How to make the right recruitment decisions and save a lot of heartache later

In this post, we discuss some key ideas to help you ensure you make the right recruitment decisions and save a lot of heartache later. It is a fragment of our full webinar Performance Management 101: Learn how to get team members to perform at the right level, even if they are working from home. Click here to gain access to the whole recording and transcript (email required).

Let's dive into how you make the right recruitment decisions and save a lot of heartaches later because let's be honest; you have a lot fewer low performers if you don't make bad recruitment decisions.

I remember a former client. He had a member of staff who turned around and said 'Well, I've got my ACCA now, I need a pay rise'. And we all turned around and said 'You can't give her a pay rise. She's not performing at that level; she's not doing this, she's not doing that.'

Actually, one of the things we've got to do is to let people know what levels need to be here before something like a pay rise happen.

You could put fancy words like a "result-speaks based" work environment, but set the expectation that this is what will trigger a pay rise.

 

Look for 'fit' and attitude.

When we go into hiring, we only look for skills and experience 'we need them to be qualified at AAT', 'we need them to have their ACCA or part-qualified.

Those are the first things you think about when you're hiring a new member of staff, right?

For example, the values of our business are loyalty and integrity. You'll often hear me say: 'look, this is a difficult situation, what's the right thing to do here?' We use them a lot in our business. So we need to make sure we ask potential members about these to ensure a good fit because when you're thinking about who you're hiring, you've got to make sure that they've got that same values.

I see that often we hire apprentices because they're cheap, but we're not prepared for the amount of supervision they need, the huge learning curve that they're going to need before they become valuable. We're just not prepared for that.

Read: The definitive guide for hiring an apprentice

 

Avoid being swayed by these factors.

Interestingly, when we come to make recruitment decisions, we often go through this process: 'Oh, someone's left, we have to replace them exactly'. Have you seen that before? 'I've lost a client manager, so I need another client manager.' Sounds familiar?

The first thing you've got to do is go 'well, what do I really need?'

I now remember a former client. She brought in this client-champion-admin-type face of the business, and they deliberately didn't go for an accountant, they went for somebody that was a real people person.

Now, it didn't work out because he had some medical issues that meant that he was incapable of coming into work. And the first thing they did in that practice was they went: 'Well, it didn't work out because they weren't an accountant and so we've got to have an AAT level 4 in that role.'

But there was nothing to do with whether you had an AAT level 4, and it was the fact that he had a medical condition that he lied about. Often we go all 'it didn't work out, so we have to have the exact opposite.'

Also, one of the things we have to realise is that often an individual's strengths become their weaknesses.

We've got to remember that sometimes our strengths are all our greatest weaknesses and we as the leader of the business have to give some direction of how those greatest strengths are used.

My greatest strength is my strategic thinking, but that means my weakest strength is the attention to the detail in the here and now. So many times, I need to say "look, I can move quickly, to cross the situation, to move ahead, and that's why we've got such a strong business. But I understand that I can miss some details in certain circumstances'.

So we have to remember when it comes to getting that recruitment decision right to create that too-detailed job description.

In the club, we have about 25 of those. You could pay hundreds for those, and they are available for anybody on the lowest membership 195 pounds a month.

Too often than not, we have a very vague job description. We need to make sure that we're giving them the details.

 

 

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Learn how to get team members to perform at the right level, even if they are working from home. Click here to gain access to the whole recording and transcript (email required).

 

Paul Wareham

I increased my capacity by 7% without adding on any new staff members.

I increased my capacity by 7% without adding on any new staff members. We were pretty maxed out with work and I was always too busy firefighting so I knew I needed some help. While working in the business, I had become too focused on day to day operations and was not taking time to plan the direction of the firm. The big gain whilst being in the club has been the complete re-engineering of my internal systems and workflows: we got back over 3.5 weeks production capacity. Freeing up this time and generating more capacity was crucial for the next stage of growth in bringing in new clients and being able to offer the service we want.

Paul Wareham

PS Accountants

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