Posts Tagged ‘hire the right employee’

So, What Are You Good At?

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

I hate to be the one to tell you but you are not great at everything. That is just how it works.

But even though you aren’t great at everything, you are great at some things. Find those and build them into your job and you excel. Find those and you have the potential to move from good to great.

Today’s best performance happens (supported by Gallup, Marcus Buckingham, Daniel Pink, Seth Godin) when an employee is both good at what the job requires and likes doing it. This means today’s managers must function more as “engage-and-inspire” coaches than “command-and-control” sergeants. They must get better at building strong relationships to know their employees’ talents, values and interests, to find ways to activate their emotional connection to their work. And it all starts with a clear understanding of what employees are good at – because great performance can never happen if employees do not feel capable and competent.

I am working with an organization that is in the process of changing its hiring process away from using standard job descriptions requiring candidates to have similar work experience. Remember, just because an employee has done a job before does not ensure the employee was both good at the job and liked doing it – both now required for exceptional performance. Instead, this organization now uses a Talent Matrix, a summary of the key talents, team talents and core skills that will encourage success in the role. They look for people are are naturally capable and interested in the responsibilities of the job. From this information they can better advertize what they need, source candidates that are a better fit and more successfully hire higher performing people.

At a time when employees are now more in front of customers (and therefore constantly building or destroying your brand), hiring the right employee is now the most critical component of activating sustainable and exceptional performance. This requires finding employees who are capable, competent and passionate about the responsibilities of the job. When these employees are hired, they are good at and interested in doing exceptional things for customers, which actives customer loyalty and strong results.

Call to action:
Do you know how to hire in an intellectual age? Do you know the attributes that will make an employee successful in each role?

Resources to get you where you need to be:
Check out Awesomely Simple by John Spence and my book, Fire Up! Your Employees and Smoke Your Competition. Contact me if you need my help to learn how to attract and hire the right employees.

The 2 Reasons Why It Is So Hard To Hire The Right Person

Sunday, October 17th, 2010

And What To Do About It

Though our workplace has changed, most companies still hold onto an outdated approach to hiring employees, resulting in performance and retention problems.

We are in a service workplace; much of manufacturing has moved offshore. Instead of performing repetitive tasks, employees now creatively invent service responses on the spot; each response must be “customerized” – appropriate for each customer. The better the service event, the more committed and loyal the customer. The more committed the customer, the more significant the bottom-line results. And at the center of this process is the employee – the right one can win customers for life. The wrong one can send them away forever.

Hiring the right employee is now more critical than ever. Though this is critical, most organizations do not have great success hiring the right employees for these two reasons:

1. Organizations continue to use outdated job descriptions that do not define the key performance attributes needed to be successful in the job. The do not assess, define and articulate the talents, strengths, passions and critical skills (performance attributes) needed to be successful in each role. Without a proper way to assess and define the performance attributes of a job, the organization is unable to share these requirements with potential job candidates – and the wrong candidates apply.

2. Job candidates are not very self-aware. They do not know their talents, strengths, passions and critical skills, so even if a company can define what the required performance attributes, most people don’t know whether they are a good fit for the job. This complicates the hiring process and increases the probability of hiring the wrong employee.

Both sides are at fault. Both sides need to change and to meet someplace in the middle.

Organizations must now clearly define the talents, passions, strengths and performance skills need to be successful in each role. This allows the organization to share these success attributes so that job seekers can assess their fit for the role. For the organizations I consult with, I use a Talent Matrix – a one-page summary of the performance talents, team talents, and skills and experience needed to be successful in each role in the organization. From this information, organizations can more successfully source candidates who have the required hard-wired attributes.

Job candidates must become more self-aware; they must make the effort know their talents, passions and strengths to be able to assess whether these attributes match the attributes required in the job. I coach organizations to require job candidates to apply using a talent-based resume; skill and experience resumes are rejected. A talent-based resume summarizes the job candidate’s primary talents, key work experience (that showcases the talents) and other valuable performance information that helps the hiring manager assess whether the job candidate would be a fit in the current employment opportunity. And to be able to complete a talent-based resume, a job seeker must be well aware of his/her strongest performance attributes. This encourages job candidates to only apply for jobs that seem a good fit and results in fewer, but better, candidates for hiring managers to review.

