interview skills

Training course manuals – for sale

by admin on September 25, 2012

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Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

CONTROLLING BIAS

Bias can affect selection in two ways

  • During the interview
  • In assessing the evidence

DURING THE INTERVIEW

Bias Arises From:

  1.  “Contrast Effect” – Candidate is much better/worse than previous candidate.
  2. The influence of the applicant’s appearance.
  3. The influence of stereotyping.
  4. “Halo effect” of similarity between candidate and interviewer.

And Is Controlled By:

  1. Probing the evidence and not making assumptions based solely on own experiences.
  2. Trying to allow some time gap between interviews. Making notes.
  3. Asking neutral questions which allow the applicant to respond appropriately.
  4. Changing your own behaviour or questioning to help him/her respond differently.
  5. Interviewing in pairs to analyse why you are drawn to the person.

IN ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE

Bias in Judgement

Halo effect of one aspect could cloud the assessor’s judgement on other aspects.

Assessing errors: rating too severely or leniently.

Controlled by:

  1. Using a systematic approach. Insisting on evidence for judgements. Making notes. Covering every aspect of the personal specification.
  2. Comparing assessments of the same candidates by other selectors.

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

Dealing with Difficult Candidates

Interviewers tend to prefer candidates who are easy to interview and make the interviewer feel efficient and likeable. However, it is dangerous to assume that the difficult candidate is likely to be unsuitable or vice versa. It is wiser for the interviewer to suspend judgement and to employ the appropriate techniques to help the candidate present him/herself accurately. The key is to attempt to diagnose the candidate’s behaviour correctly and then adopt the appropriate tactics.

Very Nervous Candidate

Tense, awkward, aggressive or over-formal behaviour. The interviewer adopts a relaxed manner and posture: introduces humour if possible; concentrates on the candidate’s interests and safe easy topics; chats about common interests or acquaintances until the candidate is more at ease. There may be some specific reason for the candidate’s state of agitation – e.g. a bad journey etc. The interviewer needs to find out whether this behaviour is part of a recurring pattern of nervous behaviour or not.

Candidates Who Talk Too Little

The interviewer should resist the temptation to compensate by talking. He/she should ask easy, open ended questions, be prepared to wait for answers, use silence, give encouraging responses to replies and follow up with “tell me more about” questions. It will help if the interviewer can determine the candidate’s particular interests. Again, the interviewer needs to consider the significance of the behaviour when assessing the candidate.

Candidates Who Talk To Much (90%)

This may, or may not be a form of nervousness. Control can be achieved by more specific questions, and firm but smooth interruptions. Use the candidate’s name to make them stop talking. More formality may be appropriate.

Over Confident Candidates

The candidate overstates his/her achievements. This may be due to insecurity. The interviewer should resist the temptation to deflate, but do probe for precise details, giving credit where due and look for reasons for this behaviour.

Over Smooth Presentation

This highly polished but impersonal presentation can appear false. The interviewer should remain courteous, probing for facts and trying to assess the reason for the candidate’s behaviour.

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

QUESTIONING SKILLS P5: COMPETENCE BASED QUESTIONS

The following sample questions focus on competence, and might be suitable for someone being interviewed for a junior/middle management post. (N.B. Where two or three questions are listed as one, you would use them one at a time.) These are similar in structure to behavioural questions.

Remember to define clearly what it is you want and then phrase your questions around that. The information you get in the overview section or the interview will help you to focus your questions appropriately to the candidate’s experience.

Organisational Skills

  • Describe how you organise your work on a day to day basis.
  • What tasks come top of your pile: what sinks to the bottom?
  • What hours do you work? What factors influence volume and quality of work output?
  • How do you organise the administrative parts of your job?
  • How do you manage conflicting priorities?
  • What objectives were you set for this year? How are they measured? What have you achieved? (What is the reason for the shortfall?)
  • Give me an example of where you have had to be highly organised in order to meet a tight deadline.

Decision Making/Problem Solving

  • What do you find most difficult about your job?
  • Describe a major decision you have had to tackle at work recently.
  • Take me through how and why you decided to tackle the problem the way you did.
  • Describe any risks you have taken in your job. How did you assess them?
  • Give me an example of where you have to take the initiative in order to solve a problem.

Career Commitment

  • Which elements of your job put you under the most pressure? How do you cope with the pressure?
  • Give an example of when you have achieved a task where it was necessary to overcome a difficult obstacle. Give an example where you have failed.

