GMCS Editorial: This is one of our first questions that we
ask potential clients when taking on an executive recruiting role with their
organization and a question that is answered when we take a new client in under
our Employer Branding Services product. ”Why do employee candidates want to
work for you?” In most cases, many hiring managers, many executives too, do not
have a clear answer to this question.
The One Question Top Talent Wants Companies to Answer
You may be the one hiring, but when you sit down to speak
with top candidates the truth is you are being interviewed, too.
It’s become pretty clear at this point that we will never
run out of new interview questions. Seldom does a visit to LinkedIn, Inc,
Forbes, etc. go by without finding “The NEW must-ask questions to hire top
talent” or the “5 tricks you have to know NOW to hire a rockstar.” Of course,
there’s a reason these articles exist — they are filling an insatiable demand.
As recruiters and hiring managers, we each have our own standard, traditional,
go-to questions, but we’re always on the look out for new ones, including maybe
a few curve balls to throw candidates to see how they can adapt (though there
are productive and unproductive ways to do that — don’t even get me started on
the “how many windows are in New York City” kinds of questions).
The point is, we spend quite a bit of time prepping for
interviews when it comes to the questions we’ll ask candidates. And we expect
thoughtful, near perfect answers for every single one, because we assume
candidates going through the interview process should be doing their homework.
Why, then, are we not holding ourselves up to that same standard?
Pitching Top Candidates: The One Interview Question You
Have to Ask Answer
Back in October, Glassdoor ran a survey aimed at figuring
out what candidates are really looking for during their interview process. An overwhelming 89 percent of people
surveyed responded that they found employee perspective valuable during the
process, particularly “details on what makes the company an attractive place to
work.”
I think a lot of companies have interpreted stats like
this as a call to ramp-up their career pages and plaster smiling employee faces
all over their site. But that type of reaction is missing something key.
Remember, when you bring a candidate in for an onsite interview, it’s not just
you interviewing the candidate. Good candidates will be interviewing you to
make sure the role and your company is a fit on their end, too. Yes, they’ll
ask you what the typical day looks like in the role. They’ll touch on culture
just like every candidate does now. Hopefully, they’ll even ask you some
questions you haven’t thought of before. But in addition to these questions,
they are also going to be wondering, from a current employee’s perspective,
what makes your company a great place to work — and what, specifically, makes
it a better place than the competition.
Now that we’ve brought things into perspective, I give
you the one question you need to make sure you answer in interviews, even if
candidates don’t openly ask it:
“What about this
company makes you continue to work here?”
I know — it seems like an easy question. But stop to
think about it. What about your current job or your company makes you get up
and go to work every day? What about it is different from other jobs you’ve had
in the past? When attempting to hire the very best candidates, you should be
able to come up with something better than, “Well, we’re a fun startup and our
stocked kitchen is awesome,” or, “The culture is really great.” Your answer to
this question can have a huge influence on the right candidates.
If you’re skeptical, I have a great example for you — my
own interview process here at OpenView. When I interviewed with my now
colleagues I asked four different people this very question. Every one of them
came up with a different answer, but there was a common thread in their
responses that I had been hoping for, and it ended up being what made me walk
out my interview knowing that this was the best possible decision for my
career. The answers didn’t just make me think this could be a great job, they
made me sure of it.
There is no such thing as a perfect interview system.
Every candidate and every hiring manager is different, and because of that
every interview is going to be different (and that’s a good thing!). The goal
of proactively answering this question for every candidate is to volunteer
information that we know candidates want to hear but might not always be able
to ask. It’s your time to sell, so go ahead and shed some light on why your
company is the one that the perfect candidate should be working for.
#Employerbranding
Source: Open
View Labs
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