Printer-friendly versionSend to friend
Friday, April 12, 2002 - 11:59
Hedging Your Hiring Bets

Whom you hire is an important decision. The right candidate will
bring sales and profits to your company. The wrong one can mean serious losses
and lawsuits. On average, you invest $20,000 in potential profit, training and
payroll in each new candidate. Here are some tips from great sales managers as
to how to make the right choice of whom to hire.

In his video, Million Dollar Management Secrets, Tom
Cooksey, vice president of the world’s largest Kinetico dealership, says
you should consider hiring candidates with the following credentials.

•               Home
owner. If candidates are homeowners, their
relentless mortgage gives them the incentive to go out and sell every month.
People who live with friends or relatives can get by with a lower level of
success. Renters also tend to be more transient.

•               Stable
marriage. People in stable marriages offer
several advantages to you as an employer. A divorce can be very distracting. If
people have stayed with their spouses for a long time it indicates stability
that may apply to their job as well.

•               Involved
in the community. While it is true that
the person who just moved to town can make a good salesperson, your best bet is
someone who has a lot of ties in the community. A person who is active in a
church, local service clubs and who has family members in the area will make
his transition to success easier and more likely.

These are factors many sales managers feel are your best bet
that a candidate will be a successful employee. One manager I know hires people
in their 50s and 60s because they tend to work evenings and rarely are in a
rush to get home.

See Them in the Flesh

Before you make your selection, perform a full demo at the
candidate’s home with family in attendance. What you see is what you will
get. If the house is a mess, you will get a candidate who may be less than neat.
If the family seems unstable, you may be taking on personal problems. If the
candidate cannot get the family to attend, you may be facing a person in a bad
relationship or one who cannot control others.

Look at the family’s reaction to the demo. Is it enthusiasm,
scorn or sarcasm? Ask the spouse if he/she believes the candidate will be
successful selling your equipment or if he/she knows that his/her spouse might
be out evenings and Saturdays.

Arrange a Ride Along

Many managers take the candidate out to do a little
prospecting, door knocking and a demo or two. They study the candidate’s
reactions and questions to see if they think the recruit has what it takes to
succeed.

Run a Credit and Police Report

In addition to reference checks, do a credit check and
police check on every candidate before you make a final decision. People cannot
sell if they have personal problems, and a credit check will tell you if they
have problems with debt. Also, before you send someone into a customer’s
home, you should know if they have a criminal record. Customers rely on you to
screen employees.

Is this a lot of work? Yes it is, but when you realize that
each bad hire costs you $20,000, it’s worth spending the time to find out
all you can and hedge your bets. When you realize that you turn over your
customers, staff, business and future to people you bring on board, you realize
what a big responsibility it is to do what you can to hire the very best.      

Roads&Bridges Videos

 

Industry News

As the people in and around Atlanta prepare to decide on a sales-tax referendum that could generate $6.14 billion for transportation upgrades,...
Utah’s S.R. 92 project should have been completed in late 2011, but traffic cones are still visible. Now the state legislature is telling the Utah...
The latest national traffic signal assessment conducted by the National Transportation Operations Coalition (NTOC), a group of transportation...

Products

349 Products

  • The ComNet FVT/FVRHDMI transmits a high-resolution HDMI signal over one multimode fiber up to 500 meters for the 1080p60 format.  The FVT/...
  • RTMS (Remote Traffic Microwave Sensor) is a non-intrusive, radar-based detection system renowned for long-term, worry-free reliability and...
  •   Volvo almost completely redesigned its B-Series of backhoe loaders, which includes the BL60B and BL70B. Among the changes is a new set of...
  •   Maximizing productivity and efficiency is the key to the eight models in John Deere’s K Series of backhoe loaders, which also features a pair...
  • JCB has extended the reach, both literally and figuratively, of its ICX backhoe loader with longer loader arms (by 4 inches) and an extending dipper...
  • Allowing man and machine to work together more efficiently was the goal of the upgrades to Terex’s TLB 840 backhoe loader, starting with the...
  • The C Series from New Holland Construction offers the B95C LR (long reach) and the B95C TC (tool carrier). The LR is more compact with a longer stick...
  •   Case’s N Series of loader backhoes — which includes the 580N, 580 Super N, 580 Super N Wide Track and 590 Super N — are driven by Tier 4-...
  • The Cat C4.4 engine on the three new models in the F Series — the 416F, 420F and 430F — upgrades power while staying up to Tier 4 Interim emissions...
  •   Versatility is the name of the game with the L45 Tractor-Loader-Backhoe from Kubota, a 3-in-1 machine with a 45-hp Kubota diesel engine at its...