Our series on how to refine your hiring process and how to find qualified candidates continues. In the previous blog, we identified theย top five rรฉsumรฉ red flagsย that hiring managers should know. However, rรฉsumรฉ red flags are only one layer of the vetting process โ after that, itโs time to sort through the candidate pool andย identify the top talent. To do this, employers need to be vigilant in having the right criteria to evaluate candidates and ensure they haveย a positive experience.
How to Get a Pool of Qualified Job Candidates
A good hiring process will lead to a pool of qualified candidates from which you, the employer, can select. While itโs true thatย the hiring environment is competitive, you can use a few key elements to filter.
The Job Posting
Make no mistake โ much of the difficulty finding candidates for a job comes from aย poorly written job posting. This introduction of your role to prospective applicants is the face of your company and the first good impression you can make. Beyond this, though, the job posting is key in outlining the exact kind of candidate you want to hire. When writing a job description, be sure to mention specific qualifications, skills, and competencies that the role will require, and avoid vague language that can leave room for misinterpretation. When prospective candidates read your posting, it should be explicitly clear whether their skills align with your criteria.
The Interview
Much like the job posting itself, the interview is an integral step in finding candidates who love their job. Make sure to structure your interview withย questionsย that are specific enough to the nuances of the role while leaving enough room for the interviewee to elaborate on their relevant skills. Be careful โ if your questions are too open-ended, you run the risk of either confusing the candidate or receivingย answers that wonโt illustrate the candidateโs skills.
One way to ensure your interviews will be effective is to incorporate scientifically validated personality tests into the hiring process. This is helpful because interviews, especially when they arenโt structured, are subject to bias and therefore are not very accurate in identifying the best candidates.ย Using personality tests prior to interviewsย can help you minimize interviewer bias, target your interview questions to explore candidatesโ potential strengths and shortcomings as related to the role, avoid hiring ineffective butย charismatic candidates, and even predict which candidates are most likely to beย engagedย in your organisation.
Put in the Work
Although the methods you use toย find qualified job candidatesย may differ based on the industry youโre working in, the fundamental idea is the same: provide the candidate with detailed information about the role and ask pointed, guiding questions to learn more about them. While these may seem obvious, theyโre among manyย common hiring mistakesย that run the risk of scaring off top talent and ineffectively weeding out unqualified candidates.