Types of Interviews
Unstructured (traditional) interviews Structured interviews
Situational (Job specific situations) Behavioral / experience (non-Job specific situations) Job-related (Job-knowledge)
Stress Interview
Interview Purposes
Proper Use of the Interview
Use in conjunction with other methods Recruiting vs. selection
Candidates remember more info when recruited Interviewers tend to be more positive when recruiting
Good at measuring: Personal relations, conscientiousness, and job
knowledge (baseline knowledge not details) Bad at measuring:
Specialized skills, and many abilities that are better measured with a test
Discrimination Found
All interviewers were white / male No structured written interview format No objective criteria for employment decisions Questions unrelated to job requirements No scoring standards Discriminatory questions
Discrimination Not Found
Structured questionnaire Questions based on job analysis Formal scoring system used Same questions asked to all candidates KSA’s listed for job Measurement of personality permitted
Structured Interviewing
USED TO IMPROVE RELIABILTY AND VALIDITY OF INTERVIEWS
Ask all candidates the same questions. Use a formal rating system. Use situational / behavioral / job-related questions. Don’t be swayed by body language, how someone
speaks or how they dress -- unless it matters. Practice.
Developing a Structured Interview
1. Conduct a job analysis
2. Categorize KSA’s (selection requirements then prioritize)
3. Decide which KSA’s best covered in interview
4. Develop situation / behavior / job related questions Interview job incumbents for critical incidents and behaviors Write the questions and rating scales Validate the questions and rating scales
5. Train interviewers
6. Validate interview process
Situational Questions
Use critical incidents that have actually occurred and are examples of particularly good or poor job performance.
Situations determined by job incumbents or experts.
Best for KSA’s related to: Good citizenship / teamwork Personal relations / communication
Include behavioral dimensions for scoring.
Situational Questions
Your spouse and teenage children are sick in bed with colds. There are no relatives or friends available to look in on them. Your shift starts in three hours. What would you do in this situation?
A customer comes into the store to pick up a watch he left for repair. The repair was supposed to have been completed a week ago, but the watch is not back yet from the shop. The customer is angry. How would you handle the situation?
Behavior / Experience-Based Questions
It is often necessary to work together as a group to accomplish a task. Can you tell me about the most recent experience you had working as part of a group? What was the task? How many people in the group? What difficulties arose working with the group? What role did you play in resolving those differences? How successful was the group in completing its task?
Should not require that applicant has actually done the job.
Job-Related Questions
Use information from job task analysis Identify and rate critical job tasks Identify and rate critical KSA’s Choose selection measures appropriate for KSA’s
Job-related questions best for job knowledge KSA’s.
Job-Related: Maintenance Supervisor
KSA: Verbal ability to give work instructions to laborers regarding construction and repair.
1. What instructions would you give a work crew who was about to string a 220-volt electric cable in a building under construction?
2. Two laborers with limited experience ask about the procedures for repairing a brick wall. What instructions do you give them regarding equipment and how they should operate it?
3. You will use eight summer employee to repaint an office building. What instructions do you give them about general and specific painting procedures?
Apply a scoring format.
Conducting a Good Interview
Be prepared. Look over the resume. Know what questions you want to ask in
advance. Keep appropriate notes. Remember - the interview is about recruiting. Put the candidate at ease – establish rapport. Ask open questions so candidates can expand on
their own capabilities. Use silence judiciously.
Common Interviewer Bias
Similar-to-me error Halo / Horns bias First impression bias Contrast errors
Common Interviewer Mistakes
Talking excessively Asking inconsistent questions Poor follow-up question Asking questions unrelated to the job Unable to put interviewee at ease Overconfidence in ability to judge candidates Stereotyping
Questions To Avoid
Don’t ask applicants if they have children, plan to have children, or what child-care arrangements they have made.
Don’t ask an applicants age.Don’t ask whether or not the candidate has a physical or mental disability
that would interfere with doing the job. Don’t ask for such identifying characteristics as height or weight on an
application.Don’t ask a female candidate for her maiden name.Don’t ask applicants about their citizenship.Don’t ask applicants about their arrest records.Don’t ask if a candidate smokes.Don’t ask a job candidate if he or she has AIDS or is HIV-positive.