Define Success, Not Skills
January 2004
If you want to hire outstanding people, first define outstanding performance.
This seems to me to be the foundation for building a company filled
with top performers. Let me explain.
I had a conversation a few weeks back with the CEO of a medium-sized
distribution company. Her frustration was evident. She wanted to hire
outstanding people, but she felt somehow that the message was not getting
down to her troops.
She implored them to hire only people with great experience, great academics,
and great potential. Unfortunately her vision was far different than
the reality. The excuses from her recruiting team were many —
unrealistic standards, not enough candidates, not enough money, a weak
employer brand, weak hiring managers, etc.
How many of you — whether CEO, HR executive, or recruiter —
are caught in this same tug of war? Here’s the essence of my subsequent
conversation with her, and the email I sent summarizing our talks. I
hope you find a point or two useful.
Dear CEO:
As we discussed, the idea of hiring outstanding people — while
a noble goal — isn’t practical using traditional job descriptions
as the basic measurement stick. Just because someone has all of the
required skills, experience, and academics, that doesn’t mean
that he or she will be an outstanding performer. This problem is exacerbated
when more skills, more experience, and even better academics are used
to elevate the definition of outstanding performance.
In fact, as we discussed, some of your best people achieved great success
with little of the standard prerequisites. Instead, they achieved their
business objectives by substituting basic talent, the tenacity to achieve
the objectives despite challenges, the ability to motivate and inspire
others, and the ability to anticipate, plan out, and solve all of the
job-related problems that always crop up. A traditional job description
ignores most, if not all, of these factors.
In fact, traditional job descriptions are more focused on defining skills
and requirements. A better idea might be to write job descriptions that
describe outstanding performance. This should be a list of the major
objectives, all of the key challenges needed to achieve these objectives,
and a great understanding of the environment in which all of this needs
to take place. From a hiring standpoint, you then need to find people
who are both motivated and competent enough to achieve these objectives.
This is easy enough to figure out. Just get detailed examples of comparable
accomplishments in comparable environments.
A couple of examples will help clarify how this concept works in the
real world:
One of our clients was looking for a COO for a real estate management
company. They thought they needed an MBA and at least 10 years of experience
in the real estate industry. In reality, they needed someone who could
quickly improve operating performance for 30 under-performing properties.
This required an overhaul of most of the management team in the field
and a major upgrade to the company’s performance reporting systems.
They’re now looking for someone who has achieved comparable results.
The person might have an advanced degree, but maybe not. The person
will probably have many years in real estate, but maybe not. More importantly,
the person ultimately selected will have had success turning around
a comparably sized company facing similar challenges. Focusing on success,
rather than on skills and experience, changed their whole approach to
the search and assessment process.
The key to this changeover is to get everyone involved in the hiring
process to define job success, rather than just list skills and requirements.
When completed, this final success profile is a list of six to ten major
and secondary objectives put in priority order by the hiring team. Everyone
involved should get a chance to have their say, but the hiring manager
and the needs of the business should dominate the setting of the priorities.
Next, make sure that advertising and sourcing programs emphasize these
challenges, while soft-pedaling the requirements. This will attract
a bigger pool of top performers. You’ll also be able to obtain
the interest of more top passive candidates, who are only interested
in jobs with more excitement and opportunity.
The interview itself is quite simple. Just get detailed examples of
the candidate’s major comparable accomplishments. Four to six
will do. Observe the trend of these accomplishments over time to see
candidate growth. Ask detailed follow-up questions to determine the
real results achieved, the process used to achieve these results, the
teams involved, and the environment in which these results took place.
From this, you’ll be able to quickly determine the characteristics
of successful people — tenacity, competency, motivation to do
the work required, team leadership, and job-specific problem solving.
While it might not actually be as easy as this, it shouldn’t be
that much harder. The key is to insist upon writing job descriptions
that list the real performance objectives of the job before the job
requisition is approved. This is the key control point. In the process
of preparing these for all your new job openings, you’ll discover
that people at every level in the company have a better understanding
of what they need to do to be successful. Clarifying expectations this
way is just good management. The best managers clearly communicate the
performance objectives to their team members, anyway, so just have everyone
do this before they hire anyone new.
Clarifying expectations is the key to hiring outstanding talent. Ask
your top performers what they like most about their jobs. They’ll
probably tell you it’s the challenge — not the fact that
they’re getting another year of experience.
For more information, contact Cheryl A. Jones, Manager of Corporate
Placement Services for Alpern Rosenthal. She can reached at 412.281.7692,
ext. 319 or at cjones@alpern.com.
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