Contact Center Hiring: Picking the Best
Hiring the right people for your contact center can be a
huge challenge. Not only is it difficult to find people with good basic “soft
skills,” such as verbal communication skills, it’s also hard to find people who
have common sense and can make good judgments when interacting with customers.
As we discussed in part
one of this three part series, the hiring process begins with the help
wanted ad you post online and in the local papers. Presenting an accurate
description of the job, including the responsibilities and skills sets needed,
is essential and will help screen out applicants who aren’t qualified, thus
saving time and money in the recruiting and training process.
The next step, which we discussed part
two, is to recruit candidates based on the knowledge, skills and attributes
(KSAs) you’ve identified as being necessary for carrying out the job. Knowing
where to find the highest concentration of people who possess these skills and
attributes is essential to effective recruiting and hiring.
Now let’s discuss some of the other steps you can take to minimize errors in
the selection process:
1) Rely on several assessment procedures, rather than one. Each procedure has
its limitations. Interpret all results with caution.
2) Be wary of educational requirements. For example, consider a job applicant
for an accounting position. To put “bachelor’s degree in accounting” as a
requirement is pretty secure. We know what most schools require for accounting
degrees.
However, in our interview, depending on the experience level of the applicant,
we may still want to check if the required learning took place. The problem
with the contact center industry is that there are no guarantees that the
required KSAs have been learned through education or prior experience.
There are few degrees or certificates in telemarketing or customer service.
Even prior experience is no guarantee. Many contact center jobs do not teach
the KSAs you are requiring. Therefore you must verify through the hiring process
whatever requirements you state in the job description for education or
experience.
3) Have applicants demonstrate relevant performance. If they can reasonably be
expected to possess essential KSAs, have them perform some aspect of the job.
This is a situation in which computer simulation and role-playing are a plus.
4) Conduct structured, in-depth interviews. Ensure that the objectives of each
stage in the process are specific, demonstrable, and appropriate.
5) Have several people (preferably including potential co-workers) participate
in the selection process. No matter how much quantifiable information has been
gathered, the selection decision will ultimately reflect a judgment.
One way of increasing the objectivity of this judgment is to include several
others in the process. An interesting study found that many interviewers
trusted their intuition over any objective data discovered in the interview
process. When you combine that with the fact that most of us hire people who
are like us, you can see how we can miss many good candidates (simply because
they did not match our style).
6) Use an assessment procedure to conduct initial screening of applicants.
Narrow the field down to a manageable number of finalists before using more
expensive, time-consuming procedures. Many contact centers use a telephone
interview or an automated system to first evaluate the candidate’s speech
patterns. If you don’t like the way he or she sounds on the phone, why waste
everyone’s time “trying to teach a pig to sing?”
7) When a decision is imminent, conduct a potential problem analysis on each
remaining candidate. Look at all the information that has been gathered for
each one, and ask the following questions: “If this person were selected and
turned out to be a problem to the organization, what would the problem be? How
would it make itself known? Why would it occur? What selection criteria would
not have been fully met?”
If it is clear that the candidate does not meet the selection criterion in
question, ask whether training, mentoring, or other supervisory activity could
prevent the problem. If so, would it be worth the additional cost? If not, can
the organization live with the problem?
8) Keep accurate records. Ensure that relevant information is collected and
used to assess the validity, cost-effectiveness, and reliability of the
selection procedures. Review this data periodically. It is the only way to
objectively improve the assessment process.
Remember that there are no shortcuts to excellence in personnel selection. Be prepared
to devote time and effort to this endeavor. Careful planning and attention to
detail are necessary. The benefits of selecting outstanding personnel will be
directly observable to the extent to which these individuals exceed performance
expectations and thus significantly contribute to the achievement of organizational
objectives.
The time and other resources required to establish this type of selection
system may seem costly at first, but the cost will be significantly lower than
those associated with correcting an error in hiring. Remember, it is always
more expensive to solve a performance problem than to prevent it.
Kathryn E. Jackson, Ph.D, is president of
Ocean City, NJ-based contact center consultancy Response Design Corp.
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