Team Working

  • Describe a time when you had to help someone else in your team in order for them to complete a task on time.
  • What size is your team and what are the roles within it?
  • Give me an example of where you supported a team member in solving a problem.
  • How do you share work amongst the team?
  • How much time do you spend working alone?

People Management

  • Give me an example of a difficult/demanding situation with which you have had to take charge and lead others.
  • Give me an example of setting objectives for someone when reviewing their performance or handling under-performance or discipline.
  • Give me an example of a problem/situation involving one of your team, where you had to make a decision. Take me through what happened and why you decided to tackle the problem the way you did. In retrospect, is there anything you would have done differently and why?
  • How do you judge the performance of your staff?
  • How do you ensure you communicate effectively with your team?
  • What kinds of people have you found it difficult to develop working relationships with? Why? How have you handled this?

Motivation

  • What aspects of your job do you most enjoy the most? Why? And least? Why?
  • Why are you leaving/ thinking of leaving your current firm?
  • What attracted you to this position?
  • What are the important factors to you in your choice of career?
  • What do you see as the potential challenges/frustrations in this career?
  • How would you like to see your career developing in the future?

Communicating

This is a big area, so focus on key parts of it one at a time:

  • What would you describe as your strong points as a communicator? Why? What are your limitations?
  • Have you been required to give presentations as part of your job? To whom? How do you feel about them? How have you prepared for them? What feedback have you had?
  • Give me an example of when someone has misinterpreted your communication? Why did it happen? In retrospect, would you change the way you communicated it?
  • What type of meetings do you attend and what is your role in them? Give examples

Influencing

  • Give an example of when you have had to work with someone who isn’t easy to get on with. Why was that person difficult? How did you handle the situation?
  • Give an example of when you persuaded a subordinate to do something they didn’t want to do. How did you persuade them? Give an example of when you were unsuccessful. Why?
  • Describe some projects or idea (not necessarily your own) that were sold or implemented successfully, primarily because of your efforts.

Interpersonal Skills

  • Give me an example of when you had to deal with conflict between you and a customer/team member. What happened?
  • Give me an example of where you had to negotiate a workable compromise over a work situation.
  • Give me an example of where you decided to change your viewpoint as a result of decisions with another person.

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

QUESTIONING SKILLS P4: BEHAVIOURAL QUESTIONS 

The key to asking behavioural questions is to:

  • Ask open questions which are structured to elicit specific answers (such as those below).
  • Ensure the interviewee answers the question fully. This may mean a couple of silent pauses during the interview while you wait for the answer, but under no circumstances should you pass over the question or answer it for them.
  • If you find there are follow-up questions which arise from the answers given, then ask them. Use a technique such as funnelling your questions (following a particular issue and making the questions more specific after each answer) until you have arrived at the answer you are seeking.

Typical Behavioural Questions:

  1. What types of decisions do you make in your current position without consulting your boss?
  2. Give me an example of a time when you came up with a clever way of motivating someone.
  3. What were the major obstacles you had to overcome in your last job and how did you deal with them?
  4. What types of things have made you angry and how did you react to those situations?
  5. Describe for me a time when you made a mistake that illustrates your need for improvement?
  6. Think of a problem person you had to deal with in your last job and how you handed it.
  7. Describe a situation in which you felt it might be justified to break Company Policy or alter standard procedure.
  8. Give me an example of a time when communicating with a customer was very difficult. Tell me how you handled it.
  9. Think of a day when you had many things to do. Describe how you scheduled your time.
  10. Give me a general view of your responsibilities in your current job.
  11. Tell me about something you’ve done in your job that’s creative.
  12. Tell me about an important goal you’ve set in the past and how successful you were in accomplishing it.
  13. When you had to do a job that was particularly uninteresting, how did you deal with it?
  14. What experience have you had of a miscommunication with a fellow employee or customer, and what did you do to solve the problem?
  15. Tell me about a time when an upper level decision or policy change held up your work. How did you deal with it?
  16. Describe a situation in your last job when you could structure your own work schedule. How did you deal with it?
  17. In your last job experience tell me about a situation when you stuck to Company Policy when it might have been easier or more immediately effective not to.
  18. Tell me about a time when you had a problem with decisiveness. How did you deal with it?
  19. Have you ever had to make a sticky decision when no Company Policy existed to cover it? Tell me about what you did.
  20. Describe a time when you communicated some unpleasant feelings to a supervisor. What happened?
  21. What’s been your experience of dealing with poor performance of a subordinate? Describe how you handled it?

