“Let’s face it — most of the hiring at the average company isn’t lead by HR… This is why hiring managers are more important than the CEO, and is why it’s vital that you prepare your non-expert hiring team for the pivotal task they’re about to take on.”

By Joseph Fung

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Let’s face it — most of the hiring at the average company isn’t lead by HR.  Sure, HR has an important hand in the pot, but ultimately it’s the hiring manager who does the bulk of the legwork.  This is why hiring managers are more important than the CEO, and is why it’s vital that you prepare your non-expert hiring team for the pivotal task they’re about to take on.  Hiring effectively isn’t rocket science, but it is an art that takes years of practice to perfect. Hiring managers don’t have years; they need to recruit and select the right candidate in just a few short weeks.

So what does it take to be a great hiring manager? It’s all about managing the big picture.

1. Identify the right perspectives

Hiring managers are responsible for getting all of the right people looking at a candidate. Aside from themselves, they’ll want to consider executives, direct reports, supervisors, co-workers, and others. But choosing from among these people is the true challenge.

Is it better to have a large hiring team, or a small one? Do you need to increase the amount of energy in the room, in order to get a particular candidate excited about the role? Should you bring in the most highly skilled engineers to assess the candidate’s technical chops?

Crafting the right combination of perspectives is critical. You need enough variety of perspectives to truly evaluate a candidate, with enough breadth of perspectives that you aren’t accidentally creating bias. For example, you might have a great mix of seniority and experience in your team, but if you assemble a group of extroverts, then introverted candidates may have difficulty identifying with their interpretation of your company’s culture.

Be as thoughtful as possible when assembling your team. You may not be able to avoid every potential bias or imbalance, but careful forethought will improve the quality of your process.

2. Move the process forward

Hiring managers aren’t usually tasked with maintaining a certain Time-to-Fill metric, but that doesn’t mean they should let the hiring process stagnate. The opening needs to be filled, so the hiring manager needs to be able to cut through the red tape and decision-making obstacles that can keep you from hiring top talent before your competitors do.

Most importantly, hiring managers are not recruiters or HR experts. Great hiring managers hire quickly, so that they can get back to their full-time jobs.

As a secondary benefit, moving quickly and decisively demonstrates to your top candidates that you are very interested in them. Dragging out the process is the surest way to turn off candidates.

3. Coach your team

Hiring mangers aren’t a one-man or one-woman team. Once they’ve identified other interviewers, they also need to engage and educate those people.

What are you looking for in this hire? How will the interview work? What’s the plan for assessing the candidate? What’s the salary negotiation strategy?

It’s too easy to assume that everyone on the team knows how to hire. It’s actually up to you, the hiring manager, to ensure that that assumption actually matches reality.

4. Hire for the future

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Joseph Fung is co-founder and CEO of TribeHR, pioneer of the industry’s first social HR platform and headquartered in Boston and Waterloo, Ontario. Connect with him at joseph@tribehr.com.

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