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Hiring_Good_Employees
| Hiring Good Employees
Hiring good employees is not only important to business, it’s
essential. Employees are the heart and soul of a business; they
are the mechanism that makes a business run; they are the breath
of life that enables a business to be something more than an
idea. A business cannot run unless someone (employees, in this
case) is doing the work. Any intelligent business owner should
want good employees.
EMPLOYERS NOT THE ONLY ONES TO FEEL THE EFFECT
Bad employees not only affect an employer by driving down sales,
costing the company unwanted expenses due to negligence or
simple lack of motivation, etc, but they affect the customer as
well. Of course, once a customer has experienced a bad employee,
it automatically affects the employer in obvious ways. Although
this seems like common sense to most people, it is uncanny how
most employers will overlook this fact, whether it’s because of
time constraints to effectively deal with the problem or lack of
better judgment. Whatever the case, it is a fact that sales get
driven down and production slowed for a reason. That reason
could very well be because of the customer’s lack of
satisfaction with whatever service he or she had received and
that lack of satisfaction stems from bad employees.
FIND THE RIGHT PEOPLE TO START WITH
This is one of the most important things you, as an employer,
can do. Getting the right people into your company to start with
gets things moving in the right direction at the very beginning.
According to Chairman and CEO, Hal F. Rosenbluth, and
Consultant, Diane McFerrin Peters, of Rosenbluth International,
the third-largest travel management company in the world, “Most
of us choose our spouse with care and rear our children with
nurturing and compassionate attention. Yet, we tend to select
the people who will join our company on the basis of an
interview or two, and once they have joined, they often find
that they must fend for themselves.
This contrast illustrates the disparity between the environments
of family and work. But, given the amount of time we must spend
at work, wouldn’t we all be happier if we took as much care at
the office as at home to create a supportive environment?
Wouldn’t we also be far more successful?”
The answer is yes.
THE CUSTOMER DOES NOT COME FIRST
It’s important to remember that if you want quality employees,
your company must be of the same caliber. If you expect to
attract an employee who thrives to be as dedicated to the
business as possible, doing more than what is expected, and
putting forth 110% without any consideration being given to the
employee’s personal needs, thoughts, and desires, you are truly
fooling yourself. And, eventually, your business will suffer for
it.
It’s obvious to most, by now, that benefits and perks play a
large part in attracting employees. I need not explain the many
benefits that a company should make available to attract a good
employee because it should be common sense to most, by now. I
will say, however, that attaining a good employee must go much
farther than just having a great set of benefits. After all,
does a wonderful benefits package actually attract only good
employees? Of course not. There must be more to it than that.
For the customer to be served with the best results humanly
possible, a more modern approach to the theory of customer
satisfaction must be realized which is that the customer should
not come first; the employee should. Therein in itself is one of
the most successful ways to attract a good employee.
When a business puts its employees first, many things can
happen. To begin with, the employee is happy. If the employee is
happy, the service that the employee provides to the customer
will be far more outstanding than if he or she were not happy.
If the service is outstanding, the customer will be happy and
that only spells successful results for the business.
This does not mean that an employer must wait hand and foot on
the employee. No, it simply means that careful consideration to
what an employee thinks, wants, and suggests should be
considered. Do not treat an employee as if he or she is a
factory robot working on a clock. Treat them as people. Treat
them with respect by talking to them as people and not “talking
down to them” as “employees”. In fact, a good idea would be to
remove the term “employee” all together. One successful company
I know of refers to its employees as “associates”, thereby
empowering their “associates” with a feeling of more respect and
purpose.
EMPLOYEE LEADERSHIP AND FLEXIBILITY A MUST
An open, friendly atmosphere is a must in a workplace. Micro
managing, as most already are aware of, is frowned upon. This is
for a reason. When a work environment is open enough for all
employees to contribute and offer ideas and suggestions, without
ridicule or negative response, this sparks creativity in an
employee and, again, empowers them to contribute more to the
business. If everyone feels as though they are a part of the
leadership process and not just a worker bee, they will have a
satisfying feeling that can go a long way. Micro managing
completely kills this system.
