Steer Clear of These Behaviors to Avoid Scaring Off Potential Job Candidates

Happy employees mean a productive company. In order to attract top-notch job candidates, leave the following behaviors behind.

During the job interview process, candidates are interviewing your company as much as you are interviewing them to work for your company. It’s a two-way street, and it should be. You want to hire someone who not only wants to work at the company but has a solid and accurate understanding of what working there will actually be like. This will not only reduce your candidate turnover, but it will lead to happier and more fulfilled employees.

So in order to not scare off quality candidates, avoid these behaviors:

Not Being Nice

This should go without saying, but it is especially important when talking to candidates for open positions. When talking to people that have applied for a role, you want to be personable and open. Think of it as inviting people over to your home. You want them to feel welcome and comfortable, not intimidated or awkward.

Not Being Truthful

The only thing a candidate has to go off at the beginning of the interview process is the job posting and your word. If you fib about the job’s responsibilities or omit a big part of the day-to-day duties, you’re doing a potential candidate a huge disservice, not to mention your company. If a candidate is duped at the beginning of the interview process, they won’t trust the other things you’ve told them. Even worse, if someone accepts a position as it was sold and then see that they’ve been lied to, you will likely just have to start the interview process all over again.

Not Giving Them Enough Information

At its core, an interview is all about information gathering. Yes, you’re gathering information on the person, but they are also gathering information on you, the company and their potential team. When you fail to give them enough information to make an informed decision, you might as well just tell them that you don’t care enough about them. And if you don’t care about them at the courting stage, why would you care about them when they are working for you?

Not Adequately Answering Their Questions

Job seekers are savvy and will (hopefully!) come to an interview with questions that they expect answers to. If you avoid questions or give vague answers, you’re not filling the candidate with the confidence to want to work there. Instead, you’re painting a picture that you not only don’t know the answer, but don’t care enough to find it for them. Like the above, candidates need as much information as possible to make the decision that’s right for them, so why would you hinder them from doing that?

Not Being Decisive

Yes, the interview process can be lengthy. There are typically multiple rounds, a variety of people to talk to and a variety of opinions. But companies still need to make a decision in a reasonable amount of time. Not only will potential candidates lose interest if they feel they are forgotten about or being ignored, but it’s likely they will accept another offer first. Give potential candidates a timeline for the interview process and stick to it as closely as possible. If something comes up, let them know. Communication is key.

So remember, happy employees mean a productive company. And in order to attract top-notch job candidates, leave any of the above behaviors behind.

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