As HR professionals, conducting job interviews is our bread and butter. But being on the other side of the interview requires different skills and not everyone gets it right. HRM looks at how to avoid the pitfalls.
Regardless of how long you’ve been in the HR profession, chances are you’ve conducted job interviews – maybe a couple, maybe a couple of hundred.
You know what you’re looking for in candidates, how you want them to respond to questions and behave during the interview process.
So being a recruitment expert must make you a pro at being interviewed for HR jobs, right?
Wrong.
Jo Skipper, director of the HR recruitment company The Next Step’s Melbourne office, told HRM that client feedback highlighted a number of areas in which HR candidates stumbled in job interviews.
“There are lots of tools to get access to that information on the internet. Reach into your networks to find out what they know about the company,” said Skipper.
She suggested going back to a basic interview preparation, utilising STAR technique – situation, task, activity, result – to constantly bring the focus back to what you have achieved and how you achieved it.
It’s important to remember that the interviewer has questions and doesn’t want the candidate to simply regurgitate their entire life experience, she said.
Instead, think about breaking down your career into relevant chunks.
“If you’ve got a 20-year career and you’re asked to tell someone about your career journey, you can chunk it into things like your foundation career, where you got the skills and experience that set you on the path towards phase two, the next horizon, when you maybe moved into a management role.
“Think about a couple of pieces you want to share about that phase two role, and if you’re in your third horizon, an executive role, what are some key components you’ve been able to demonstrate in that third horizon?”
“A lot of the time, that’s linking to the “why” – if you’re going to implement a particular strategy or you’re about to do something, there’s always a reason why, but often in interviews, candidates don’t communicate what the reason was.
“If you’re about to go through an organisational change or you’ve implemented a new cultural initiative, what was the reason? Why was HR required to take the organisation from A to B? For an external person, they want to know the why. Lots of people forget to do it.”
“The person sitting in front of them really wants to think, ‘They’ve got some really deep skills in some areas I’m particularly focused on, that are keeping me awake at night’.”
“When you’re talking about restructure or reorganisation, instead of talking about making 50 people redundant, talk about how by this organisational change, the cost saving was XYZ. Or by relocating a contact centre to a lower-cost area, this is what the business saved.
“Talk about it in revenue savings or the increase in customer satisfaction. By HR delivering on one or two components, how did that change the employee engagement score or the external customer net promoter score?”
Talk in commercial-style language rather than HR jargon and make sure your points are results-focused.
And remember to keep it simple.
“Often HR [professionals] like to demonstrate their knowledge and experience because we’re very passionate and it’s a knowledge-based profession – people get into HR because they are interested in organisational dynamics, people, psychology, all of those complexities. It’s broadening that out into how all of those components make an organisation much more effective than it had been previously.”
You know what you’re looking for in candidates, how you want them to respond to questions and behave during the interview process.
So being a recruitment expert must make you a pro at being interviewed for HR jobs, right?
Wrong.
Jo Skipper, director of the HR recruitment company The Next Step’s Melbourne office, told HRM that client feedback highlighted a number of areas in which HR candidates stumbled in job interviews.
- Be prepared
“There are lots of tools to get access to that information on the internet. Reach into your networks to find out what they know about the company,” said Skipper.
She suggested going back to a basic interview preparation, utilising STAR technique – situation, task, activity, result – to constantly bring the focus back to what you have achieved and how you achieved it.
- Don’t just regurgitate your background
It’s important to remember that the interviewer has questions and doesn’t want the candidate to simply regurgitate their entire life experience, she said.
Instead, think about breaking down your career into relevant chunks.
“If you’ve got a 20-year career and you’re asked to tell someone about your career journey, you can chunk it into things like your foundation career, where you got the skills and experience that set you on the path towards phase two, the next horizon, when you maybe moved into a management role.
“Think about a couple of pieces you want to share about that phase two role, and if you’re in your third horizon, an executive role, what are some key components you’ve been able to demonstrate in that third horizon?”
- Explain the “why”
“A lot of the time, that’s linking to the “why” – if you’re going to implement a particular strategy or you’re about to do something, there’s always a reason why, but often in interviews, candidates don’t communicate what the reason was.
“If you’re about to go through an organisational change or you’ve implemented a new cultural initiative, what was the reason? Why was HR required to take the organisation from A to B? For an external person, they want to know the why. Lots of people forget to do it.”
- Match your experience to the company’s needs
“The person sitting in front of them really wants to think, ‘They’ve got some really deep skills in some areas I’m particularly focused on, that are keeping me awake at night’.”
- Talk numbers
“When you’re talking about restructure or reorganisation, instead of talking about making 50 people redundant, talk about how by this organisational change, the cost saving was XYZ. Or by relocating a contact centre to a lower-cost area, this is what the business saved.
“Talk about it in revenue savings or the increase in customer satisfaction. By HR delivering on one or two components, how did that change the employee engagement score or the external customer net promoter score?”
Talk in commercial-style language rather than HR jargon and make sure your points are results-focused.
And remember to keep it simple.
“Often HR [professionals] like to demonstrate their knowledge and experience because we’re very passionate and it’s a knowledge-based profession – people get into HR because they are interested in organisational dynamics, people, psychology, all of those complexities. It’s broadening that out into how all of those components make an organisation much more effective than it had been previously.”