The Best Way to Interview

Competency-based Selection & Recruitment

With the focus on growing businesses and ensuring that new employees “fit” well with both the job and the organization, getting selection decisions right is more important than ever. This interactive program enables line and HR managers to recruit higher quality employees by teaching them the skills of structured, competency-based interviewing. Participants will learn how to construct competency-based questions, how to probe and evaluate responses and make better final decisions.

Program: Competency-Based Behavioral Interviewing

Client: ForLife Research

Venue: 4Life Training Room

Date: September 2008

Conducting Competency Based Behavioral Interviews

Program: Competency Based Behavioral Interviewing

Venue: Holiday Villa, Subang Jaya

Date: August 11 & 12, 2008

Now isn’t this a group of happy HR people?

Published in: on August 12, 2008 at 11:23 pm  Leave a Comment  
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What is Competency-Based Behavioral Interviewing?

CBBI – that’s the short name for Competency-Based Behavioral Interviewing. What’s the difference between CBBI and normal interviewing? Perhaps the following example will give you an idea.

Interviewer: “I think I mentioned earlier that this is a high stress position. How do you manage stress?”
Job applicant: “My last two positions were high stress. I actually work better under stress. Through experience, I’ve learned how to make stress work for me rather than against me. I think two of the most effective stress management techniques are…..”

What did the interviewer learn?

Nothing much, other than the person knows a few stress management techniques. Whether this person actually uses them or not is up for debate.

What is stressful to this candidate? Your guess is as good as mine.

In a CBBI interview, this would be the question asked:

“Tell me about a time you had to perform a task or project under a lot of stress”

Now you are going to find out how the candidate actually handles stress in a real-life situation and what he/she considers stressful!

Past behavior is the best predicator of current or future behavior.

Published in: on May 6, 2008 at 11:07 am  Leave a Comment  
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