Hiring and retaining top talent is the topic of the day. In keynote addresses, headlines, peer groups and conference rooms everyone wants to know, “How do we hire for long-term success?”
Much of our current hiring processes are designed around a candidate’s background. Does the person have N+ certification? Experience in business-to-business sales? Are they a college graduate?
Why then do some people with similar experience and education succeed and others fail? With all the talk of millennials you might think this is a new dilemma, but history shows us it is not. This was the basic question Walter V. Clarke, an accomplished organizational psychologist first asked himself in the 1940’s. He noted that in many cases while experience and education were similar, he reasoned the success or failure was due to the difference in the individual’s behaviors. A behavior is the way in which one acts or conducts oneself. An example of a behavior might include logical, methodical or calm.
Yet very little of our hiring process takes into account the behaviors needed to support the role in our company, our company culture and the interactions with our customers. Different natural behaviors are a better fit for different roles. For instance, do they like to multi-task and seek variety and change or are their behaviors more methodical and systematic?
There are a couple common methods for assessing behavior in candidates:
Sally Brause, speaking at the BTA event in Orlando this week explains, “Understanding the behaviors required for success in a position and then using an objective assessment tool to determine if a candidate has those behaviors, can give you great insight that can otherwise be difficult to achieve through an interview.”
Assessing behavior fit for the role and company culture can help you hire and retain top talent.
If your hiring process is not giving you the results you desire, consider adding a behavioral assessment component to your process. The addition of a benchmark for the behaviors needed for success in the role will help strengthen your ability to identify and hire for long-term success.