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You get what you pay for. Hiring great people is an investment. Every employee is like a stock in your investment portfolio. The rock star rule is that fewer employees are paid more, which equals a lower total labor cost. It has been said that one high performer delivers more than 10 average employees in a creative environment. Not to mention, average employees bring down high performers. Performance is contagious.
Hiring aims not simply to fill job openings with warm bodies. It doesn't matter if you are a small, medium, or large organization; or if you are the director of human resources, head of recruitment, or a department leader; or if you are hiring seasoned people with a certain level of expertise or less experienced people you will have to train. Regardless of all these factors, your number one job is to find a candidate who fits your culture and will enhance it.
A great leader and a great organization understand that just as much as the potential employee needs to be the right fit for their company and team, the company needs to be the right fit for the potential employee. If not, within the next six months, both the company and the person hired are likely to be back at the drawing board with both parties looking for a new situation.
Your goal is to find candidates who are happy, kind, caring, empathetic, friendly, positive, optimistic, grateful, and genuinely like others.
The following is an abbreviated list of optional interview questions from the Interview Question Guide to Gauge Service Aptitude that focus on whether the candidates have the potential to provide excellent customer experience skills, primarily soft skills. These questions should be combined with other interview questions not listed here that assess skills, including technical knowledge, work ethic, cultural fit, etc. We also do not recommend using all these questions. Pick the ones that best fit your company's customer service culture.
These questions are broken into categories:
If you are seeking people who have the potential to be customer-centric team members, evaluating their "Five Es" might be your most powerful tool. Many of our consulting clients have incorporated these into their interview processes, literally counting the times a candidate demonstrates each one.
Throughout the interview, we measure how often the following occurs:
___ Eye contact is made
___ Ear-to-ear smiles take place
___ Enthusiasm is displayed
___ Engagement with the interviewer occurs naturally
___ Educated answers are given to interview questions
Please note that the interview questions provided herein are designed to assist with evaluating candidates' qualifications, skills, and experience in a manner consistent with fair hiring practices and compliant with federal, state, and local employment laws. This disclaimer is provided for guidance and does not constitute legal advice. Interviewers should consult with their human resources department or legal counsel if in doubt about the appropriateness of an interview question or topic.
While most employee candidates have the potential to provide excellent customer service, not all do. These sample questions can help you identify candidates who can achieve a high service aptitude with additional customer experience training.
John R. DiJulius III, author of The Customer Service Revolution, is president of The DiJulius Group, a customer service consulting firm that works with companies including Starbucks, Chick-fil-A, Ritz-Carlton, Nestle, PwC, Lexus, and many more. Contact him at 216-839-1430 or info@thedijuliusgroup.com.