A good employee is one of your company's greatest assets. A poor employee is a liability.Poor employees are unsuited for
position they fill. They might lack
skills needed to do
work. Or, their work habits and personalities are incompatible with your business environment. They could be excellent employees at a different workplace -- but not at yours.
The best time to weed out unsuitable employees is before you've hired them. After they're on
job, dealing with
problem will be time-consuming, stressful, unpleasant and expensive. HR experts say that supervisors typically spend 80% of their time with 20% of their employees.
When you're recruiting, you want to know two things: 1. Can this person do
job? 2. Will he or she be a problem to manage in this workplace?
The first question is simple to answer. Skills are easy to assess and to test. Look to samples of work, educational criteria, licenses, accreditations, skill tests, etc.
The second question is
hard one. You want to discover whether
applicant will fit into your workplace.
Before conducting
job interview, be sure you know what questions are illegal to ask in your country. Make an error here, and you could be faced with legal proceedings.
Once you know what's legal and what isn't, create interview questions designed to discover
applicant's "soft skills."
Examples:
1. Tell me about your favorite supervisor in
past, and why you liked working for this person. Then, your least favorite supervisor, and why? Identifying information is not necessary.
This will elicit information about how
applicant responds to supervision and how he prefers to be supervised.
2. Describe a difficult workplace situation that you faced, and that you think you handled well. Then, tell me about a workplace situation that you don't think you handled very well and what you could do differently next time.
You are looking for clues about how
applicant deals with conflict and difficult situations. In
situation that was handled poorly, try to determine if
person has learned from
mistake.
3. Describe a situation that is likely to occur, or has occurred, in your workplace. Ask
applicant how he or she would handle it.
You are looking for problem solving and judgement skills. Remember that
applicant is not familiar with your workplace and cannot be expected to provide
exact response that you would expect from your employees.