Strongly agree with this, two key concepts in particular:
1. Using group discussion to make the principled rubric is incredibly respectful of everyone’s (employee and candidate) time, not just now but future time. Using the rubric is also unreasonably effective at getting clearer pictures of people quickly.
2. Systematic doesn’t mean automated, and that hiring should aspire to be systematic to the point it makes no difference who interviewed the candidate, and all the difference which candidate interviewed.
I’ll add one …
3. If you have a rubric setting a consistent bar, share feedback with the candidate in real time (such as asking to ‘help me understand your choice I might have done differently?’) as well as synthesized feedback at the end: “This is my takeaway, is it fair?”
Contrary to urban legend this never got us sued. Every candidate, particularly those being told no, said it was refreshing to hear where they stood and appreciated the opportunity to revisit or clarify before leaving the room. Key is non judgmental clear synthesis with, “Is that fair?”
1. Using group discussion to make the principled rubric is incredibly respectful of everyone’s (employee and candidate) time, not just now but future time. Using the rubric is also unreasonably effective at getting clearer pictures of people quickly.
2. Systematic doesn’t mean automated, and that hiring should aspire to be systematic to the point it makes no difference who interviewed the candidate, and all the difference which candidate interviewed.
I’ll add one …
3. If you have a rubric setting a consistent bar, share feedback with the candidate in real time (such as asking to ‘help me understand your choice I might have done differently?’) as well as synthesized feedback at the end: “This is my takeaway, is it fair?”
Contrary to urban legend this never got us sued. Every candidate, particularly those being told no, said it was refreshing to hear where they stood and appreciated the opportunity to revisit or clarify before leaving the room. Key is non judgmental clear synthesis with, “Is that fair?”