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5 Hiring & Selection Questions with Will Andrew: President of Trimark Sportswear, Top 40 Under 40 for 2010.

September 2, 2010

Ben Baldwin@5:04 pm

Will Andrew was recently named one of Canada’s Top 40 Under 40 for his work with Trimark Sportswear Group, official licensee for the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics.  He’s also been asked by Canada’s national newspaper, The Globe and Mail, be to part of a special feature column on company culture.

It goes without saying, that will has hired a lot of people and learned a lot on his path to running Trimark, a 100-employee company.  So let’s not waste any more time and see what Will has to say about his hiring and selection experience.

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • Hire for attitude first then skill.  If you don’t, the culture will suffer and the execution will not happen.

2)  What’s the most effective interview question you’ve ever used in employee hiring … and what was the outcome from using it?

  • If we were meeting three years from today, what has to happen over that time for you to feel good about your progress?
  • This tells me if they have a vision for the future and helps me know how or if I can help them.

3)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Have them do an assignment and test their written skills and attention to detail.

4)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  • Have multiple people doing interviews and use a Kolbe index to determine the fit.

5)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • Workopolis – lots of candidates and fast.

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Hiring a Customer Service Person?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Customer Service Person is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Customer Service Person for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Avoiding Hiring Mistakes with Lauren Friese, Founder of TalentEgg

August 17, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

I met Lauren Friese a couple of years ago, when she was first starting TalentEgg.  She’s just as passionate today – with 8 employees and growing – as she was then about helping students connect with the employers that suit them best.  In her words: TalentEgg is an online career resource for students and new grads.

TalentEgg.ca helps students launch meaningful careers, and helps employers attract and recruit top students.  Here’s Lauren on CanadaAM.

I thought it might be interesting to ask Lauren our series of hiring questions, to get her perspective from both sides: as an entrepreneur and as someone who helps the best and brightest young talent find their professional footing.

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • The best advice I’ve ever gotten is very cliche: hire people who are smarter than you.
  • For me at TalentEgg, I’ve slightly adjusted that advice to mean ‘hire people who complement your skills … AND are smarter than you in their area of responsibility’.  In practice, this means that I tend to hire people who are do-ers, rather than idea-people.

2)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Referrals!  A players know A players.
  • The biggest cost in our hiring cycle is the time it takes me to screen and qualify and interview candidates.  Referrals help quite a bit.  A system like ClearFit would accomplish something very similar I would imagine.

3)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  • Everyone says “Hire slow, fire fast”.  I agree with ‘fire fast’.
  • If someone isn’t working out, it’s not in your interest or their interest or the interest of your current team to keep that individual on board.  However, the whole idea of hiring slowly seems flawed to me.  At some point, every hiring decision is a risk, and a lot of time can be wasted putting candidates through a lengthy hiring process.  So I would edit the saying: “Fire fast, hire as quickly as is reasonable.”

4)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

____________________________________________________________

Hiring a Customer Service Person?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Customer Service Person is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Customer Service Person for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Some Common Mistakes that Big Companies Make When Selling to Small Companies

July 27, 2010

Ben Baldwin@7:00 am

Jamie and I started ClearFit to specialize in the small business market.  Why?  Because there are very few companies doing it well.  In particular, the big guys frequently run into trouble with this tricky market.

Many large companies look to the small business market as a huge, unexploited opportunity for growth.  They do the math on the potential and agree that it’s definitely a key market for them.  Unfortunately, other than identifying the size of the opportunity and deciding to target that market, few companies do what is necessary to sell successfully and profitably to small businesses.  The following is a list of challenges for large companies selling to small businesses, as well as suggestions for how to overcome these challenges:

Here Are Common Mistakes Large Companies Make:

1.   Large companies assume that small businesses are all the same.

2.   They don’t understand how small businesses want to be sold to and what their buying process is.

3.   They try to reach small businesses through existing channels – the same channels where they sell to consumers and large corporations. Where do small businesses want to buy (i.e. online, phone, salesperson visit)?

4.   They take their current product, remove features, lower the price and say it’s for small business and think it’s ready. This makes buying and using the product complicated/time consuming for small businesses.

The Right Way to Sell:

1.   Segment. The small business market is very heterogeneous.  Know what segments you’re after and segment accordingly, based on their relative fit with your product offering.  (size, sales, industry, needs, location, etc.)

