Behavior Based Interviewing
We have found Behavioral Interviewing to be very effective and want
to share with you what works well for us.
Why Use Behavioral Interviewing?
Research has proven that traditional "gut feeling" interviewing is a
poor predictor of good hires.Using traditional interviewing the odds are
that 75% of new hires will not meet management's performance
expectations. This makes traditional "gut feeling" interviewing costly
in terms of low productivity and poor customer service.
Successful organizations use behavioral interviewing because it:
- provides a systematic process;
- ensures job-related questions are asked;
- acquires relevant information to make a hiring decision;
- meets legal guidelines;
- provides objective data;
- ensures a fair selection process;
- ensures a good match between candidate and job;
- results in shorter training time and lower turnover.
What is Behavioral Interviewing?
Behavioral interviewing is a structured interviewing strategy built
on the premise that past behavior is the best predictor of future
performance in similar circumstances. The interviewer probes for
behavioral evidence of what the candidate said, did, felt, and thought,
and what were the results.
Behavioral interviewing allows the interviewer to gather evidence for
critical capabilities in a way that is most likely to ensure that a
person both possesses these capabilities and is likely to demonstrate
them in future situations. It is these critical capabilities, called
success factors that identify the very best performers in a given job.
Success factors include:
- Technical or job specific knowledge and skills
- General abilities (communication skills, customer service
orientation, etc.)
- Behavioral Traits or competencies (initiative, results
orientation, risk taking, etc.)
Behavioral Interviewing Process Model
We have found a four-step model to be very effective in interviewing
and selection. The four steps include:
Step 1 - analyze the job;
Step 2 - plan the interview;
Step 3 - conduct the interview;
Step 4 - evaluate candidates.
Step 1 - Analyze The Job
The first step of behavioral interviewing involves a number of
background activities that require analysis.
Reviewing the job involves examining existing documentation that
describes the position. Review position descriptions, performance
standards, and business plans that impact the position.
Developing Success Factors involves identifying a list of
capabilities and characteristics - the knowledge, skills, abilities,
traits - that distinguish the top performers in the position.
Determine mandatory Success Factors, those you must have and
therefore need to hire for, and those success factors you can develop
for. The success factors you must have in a hire will become the
foundation for interviewing and selection.
Step 2 - Plan The Interview
Develop interview questions for all "must have" mandatory success
factors.
Directing questions set a direction for a portion of the interview
and are designed to assess specific success factors. Typically, they are
used to ask a person to describe an actual past situation. For example:
To assess communication skills, ask directing questions like:
"Tell me about a specific situation where you had to get something
across to someone he or she found difficult to understand."
To assess results orientation, ask directing questions like:
"Give me an example of a time when you had to go beyond the call
of duty to get a job done."
Probing questions elicit details that help you assess a candidate
against the job's success factors. Probing questions can involve asking
a candidate for his or her thoughts, feelings, behaviors, dialogue and
closure -- how the situation turned out. Examples of probing questions
include:
"What were you thinking when that happened?"
"What was your reaction?"
"What did you actually do?"
"What did you actually say?"
"What did other people say in response?"
"How did it finally turn out?"
"What was the end result?"
"Is there anything else I should know about this situation?"
Plan the interview process.
Determine who will interview and for which mandatory success factors.
Determine the role of each interviewer in terms of what specifically
each will be evaluating and what information each will be providing.
Determine who will review resumes and phone screen candidates. Determine
what the job and company have to "sell" and assign a "sell" role to one
or more interviewers.
Step 3 - Conduct The Interview
Here is a model that we have had success with:
- Establish rapport and get background information (5-7 minutes)
- Ask rapport building questions
- Communicate how you plan to conduct the interview ("I'll be
taking notes, etc.)
- Ask questions to get background information
- Obtain behavioral information on mandatory success factors
(40-45 minutes)
- Ask a directing question and get an overview of the
situation (5%)
- Get background information on the situation (15%)
- Probe for details (65%)
- Close (15%)
Go through same process for another success factor.
- Describe the position (5 minutes)
- Duties, responsibilities, deliverables, etc.
- Examples of work to be performed
- Answer questions
- Sell the position and company (5 minutes)
- Close the interview (3 minutes)
- Determine candidate's interest
- Describe next steps
Step 4 - Evaluate Candidates
Assess the candidate against the success factors you are evaluating.
To do this, assess the strength of the evidence the candidate presented
in your behavioral interview. Document your evaluation and make a hire
or no hire decision.
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