we can help IT

  • Home
  • IT Leadership
  • IT Management
  • IT Services
  • Retail Community
  • Contact

View Mike Bohlmann's profile on LinkedIn

Tags in Tags

business-IT alignment career Drupal game higher education innovation IT@Illinois leadership operational IT professional development relationship management strategic IT
more tags

User login

What is OpenID?
h
c
C
K
A
v
Enter the code without spaces and pay attention to upper/lower case.
  • Log in using OpenID
  • Cancel OpenID login
  • Create new account
  • Request new password

Older articles

My Thoughts: Resignation of Sally Jackson - May 20, 2011
Carr's "IT Doesn't Matter" - May 16, 2011
DIY professional development - May 12, 2011
IT@Illinois - Organizing without Organizations - Apr 28, 2011
Uncertainty: The momentum killer - Feb 21, 2011
Rationally diffuse: Aggregating from the right perspective - Jan 24, 2011
Rationally diffuse: Centralization doesn't matter - Jan 10, 2011
Anyone can be replaced, but how do you make yourself less so? - Dec 13, 2010
Leading - Managing - Doing: The Other Balancing Act - Nov 22, 2010
What would you call this job? - Nov 15, 2010
Home

interviewing

Behavioral interviewing

Submitted by mikeb on Mon, 04/21/2008 - 15:35

We're in the process of interviewing candidates for a few technology licensing manager positions, and the method of interviewing always comes up. After this year's Super Bowl, one of the first things I think of when I start preparing to do an interview is this Tide coffee stain commercial:

While we might open with a question for a candidate to tell us about themselves, most of our candidates are asked better questions than in the commercial. However, it can be a real challenge to figure out whether a person would fit well into the organization. For most positions, a candidate will spend an entire day or more with us in interviews with the entire staff and other stakeholders in our department. In the course of that much time, usually you find out what a person is like. The person who talked about skinny dipping in his backyard? Yeah, probably would not have come out in a half-day interview, but it did come out over dinner conversation.

By having these extended interviews, we are usually able to get at the real personality of a person and how they might fit into our department. But maybe there are better phone interview questions that can be asked to try to weed out these poor behaviors before they get in front of the entire group. The best method for this is called behavioral interviewing. The idea behind behavioral interviewing is that past performance and past actions are the best predictors of future performance. In traditional interviewing, the interviewee actually has a lot of control as the questions most interviewers ask are pretty open-ended and move from subject to subject. Behavioral interviewing has the interviewer asking an open-ended question and then more probing questions to get at the details of the answer in order to learn something about the interview subject.

Here is an example of how a set of questions might go in a behavioral interview:

Tell me about a time you had a conflict with someone else in the office.
How did you approach the person to resolve the issue?
What was the discussion about the resolution like?
Whose advice did you seek in evaluating the situation?
What was the atmosphere like between the two of you after the issue was resolved?

Can you imagine how a candidate might answer differently if they were given the first statement and then the interview moved to another subject? The goal of the follow-up questions is to really probe into the behavior of the person you are interviewing. By using this probing style of questioning, you can find out multiple things. You can better judge whether they gave a fully honest answer. You can find out how they really dealt with the given situation. You can maybe get some insight into their personality.

This interview style can even be carried over into technical areas. Here is an example of how you can use behavioral interviewing with technical subjects.

Tell me about a time you had equipment go down that impacted the organization's operations.
What did you say to the server vendor to explain the problem?
What did you tell the non-IT staff about the problem?
How did you decide on a solution?
How long did you think the repair would take?
How did you communicate that to the rest of the organization?
How long was the equipment down and impacting the organization?

Asking these questions will not only tell you a bit about their technical abilities, but they will also tell you how they deal with others during a crisis. The IT field is beyond the days of being a bunch of basement-dwelling, antisocial jerks, and that means it is even more important to know exactly how a new hire will react when you have an emergency or handle day-to-day operations. If someone is just good enough to get through a traditional interview, you might find out too late that they are a really bad fit for your organization.

Tags:
  • behavioral interviewing
  • interviewing
  • IT Leadership
  • IT Management
  • Tech Transfer
Syndicate content

Twitter

New & Popular

  • Using IT when you work in IT
    18 weeks 4 days ago
  • list of directory
    3 weeks 1 day ago

Oldies but Goodies

  • Carr's "IT Doesn't Matter"
    4 years 16 weeks ago
  • Prototyping in expert systems development
    4 years 40 weeks ago
  • Competitive advantage from IT
    3 years 28 weeks ago
  • State of the IT@Illinois
    2 years 39 weeks ago
  • This Week in Startups Episode #13
    2 years 22 weeks ago
I love Smashing Magazine!

© 2009-2011 Michael Bohlmann

Fervens Drupal theme by Leow Kah Thong. Designed by Design Disease and brought to you by Smashing Magazine.