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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Content
- Why interview?
- Why interview? (summary)
- Getting the environment right
- Getting the environment right (summary)
- Asking effective questions
- Asking effective questions (summary)
- Minimizing bias
- Minimizing bias (summary)
- Candidate experience
- Candidate experience (summary)
- Five top tips
This material is restricted to subscribers.
Topics Covered
- Why interview
- Getting the environment right
- Asking effective questions
- Minimizing bias
- Candidate experience
- Top interview tips
Links
Series:
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Talk Citation
Morrison, N. (2017, October 31). Recruitment interviewing [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 18, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/GJVR8975.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, and welcome to this session on Recruitment Interviewing.
My name is Neil Morrison,
I'm the Director of Strategy, Culture and Innovation
at Penguin Random House, UK
and a board member at the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development.
0:14
In this session we're going to look at a number of
different areas around recruitment interviewing.
Starting off with the simple question,
why interview in the first place?
Secondly, moving on to getting the environment right,
both in terms of the physical environment and the situational setting.
Then we'll look at asking effective questions
and which questions to ask and perhaps which ones not to.
We'll look at how you can take steps to minimize bias in your recruitment interviewing.
We'll look at how to create a great candidate experience, and finally,
finish with my five top tips.
0:46
So, let's start off with a very simple question,
why bother interviewing in the first place?
And often the answer is simply,
well, we've got a vacancy and we need to fill it,
but what I'd suggest is that,
recruitment interviewing is effectively looking at the appraisal of investment.
What we're saying is, how can we find a person who'll
perform the task that we need doing, the best of all?
And are we willing to invest in that person over a period of time?
And the reason this is important, is it can help us think about, in some ways,
the seriousness of interviewing and the importance of
approaching it in a slightly more structured way than sometimes happens;
Because we need to recognize that interviewing is imperfect
but there are steps we can take to make it better.
And there have been a number of studies that looked at
the factors that can be used to improve
quality of interviewing and to improve the likelihood of making a successful hire.
So simply, one of the main findings is that designing questions around
the job related requirements and asking them
in an organized and structured way, can actually
increase the validity of the hire by about twice.
So, you can double your chance of making a successful hire just by making
sure that the questions are structured and they're based firmly around the job.
Likewise, studies have also shown that
unstructured interviews tend to favor candidates who perhaps have better social skills,
and personality, and have a level of social polish,
whereas structured questions based on the job tend to test cognitive ability.
The other part about recruitment interviewing that we need to remember is that
it's also a chance for the candidate to
understand whether they want to work for the company,
and each interview is a brand interaction;
So, if we want to create the best environment and if
we can, through that interview, create the best environment,
then even if that candidate isn't successful and doesn't join us,
they go away feeling positive about our organization,
feeling positive about the company that we work for,
and talking to other people potentially
about that positive experience and interaction.