By Jason Richmond, CEO and Chief Culture Officer at Ideal Outcomes, Inc.
I’m the first one to admit that Millennials typically get an unfair shake in today’s society. It’s my professional belief that Millennials actually offer companies unprecedented advantages: highly educated, tech savvy and of course, always looking to build upon the culture of a company for the greater good. With that being said, there has been somewhat of a “trophy trend” where people feel that the younger generations need to be coddled and cared for- especially in the workplace. The result is Human Resource departments that fear legal ramifications from being too tough on employees.
If you ask the CEO of one marketing company, she believes it’s well past time for all of that to stop, “they make you think there are questions you can’t ask- or things you can’t say. I’m sick of it because frankly, it doesn’t work. Sometimes the tough questions need to be asked- especially when hiring.” Backing up her claims is a recently published book by Kim Scott called Radical Candor. The premise is simple: “care personally and challenge directly.” Since then, this particular CEO has long since gone back to asking the questions that get to the root of who the candidate truly is: background, intentions, skill sets. It’s less of an abstract conversation and more direct, ultimately saving everyone time and money.
Here are her top 3 questions when sizing up potential:
If you ask the CEO of one marketing company, she believes it’s well past time for all of that to stop, “they make you think there are questions you can’t ask- or things you can’t say. I’m sick of it because frankly, it doesn’t work. Sometimes the tough questions need to be asked- especially when hiring.” Backing up her claims is a recently published book by Kim Scott called Radical Candor. The premise is simple: “care personally and challenge directly.” Since then, this particular CEO has long since gone back to asking the questions that get to the root of who the candidate truly is: background, intentions, skill sets. It’s less of an abstract conversation and more direct, ultimately saving everyone time and money.
Here are her top 3 questions when sizing up potential: