Six Tips to Help Upgrade Your Hiring Process

Modern-day hiring is largely broken, but hiring expert Scott Wintrip is fixing it one company at a time. In his book High Velocity Hiring: How to Hire Top Talent in an Instant (McGraw-Hill Education, April 2017) Wintrip explains exactly how to optimize your company's hiring potential and find better job candidates faster than ever before.

It's no secret that hiring within an organization can be a stressful, confusing, and tedious process. Business owners, organization leaders, and hiring managers all want to choose the best job candidates so their companies can experience more productivity and less turnover. But according to Wintrip, a business consultant and hiring expert, most companies operate under a broken hiring system, and they may not even realize it. In fact, he wrote the book on how to rehab your hiring practices by hiring faster, smarter, and better.

"The healthiest organizations are successful because they have perfected the art of hiring," says Wintrip. "When you adopt proven hiring strategies, you can finally retain a steady flow of talent to fill open job positions and replace underperforming employees quickly. And when your hiring is fast and accurate, you get to focus on your company's performance instead of managing bad hires or struggling under an increased workload while you search far and wide for the perfect candidate." 

High Velocity Hiring is the essential guide for anyone who wants to make higher quality hires every time. Here, we've compiled six guidelines from the book that will help you improve your hiring processes and enhance your workforce.

  1. Embrace experiential interviews. The standard approach to hiring is to conduct interviews where candidates talk about work. Not only is this a huge drain on time, it's also an inaccurate way to assess whether a candidate fits your job. That's why many business owners have replaced traditional interviews with experiential, or "hands-on," interviews. "In a hands-on interview, you experience the candidate doing sample work," says Wintrip. "If it's for a sales role, the candidate joins you on a sales call. If you're hiring for a customer service role, he can help solve a customer's problem. By watching the candidate in action, you save time while also making a more accurate assessment of whether or not someone is a good fit."
     
  2. Cultivate a diverse workforce. It's no secret that diversity in the workplace is a good thing. An inclusive workforce helps businesses better serve their diverse client base, and research even shows that the most diverse workforces are likely to generate better financial results for a business. "Slight adjustments to your hiring profiles can substantially increase the flow of diverse talent," says Wintrip. "For example, for years a large banking institution had required candidates to have finance degrees. However, they noticed that top candidates at competing banks didn't have this requirement. They changed their own requirements and asked for candidates with any type of two- or four-year business degree. This led to a richer flow of highly diverse talent, resulting in some of the best hires they ever made."
     
  3. Line up key people before you need them. "Some roles are more vital than others, and when these roles are left unfilled, they can harm your business," asserts Wintrip. "Plus, the extra work usually falls on your already-overflowing plate. Instead of waiting until an employee in an essential job quits or gives notice to start recruiting, do yourself a favor and recruit ahead of time. Dedicating 30 minutes to recruiting each week pays off by creating a pipeline of potential talent ready to be hired the moment that vital job becomes open."
     
  4. Use a hiring team to avoid making bad hires. Even the best interviewers routinely overlook crucial details during the interview process. This may prompt them to hire employees who don't perform as expected and cripple the company over time. But according to Wintrip, a hiring team can solve this common problem. "There are four distinct hiring styles," says Wintrip. "You are either a Tackler, a Teller, a Tailor, or a Tester. Each hiring style has strengths and blind spots, so it is important to have people who fit each style on your hiring team. Together you will be able to notice any red flags while interviewing job candidates and can work together to choose the best person for the job."
     
  5. Make the most of referrals. Word of mouth is a great way to find talent and fill open positions in your business. Wintrip advises asking for referrals among all your networks, including vendors, former coworkers in good standing, present coworkers, fellow business owners, and friends and family. He further explains that investing just a few minutes each day in referral recon pays off in dividends. Don't hesitate to make a quick phone call or send a short email to anyone you think might know someone great. It takes almost no effort and could result in new talent for your company!
     
  6. Network with a candidate recycling program. Wintrip asserts that sharing your mismatched talent with other similar companies is the gift that keeps on giving. With this type of arrangement, companies pass along the talented candidates they can't use instead of hoarding the talent for themselves. They can set up sharing agreements between competitors, they can agree to "borrow" talent and temporarily loan out individuals to one another, or they can even compensate organizations for locating viable candidates. This form of networking allows the talent to flow efficiently and helps hiring managers staff their organizations better and faster. "Businesses should realize that competition is healthy and it signals that an industry is viable," says Wintrip. "Healthy industries create opportunities for everyone, and candidate recycling programs build a mutually beneficial stream of prospective employees for those businesses. At the end of the day, your employees—and the work they do—make or break your company. That's why hiring talent better, faster, and smarter is so crucial for every organization. When you optimize your hiring strategies, you'll begin filling open positions more quickly and hiring the right person for the job every time.

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