With the chef shortage on the rise chef and restaurateur, Chris Hill, takes a look at the biggest mistakes we make when hiring and shares his three step process to help us avoid these mistakes.
Hiring is hard. Have you ever hired someone and a week (or even an hour) later thought to yourself, ‘what the HELL have I done!?’
Everything looks good on paper, they have a good work history, a steady stream of employment and their resume seems legit, but for some reason it’s not clicking. First of all, it comes down to hiring someone not just to fill a job, because those individuals are a dime a dozen for most types of work, but hiring someone to be an integral part of your team. When someone feels like they are a part of a team, they are much more likely to contribute to the success of the organisation — they WANT to contribute because their inclusion in the organisation’s success is a way for them to extract more meaning from the work that they are doing every day. The question is:
How do you get there?
You need to have a clear vision and understanding of what you stand for as a company.
In other words, why should someone want to work with you? Do you offer a wide array of sustainable seafood? This shows your commitment to ethically and responsibly supporting the environment. Are you a gourmet hot dog shop that makes your dogs in house? This shows anyone in town why they should grab one of your delicious meats over the street cart on the corner downtown. Are you a vegetarian spot that truly embraces the local farms in the local area? This shows your commitment to a certain type of lifestyle, but also demonstrates your commitment to supporting the local community. (Side note, if you are a chef or creative in any capacity, you need to be able to answer these questions for yourself as well.)
Once you understand and can clearly articulate what it is that you represent as a company organisation, then you have a distinct advantage over other organisations because anyone looking for a job knows exactly what they are signing up for (in terms of offering and style) if they are offered a position with you. For sustainable, long-term success, it is IMPERATIVE that you don’t hire people for the job, but instead, hire people for the mission. Now the key is getting the right people in the door. What are you looking for in an employee? I think a lot of us fool ourselves into thinking that we are better at hiring than we actually are. Most of us have a set of canned questions that potential hirers are looking for,
These questions aren’t bad, but they aren’t good. They don’t provide any context. They don’t tell us if this is the type of person we want working with us on our team. Instead, questions that speak to the true nature of someone, those answers provide us with the knowledge we need to make more calculated decisions. I call these Identifier Questions:
‘What kind of team environments have you been in and of the ones you’ve thrived in, what made those so meaningful for you?’
‘What are the values you hold most dearly and how do you live out those values every day?’
‘What is your biggest failure and how did you respond/overcome that? What did you learn from it?’
These are the types of questions that give us a peek into the people that we could be relying on every day and just by asking those three thoughtful questions above, we will know, in order of appearance the below:
TEAMS: What kind of team member they might be, how they perceive working in team environments, and perhaps most important of all, what kind of importance of how meaningful (if at all) the opportunity of working in a team environment is to them.
VALUES: How this person lives their life, what is most important to them, and as a result, how these values might appear in the right environment (or not if they are completely full of crap).
FAILURE: Things are bound to go wrong in ANY industry, but it’s how we respond that is so incredibly important. This question teaches us a lot about a person’s resilience, commitment to figure it out by trial and error, and also their overall interest in something — if they were willing to give up on something important to them, because it was easier than fighting it out, how should you expect them to handle a situation when things in your business go awry? Whatever it is you ask a candidate in an interview for a job, make sure that by the time you are done conversing with them that you have a really good read on them.
It’s a two way street. It’s important to realise that you aren’t just hiring somebody to fill a need, you’re also providing them with something as well — a solid workplace, a place to grow and thrive, and move their career in the right direction. Most of us as employers think we are doing our staff a huge favour by giving them a chance to work with us, and we might be. But, at the same time they are investing in us, and we need to invest in them and realise the responsibility that comes with that. For me, that means understanding what their goals are, and what’s important to them in their career, that way you know whether or not those things aligned with what you are able to offer them. At the same time, it’s important to understand where somebody might be in their career, do they want to open their own business in the next two to three years? Are they happy being an employee for the rest of their life?
The way people answer those questions determines a lot of how they will fit into your organisation, and perhaps more importantly, how you can nurture that relationship if you choose to bring them on board. Getting clarity here creates a common understanding and avoids unmet expectations from either side down the line. The most loyal employees aren’t loyal because they have to be, or because they feel threatened, they are loyal because they want to be. All it takes is a feeling of trust and understanding that you, as the person driving the ship, have their best interest in mind.
Keeping employees around and excited to show up to work every day? Well, I’m writing a book about it now. Just know, that if you want your staff to go into battle with you, you need to be willing to take the first bullet.
Chef Chris Hill left a job in the business world to follow his heart and passion into the world of cooking and the kitchen. Chris opened his first restaurant at 28 and grew into the role of executive chef.
Having taken his experiences in the corporate world, as well as those in the kitchen, Chris has built a large social media following centred around TV appearances all over the Southeast U.S., his writing, TEDx talks, and his mission of helping industry workers to lead fulfilling, successful careers.
Chris' first book comes out in the Summer of 2016 and is a dive into what makes for a successful career in the restaurant world, and includes exclusive interviews with some of the world's leading and most respected chefs.
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Chris Hill Blog: Hiring mistakes almost everyone makes
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