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What is this thing called “The Interview”?

March 17, 2015 by Ellen Shepard

sectorswitchers
One of the most awkward conversations two people will partake in, is that of an interview for a job opportunity. Awkward for both participants!

Why, you ask?

Once you get through the normal recruiter conversations, as a candidate, you are now speaking with peers and managers who actually work within the business. These people rarely conduct interviews. Think of your own experiences as a hiring manager and reflect on the small number of interviews that you conduct each year. Most of us do not hire that many people a year, so the interview, for most interviewers, is a disruptive conversation that we are never really completely comfortable participating in.

As a candidate, you may have been in your current or last position for many years and without question, the interview is certainly a disruptive experience!

Let’s take a minute, and explore how both participants can make this “interview” into a productive conversation, that both parties look back on as a worthwhile experience, regardless of the final result.
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As an employer, you want all candidates to walk away from the interview process with high regard for you, your team and the process. In retrospect, this is the only impression they have of you, and whether you offer them a position or not, you want them to be able to say positive things about their experience during the interview process. If the candidate is offered an opportunity to join your organization, this brief experience carries more weight in their decision matrix than you can ever imagine!

As a candidate, you want to make a compelling case for who you are and how you would bring real value to the organization. Regardless of whether or not you are offered an opportunity, you want all of the parties in the process to remember the positive experience they had interacting with you.

Let us share with you our secret sauce and key ingredients to interviewing success:
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“Be human and manage the conversation,”– yes, both of you!

As an employer:

Be Prepared! Don’t review the resume with the candidate – review this information prior to the interview.
Do ask specific questions based on your resume review – job moves, detailed project examples, accomplishment questions.
Do ask a behavioral question – give a situation and ask how they would handle it or ask for an example of a difficult situation, and how they handled it.
Do ask them to describe an example of a demonstration of a strength that they possess – for example – persuasion, critiquing, etc.
Do ask them to describe a time when they learned a lesson and how they have/would implement what they learned in the future.
Do allow time for the candidate to ask you questions.

As a candidate:

Be Prepared! Read current news about the company – understand what they do – research the interviewers – know who they are.
Have a list of 4 things you want the interviewers to know about you – work them into the conversation or mention them at the end.
Have examples of at least one success and one failure ready – for the failure be prepared to espouse the lessons learned.
Allow time and silence into the space of the interview – it is okay to allow time to think before answering a question!
Maintain eye contact and answer the questions asked – do not veer off topic.
Check in with the listener to see if you have answered the question. Just blatantly ask them, “Have I answered your question?”
Prepare a list of at least 4 questions to ask the interviewer, (think these through.)
For example:
What attributes have you found in the person/people who have held this position in the past that have led to their success (or failure)?
What are the challenges ahead for this position? Critical initiatives?

If both participants manage the conversation, everyone will come away with a rave review!

For additional information that will assist you in resource planning and career management, please follow us:
Twitter: @TRC_Difference
LinkedIn: TRC Companies, Inc.

Data Governance: DATA, DATA, Who Owns It, And Who Cares?

August 20, 2014 by Ellen Shepard

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Through the hallowed halls of many a corporate IT department there continues to be an ongoing conversation about data governance, or put more simply, what is critical data, who “owns” it and who has a stake in the information culled from this data.  Often, when faced with decisions that seem to have a technology solution behind them, organizations submit to the seemingly easier road and throw the responsibility into the lap of the IT department…after all, this is technology generated “stuff”.

If our conversation were to turn toward bits of data, this would seem plausible as they would not be useful at that level.  However, once we coin the “stuff” as “data”, the possibilities for the use of this “stuff” as information has it take on a whole other meaning, which suggests a different way of thinking about the business process of data creation, gathering, storing, reporting, etc.

In enter the folks who “need” this data in the form of information to solve a business imperative.  They are the people who “care”.  As with most acts of creation, keeping responsibility for reliability and accuracy closest to the source usually guarantees this possibility.  Ah, but then what happens when this data moves into the form of information and is handed off to those who need it?

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Now, who is responsible for the care and feeding of this information?  Theory and some experience along the way, say those who have a need for something will nurture it best.

I hope you have garnered the not so subtle difference between data and information…Let’s go back to where we started and set-up a couple of premises:

Data is created, gathered, stored, reported through technological processes, as defined by people who need information from this data.

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Information is data that is in useful form, as requested by those who need it, usually to solve a business imperative.

 

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 Governance is the act of rule setting and monitoring.  In the case of data or information governance, it is like the county seat for these valuable commodities.  They cannot be separated since they reside symbiotically.

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There was a time in our not so long ago technological world that the answer to the question, “DATA, DATA – WHO OWNS THE DATA & WHO CARES?” would be easy to answer.  Technology had not become sophisticated enough to unleash the fruits of its labor into the business world without tight control.  That day has passed…We now have savvy technology users throughout organizations who can quickly learn the processes necessary for them to avail themselves of what they need to perform their jobs – what the firm needs to increase revenue – and what predicative analysis can shine on the future planning for a firm.

