Running Your Business
Business Management


LOOK FOR
BEHAVIORS WHEN HIRING
By
William E. Miller
Identifying the
"Behavioral Requirements" of the job is probably the most important assignment
for your hiring team because candidate behavior is the best predictor of job
success. Our behaviors are a reflection of who we are and the way others would
describe us. They have a lot to do with the way we relate to and treat other
people. The way we have behaved in the past is the best predictor of how we
will behave in the future.
Some behaviors
are better suited for some jobs than others. Think of a Sales Representative
for example. How would you describe him? Words like excited, extroverted,
competitive, and risk taking might come to mind.
Now picture an
Accountant – how would you describe him? I think of someone who is analytical,
introverted, cautious, and concerned with details. These are generalizations
of course, but it's fair to say that if we hired an introverted, cautious
analytical candidate for a direct sales position, we would be headed for trouble
and have probably set the candidate up for failure. On the contrary, hiring the
outgoing, competitive risk taker to handle the end of month closing and the bank
account might predictably end in disaster as well.
Without taking
behaviors into account in your hiring process, you run an enormous risk of
hiring "misfits"… hiring people best suited for analyzing financial trends to
sell your services and products; or hiring people who love socializing,
competing, and risk taking to guard the finances of your company.
Understanding the human behavior and traits required for success should be one
of the most important components of your hiring system.
Behaviors
are a reflection of personality. Psychologists tell us that personality is a
product of genetics and early childhood environment. We are a product of nature
and nurture they say. Our personalities are formed and fairly well set by the
time we are six years old. Think about that a moment. There's a valuable lesson
here. It means that managers have nothing to do with a candidate's basic
talents and behaviors that the job requires- unless you're hiring six year olds
or your own children. It's a scary thought.
I give
students in my classroom a personal challenge to illustrate. "Suppose I give
you $50,000", which usually gets their attention. "Suppose I ask you to take the
money and drive to Tennessee and purchase the finest registered Tennessee Blue
Nosed Mule that you can find. Transport that mule to Lexington, Kentucky. I'll
make arrangements for boarding space at the best thoroughbred horse farm in the
area. I'll arrange for the best training with the best trainer in the racing
business and provide our mule with the best medical care and healthiest diet.
I'll contract with the best jockey in the racing industry to ride our mule in
the Kentucky Derby."
Then I ask the
class, "How do you think our mule will perform? Where will he finish in the big
race?"
"Dead last!"
someone shouts from the back row.
"Why?" I ask.
With assurance
and confidence he answers, "Because he's a mule, not a racehorse".
The story not
only drives home one of the most valuable lessons in horse racing, but in hiring
as well; you can't make a racehorse out of mule! You can't pay enough to win;
care enough to win; or train enough to win. Why…? A mule isn't a racehorse.
He's a mule and will always be a mule.
Businesses are
hiring mules for race horses everyday. They may be doing it out of desperation
to fill some open post. They may be doing it under the false illusion that
they're saving money. They may be doing it because of overconfidence in their
ability to train, develop, and coach mules into racehorses. I believe that many
of them are doing it because they don't know any better. They don't understand
and practice some common sense fundamentals of good hiring.
The first lesson
in effective hiring and leadership is learning that managers don't create the
raw talent and behaviors that the job requires. They were created long before
the candidate filled out a job application. They are the product of genetic
birthright and early childhood upbringing. And once raw talent and behaviors
are formed, they make up who we are. They're not subject to change, barring
some major life changing event. We are who we were - who we are - and who we
will be. The way we behave in the past is the way we will behave in the future.
This is such an important principle, I call it "The Golden Rule of Hiring … Past
Behavior Predicts Future Behavior".
When you
identify and define the behaviors that the job requires, and hire candidates
that possess those behaviors, the odds of a successful hire increases
dramatically. You and I are not Psychiatrists. Changing fundamental behavior is
beyond the scope of daily management and business leadership. It's much easier,
less painful, and much less expensive to know the behaviors you are looking for
– and hire them.
About the Author:
William E. Miller
Performance Leadership, LLC
wmiller@performanceleadershpllc.com
Article Source:
ArticlesBase.com


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