Hiring Authority
Candidate Abuse And Death By Interview
We frequently read about such things as animal, drug and alcohol abuse.
But one of the least talked about forms of abuse that occurs on a daily
basis is "candidate abuse" during the interview and hiring process.
Some companies have become arrogant in how they treat candidates and often
take a "my way or the highway" approach with applicants. Firms
have not adequately trained those involved in the hiring process on how
to treat candidates correctly. At the same time, the candidate's themselves
may take this abuse because of a scarcity of jobs that puts them at the
mercy of hiring managers.
In the business world, it's not uncommon for individuals with power to
take full advantage of it. But in this case, might doesn't make right.
The Negative Consequences of Abusing Candidates: There are numerous
economic consequences to firms that fail to make the interview process
user friendly.
1. Candidates are potential customers: Enlightened hiring authorities
realize that candidates are also potential customers. As a result, it's
wise to treat all applicants with a high level of courtesy and respect.
Firms can no longer afford to treat applicants as people that "bother
us" with questions. Companies need to learn how to duplicate the
level of customer service that is usually provided by the sales, customer
support, and product service departments to all candidates.
The habit of taking advantage of candidates or even abusing them can have
some negative consequences to a firm. If your organization deals with
retail customers, candidates are likely either to be current or future
customers. A negative experience may lead to decreased sales and sales
referrals. In addition, candidates talk about their experiences with colleagues,
so a negative experience can also lead to a weakened employment and product
brand as well as fewer future applicants.
2. Slow hiring means you lose the top candidates: Numerous studies
have demonstrated that the top candidates for nearly any job are gone
within 10 days. Even if the interviews themselves might take that long,
finding time when both the interviewers and the candidate are available
can mean it could take many weeks to schedule a series of different interviews.
Unfortunately such delays will mean that many of the top candidates will
likely be gone after only a short period of time.
3. Interview fatigue and costs to the firm: Not only can multiple
interviews fatigue candidates, but they can also wear out the interviewers
and the hiring managers. The amount of hours required by the process frequently
leads to "management fatigue," which can cause managers to delay
future hiring or to put off the interview process.
From the company's perspective, a large number of interviews are expensive
and time consuming. Multiple interviews, with more people participating
in them, are expensive by any standard if you add up the multiple hours
that managers and employees must spend in interviews, (which is multiplied
greatly when there are team interviews). The costs of a series of interviews
to a firm can easily grow into five figures. During lean times when company
budgets are low, justifying this added expense is difficult, especially
when there is little proof that increasing the number of interviews or
interviewers has a significant impact on the quality of the hiring decision.
4. Repetitious questions also hurt the firm: One firm I know had
the audacity (or intelligence) to ask applicants what they thought about
the multiple interview process. The results were, not surprisingly, highly
negative.
One of the primary things learned in the survey was that candidates were
frustrated and angry about being asked the same questions over and over.
They found repeating the same question gave candidates the impression
that the firm was uncoordinated and disjointed! By repeating the same
questions, the firm lost the opportunity to gather data in a broad variety
of areas that might have helped to improve the value and accuracy of the
overall interview process. In addition, frustrating the candidates may
cause them to prematurely take other firms' offers or to drop out of the
process before it's even over.
5. Multiple interviews can hurt a firm's ability to hire.
When candidates are unemployed they are more than willing to come in for
a series of interviews. However, "top talent" is probably currently
employed and therefore likely to find it difficult to come in more than
once. Multiple interviews spread out over a period of time make it difficult
for currently employed people to make up a believable story about why
they will need to be away from work for multiple days. Interviews that
require long distance travel are getting increasingly impossible to schedule
because of the difficulty and fear of travel.
In brief, a long and protracted interview process may discourage applicants
from applying, decrease attendance at interviews, and hurt your firm's
image. Even worse, it may cause top candidates to accept "other offers"
long before your process finally concludes.
Ways That Candidates Are Abused: There are several different ways
that powerless candidates are abused during the hiring process. Here's
a closer look at a few of them.
1. Death by interview: Companies have become increasingly conservative
in how they screen candidates due to a large number of lawsuits relating
to selection testing. As a result, most hiring tests have gone by the
wayside. The net effect is that companies have increased the number of
interviews to make up for the absence of other screening tools.
At many companies, the standard number of interviews given to a candidate
has proliferated like rabbits. The same fear of lawsuits has also caused
firms to increase the number of people who participate in interviews in
order to avoid discrimination claims.
The net result of both of these trends to powerless candidates is that
they must endure a large number of interviews spread out over a painfully
long period of time. From the candidate's perspective, attending a large
number of interviews on different days is expensive (a bigger problem
if they are out of work) and time consuming. The long delays and the uncertainty
can be stressful for candidates and their families. The burden is made
even worse by the fact that in a down economy, the odds of all that time
and effort actually resulting in a job offer are actually pretty small.
Too much of a good thing is bad for you. This is true for both sweets
and for interviews!
2. Death by repetition: When candidates are subjected to multiple
interviews at the same firm, it is quite common for different interviewers
to ask exactly the same questions in back-to-back interviews. This tedious
repetition occurs frequently, because interviews by different managers
are usually not planned or coordinated. It is also partially caused by
interview training manuals, which, by suggesting appropriate questions
to use in an interview, can inadvertently cause interviewers to use the
same questions over and over.
From the candidate's perspective, having to answer duplicate questions
over and over is frustrating and confusing.
3. Uncertainty and being kept in the dark: In addition to the
number of interviews, another abuse of candidates occurs when firms keep
the candidate in the dark about the interview process and what is expected
during it.
In nearly every testing or assessment process outside of hiring, individuals
are told in advance what the judges are looking for and what the process
entails. For some unknown reason, companies do not feel compelled to meet
that standard and inform the candidate about what specific skills or abilities
will be assessed during each particular step of the interview process.
In addition, candidates are usually not told who will be there during
the interview and what the role is of each interviewer.
This lack of information leads to confusion and frustration on the part
of the powerless candidate, and all for no reason. There is no legal regulation
that prohibits companies from telling candidates upfront about the process
and what is being assessed during it. Failing to educate candidates may
cause them to over-prepare in unimportant areas and under-prepare in key
ones. Not knowing who will participate in the interview also prohibits
the candidate from doing research on the background of the interviewers.
4. After the interview, the abuse continues: The abuse of the
candidate doesn't stop after the interview is over. Candidates who fail
to make it to the final interview stage are seldom told right away that
they have been rejected. Instead, they have to wait until the final selection
is made to find out their fate. If they should have the audacity to call
to inquire about their performance, they get the all too common "don't
call us, we'll call you" response.
To add insult to injury, when the final rejection comes, it is generally
a form letter or brief call that does not tell them specifically where
they must improve in order to land a job in the future. Being rejected
without being told why is crushing many people's egos — and it also
reduces the likelihood that the rejected candidate will apply again at
the firm at a later date.
The Net Result: The net result of these multiple abuses is that
candidates' fear of the interview process keeps many top performers from
even applying for jobs. Those who do apply certainly don't look forward
to the interview process. Their fear and uncertainty may also cause them
to be nervous during the interview and thus they will likely fail to perform
as well as they would in a more relaxed and certain assessment process.
Using any customer service standard, the interview process with companies
usually fails to meet the grade.
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