An employer must be flexible. Does there really need to be a
rigid schedule? Does lunchtime really need to take place at a
specific time? Who actually needs a clock to tell them when they
are hungry? This line of thinking is what is needed in every
faucet of business, as simple as it seems. It makes an employee
feel more like a human; it makes them feel as though the
business respects them as a person and will put them first. Once
that consideration is instilled in an employee’s mind, there
isn’t anything that he or she wouldn’t do for a business. And,
when a person looks forward to waking up in the morning to begin
working in a place where they feel management gives them respect
and thinks highly of them, they will put forth the effort to
show appreciation.
HIRE NICE PEOPLE
Experience and degrees are great ways of measuring employees’
qualifications and potential…but ask yourself, are they nice
people? A person can be the most qualified, educated, and
experienced possible employee on the planet but if they have the
personality of a wet paper bag or of a caged wolverine, it’s
guaranteed they’re not going to do much for your business. Those
that have to work with them will be disgruntled on a daily bases
and begin putting out a poor performance. The customers that
receive service from them will be unhappy and I need not say
what happens after that.
Hire nice people. Nice people can do wonders for a business.
Sound picky? It is. But, when it comes to your business, can you
afford not to be picky?
A nice person can learn anything. Nice people are pleasant to be
around and are easy to teach. They are notoriously quick to
learn. So, even if your nice person does not have the skill set
that you are looking for, one might consider the possibility of
training. Think about the potential, especially if nice people
seem to be rare in your neck of the woods.
HOW DO YOU FIND NICE PEOPLE
This should be obvious. During the interview process, were they
down-to-earth or were they focused solely on success, success,
and more success? As crazy as it may seem, the total, success
driven fanatic may not be the best option. Again, the person who
seems more like a “person” would be the best candidate for
hiring. In the long run, they will make your business more
successful because they would make the customer, as well as
those that have to work with them, happier.
Conduct tests and unconventional interview methods. Why should
an interview consist of one or two meetings in a stuffy room?
How can we really find out about a person that way? The answer
is that we can’t. Instead, how about combining the stuffy office
interview one day with another day of playing a game of softball
with other, current employees, as Hal F. Rosenbluth and Diane
McFerrin tend to do within their company? This would be great
for company moral and, at the same time, provide a chance to see
how the potential employee reacts in a team environment. If the
person is bent on nothing but winning and becomes angry when
other teammates drop the ball or do not hit as far as they
should, perhaps this person is not the best employee to have
around. Chances are that their performance on the softball field
will reflect their performance in the office.
Go for a drive. As again explained by Hal F. Rosenbluth and
Diane McFerrin Peters, the way a person drives an automobile
says a lot about a person’s personality. Are they overly
aggressive and speed through traffic, weaving in an out of other
cars, determined to get to the point of destination no matter
what the cost? Or, are they assertive drivers who consider the
safety of their passengers and think of alternate routes when
confronted with a traffic jam, focusing more on the drive than
the destination? (31). Which person would you rather have
working for you? Which person would you rather have serving your
customers? If you were a customer, which person would you rather
have serving you?
Invite your new, potential employee to a company social event.
Are they the type of person that talks only of themselves and
continuously brags about all of the wonderful things that he or
she has done? Do they even talk to anyone at all? These are the
folks that either want to gain far more than they are willing to
contribute or aren’t willing to gain or contribute. These are
the type of people that will bring your company down.
About the author:
Myron Curry is President and CEO of BusinessTrainingMedia.com a
leading provider of workforce and business development training
programs designed exclusively for corporate deployment. Myron
has over 20 years of successful management experience with
leading fortune 500 companies and has written numerous articles
about workforce management issues.
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