If you run your own small business, you have a hand in all aspects, like it or not.
From meeting payroll, to generating leads, to keeping the dishes in the office kitchen sink clean, you experience first-hand the many challenges inherent in owning and growing a business.
For many of the businesses we talk to, there's no challenge greater than talent.
A great hire can change the trajectory of your business.
A bad hire can drag you down and squander resources for months. Or years.
Whatever your customers pay you for, your ability to build strong relationships is what keeps them boasting about you to their friends.
Hiring high-performing marketers is about more than just finding the smartest marketers or candidates with degrees from top universities.
The best candidates also need to have real-world experience, be skilled communicators, have high emotional intelligence — and be a strong fit for the company’s culture.
On top of all of this, they also need to be voracious learners who are driven to stay on top of new developments in an industry that is changing at a lightning-fast pace.
Studies estimate that the cost of a bad hire is $17,000 on average, and the impact of a bad hire can extend well beyond financial losses to damaged client relationships or even customer churn.
Resumes and cover letters can only tell you so much about a candidate.
This means that the interview is an employer’s best opportunity to uncover the real story behind a polished application.
To do it right, you’ll need to know exactly what you’re looking for — and the questions to ask that reveal it.
Below, I’ll cover important information that can help you improve your candidate interviews so you’re building the team you need, such as:
Armed with this information, you’ll feel more confident selecting candidates who are the perfect fit for your company.
A lesson that many business leaders have learned the hard way is this: past performance is the best predictor of future performance.
This is the theory behind behavior-based interviewing.
Most interviewers tend to ask hypothetical questions intended to test how the applicant would respond in certain situations. For example, you might ask “What would you do if you weren’t getting along with a coworker?” to determine whether the candidate has good communication skills.
The intention behind this type of question is good. The problem is that it is too easy for applicants to tell you, as an interviewer, what you want to hear.
The idea behind a behavior-based interview is to reframe the question and ask it in a way that forces the applicant to share how they have responded in a real-life situation.
So, for example, you could reframe the question above as “Tell me about a time you weren’t getting along with a coworker. How did you handle that situation?” and then follow the applicant’s answer with deeper, probing questions intended to verify that what they are saying actually happened.
As an interviewer, your goal should be to get the applicant to share:
(otherwise known as the STAR method of behavioral interviewing).
Executed properly, a behavior-based interview can tell you everything you need to know about a prospective candidate, from whether they have the marketing skills and experience necessary for the job, to their degree of emotional intelligence, culture fit, and ability to communicate.
Succeeding with behavior-based interviewing starts with the development of a strong set of interview questions.
The interview questions that you ask of marketers should be tailored to the skills, cultural qualities, and experience that you’re looking for in your applicants.
Below, we've separated these questions into four categories:
Here are sample interview questions for each of these.
How did you learn about this position and what prompted you to apply?
Please describe a typical workday at your current job. Does your current job involve any evening or weekend work? How many hours per week are you currently working?
What work achievements are your greatest source of pride? Why?
How do you define success for yourself in your current position?
If I were speaking to your friends or your former supervisor, what would they say are your strengths and weaknesses? Give me an example of how these play out.
What do you think are the three biggest challenges facing companies today when it comes to marketing? How have you addressed these in past positions?
Tell me about a successful marketing campaign you recently worked on. What was your contribution? Why do you consider it successful?
Tell me about a marketing campaign that did not work as well as expected. What went wrong? What did you learn from this?
Let’s say you have a client and you feel you’ve been doing a great job on their marketing but they disagree. What specific analytics would you use to prove to them that the work you are doing is having a positive impact?
What is your favorite marketing book or blog? Why?
Tell me about a new approach or idea you have introduced or developed.
What do you believe are the qualities of a great team leader?
Tell me about a time when you demonstrated leadership skills. What about this example makes it a good example of leadership?
Who have you coached or mentored to achieve success? How did you do this?
Tell me about a time you made a mistake. What did you do when you realized this? How did you handle it? What did you learn?
Tell me why you think you are the best person for this position. Why do you want to join our company specifically?
Give me an example of a time you worked effectively as part of a team.
Give me an example of a team that you were a part of that did not work together effectively.
How would you improve a team environment in which two people aren’t getting along?
What are you an expert in? How did you develop that expertise? Teach me something about this.
What kind of a workplace are you looking to be a part of? What do you mean by that? Give me an example.
Tell me about a time you felt frustrated by a friend or co-worker. How did you handle this situation?
How do you stay organized and on task? Let’s say you were given a tight deadline on a complex project. How would you tackle it?
In what way is our culture a good fit for you? How would you enrich it if hired?
Every business’s success depends on finding and hiring the right people.
Unfortunately, businesses get this wrong every day — and the effects are damaging. In a famous study done back in 2018, Jobvite found that a third of employees don’t even make it through an entire quarter.
If someone is leaving that quickly, it likely wasn’t a good fit from the start.
If you want to attract good-fit applicants (and avoid bad-fit ones), provide as much information up front as you can.
Use videos and written content to address every question an applicant might ask so they can understand company culture, role responsibilities, and day-to-day schedules before they're in an interview. This way, no one's time gets wasted.
The questions I’ve listed above are a good starting point for developing an interview rubric suited to your specific organizational needs. But the real magic happens during the actual interview.
That is your chance, as the interviewer, to peel back the layers of the onion and discover who your applicant really is.
The biggest mistake that most interviewers make is accepting applicants’ responses at face value.
Marcus Sheridan says that the real answer is never the first one you get. This is especially true in job interviews because applicants have plenty of opportunities to rehearse the perfect answer.
Behavior-based interviewing helps get at the real truth behind the rehearsed answer by forcing the applicant to share how they have handled actual experiences, as opposed to hypothetical ones. It works best when the interviewer asks follow-up questions like “give me an example of that” or “tell me why you responded that way.”
The next time you interview a candidate for a marketing position, challenge yourself to reframe your interview questions in this way and then force yourself to ask those follow-up questions. What you discover might not only prevent you from making a bad hire — it might uncover your next marketing superstar.