2.    Create real value and charge for it. Small business owners are not cheap. They just won’t pay for things they don’t need.  They want good products and are willing to pay for what they need.  So learn what they want, create products specifically to meet their needs – and then help them buy it.

3.   Market through SMB-specific channels. SMBs buy differently than large companies and they also buy differently than consumers.  Make sure you’re selling to them where they buy (and that varies by the size and type of business they are).  It’s also worth noting that you are most likely selling to the owner, you need to speak to them accordingly.

4.   Make it easy. Big companies love complicated products, sales cycles, training, pricing, etc.  Small businesses are too busy to deal with this; they want a product that they need and they want it to be easy to understand, buy and use.  Don’t make it hard to sign up for, understand or use your product.  If there are things about your product that are complicated, make sure it’s easy for someone to get the support they need, when they need it – or remove that feature!

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Hiring a Bookkeeper?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Bookkeeper is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Bookkeeper for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Are You Hiring the Right CFO?

July 13, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

Following is an article that I wrote a couple months ago, in a slightly different version, for Octane Magazine.  I thought it might be worth posting to my blog, since I’ve recently been asked twice about hiring the right CFO for a small or medium-sized business.

As the owner of a hiring software firm, I know how hiring mistakes can impact good companies.  On the surface, a high-level employee like a CFO can seem extremely qualified, but it doesn’t take long before you notice the warning signs, like flexible ethics and insubordination.  Honesty, integrity and ethics are important for all employees, but they are absolutely critical for the CFO.  You may not always like the news you’re getting, but it’s much better when you know you can trust it.

Three years ago, I hired Jamie, my first “C-level” employee.  We started him in the role of CFO, and thankfully, everything worked out.  Hiring Jamie was one of the best decisions I ever made, but it could have easily been the worst.  How did we avoid a bad hire?  I focused on the metrics.  A good friend is the head of scouting for a Major League Baseball (MLB) team, and I’ve always been fascinated with his ability to analyze players.  Unlike MLB scouts, hiring managers measure a worker’s behavioral attributes, not his/her physical attributes.  I’ve found behavioral statistics to be incredibly useful and accurate at helping to predict future job performance.

Here are three ways anyone can hire a great CFO by leveraging the right metrics:

1)    Build a hiring checklist to capture what outputs and behaviors you’re looking for from your new hire.  Remember to be as objective as possible; there are free online tools to help you determine these behavioral metrics.

2)    Use a hiring assessment to determine how candidates score relative to behavioral norms of top-performing CFOs.  It’s important to select an assessment that detects when someone is trying to manipulate their employment application to “appear more desirable” than they really are.

3)    Implement a consistent interview template and scoring guide that will help you uncover past achievements that demonstrate an ability to accomplish your desired outputs.  It’s also important to ask behavioral interview questions for those attributes where your candidate strays from the top-performing CFO norm.

Hiring the right CFO has helped us drive successful growth, but hiring the wrong one would have been disastrous for our business.  Now when we hire for a position at this level, we’re clear what we’re hiring for, we follow a standardized hiring-selection process and we measure job fit by utilizing metrics-based tools.  Following these simple suggestions helped us hire a winner and avoid hiring a dud!

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Hiring a Manager?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Manager is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Manager for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

5 Tips on Hiring Employees from Brent Gingerich, CEO and Owner of 500-Employee peopleCare

June 22, 2010

Ben Baldwin@7:10 am

Brent Gingerich likes to make a difference.  He owns peopleCare Inc., a long term care & assisted living community, that’s grown to 500 employees through hiring people who fit their unique family-like culture.  Brent sees hiring employees as a mission-critical job for his organization’s success and likes to stay involved in the hiring process. 

Brent, whom I met through Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO), recently hired over 100 people, in a few short months, for a new peopleCare facility.  This type of growth and transformation is what gets me excited about working with small and medium-sized businesses.

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • Out of all the functions and responsibilities of a successful management organization, hiring is the most important thing you do.  Having the right people in your organization in the right roles will make or break your success.

2)  What’s the most effective interview question you’ve ever used in employee hiring … and what was the outcome from using it?

  • I try to get have the candidate expose potential references they didn’t write down on their reference list.  I believe past job performance is the best indicator of future performance.

