
Dec 10, 2020, 11:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seesaw
Out of my last 10 hires only 1 was what I would call a failure, in that we ended up letting her go.
Here's the thing: we hardly ever hire for skills or skills alone. Most of the time I hire people for their attitude, interest, and personality characteristics, not just because they have skills. In fact, the people I have had to hire were hired solely based on skill.
When you can't tell me why you're interested in the company, what you're really telling me is that you're too lazy or don't care enough to make an effort to have looked at my website, determined if you felt in line with our mission statement, and would actually want to be a part of this team. I'm not hiring an independent worker, I'm hiring someone to be on my team. I'm going to invest a heck of lot on onboarding you, paying into payroll taxes and unemployment, benefits, etc. And if you don't know anything about my company, then that lack of initiative tells me you aren't a good fit.
It's not like you have to sell me that you intend to stay at my company for a million years and be the next CEO. You can answer this question positively without selling your soul. I've done it when I was on the other side of the fence. I do it now with clients I onboard.
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Still cannot make the connection between someone interested in the company and they being a team member. I agree, (technical) skills are not the most important thing in a candidate, but you don't have to be interested in a company's mission to be a team player and a successful employee. Making a judgment that a candidate is lazy because they didn't express interest in a company is a snap judgment with no evidence in my opinion. I read about the company when I interview with them, and a question like "what do you know about our company?" is an acceptable question, and I am glad to answer it. But asking "why are you interested in our company (not the position itself)?" is not, and it forces me to find a way to say something they want to hear, which I am not comfortable doing.
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