Behavioural Interviewing

Taking the Guesswork Out of Recruitment
This program teaches how to use the concept of "behavioural interviewing" to predict the future performance of a job candidate, using five easy-to-follow steps for a successful interview. Available in French.
Runtime: 25 Minutes
Inclusions:
  • DVD
  • Leader's Guide
  • Group Training workbook
  • Self-Study workbook
  • PowerPoint Slides
Key Learning Points:
  • Draw up a behavioural profile
  • Focus on critical incidents
  • Hide your hand
  • Take your time
  • Make a list of key qualities

Behavioural Interviewing: Taking the Guesswork Out of Recruitment shows how to conduct an effective interview.

It shows that past behaviour is the key to predicting future performance. Rather than using intuition (I’ll know them when I see them), an interviewer can use the questioning techniques demonstrated here to retrieve relevant information based on the candidate’s past experiences.

A candidate’s qualifications, experiences, jobs they’ve held, level of responsibilities taken are all important details that you need to know. But the unanswered question is ‘how will they actually perform in the precise job you’re advertising?’

Because behavioural interviewing is a technique that is so important, so effective and always successful – it needs to be used consciously and systematically in every selection interview.

This program covers the following five stages of behavioural interviewing technique:

  • Draw up a behavioural profile
  • Focus on critical incidents
  • Hide your hand
  • Take your time
  • Make a list of key qualities

Behavioural Interviewing also shows the importance of conducting a thorough review of the job requirements, drawing up a list of interview questions, getting behavioural examples in the interview, and then rating the interviewee’s skills against the job specification.

It is suitable for managers, supervisors and personnel specialists and provides realistic interview scenarios to put the message in context.

Extra content includes:

  • Getting started – How to get from broad introductory questions towards more specific ‘behaviour’ based questions.
  • Looking for evidence – How to avoid the danger of misinterpreting evidence from a single incident, recognizing ‘danger words’ and watching out for openings.
  • Detective work – Using silence to your advantage, spotting when a candidate is being evasive and the importance of what people leave out as well as what they say.

Available in French.