3)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

4)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  • Get to know as much background about the candidate as possible and whether they ‘fit’ the position; therefore one also needs to know as much about the position as possible.  A great person in the wrong role, is as bad as a wrong person in a great role.

5)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • The best of candidates come from inside one’s own organization, those who you have hired early in their careers and trained, understand your organization and culture, and their background profile is a fit for future role.  Therefore hiring candidates for lower level positions who have potential to grow is another important element of success.

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Hiring an Administrative Assistant?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Administrative Assistant is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Administrative Assistant for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Hiring and Selection Pointers from Catherine Graham, of industry innovator RIGHTSLEEVE Marketing

June 16, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

RIGHTSLEEVE has an interesting take on the age-old promotional products business. Their 16-person promotional products agency is focused on creating online merchandise solutions for clients.  Or more plainly put, they make awesome Swag supported by a technology solution that makes the ordering and management of Swag super easy.  They’re using technology and social media to reinvent how they interact with customers and how customers interact with promotional products.  With that said, they need to recruit and hire a special type of person, which means fit is very important.

Today we speak with my good friend Catherine Graham about RIGHTSLEEVE’s hiring and recruiting activities.

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • Hire for fit, train for skills.
  • We are a highly customer focused organization and if a candidate does not have the people skills, this is not something that can be trained.

2)  What’s the most effective interview question you’ve ever used in employee hiring … and what was the outcome from using it?

  • “What is the biggest risk you have taken recently?”  “What is an example of a risk you took that didn’t work out?”
  • It always provides good insight into a candidate, as it is not only indicative of their risk tolerance, but also gives some insight into what makes them tick and how they recover from set-backs.

3)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Leverage social media to tap into your network.
  • It saves time as candidates come to you rather than you having to sift through hundreds of resumes generated by a hiring site.  If your social media channels tap into the right network, it also means the candidate is more likely to be the right fit.  The savings are hours and hours of time.

4)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  1. Use a questionnaire or some kind of initial screening tool (like ClearFit!) to make sure you are only spending time on the right resumes.  In this questionnaire, ask clients why they are the right fit for your company.  This ensures they will have done their homework and can demonstrate why they are the right fit for your organization.
  2. Put the candidate through a “social” test, by engaging them in a social setting with others in the company.  We invite second round candidates to a full team lunch and it usually becomes evident quickly who is or is not going to fit in our environment.

5)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • Personal networks, amplified by social media channels has been far and away the best source of candidates.
  • It seems to attract the right type of fit for our company as it’s drawing from our own networks.

6)  What question do you think I’m missing from this list, and what’s your answer to it?

  • Q. How do you get past the typical “canned” responses in an interview?
  • A.  Push for more examples in a certain area.  If you are asking candidates for an example of failure and they give you what you feel is a canned response, ask them for another example.  If you feel that answer is still weak, don’t hesitate to ask them again.  Don’t be afraid of silence while they think of a response.

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Hiring a Salesperson?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Salesperson is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Salesperson for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Dodging Hiring Mistakes in Wealth Management, As Told By Bryan Deviney of Assante Capital Management

June 15, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

For the most part, I’ve been interviewing people who started their business and their brand from scratch.  Today, we’re taking a slight detour from this format to interview Bryan Deviney, who runs his wealth management business under the Assante Capital Management Ltd. brand.  Bryan’s 3-person business, The Deviney Goodman Team, is part of Assante’s team of 800 advisors and over $21 billion of assets under administration.  They specialize in developing retirement plans that work in all market conditions. Below, Bryan fills us in on the wealth management perspective.

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • It is critical to know the essential hard skills for the role.  If a candidate states that they know this skill test them.  In many case, applicants over estimate their skills not only to improve their odds of getting the job but also because it is human nature to impress.  I remember the story of a colleague interviewing someone for a basic filing role.  The interview went until the applicant was asked to state the alphabet from A to Z.  They could not do it.

2)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Before you contact any applicant have them perform a unimposing task like ClearFit.  Get the applicant to do more than send an email with a resume attached.  Having people commit 5-10 minutes will weed out the majority of the tire kickers.  You’ll probably eliminate 50%+ of the applicants right there.

3)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  • Don’t hire in your image – hire for the role.  Imagine putting the personality of a sales person in an administrative role.

