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Problems with structured and competency interviews
At first glance, structured or competency interviews seem pretty thorough. Unfortunately,
applicants can now obtain these types of questions and answers from a variety of sources. For
example, an online Internet search for "behavioural interviews" will quickly produce
many behavioural questions and ideal responses. And almost every bookstore is well stocked
with a variety of books that provide questions and answers to behavioural and competency
interviews. As well, many career counselling centres also teach applicants how to respond to
these questions and I have even seen the odd article with a quick "how-to"
instructional focus on behavioural or competency questions. So clearly, widespread use has
led to widespread availability of these materials. And this has led to a wave of well-prepared
applicants who may in fact, not hold all of the true knowledge and skills/abilities required on
the job but are good at recognizing competency questions and responding with memorized stock
answers.
Behavioural and competency-based questions are time-consuming to develop
The reason questions and answers have become so widespread may indeed be due in part
to a common complaint I hear from HR professionals: the proper development of structured or
competency interview questions can be very time-consuming and this can lead to increased
selection cycle time or hiring delays. Thus, once a question is developed, it is often "
recycled" for a wide variety of related jobs, with little or no modification. After all,
behavioural and competency questions are usually targeted to the transferable skills and
traits that make up 75 per cent of each job. Applicants can and do memorize the correct
responses to these types of questions because in the end, there aren’t really that many
different questions (e.g., decision making, problem solving, time management, conflict
resolution, team work, communication, initiative, etc.)! And this seriously impacts the
validity of your interview as well as the success of your new recruit when these individuals
have just memorized the "right" answers.
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This article copyright © Stephen Jackson. All rights reserved.
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Stephen Jackson of the consulting firm HR Strategy, is author of:
Performance-based Selection: A Step-by-step Guide to Saving Time, Reducing Costs
and Hiring Top Performers.
For more information, visit:
or e-mail
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