Archive for Interview Tips
Good Questions vs Bad Questions
Posted by: | CommentsThere is a tremendous amount of misinformation about interview questions. I have covered the details in other articles but thought I would show you a contrast in this article.
Below I have listed a number of bad questions (B) and followed each with the fix (G). You should see a pattern very quickly.
(B) Tell me about overcoming objections.
(G) How did you overcome the biggest objection in the ABC sale?
(B) Have you ever created a budget?
(G) Step me through the last budget you created.
(B) Do you use a system to manage your time?
(G) How did you plan your schedule today?
(B) What was the last book you read?
(G) What have you read in the last year to keep your skills current?
(B) How will you manage projects if we hire you?
(G) How did you put together the project plan for ABC?
(B) When is the best time to close in a sales cycle?
(G) At what point in the call did you start closing?
Sales Hiring – Looking For The Magic Bullet
Posted by: | CommentsI received a request this week from a sales executive who wanted to know what he can give his field sales managers to help them do a better job of hiring. He was looking for the magic bullet “Do this and all your problems go away!” I wish it existed.
Hiring Advice You Should Not Use
Posted by: | CommentsI received a copy of a tool used by one of the huge online job posting companies that is supposed to help you assess a candidate. I just hope that people did not pay money for this piece of drivel because if they did they should demand a refund.
There are eight questions on the tool designed to give you better insight into the “hidden signals” a candidate can give you in the interview. First, what are you doing looking for signals when you should be gathering specific behavioral data.
When It Comes To Hiring, Ambuguity Is The Enemy
Posted by: | CommentsAnything that increases ambiguity when it comes to hiring only makes your decision more difficult. This is a principle I have taught in my training class for the last 25+ years. Unfortunately, I continue to see advice and reccomendations for techniques and questions that put you in a bind.
Why “Group” Interviews Don’t Work
Posted by: | CommentsA good friend of mine who is a very experienced sales executive called yesterday to share a great story. He was interviewing for a position and went back for the second interview only to be told he would would be interviewing with 25 people simultaneously. It was a medium-sized company and they informed him that he needed to “pass muster” with all of the key players in the company.
Unfortunately, the mob mentality is not good when it comes to choosing employees.
Don’t always believe what you read when it comes to hiring!
Posted by: | CommentsThere has been an awful lot of talk recently about the changing landscape in the employment market. Unemployment rates are rising, there is a financial crisis and most people are confused about where markets are headed. As a result, a lot of strange people are coming out of the woodwork with some really crazy ideas. And, unfortunately, some of the mainstream press is perpetuating these crazy ideas.
Just yesterday I read the feature article in a major business publication titled, “The Hiring Game, New Times, New Rules.” (The fact that they use “game” in the title should be your first clue that they don’t get it.) The article outlined that, due to the current economic conditions, the power in the has shifted from candidates to the hiring managers. Idiots!!!
Five Deadly Sins Of Hiring
Posted by: | CommentsHiring good employees gives you the best opportunity to defeat your competition. In this constantly changing market, the quality of your people is the only sustainable competitive advantage. This article identifies and will help you avoid some of the biggest hiring mistakes. But, before we jump in, a quick story.
I fielded a call this morning from a prospect who is interested in our Selecting Winners program. He runs a large insurance agency and needs to hire more than 100 salespeople this year. He asked me what I could guarantee. This is certainly a reasonable question. So, I gave him my standard answer: “By using the Selecting Winners system you will have the highest probability of hiring successful employees!”
Too often, people are looking for the “magic bullet” or some other secret when it comes to hiring. The simple truth is that there is no magic bullet or secret when it comes to choosing great employees. The answer lies in applying a proven system and using it religiously.
The Business Owner’s Most Important Decision
Posted by: | CommentsImagine this situation. You are competing against two other firms for the same piece of business. One firm is the 900-pound guerilla in your market, and the other is a competitor of about the same size. You have the best technology, the big company has the most market share and brand recognition and the third competitor has the lowest price. Who gets the business?
Why Not “Why” Questions
Posted by: | CommentsFor years, I have been preaching in my Selecting Winners workshops that you should never ask an interview question that begins with “why”. This goes against the grain of so much of the common wisdom on the subject. That alone should tell you it makes sense! Just kidding.
But seriously, there are a number of important reasons supporting the ineffectiveness of “why” questions. In this article, you will learn the pitfalls of “why” questions and how to ask much more effective alternates.
Hire, Fire — Then Repeat
Posted by: | CommentsI was having lunch last week with my race car mechanic Ray, and he shared a very interesting story with me. Ray and I have gotten to be good friends in addition to him being my mechanic. We do spend a lot of time together (remember I drive a vintage Fiat).
Ray runs a one man shop southeast of Seattle with his wife running the office. During the 70’s and most of the 80’s, Ray was the head mechanic at the largest Fiat dealership in the northwest. When the dealership folded, Ray started his own repair shop working strictly on Fiats. Lots of service bays, lots of employees, you get the picture.
Now, for the story.