Your bottom-line success is based on your ability to have highly engaged and passionate employees doing great things for customers. The primary component of employee engagement is employee fit. Employees who are good at what the job requires and passionate about doing it, do the work in an epic way. This requires hiring the right employees.

So to get it right, both sides need to improve the hiring process. When both improve, it will be an easier and more effective process to align the right employee to the right roles – employee performance, satisfaction and loyalty improves; the organization’s bottom line improves. With such critical things at stake this is a change that cannot wait.

Contact me to learn about the Talent Matrix, my work on talent-based interviewing and the talent-based resume. The way to fire up your employees is to first get them in the right jobs.

Get More Done With Less

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Many organizations have been carrying extra employees for years – employees who continued to show up each day without adding a level of value commensurate with their pay and benefits.

The recession forced virtually all organizations to reduce their spending. And in today’s intellectual and service workplace, most of these expense reductions related to manpower. Thanks to the recession, most organizations have now seen they can get more done with fewer of the right employees, than more of the wrong employees. Great lesson.

Getting more done with less is not about overwhelming employees by adding the responsibilities of laid off employees to surviving employees. Rather, it is about understanding employees talents, strengths and passions and realigning employees to roles that use these to make a more significant difference. Studies continue to support that employees who are engaged (intrinsically and emotionally connected – they are good at what the job requires and like doing it), out perform all others. They are more creative, more focused and more interested in their work. The result is greater performance. This requires a greater attention to “fit.” Fit determines the “right employee.” Right employees get more done.

So to get more done with less:
1. Define the talents, strengths, skills and experience needed in each role.
2. Realign existing talent to roles that match and need their attributes.
3. Hire those positions for which you do not currently have the right people.
4. When interviewing, use talent-based questions (workplace situational questioning) to assess candidates’ talents and assess their responses and fit.
5. Clearly define performance expectations and allow employees greater freedom in achieving expectations.
6. Provide recurring feedback to encourage employees to perform.

We are in the new “normal.” The recession showed us we can get the work done with fewer of the right people, keep costs down and improve profitability. Did the recession change how you hire and who is on your team?

Please forward this to someone who can benefit from it, and contact me to show you how to get the right people in the right roles to build your A-Team.

Employees Must Earn Their Place on the Team

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The recession has been an education. It showed us many things, the most significant being that every employee must be a value-builder, a team player and a customer connector, or they are not needed. There are no longer any rights of employment. Today, an employee must earn the right to be on the team – and that comes from the way they add value.

So I thought this week, I would help managers communicate this message to their employees. Here is a draft letter; consider editing and using this with your employees:

Dear employee,
We have been through some very tough times lately; this recession has taught us many things. We have learned to better watch our world and respond in a more value-building way. We have learned to better listen to our customers and refocus on loyalty, not satisfaction. We have learned that every employee must contribute in a significant way, or they do not have a place on our team.

The recession has ushered in a new workplace – the rules of the workplace have changed. We have had to learn to do more with less. We now rely very significantly on every employee to add real value. This is how you earn your place on our team – you add and build value. There are no more entitlements. No more just showing up or doing the job as it has always been done. To be on this team, you must come to work each day ready to make the greatest difference you can. You must think, invent and respond. You must own your performance. You must earn your place.

We are committed to helping you achieve greatness here. We will coach you, give you the skills you need and look to activate your passion for your work. In exchange we require you to make a significant difference each day.

The rules have changed. Show up, step up and stand out. This is what it takes to be on this team.

Your manager

Times have changed. There is no right to a job. Employees earn their place by adding value. Be sure they know this. Help them achieve this. This will influence your success.

Please forward this to someone who will benefit form it and contact me to help your employees earn their place on your team.