When to Ask the Million-Dollar Question
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Just like in marketing, it is essential that you know your customers' "buying criteria" before you attempt to make the sale. The golden rule here is the earlier the better! Remember that after you get the information, it's critical to document it in a way that is accessible to all who will interact with the candidate.
{# C, e( f, u3 jAsk this question in the following places:
- K6 {( _1 v& P( l- Your corporate career site (candidate profiling feature).
- On your written application for employment.
- During any pre-screening activities (phone screen, Web screen, face-to-face meeting).
- Via e-mail prior to any assessment activity.
- As the ice-breaking question in a formal interview.
Getting the Answer Indirectly
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If you want to be subtle, ask them to outline their "dream job" using a structured set of information categories and use it to sell them. You could also get at the information by asking the following:
8 ^- O4 T5 n! o( s- What frustrates you about your current job?
- What could your company do to improve your current job situation?
Or, simply ask for their input on the following:
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- References.
- Other decision influencers (colleagues, friends, professors, and family).
- Focus groups or surveys with other recent hires in the same or similar job family.
- Focus groups with employees from other firms (this is usually done at a trade fair or job fair) to identify their criteria.
- Published general market research studies.
If you're finding that candidates are not reluctant to provide you with their job acceptance criteria, ask them to rank or weight the factors so that you can see which are most critical in their decision-making.
( B( ]+ R/ ~9 F, w. V6 {# j! `Incidentally, during the on-boarding process you should ask all candidates why they accepted the offer, and also whether they had any concerns that caused them to nearly decline. Use this information to improve your sales pitch and to "validate" whether the information you're getting on their job-acceptance criteria is similar to the criteria that they actually used to make their decision.
& ~- n% w! i8 y5 v# x" |Remember, wherever possible, to categorize the answers from these surveys and focus groups by job family, location, and demographic factors. These "general" decision-making factors change over time as the economy and the competitive job market change.
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Don't Forget To Use the Information
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Remember, the purpose of identifying job-acceptance decision criteria is to provide recruiters and managers with specific information that will help improve the organization's closure rate. Doing the work and keeping the answers a secret will not work, nor will knowing the information and failing to consistently act on it.
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If managers don't use the information, or do not accept the candidate's reasoning as valid, it will not work. To be successful, have a process for getting feedback as to whether the information was helpful and how the process of gathering decision criteria can be improved.
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Incidentally, if you come across reluctant candidates, run. It's a bad sign if candidates can't identify their own decision criteria before making a critical decision like pursuing a new job.