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INTERVIEW GUIDE





TREASURER AND CONTROLLER

Applicant閼?

Date閼?

Recruiter閼?


The goal of an interview is to determine whether a candidate has a good fit for your particular job. This is best accomplished by asking questions about job related competencies to determine whether the candidate has previous experiences successfully using these competencies.


Introduction Phase
Encourage some small talk to give the candidate time to get settled and to help him/her ease into the conversational flow of the interview.

Candidates usually feel more comfortable when they know what to expect in an interview. Share your general format with the candidate.


Tell the candidate that you may be writing during the interview and explain why you will be doing this.

Assure candidates that two-way questioning is allowed and encouraged. Make it clear that the candidate will have an opportunity to ask questions at the conclusion of the process

Interview Phase
Have your competency based questions ready for scoring. We recommend a 1 to 5 scoring grid; a score of 1 would mean the candidate has demonstrated no experience using the competency and a score of 5 indicating the candidate has a deep understanding of the competency and has used it successfully in the past with good results.

Probing: After asking a planned question, you may want to probe for more information to support a candidate's response. Probes are usually unplanned; you use them when you want the candidate to clarify or expand upon a point or when you want more insight into his/her thoughts, feelings, and behaviours.("Please expand upon that." "Describe how you .")

Clarifying Inconsistencies: When a candidate appears to be caught in a contradiction, it may be appropriate to bring the conflicting information to the surface for clarification. ("You mentioned earlier that you were involved in developing a distance education course. You are now indicating that you have limited experience with distance education and need to learn more about it. Please clarify your experience with distance education.")

Paraphrasing: When in doubt that you have fully understood a candidate's response, restate what you think you heard in your own words and ask the candidate for feedback. ("You are basically stating that there are several ways to handle this situation depending upon the way in which the client presents the problem. Is that what you meant?")

Silence or Pause: Silences or pauses are an effective technique for encouraging the candidate to do the talking. When there is a silence or pause, don't jump in with another question; allow the candidate time to reflect and form a response. Look expectantly at him or her while you wait.

Repeating: When the candidate appears to be avoiding a question, come back to it again. While the candidate may have reasons for trying to evade it, she/he may simply have gotten sidetracked or may not fully understand what you mean.


Integrity

Integrity is something all employees are expected to demonstrate; however, integrity becomes more critical when the job includes temptations such as handling financial transactions, handling sensitive personal or health records, or working with valuable property and materials. People with high integrity follow rules and regulations associated with the job and are uncomfortable when they are violated.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of integrity associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

Have you ever been in a situation where someone asked you to discuss personal information about another person ? What was the situation ? What did you do? What was the result ?


1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Cooperation

Cooperation requires being pleasant with others on the job and displaying a good-natured, cooperative work attitude. This trait differs from concern for others in that it not only includes the willingness to empathize, but includes volunteering to actively share their work load or help resolve their problems. Specific employee activities include listening to what another person is saying, empathizing with their situation, asking questions to clarify issues, explaining how the problem affects them both, and jointly developing a plan of action.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the level of cooperation associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

Would you say you were more focused on achieving goals or maintaining relationships ? Please provide some examples. What were the results ?



1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Analytical Thinking

The position requires someone who successfully performs analytical work. They tend to be thoughtful and approach decisions both logically and systematically. Analytical people ask questions to discover issues and do not make decisions without methodically thinking through the consequences.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of analysis associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

How much time do you usually spend examining your past decisions to determine how to make better ones in the future ? Please give me some examples. What were the results ?



1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Dependability

Dependability involves the employee being reliable, on time, responsible, dependable, and consistently fulfilling commitments. On the job the employees must do what they say and say what they do. A dependable employee can be trusted to give straight answers, follow through, and complete assignments on time and within budget. Their behaviour is predictable and seldom holds any surprises or unexpected reactions. They can be counted on to be honest and upfront with co-workers regardless of the situation.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of dependability associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

How do you balance socializing with co-workers with accomplishing the job ? Can you give me some examples? What were the results ?


