The Do's and Don'ts of Interviewing

In the current climate the competition for finding talent is fierce. The challenge for employers is to try to identify and attract the best candidate for the job. As the candidates try hard to convince you that they are the best person for the job you need to take extra care to make sure that you can identify what a candidate can really bring to a role.

Use a job description and person specification to define what the job is about and the type of person you think you need to carry out that role. What skills and behaviours are you looking for? Make sure your advert is clear focusing on the role and the skills and behaviours you are looking for. Avoid putting anything in the advert that indicates a preference for a candidate from a particular group such as age, gender or ethnicity.

Interviews can be nerve-racking experiences irrespective of which side of the desk you are on, so try to make the interview as easy as possible as this will help you to get a fuller picture of the candidate. Be aware of body language in order to try and make the interview as open and friendly as possible. Consider placing a small clock on the table in front of you so that you can discretely monitor the time without risking the candidate thinking that you are bored. 

The purpose of the interview is to identify the best person for the job, so design questions in advance to test for the particular skills and experiences that you have set out in the job description and person specification. This means that the candidates can be compared on issues relevant to the position. Open questioning allows candidates flexibility to show how they meet the issue being tested. Be careful of unrelated discussion as it can be misinterpreted, so avoid issues like children and child care, retirement and health. Don’t set tasks, like presentations, if its not a relevant skill for the role under consideration.

Scoring records should record notes of the answers given and if the interviewer thinks that the candidate meets, partially meets or does not meet the criteria being tested. This helps interviewers to ensure that their selection process is fair.

It is reasonable to expect a candidate to have reviewed what the job is about as well as attempted to find out something about the company and you can ask candidates about what attracted them to the position or the company.

Look for clear, detailed answers to the questions showing that the candidate has listened to the question and understood how it relates to the role. Ideally, you want someone who can learn something useful from an experience, good or bad, and react positively in difficult situations. The length of the interview should take into account the number of questions being asked so that the process is not rushed and allow the candidate to ask any questions of their own.

Whether interested or not, sell yourself, your companies values, culture and vision. People know people and important all interviewees leave feeling positive and impressed as likely to spread the word!

Thank them for their time and let them know when they can expect to hear from you. Ensure they are given a response with outcome. 

If you are planning to recruit and want some help with the process, contact LCA Jobs and one of our consultants will be happy to help.

In the meantime, here are our top Do’s and Don’ts to remember:

Do's

Ensure welcomed to your offices with professional polite and positive greeting

Read the CV before the interview and make any observation notes in advance

Welcome and explain time and format of interview

Plan questions in advance to identify the skills you are looking for

Use scoring matrix to cover key skills, experience and behaviours required

Ask each candidate the same question

Keep a clear record of the scoring

Ask open questions

Sell yourself and your companies values and culture

Thank them for their time and let them know when they will hear from you.

Ensure they receive a response following their meeting.

Don'ts

Keep them waiting

Go into the interview unprepared

Have an overly large interview panel

Ask potentially discriminatory questions

Ask closed questions

Set unnecessary tasks

Talk negatively about other members of staff

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