American Management Association logo
Home Register Member FAQ’s Your Member Account About AMA
Seminars On-Site Events Books e-Learning Self-Study Research Conference Centers
   
  Areas of Interest
  HR/Training
  Management
  Leadership
  Sales and Marketing
  Small Business
  Global Perspectives
  Professional Development
  Archive
  Member Benefits
  Membership Plans
  Association Partners
  Member Resources
  Self-Assessments
  Member Newsletter Archive

Checking References Pays Off

by Johanna Wirth

Veteran HR professionals know good employees aren't necessarily good at job interviews. Likewise, good interviewees don't necessarily make for good employees.

Given that, it is absolutely essential to do a reference check on all potential hires.

Candidates don't always know precisely what you are looking for and often generalize about their skills and experience. On the
other hand, many candidates exaggerate about their background, and some mislead or outright lie.

Unfortunately, few job interviewers are trained to determine if the candidate can do the work the employer needs. Job interviewing is really a skill and all too often interviewers simply ask a lot of questions in hopes the candidate will give the right answers. To the rescue is reference-checking, which, if done right, can produce the answers the job interview failed to produce -- greatly increasing the likelihood that you will hire the best person for the job.

Get Specific

The best indicator of a job candidate's future performance is past performance. What you want -- from both the interview and the reference check -- are specific, tangible examples of past performance. The focus of a job interview, therefore, should be to get examples of the candidate's best work in a variety of different areas.

Look for technical expertise, managing people, commitment to the job, responding to pressure. Try to get the candidate to provide examples of their ability to do the work across the wider demands of the job.

During the interview, push beyond vague, general answers. The more specific and targeted your questions, the more you'll learn about the candidate's qualifications. If the candidate says they did their best work while working on project XYZ, find out exactly what the project involved, what their role was, how the project worked out, who their supervisor was.

Conducting the Reference Check

Following the job interview, you need to get the other side of the story. Consider doing the following:

Don't settle for generalities when you speak with a candidate's former employer. If you ask, "What kind of a guy is Joe," you'll be told, "Well, Joe is a great guy." But you won't know more than you did before. Instead, say, "Joe tells me he managed the XYZ project. Please tell me in your own words what the project involved and about the role Joe played. Was he a good manager? How did he work with other people? How well did he handle pressure?"

Don't let the reference-provider get away with value judgments, such as, "Joe is a hard worker." Push for examples of why that value judgment was made. "Why do you think Joe was a hard worker? Why do you think Joe has good team skills? Can you provide examples to validate those judgments?"

When it comes to checking references, you can ask any reasonable question you want. There are few legal hurdles to checking out a job candidate with anyone you choose to ask but there are some restrictions on what references can tell you, though.

Most employers fear giving out negative information about a job candidate.

Many states have passed laws shielding reference providers from legal action by former employees. But in none of these states is the protection from lawsuit unconditional, so many companies maintain stringent reference-giving policies. And that usually means not saying anything even remotely negative when a reference checker calls.

Keep in mind that companies fear legal action for giving out derogatory information about a past employee. If you run into resistance when you check a reference, that alone is a clue that Joe's work may not be all he said it was.

Experts concur that the only candidates who can't provide checkable references are candidates who were average or worse.

You can work around the reluctance to say negative things by asking carefully worded questions such as "on an overall summary of the candidate's competency on a scale of 0 to 10, Joe rates where?"

Going the Extra Mile

You can also do a complete background verification of a candidate for nominal cost of between $75 and $150. That covers academic-degree verification, employment verification, credit verification and a criminal background check.

Also, it may be appropriate, and sometimes necessary, to look beyond the references the candidate has provided to get a truly unbiased appraisal. After checking a reference you may want to ask if there is someone else who knows Joe and then be referred to another person in the group who worked with Joe.

Word of Caution: Be mindful about who you contact -- especially if the candidate is currently employed. Letting others know the candidate is looking for another job is definitely a breach of confidence. But done selectively and discreetly, you will gain important additional information about the candidate.

Johanna Wirth is a Boston-based business writer.

 
 
Toolkit
Index of Articles
Recommended Seminars
Recommended Books

 
AMA Seminars
European Seminars
Canadian Seminars
Books
Self Study
e-Learning
Research

 

 



Privacy Contact Site Map
American Management Association © Copyright 1997-2004
1601 Broadway New York, NY 10019
Phone: 212-586-8100 • Fax: 212-903-8168 • Customer Service: 1-800-262-9699