Is it time for IT departments to step back from the Data Governance forefront, maintain the back-end processing, ensure tools are available to users and allow the organization to govern its data and information?  How are you handling this in your organization?  What is working and what is challenging?

 

Computer Monitors Shaking Hands

For top notch technology resources, please contact The Resource Collaborative at info@trcollaborative.com.

HIRING FOR SUCCESS & LONGEVITY

April 7, 2014 by Ellen Shepard

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Are you a hiring manager torn witless by the number of resumes flowing into your inbox on a daily basis and yet, no shining star has appeared?

You are not alone!  Most hiring managers meet with an internal talent acquisition representative to formulate or revise a job description for a resource need.  The talent acquisition representative goes to the market to find a candidate with the skills to fill the requirement.  You receive the resume and see the relevant skillset.  You meet with the candidate and walk away underwhelmed…knowing they will not be successful on your team.

“Hmmmm”, says the talent acquisition representative…”how could that be”?  And back out to the market for another candidate and the cycle continues.

What is missing?  The cultural “fit”…not just within the overall company, also within your team.  Once you get past the skills assessment, what is it that makes an individual successful in this position within your team?  Successful broadly meaning, not only successful at the results they are producing, also successful in how they feel about the results they are producing.

The answer to this conundrum lies in the definition and quantification of this cultural piece.  It is every bit as important as the skillset required and should hold a place of honor on the job description.  All of us have seen some of the “quality” attributes on a job description – excellent communication skills, critical thinker, adaptable, etc.  While this is fine to include, perhaps a more productive targeted way to get a quantifiable read on a candidate’s cultural “fit” would be to include a list of questions that would indicate a candidate’s suitability and test for the “success factors” for a particular opportunity?

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As a matter of fact, one could say in today’s fast changing world of technology, the skills needed today are the skills of tomorrow as quick as you can blink an eye.  Finding people who are a “fit” and will stay with your organization, is perhaps more important than one skillset today.

 

Some questions or “TO DO” TIPS…

  1. Can you articulate your organization’s culture?
  2. Do you have a list of questions to test for a cultural “fit”?
  3. Who on your current team exemplifies a great “fit” and why?

Answering these questions and turning them into guidelines will go a long way to ensuring hiring for success and longevity!

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At The Resource Collaborative, we understand how costly turnover and attrition can be both in hard dollars and in productivity.  Therefore, we take the time to learn about the cultural “fit” for each position we are asked to fill and we offer to work with the hiring manager to determine what this “cultural fit” looks like so that we can formulate the appropriate questions for candidates to address.  Give us a call today to learn more about this service.

 

Hello and Welcome to The Resource Collaborative (TRC)!

January 15, 2014 by Ellen Shepard Leave a Comment

We are thrilled to welcome you

to our new website, and to introduce you

to our newly formed Leadership Team!

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Established in 2011, TRC is a privately held woman-owned company, with offices in the greater NY tri-state area that provides a full slate of human resource services to our clients across industry sectors, across the USA.  We like to think of ourselves as the “next generation of talent collaboration” – if it has to do with resources, you should be speaking with us! We believe that supporting the operations and technology areas within our client organizations allows us to make a meaningful contribution to the achievement of their business objectives.

To that end, here is the “TRC Difference”:

  • We were founded by and are led by a former CIO/COO – we know IT and Operations.
  • We are not recruiters, we have been actively employed as executives and managers in many industries – we have been in the hiring manager role, in most cases, for over 20 years! 
  • We truly collaborate with you!    We customize our fees based on the opportunity, the current market conditions – difficulty indicator and your budgetary constraints.  We are not a “one fee for all” commoditized business.
  • We have a 30+ year solid pipeline of stellar resources who collaborate with us to bring our clients the very best in delivery and results.

…We consistently add value to our client’s bottom line!

So, you need to complete IT and/or Operations projects and move your firm forward, but you have minimal resources (time, people and money) to accomplish your goals?

We just may be a breath of fresh air!

Our clients collaborate with us because we keep it simple, always look for ways to add value to their bottom line, and offer stellar services and unimagined productivity, all while “right-sizing” our fees to fit your circumstances.

Interested?   

The following is what we do best:

RESOURCE COLLABORATIONTALENT COLLABORATION
  Team Extension  Interim CIO
  Solution Management & Delivery  Interim COO
  Contingency Search  Leadership Team Coaching
  Exclusive Contingency Search  Leadership Team Workshops
  Retained Executive Search  Resource Planning & Retention

It is with great enthusiasm that we look ahead to another year of continued growth and success. We are committed to exceeding our clients’ expectations as we help them meet their IT and Operations resource challenges and business objectives head-on. Whether you are a potential client or are a skilled professional who is interested in joining the TRC team, we look forward to hearing from you!

All the Best,

Ellen

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