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

QUESTIONING SKILLS P1: FUNNELING

This is a method of shaping a series of questions to gain maximum information about each topic.

START WITH A GENERAL EASY OPEN ENDED QUESTION.

LISTEN

FOLLOW-UP RELATING CANDIDATE’S REPLY TO THE SPECIFICATION

LISTEN

PROBE TO CHECK ON FACTUAL DETAILS AND GAIN BEHAVIOURAL EVIDENCE

LISTEN

ASK ABOUT FEELINGS AND MOTIVES

LISTEN

SUMMARISE AND SEEK AGREEMENT

START NEXT TOPIC WITH AN OPEN QUESTION REPEAT SEQUENCE

The probing gains the evidence behind the initial statement or opinion, whilst sympathetic summarising may result in further information being offered by the candidate.

The Overview

Explore recent job changes. The past two to five years is the most critical timeframe to explore. People tend to repeat recent patterns of behaviour and methods of dealing with problems. They are also more likely to remember what they did and said in the recent past.

Focus on their current job. And get a picture of the candidate e.g. what they do, what their responsibilities are, their likes, dislikes, frustrations, challenges, contacts, and daily routine.

Sample Question

  • Tell me about your job responsibilities.
  • Tell me about a typical day. (This helps you to see what specific areas you could probe on).
  • Who are your customers?
  • What sort of problems do you encounter in your job?
  • What targets and objectives do you work to?
  • How do you monitor performance?
  • Tell me about the people in your team.
  • How do you work together?
  • How do you arrange work between each other?
  • What do you like most/least? Why?
  • What are your strengths?
  • What are your development areas?
  • What have you done to address these?

The competency you are looking for drives what you ask in the overview. The objective is to obtain context for the next stage relevant to the competence.

LESS EFFECTIVE QUESTIONS

Leading Questions

Implies the correct answer and hence inform the person but does not encourage him/her to inform you. Therefore questions like: “Do you have the necessary experience?”, “Are you good at…?”, “Can you…?”, need to be re-phrased. For example, “Tell me about your experience…”

Multiple Questions

“How long have you been in this job: what have been your major objectives over the past year and in each case what were your main achievements?”

Such questions tend to be confusing and you don’t give the person a chance to answer before asking another question.

Implied Values Questions

“Surely you don’t agree with him…”, or “Oh?” (said with a disapproving tone)

Your task is not to influence or express disapproval but to obtain valid information.

Hypothetical Questions

These questions ask candidates to put themselves into an imaginary situation and tell you how they would deal with it, e.g. ‘How would you deal with a difficult customer?’ The danger is that people will tell you the ‘right’ answer or what they might want you to hear. You will not gain any real evidence of their behaviour in a situation.

Always look for:     Evidence of behaviour

What they did

What they said

Why they acted as they did

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

QUESTIONING SKILLS P2: SITUATIONAL QUESTIONS

Always ask situational questions, as they explore the candidate’s actual experience in a specific skill/quality from the person specification. These sorts of questions will give you some idea of how they may react in future e.g. “Tell me about a time when you had to make a quick decision. What did you do?”

Use the STARS technique to ensure that you gain meaningful information

S          Situation – What was the situation?

T         Target – What were you aiming to achieve?

A         Action Taken – What action did you take?

R         Result – What was the result? Did you achieve your aim?

S          Spin-Offs – What have you done differently as a result?

Follow up or probe questions

Use when you do not have enough information, or to discourage vague answers.

“Tell me more about…”, or “Can we go into this a little deeper?”

Other good follow up probe questions are:

“How did you tackle that?”

“Why did you do that?”

“What else were you aware of?”

“Would you enlarge a little on that for me please?”

Such questions need to be oiled so as not to appear too aggressive

In-Depth Questioning Using STARS

In order to make an effective evaluation of a candidate it is vital to gather ‘evidence’ on each of the criteria from your person specification. This can be achieved by probing actual situations where the individual had an opportunity to demonstrate the skill in which you are interested. e.g. ‘Can you think of a situation where you had to demonstrate initiative?’

