If you have a job opening in your organization, are you trying to find a superhero that, in all likelihood, does not exist. Or, is your desperation to fill a position distorting your recruiting and selection process? Recently, I read an interview with Patty McCord, former CHRO at Netflix. McCord described the challenges that many managers face when trying to hire people. Then, she provided a different approach to recruitment. I found it be a fascinating perspective and process. She calls it "reverse thinking." Here's an excerpt:
First you start with the timeframe. I usually say six months to a year, depending on the level of the role. If we hire the right person in that role and things were amazing, what would be occurring then, that’s not occurring now? Then I tell people to list out all of their metrics to measure success. Everyone has numerals. Spit them all out.
Then I say to make a movie of it. If I’m walking around, are there more meetings or are there less meetings? Are people’s heads down? Are they working collaboratively? What does it look like?
That gives you the behaviors and the drive and the motivation. What somebody wants to get engaged with in purposeful work.
Now that I have my movie and I have my metrics, now I say okay, in order for those things to happen that aren’t happening now, what does somebody need to know how to do?
Now you get to the skill set that’s never on the job description. Then you look at the skills and experiences that would lead someone to know how to do that.
I like this reverse thinking because most people write job openings to describe (a) the person who left that they didn’t want to leave (b) the fantasy person who doesn’t exist (c) whatever it will take to get the req approved.
2 comments:
Wow, I'm nearing the end of a hiring process and this is excellent and timely advice.
Great advice!
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