Holding Back ‘Bad Hires’
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Holding back ‘bad hires’

Business Development
In today’s talent starved labour market, many organisations tend to forget that having a “bad hire” onboard can be worse than leaving the position vacant. Let’s find out how organisations are falling prey to this menace and some of the preventive measures to curb it


The growing menace


The worst mistake any organisation can make in terms of recruiting is to get ‘bad hires’ on board. A ‘bad hire’ is a new recruit who either does not have the required skill set or someone who does not have the right attitude and aptitude, required for the job. Navjit Singh, business head, Exon Solutions explains, “A bad hire is a person whose skill set as a professional doesn’t match up to the demands/requirements of his/her job.”

“A person can be hired on the basis of his/her performance during the interview, also if their resume is very impressive. This is no indication of the performance of the person. Therefore, the challenge lies in taking corrective steps in the recruitment stage itself. A bad hire is usually a person who’s undisciplined, unproductive, and severely lacks the “can do” attitude. Hence, to avoid such hires, the interviewer, needs to be alert and a keen listener in order to gauge the candidate’s abilities,” expresses Sunil Ghorawat, managing partner, Earth Water Group.


The hiring challenge


Hiring a wrong person can be very detrimental to the growth and reputation of the organisation. Also, the financial repercussions are far too many. Recent studies have shown that the cost of a bad hire can range from one to five times of their annual salary. “Apart from the enormous loss in terms of financial cost, one bad hire can affect the morale and confidence of the colleagues, team and clients and in certain areas, the entire organisation,” informs Singh.

Neeraj Mediratta, director, Ace Data Devices says, “Monetary loss can be calculated to a certain extent but the biggest loss is the loss of customer loyalty and the brand equity that the organisation has built over the years. Additionally, the rest of the team has to work even harder to balance the performance, thus resulting in burnouts, low employee morale, and even frustration in employees.”


The right choice


In order to avoid such mishaps, it becomes imperative for organisations to have corrective measures in place to deal with such undesirable situations. So how can an organisation prevent recruiting such bad hires? “Attracting the right candidates by proper recruitment branding and choosing the right recruitment channels helps prevent bad hires from coming on board. A thorough reference check of the candidate does play an important part in the hiring process,” advises Chetan Shah, MD, Synygy India.

Singh states that the ideal scenario to eliminate bad hires is to have a robust, scalable and seamless recruitment system in place. “The system has to be a mix of processes of skill evaluation, psychometric evaluation and background/reference checks,” he adds. Rajaram Agrawal, MD, TalentAhead India adds, “Generally, the HR or consultants carry out the reference check with the two referees whose names are provided by the candidates themselves. I feel that this is not the right approach, simply because the candidate, more often than not, has already taken these two people in confidence before providing their names. Hence, it is important to do independent checks.”

“Each role in the organisation should have a competency matrix associated with it. Competency mapping can be done with the help of behavioural event-based interviews and competency questionnaires. More and more open ended questions should be put forth to candidates so that it becomes a lot easier for recruiters to gauge his/her strengths and weaknesses,” explicates Ghorawat.

How many companies are as rigorous about evaluating job candidates as they are about deciding on an investment proposal? Reality is that hiring processes are poorly designed and executed. Hence, HR needs to realise that a steadfast recruitment process is in the organisation’s interest.

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