The STARS sequence allows you to gain in depth information. Define what it is you want and then ask the question e.g. ‘I’d like you to tell me about a time when you had to deal with a different situation with an angry customer’.

Situation

‘What was the situation?’

Target

‘What were you aiming to achieve?’

Action

Tell me in your own words what you said when…?

What did you say?

What did the other person say?

How did you feel? Why?

What was your motive in doing that at this point? Why?

What was the customer’s reaction?

What did you do then?

What other options did you have?

Why did you choose that one?

Why did you say that?

Why take that action?

What was their reaction?

Result

What was the outcome?

How did you know this was successful?

How does this demonstrate…?

How did this compare with what you set out to do?

Spin-Offs

What did you learn?

How have you used that learning?

What have you done differently as a result?

Using this sequence will also enable you to compare what they were aiming to achieve with what was actually achieved.

It can be used to probe both achievements and disappointments although it is vital to balance negative and positive examples.

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

QUESTIONING SKILLS P1: EFFECTIVE QUESTIONS

The Open Question

It is best to start with an open question. Open questions start with words ‘who’, ‘what’, ‘where’, ‘why’, ‘when’, ‘which’ and ‘how’. They encourage the candidate to open up and talk more. The more open the question, the wider the answer. The candidate can offer what he/she thinks is most important. However, too general a question, “Tell me about yourself” can be difficult to answer.

You will get nowhere if the applicant responds to all your questions with ‘yes’ or ‘no’ or ’3 years and 5 months’. The key is in how you ask the question. It is impossible to give one-word answers to almost any question which begins with how, what, where, why or when.

The things you need to explore include:

1.     Not just who they worked for but what they did in the job. What was their contribution?

2.    What did they learn from the job? Therefore what can they bring to you from that experience?

3.    Why did they leave the previous employer and how did a subsequent job match their expectations – in other words is there logic or growth in their career history?

4.    How did their reasons for leaving and joining different organisations match with their starting and leaving salaries? Is claimed career progression matched by salary progression?

Examples of  good open questions: Open questions are especially useful to get nervous candidates to talk:

“I see from your CV that you…tell me about it”

“I’d like you to tell me about a time when…”

“How do you go about…?”

“Tell me about your job responsibilities.”

“Tell me about a typical day.” (This helps you to see what areas you could probe on).

 “What sort of problems do you encounter in your job?”

“What targets and objectives do you work to?”

“How do you monitor performance?”

 “How do you organise your work schedule?”

“What do you like most/least? Why?”

“What are your strengths?”

“What have you done to address your development areas?”

‘Follow up’ or probe questions

Use when you do not have enough information, or to discourage vague answers.

Tell me more about…”, or “Can we go into this a little deeper?”

Further examples of ‘follow up’/ probe questions are:

“How did you tackle that?”

“Why did you do that?”

“What else were you aware of?”

“Would you enlarge a little on that for me please?”

The Closed Question

These questions can be used to probe for specific information, or to control an over talkative person. But used too often, they make an interview sound like an interrogation.

Examples are:

“Did you…?”    “Have you…?”

“Could you…?”     “Will you…?”

Comparison Question – this is an effective, ‘open’-style question

“How did that project compare with the previous one?”

People find this easier to answer than direct questions about their likes and dislikes. It is also a useful question for exploring attitudes.

Scenario Based Question – this gives the candidate the opportunity to impress you with their ability to think things through

The key to this type of question is to give the candidate a typical scenario to see how they would handle it. Important to discover if they have skills, techniques and strategies that they can use in your organisation. “Tell me what you would do in this situation when………….?”

Learning or Reflecting Questions

These questions are used to gauge what the candidate has learnt from his current job or projects within it. Answers may reveal what skills were used, and even how that learning has been applied since, e.g. ‘What did you learn from that?’ ‘How would you apply that to your current job?’

Link or Bridging Questions

“Thank you, I was very interested in…can we now move on to talk about that?”

This is a polite way of moving your candidate on to the next area without seeming abrupt.

Final Question

“Is there anything we have not covered that you would like to add?”

Such a question can lead to important additional information.

