Dear Claudia,
I hired a top performing sales representative for one of my best clients last year, and he hasn’t disappointed: he has tripled revenue in his territory since he was hired, and is on track to double that figure again in 2009. He works from a home office, and all was well until he flew in for meetings at corporate recently; apparently while he was there IT caught him surfing for porn on one of the office computers, and they’ve got a no-tolerance policy for that sort of thing. His manager is now fighting to keep him in the face of an HR department that says he has to go; the decision is currently in the hands of the CEO. I think they should just coach the guy for being stupid and move on. Am I missing something? And as the recruiter responsible for his hire, should I have uncovered this (no pun intended) in the reference checks?
Scratching My Head
Dear Scratching,
I have to say that I agree with you on the coaching for stupidity thing; I think there’s a balance between appropriate and inappropriate behavior in most situations, and the human stupid factor can never be fully discounted when people are involved.
But I really like that you brought up reference checks in this context. Could you have foreseen this with better due diligence on the candidate? Maybe, maybe not. I’ve never gone fishing for this particular behavior in a standard reference check, and I don’t think it’s possible or even feasible to cover every potential pitfall in every candidate in advance. But it
is possible to structure the reference check in a way that helps you to connect the dots of consistent behavior reflecting a candidate’s competencies and values.
In a nutshell – and regardless of the laws that pertain to your geographic location - great reference checks have two clear guidelines: they should provide third-party perspective about a candidate’s competencies for the job and work environment, and the content should have been supplied in good faith. There are some good reads to be found
here and
here for more technical HR information on the subject, and there’s a sample reference check template attached to this post that you might find interesting as well. Use it if you find it helpful.
When checking references, a great recruiter listens for trends of behaviors, probes for inconsistencies, and reports the findings as factually as possible back to the employer. Some recruiters see this as the final chance to “sell” the hiring manager on the candidate; I think it’s your final chance to discover if others have seen the same behaviors that you have seen (or suspected) in the interview and assessment process. Use it well and wisely, and you’ll be a stronger consultant back to your clients.
**
In my day job, I’m the Head of Products for Improved Experience, where we help employers use feedback to measure and manage competitive advantage in hiring and retention. Learn more about us
here.
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