
environment and the challenges associated with their work…. Executiveswho
embrace this new management style are attracting and retaining better employees.
Can We Tolerate Working With You? – Fit
Continuing on with our conversation, Heidrick’s Kelly
went on to explain the importance of cultural fit:
A lot of it is cultural fit and whether they are going to
fit well into the organization… The perception is that when (senior leaders)
come into the firm, a totally new environment, they know everything. And they
could do little things such as send emails in a voicemail culture that tend to
negatively snowball over time. Feedback or onboarding
is critical. If you don’t get that feedback, you will get turnover later on.
He made the same point earlier in an interview with Smart Business,
referencing Heidrick’s
internal study of 20,000 searches.
40 percent of senior executives leave organizations or
are fired or pushed out within 18 months. It’s not because they’re dumb; it’s
because a lot of times culturally they may not fit in with the organization or
it’s not clearly articulated to them as they joined.
Preparing for Interviews
If you’re the one doing the interviewing, get clear on
what strengths, motivational and fit insights you’re looking for before you go
into your interviews.
If you’re the one being interviewed, prepare by thinking
through examples that illustrate your strengths, what motivates
you about the organization and role you’re interviewing for, and the fit
between your own preferences and the organization’s Behaviors,
Relationships, Attitudes, Values, and Environment (BRAVE). But
remember that interviews are exercises in solution selling. They are not about
you.
Think of the interview process as a chance for you to
show your ability to solve the organization and interviewer’s problem. That’s
why you need to highlight strengths in the areas most important to the
interviewers, talk about how you would be motivated by the role’s challenges,
and discuss why you would be a BRAVE fit with the organization’s culture.Please click the link below to access the Forbes article directly:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/georgebradt/2011/04/27/top-executive-recruiters-agree-there-are-only-three-key-job-interview-questions/
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