In this series, professionals reflect on their inevitable career mistakes. Follow the stories here and write your own (please include #BestMistake in your post).
My “best mistake” came early in my career as a leader – and it opened my eyes to how not to hire.
I
was a new manager who needed to fill a position on my team, and I
eagerly attacked the challenge of finding the best person for the job.
I
spent a whole lot of time poring over resumes, looking for candidates
who “wowed” me with their combination of technical prowess, experience,
and education.
After interviewing a number of them, I hired the
person who seemed to have the most impressive credentials and the
strongest technical skills.
What a mistake that turned out to be.
As
expected, my new hire was great at fulfilling the technical
requirements of the job. But it became clear to me why performance is
more than just getting the job done. The new hire was terrible at
working with his colleagues. He alienated his teammates and caused much
dissension in the ranks. Morale and productivity suffered.
The bottom line was that he didn’t fit into the culture of the organization – and had no real desire to adapt to it.
The experience was painful, for my team and for me. But it taught me an extremely valuable lesson about hiring.
I
learned that cultural fit is an essential consideration in hiring – and
that you have to spend as much time assessing a candidate’s “soft
skills,” such as communication, personality, and empathy, as his or her
“hard skills” and credentials. The best person for the job will be
strong in both kinds of skills, but I’d choose cultural fit
over credentials any day. Talented people can fill in any skills gap
they may have, but it’s really tough to overcome a bad cultural fit.
Hiring
for cultural fit is particularly important at a company like TIAA-CREF.
We are a mission- and values-driven firm that exists to help the people
we serve achieve financial well-being. We put our clients’ interest
first. We look to hire employees who are not just great at what they do,
but who will live the values that together define our culture: Put
the Customer first. Value our people. Act with Integrity. Deliver
excellence. Take personal accountability. Operate as one team.
When
I interview a job candidate today, I ask different kinds of questions
than I did when I was just starting out. I talk not just about the job
requirements but about TIAA-CREF’s mission and values and our commitment
to diversity and inclusion. I try to assess whether the candidate is
the right fit for our company.
I wish I could say that my first
hiring mistake was the last one I ever made. I’m not perfect and never
will be. But what I can say is this: after that first misstep, I’ve
never approached hiring the same way again.
No comments:
Post a Comment