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

INTERVIEW STRUCTURE

Base the structure of the interview around ‘WASP’. This is a guideline structure and it is important to include all of the points, however, interviewers may wish to adjust the order of some of the following items to suit their preferences:

W                              Welcome

  • Be punctual
  • Greet the candidate in person
  • Introduce yourself and give your job title
  • Confirm purpose of interview (job applied for)
  • Establish rapport with a couple of easy questions or comments, for example on where they live, journey to interview etc
  • Explain structure and timing (i.e. acquire information before supplying information)
  • Explain that you will be taking notes

A                                Acquire Information by Asking Questions

This is the most vital section of the interview. You can split it into two parts:

  • Overview and CV
  • In-depth questioning to determine action and behaviour.

S                                 Supply Information/Sell the Company

  • Explain briefly what the job involves and the working conditions successful candidates would be expected to meet, e.g. hours etc
  • Sell the company and its benefits
  • Answer any questions and note the quality of their questions about the company / the work
  • Amplify nature of the job, cover working requirements, hours, travel, pay (if appropriate)

P                                Part and Plan

  • Check whether candidate has any other points to make
  • Check the candidate’s continued interest
  • Give time-table for decision
  • Thank them and see them out personally
  • Remain neutral in your language

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information

Our one-day interviewing skills course is tailored for delegates who would like to gain better interviewing skills and learn how to conduct successful interviews for choosing the right employee(s). Our Interviewing course will show candidates how to; gain winning interview skills; give better interviews; be a better interviewer and learn how to interview effectively. As well as improving interviewing skills, delegates will also learn recruitment and employment law.

EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

Consistency of employment

  • Ask about gaps of unexplained time between jobs. How many applications, how many interviews, how did they fill their time?
  • Check for gaps between jobs and school and university work.
  • Can they explain their reasons from initial idea (head hunted – why?) through to application, job interview and positives and negatives of new job?
  • What trends can you spot e.g. salary progression, (if given) types of companies worked in, patterns of work?
  • Did they move up in salary, job responsibilities (not necessarily job title), staff responsibilities?
  • Be aware of frequent job changes with no advancement in job responsibility or title.
  • Is there anything that appears inconsistent? e.g. switch from large company to small to large company or vice versa: change of company whilst a trainee.

Details of positions

  • Are the candidate’s previous responsibilities clear? Job titles are normally vague.
  • What did the person actually do?
  • Equally, the same job title may mean different things in different companies.
  • Check the career theme: how was the initial choice made, how has the career progressed since?
  • How wide is his/her experience?
  • Have there been concrete achievements?
  • Is there evidence of personal responsibilities for these achievements?

Reasons for Leaving (These are notoriously vague, and may never be accurately established, either on CV or in the interview):

What were their reasons for leaving? Would the organisations have them back? What would their current manager say about them?

  • These can be checked by writing to/telephoning to previous employers.
  • Explore how the candidate views previous job changes: What is he/she looking for?
  • Was there a settling period or has the career progressed logically?
  • Has each job offered a new challenge?

Why They Approached the Company

  • What does the applicant know about the company?
  • How much work was done to prepare the application?
  • How deeply has the candidate thought about fitting into the organisation?
  • How realistic are his/her views and expectations? This is useful to reveal motivation and drive.

Qualifications and achievements

  • Can they provide proof of qualifications gained (certificates etc.), do they have any records which back up claims of success/achievement (computer progress charts, letters etc).
  • Is this person over-qualified? Will their salary aspirations be too high for the position they are applying for?

References

  • Who are the referees? Positions within the organisation? Who is not on the list of referees and how can you contact them?

Interviewing Skills Course

This course will cover the practical skills needed for successful interviewing and our reputation for effective recruitment training has been endorsed by many delegates. Those who have attended the course have described it as being productive, informative and focused. It allows delegates to understand the stages of carrying out interviews and shows them how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job. We guarantee to deliver the best employment strategies, tips and techniques for better interviewing and recruiting skills.

Course Dates

  • June 20, 2013
  • July 19, 2013
  • August 5, 2013
  • September 18, 2013
  • October 17, 2013
  • November 18, 2013
  • December 18, 2013

Who will benefit from the course?

Our course will cover the practical skills needed to make recruitment interviews productive and focused. It will allow delegates to understand the stages of the recruitment process and how to conduct an effective interview so that they are able to attract the best candidates and choose the best person for the job.

Our courses allow all staff to benefit from enhanced interviewing skills. The types of delegate we have trained previously are:

  • Directors and senior managers
  • Sales and fundraising staff
  • Local government employees
  • Managers, department heads, team leaders and supervisors
  • Technical and academic team members

Related information