Are Your Candidates Lying to Get Hired? | Strategic Interview Questions to Expose Lying Candidates
Wollborg Michelson Recruiting
A Finance Recruitment Agency Connecting Businesses With Top Talent, and Job Seekers with Cutting-Edge Companies.
It may come as no surprise that in today's competitive job market, many candidates compromise their integrity to land a job. Some have false information or "embellishments" on their resume and some lie during their interviews. In Free Lance Journalist, Katie Navarra's recent article, "Are Your Candidates Lying to Get the Job?", she found that "applicants with master's or doctoral degrees admitted to embellishing or telling untruths in cover letters and job interviews most often (85 percent)...Seventy-one percent of candidates without a college degree said they have lied." A vast majority of research around this issue concludes that asking behavioral questions during the job interview is the way to go.
Behavioral Questions: The Gateway to Genuine Answers
Behavioral questions are a powerful tool to understand how a candidate reacts in certain situations. These can be crafted to probe a candidate’s behavior in past experiences. For instance:
#1 "Can you share an example of when you had to deal with a difficult colleague or supervisor? How did you manage the situation?"
#2 "Have you done remote training before?"
#3 "How many absences do you think is appropriate for the first 90 days?"
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#4 "Tell me about a time you had to work with limited training or limited instructions"
In Conclusion
Use the your interviews to gauge a candidate's honesty, integrity, and suitability for the role. By diving deep into a recruit's past experiences with behavioral questions, hiring managers can better discern the most suitable fit for their organization. By leveraging these techniques, recruiters and hiring managers can uncover the truth behind a job seekers's words and ultimately build stronger, more reliable teams.