a. Don't be
fooled
b. Haste makes
waste
c. Who you gonna
call
d. Look beyond
the list
e. Easy things
first
HMC is the leading executive construction recruiter and construction executive search firm for construction president placement. For C-level construction staffing and
construction recruitment, HMC is the construction search
firm and construction management recruiter to fill any construction executive job, or
confidential construction jobs (construction executive jobs, construction management jobs or
construction manager jobs) with construction salaries over $200k. HMC is also known as a boutique construction
recruiting firm (construction search firm, construction recruitment, construction recruiting services, construction executive recruiter, construction recruiters, construction head hunter or construction headhunter) with a 25-year
legacy in corporate board member recruitment.
To check references effectively, you will
have to do much more than casually call the people on a list that the candidate supplies.
But the effort is worth it. No other step in the hiring process is more important. If you
don't check references well, you will inevitably make some bad hires- and let some of your
best candidates slip by. Both mistakes are costly.
When you're ready to
begin talking with reference sources, establish a rapport before asking difficult
questions. Describe your own position and your potential interest in the candidate. Then,
verify dates of employment, job title, responsibilities, accomplishments, income earned,
and any other pertinent facts. If the candidate has been accurate in representing his or
her career, you'll get many "yes" answers. They will establish a positive tone.
Now, you're ready to
lead into more complex, subjective questions. What were the candidate's strengths on the
job? Were there areas in which he or she should improve? Was he or she dependable, a team
player? How would you compare his or her work with others who held the same job?
Don't be afraid to
ask pointed questions regarding your areas of concern. You want to know about your
candidate's reliability, self-motivation, need for supervision, ability to make sound
decisions, and capacity for teamwork. You'll also want to know about his of her
adaptability to the corporate structure, general pleasantness to be around, potential for
leadership, and fitness for periodic promotion. If applicable, ask about the candidate's
relationship with vendors, customers and professional colleagues.
Some of the most
awkward questions may prove themselves the most useful. Why did the candidate leave your
company? Is he/she eligible for reemployment if he/she re-applies? It's not fun to ask
such questions, but you need to know- so ask.
Don't wait to
evaluate your findings. By evaluating and grading each reference immediately after
checking it, you will remember not only what was said, but what was implied, and what your
gut feelings were.
Evaluate each
reference independently of the others. Assign each a grade from excellent to poor. Once
you've checked as many references as you deem necessary, compile you evaluations. Assign
them a composite grade, and use them to summarize what your candidate has to offer. View
with caution references that are less than excellent.
Many firms have a
policy of not hiring candidates who have less than excellent references. If your reference
checks cause you strong concerns, but you'd still like to pursue placing the candidate,
confront him or her with the problem. Be sure not to divulge the source of your
information; stick to the information itself. Give the candidate a chance to explain and
ask for the names of people who might verify the candidate's version of the event.
Confronting a candidate with a negative reference may involve you in a lawsuit if you are
not careful to protect your sources.
In deciding whether
or not to hire, place or market a candidate, you are affecting the future of an
organization. The candidate will bring all that he or she is, to the new situation.
If you have checked
your references effectively, you'll know enough to make a wise decision.
"The article above was written by construction recruiter Frederick Hornberger, CPC, president of Hornberger Management Company in Wilmington, Delaware (www.hmc.com), a construction recruiter specializing in senior level, executive search."
| Our
Founder | Consulting
| Research
| Current
Press | Public
Speaking | Submit
Resume | Our
Offices |Video | Position Open