4)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • I have found success using the large Canadian job boards like Workopolis.  You get a good pool of people to choose from.  I add the caveat that it is imperative to use a tool to narrow down the number of applicants.  Using your talents as the primary filter will rob you of your time and reduce your chances of finding the right person.

____________________________________________________________

Hiring a Customer Service Person?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Customer Service Person is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Customer Service Person for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Why Do So Many Business Owners Dread Hiring Employees?

June 8, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:03 am

The answer may be simpler than one would expect: humans don’t like doing things that they are not great at, especially if there are grave consequences when executed poorly.

Hiring can make or break any business.  This is especially true with small and medium-sized businesses.  In general, most people are not very good at hiring employees.  In fact, according to my friend, hiring expert Charles Handler, Ph.D.: on average, 45% of new hires leave in the first 6 months and 15% of new hires are fired within the first year.  And if you thought that was bad, the harm that hiring mistakes can do to your business is much worse: wasted time, reduced morale, lost clients … I could go on.  In fact, employee turnover costs range from 1/2 to 5 times an employee’s annual wages.*

How did hiring, as we know it, become so broken?  Many experts believe it’s because hiring has become more of an administrative task than a strategic or managerial priority; a painful task that’s frequently delegated to an administrator, or a recruiter.  Business leaders must become more invested in hiring, so they can avoid spending far more of their time and resources managing and firing.  Here are some helpful tactics:

1)  Focus On What’s Important:

Only you know what it is you are looking for, so make sure to prepare before you start hiring.  One key thing to note is that it’s just as crucial to understand what isn’t important, as what is.  Avoid becoming romanced by qualifications that are not relevant to getting the job done.  Make sure you also have a good understanding of what sort of personality you’re seeking, because, as the old saying goes: you can train skills, but you can’t train fit.

2)  Hiring Is Sales:

Often, the best candidates are not looking for a job, so they must be sold on your opportunity.  From HubSpot, Paul English, founder and CTO of Kayak, the most popular travel search site on the web: “When someone mentions the name of a person that they’ve worked with that they think is exceptional, a little clock starts ticking in my head.  From when the clock  starts, I give myself seven days to track them down, back channel, get them in for two series of interviews that are intense and focused, and make an offer and have them accept it.”

3) Become Good At Asking Questions and Reading Responses:

Typically, even when employers do a good job of getting the right candidates to the table, they don’t prepare adequately for the interview.  The interview is critical for avoiding a bad hire and ensuring you’ve got the right person.  You can forget about trying to “fix” unfit employees after you hire them, because this is either impossible or a huge waste of time, no matter how strong a manager you are.

Avoid asking a standard set of questions.  Instead, ask questions based on your candidate’s own strengths and weaknesses, compared to what’s required to successfully perform your unique job.  Try to focus on areas where they appear to be weaker than others, or where their performance might derail while they are working for you.  Make sure you keep digging when you ask your questions (ask “why” a lot), as this is your opportunity to really get to know this person before committing to them.   You have to feel comfortable that you can live with all of your candidate’s weaknesses and that they won’t become obstacles that get the way of their success.

I’ve learned a great way to get some really honest responses is through difficult questions such as: “Who was your last boss?  What will they tell me about your strengths and weaknesses when I call them this afternoon?”  Another tactic is meeting with your candidate in a social setting (go for a drink with others, if you can) where they are more likely to be themselves.

Let me know how these tactics work for you and don’t be afraid to email be with any questions!

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*Charles A. Handler, Ph.D. (2009) Using Technology to Support Informed Decision Making Within the Hiring Process.



____________________________________________________________

Hiring a Bookkeeper?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Bookkeeper is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Bookkeeper for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

What Can One of North America’s Most Innovative Fundraising Brands Teach Us About Employee Assessment and Hiring Employees?

June 2, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

Today I’m taking a brief hiatus from interviewing entrepreneurs because I think we can all learn something from Phil Wylie, who is a driving force behind hiring for one of North America’s most innovative fundraising brands: The SickKids Foundation.

Established in 1972, SickKids Foundation is the fundraising organization for The Hospital for Sick Children. For the fiscal year ending March 31, 2009, SickKids Foundation made an investment of $64.1 million in children’s health research, education and care. A direct result of community support, this is the largest investment in paediatric health care and one of the largest contributions to a hospital anywhere in Canada.