1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Attention to Detail

Attention to detail includes the employee闁炽儲鐛?ability to identify and manage important details associated with doing a good job. This includes things such as checking and rechecking work, setting up monitoring systems, noticing missing details, accurately completing forms, following directions, and planning projects to the final detail.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of details that are associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

Everyone faces times when we overlook some small, but important detail. Tell me about a time when this happened to you. What happened ? What did you do? How did it work out?



1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Independence

The position requires someone who is independent. Independent people tend to break rules and do things their own way. They like to be their own guide and seldom enjoy working under close supervision even though they may not know what is expected of them. Often they will act or speak without restraint or authority.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of independence associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

Would you prefer to work in a job with rules and guidelines you could follow or one where you could make most of your own decisions ? Please give me some examples.



1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Persistence

The position requires persistence in the face of obstacles. Persistent people are often the last to give up on a problem and continue working in the face of obstacles that would discourage others. They do not give up easily and complete most of the work they start even in the face of frequent roadblocks or redirection.

Before you ask this question, best practice suggests that you know beforehand the kind of persistence associated with both satisfactory and unsatisfactory job performance.

What do you do when a task becomes increasingly more difficult to achieve ? Please provide some examples of what you did and the results.


1 2 3 4 5


Minimal ability/NA
Average ability
Exceptional ability



Comments
Conclusion Phase
During this phase, you are shifting the emphasis to the candidate's need for information so that she/he is able to reflect upon the position and decide if it is personally suitable. Both you and the candidate are evaluating one another in the interview. This is your opportunity to present a positive, attractive image of the position and you the employer.

Describe the position and your company to the candidate. You will probably want to discuss the position in more detail by clarifying the performance expectations, reviewing critical responsibilities and describing the work environment. You might also wish to talk about the support and training that may be provided and career development opportunities.

Encourage the candidate to ask questions. Candidates should feel that you respect their questions and that your responses provide the information they need to make a decision. Candidates often have questions about salary and benefits, and you should be prepared to outline the main facts and features during the initial interviews. If you are asked a question to which you do not know the answer, let the candidate know that you will research the question and report back to them. Record the questions asked and the responses that you gave.

Outline the timelines for the final selection decision. Let the candidate know the general steps ahead and who to contact should the candidate want to follow up.

Thank the candidate and close on a positive note.


Seven Cautionary Notes
Although interviews are an excellent way of assessing how well candidates measure up to your job requirements, they are subject to many influences that may reduce the effectiveness of the interviewer's judgment. Interviewers should be aware of these pitfalls and avoid them. Following are seven of the most common interviewing hazards.

Halo Effect: This happens when an interviewer forms a global, positive impression of a candidate based on a characteristic or other information that biases the interviewer's assessment of the candidate's qualifications.

Stereotyping: Stereotyping is a generalization based on personal or physical characteristics (e.g., racial/ethnic background, social status) that have nothing to do with the factor being assessed. It affects a candidate's rating if it elicits a negative or positive reaction in the interviewer. Restricting candidacy based on gender, race, or religion is one of the biggest mistakes companies make when hiring.

Order Effect: The order in which candidates are interviewed can result in inaccurate ratings. A good candidate who is interviewed after an outstanding candidate may be given a lower evaluation than is merited because of the overshadowing effect of the superior candidate. The time of day may also influence an assessment. A tired committee is not as attentive or accurate as it would be earlier in the day.

Early Judgments/Impressions: Interviewers should avoid making snap or early judgments (positive or negative) based on factors not related to the position such as appearance, voice, or handshake.

Rating Tendencies: Leniency and strictness errors occur when interviewers gravitate to either extreme on the rating scale and are consistently too generous or too rigid in their scoring. Errors also occur when interviewers rate all candidates as average. Rating tendencies reduce the effectiveness of the assessment process by making it hard to draw clear distinctions among candidates.

Inadvertently Influencing the Candidate's Response: The more you talk, the more you influence a candidate's response. In the beginning and middle phases, say as little as possible about the position and get back to questioning and listening. Body language and tone of voice will also influence a candidate, so be aware of the signals you may unintentionally be communicating.

Losing Control of the Interview: As the chair, it is up to you to ensure that you control the interview, not the candidate. Use the communication techniques described above to take control of a chatty or rambling candidate, to refocus the conversation when it gets off track, to signal other committee members to ask their questions as required, and to monitor the time.




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