HR

Hiring top candidates the Google way

by alec on June 2, 2010

Shona Brown, Google senior vice-president. (photo supplied)In Google VP: ‘It’s all about having the best people’, The Ottawa Business Journal reports on a speech given by Google SVP (and Carleton University graduate) Shona Brown at Carleton’s Spring Leadership Luncheon last Monday.  Her theme was recruiting the best people.

Most often, the recruitment process is managed by a team of people – because “teams make better decisions than individuals” – and must be approved by a senior executive, she explained.

Ms. Brown, who graduated from Carleton University with a degree in computer systems engineering and then pursued studies at Oxford University and Stanford University, said Google prefers to hire generalists with strong critical thinking skills. “People who ask why as opposed to what,” she said, adding passion is another key trait.

Good advice!  That’s the general philosophy I learned at Microsoft years ago, and which I’ve written about in the past on this blog.

So how do you hire that way as a start-up?  Here’s what we’ve done to staff the team building our web conferencing solutions at Calliflower:

  1. Job postings include problems.  Candidates need to submit solutions with their resumes.  A resume alone won’t do.  Amazingly, over 70% of candidates fail at this step.
  2. We look at the problem solution, before the resume.  Do we like this person’s work?  Can we see ourselves maintaining it in the future?
  3. Interviewing is done by a team.  Candidates meet with groups of people, or individually, but the final decision is by consensus, and each interviewer has a veto.
  4. Interviews are about how people perform under pressure, the quality and creativity of the individuals, and the inquisitiveness of the candidate.  They’re not about general knowledge. A smart, resourceful self starter can learn quickly.  The same is not necessarily true of a knowledgeable plodder.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

{ 1 comment }

Paidinterviews is transforming the traditional recruiting model. Using PaidInterviews, candidates are better able to market themselves by building digital career profiles complete with videos, pictures and work samples. They can also network with other candidates and search the “Watercooler” to find employer ratings created by previous employees. Jobs are uniquely matched to candidates based on the way their ideal job is outlined. Once hired, a candidate is paid their “ask fee” as a success bonus.

We talked with PaidInterviews CEO Jim Weaver, about his business, business model, and the potential to disrupt the traditional recruiting model.

On the Calliflower Conference Call: Jim Weaver, Gillian Brouse, Bill Volk, Phil Wolff, Sheryl Breuker, Frank Abrams, Quinn Askeland, Greg McQuay, Sergio Meinardi, and Dan Rockwell.

{ 0 comments }

Squawk Box June 11

June 11, 2008

Image via Wikipedia Glassdoor is a crowd sourcing play that promises to turn the salary survey industry on it’s head. Founded by Expedia veterans, the premise is pretty simple. Tell me what you make, and I’ll tell you what I make. We discuss whether any of us would you use it; whether our companies might [...]

Read the full article →

Iotum is Expanding

December 14, 2005

Located in Ottawa?  Iotum has a couple of job openings.  We need software developers, and a program manager.  If interested, please check out these listings. Software Developer Program Manager

Read the full article →

Submitting resumes

November 7, 2004

Problem: As a small company, without the luxury of an HR department, how do you weed through 100 or more resumes when you post a new opening? Iotum has been interviewing and recruiting people pretty aggressively for the last few months.  It’s been an interesting experience.  We’ve taken some of the best practices of Microsoft, [...]

Read the full article →
Alec on LinkedIn Alec on Twitter Alec on Facebook Calliflower on Youtube RSS Feed Contact me