BlueEngine
Seasoned Expediter
How much time do you invest in interviewing, Wingnut? Although interviewing is one of the least reliable pre-qualification tools, I find it quite useful. If you talk to a person for an hour or so, one in the habit of lying will soon reveal himself/herself.
I also appreciate the interview because it provides solid examples of one's ability to communicate. Did the person just give an off the wall response to a clear question? The examples a person chooses reveals something about that person. So I listen. The questions a person asks often reveals pressing concerns, so I follow through with my own questions along the same line. The ramblings are important, too.
Recently an interviewee told me that he would no longer consider working for Panther because the recruiter didn't tell him he needed a hazmat endorsement. An owner told him he did. He didn't bother to verify and I didn't bother to correct. He had already said enough about himself. Thank you and good-bye.
If I call someone's home and that person is rude before he/she has any idea who is on the other line, I'm likely to hang up. The person just disqualified himself/herself. I want team members who are polite on a regular basis.
Much is gleaned by interviewing. Did the interviewee put you on hold to take a personal call? Did the interviewee actually think you were calling to offer a job before you had even asked a question? Did the person have basic math skills? If the person can't understand basic math, the person may not understand alot of other basics. In short, the interview is a time-consuming process that shouldn't be ignored.
BlueEngine
I also appreciate the interview because it provides solid examples of one's ability to communicate. Did the person just give an off the wall response to a clear question? The examples a person chooses reveals something about that person. So I listen. The questions a person asks often reveals pressing concerns, so I follow through with my own questions along the same line. The ramblings are important, too.
Recently an interviewee told me that he would no longer consider working for Panther because the recruiter didn't tell him he needed a hazmat endorsement. An owner told him he did. He didn't bother to verify and I didn't bother to correct. He had already said enough about himself. Thank you and good-bye.
If I call someone's home and that person is rude before he/she has any idea who is on the other line, I'm likely to hang up. The person just disqualified himself/herself. I want team members who are polite on a regular basis.
Much is gleaned by interviewing. Did the interviewee put you on hold to take a personal call? Did the interviewee actually think you were calling to offer a job before you had even asked a question? Did the person have basic math skills? If the person can't understand basic math, the person may not understand alot of other basics. In short, the interview is a time-consuming process that shouldn't be ignored.
BlueEngine