Phil is a unique individual, because he acts more like an “intrapraneur,” finding innovative ways to apply HR tools and employee assessment within SickKids’ 150- 200 employees and many more volunteers.  He’s the only HR person I know who is equally versed in CHRP as he is in RoR.  So here’s what Phil had to say about hiring employees:

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring employees?  Why was it the best?

  • Hire for personality, attitude and fit with your overall culture.
  • Skills and knowledge can be taught, but a person with a bad attitude is much more difficult to change. I heard this one a long time ago and it still stands to this day. People who aren’t willing to learn, change or grow with the company end up being actively disengaged and working against what you are trying to accomplish.

2)  What’s the most effective interview question you’ve ever used in employee hiring … and what was the outcome from using it?

  • It’s probably a three part question …
  1. Tell me about a time when (insert job competency you are looking for here).
  2. What did you learn from that?
  3. How have you applied that learning in different situations?
  • These questions help determine learning agility, one of the most important predictors of leadership success. The outcome has been being able to identify leadership candidates who possess learning agility and are able to apply what they’ve learned in the past to their new challenges in the role.

3)  When it comes to hiring a new employee, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Don’t interview referrals for the sake of it.
  • Even if the referral comes from the boss, if the basic skills and experience you are looking for aren’t there, don’t waste your time on the process.

4)  What’s your best advice for avoiding hiring mistakes in the hiring selection process?  Why?

  • If there are any red flags at the interview or selection stage, do not proceed.
  • If you have doubts about the persons’ ability after one or two brief interviews, the chances of you regretting hiring them are huge.

5)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best small business job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • Not for profit job boards and not for profit college graduates.
  • Fundraising as a profession is still relatively young and a small segment of the overall job market, so we have to rely upon boards to find experienced people and colleges to find young talent that we can further develop.

6)  What question do you think I’m missing from this list, and what’s your answer to it?

  • How is an employee assessment process integral to the recruitment process?
  • Because they provide an additional piece of information to help inform your decision, and given the pressures to make the right hire on a tight time line, every piece of information that can help is integral.

____________________________________________________________

Hiring a Salesperson?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Salesperson is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Salesperson for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).

Hiring a New Employee, Through the Eyes of Ivan Roth, Founder of Lava People

May 31, 2010

Ben Baldwin@8:00 am

Ivan Roth is building a very unique business, based around networking entrepreneurs.  His model reminds me of how A Small World compares with LinkedIn: a more exclusive community for a specific audience.  Here’s how Ivan describes his Amsterdam-based business venture: “Lava People is a new online club for entrepreneurs and investors – it is a network where you meet like-minded individuals to do and grow business.  Its a space with a true community culture for entrepreneurs that can help each other with connections, advice, and new business opportunities.”

Following is what Ivan has learned about hiring employees — whether English or Dutch:

1)  What’s the best advice you’ve ever received regarding hiring job candidates?  Why was it the best?

  • Go through trusted network.
  • Candidates come recommended from people that (often) understand your needs.

2)  What’s the most effective job interview question you’ve ever used … and what was the outcome from using it?

  • Why do you want to work here?
  • By using this question you can assess the persons motivation for taking that position.

3)  When it comes to small business hiring, what is the best time/money-saving tip you know?  Can you quantify your savings?

  • Again, go through trusted network if possible.
  • Your savings would be in not having to hire a headhunter or paying an agency placement fee.

4)  What’s your best advice for avoiding a mistake with job fit in the hiring process?  Why?

  • I usually rely on my gut feeling.
  • It has mostly always been right for me but I wouldn’t specifically advise others to do the same.  Not sure what I could recommend.

5)  Where (from what source) do you tend to find your best job candidates?  Why is it the best source for you?

  • Network.
  • So far, the only qualified people have come through personal network.  Although, I must say I have not looked much further.

6)  What question am I missing from this list, and what’s your answer to it?

  • Whats the best way to measure someone’s commitment?
  • If I knew the answer, I wouldn’t be asking the question…

____________________________________________________________

Hiring an Administrative Assistant?

How will you ensure you’re not making a costly hiring mistake?  Hiring the right Administrative Assistant is critical to your success, but it can be difficult to do.  Learn how to find the right Administrative Assistant for your success and how hiring them can be easy!

____________________________________________________________

About the Author

Ben Baldwin invented ClearFit.com: a software tool that makes hiring easy. Patent holder and member of the Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO/YEO).
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