Everyone in a hiring capacity has made a wrong hire in their career. I believe that this is a direct result of hiring for skills first. Here’s the scoop, a person’s skills can change, but you can't change who they are. And technical abilities are not a clear indicator of passion in the work.  


Today’s Quote: 


“Values should underpin Vision, which dictates Mission, which determines Strategy, which surfaces Goals that frame Objectives, which in turn drives the Tactics that tell an organization what Resources, Infrastructure, and Processes are needed to support a certainty of Execution.” — Mike Myatt


Our guest today: David Kinnear, Executive Mentor & Group Chair of Vistage International.


Dave Kinnear is a Business Advisor, Mentor and Executive Leader Coach. Through his affiliation with Vistage Worldwide, Dave convenes and facilitates peer advisory boards of Business Owners, Company Presidents, General Managers and Chief Executives dedicated to becoming better leaders who make better decisions and achieve better results. 


Dave is also an executive-to-executive mentor to Executive MBA students at the UCI Paul Merage School of Business and a coach for the Center for Entrepreneurship at CalState University, Fullerton.


Today we are going to discuss


Why a skills-based interview is dangerous
values alignment is critical
The framework for a successful interview

Why do people interview for competency/skills?


Competency is easy
This is what people focus on 
Today's workers need mastery, purpose and autonomy
Shared values aligns well with the way decisions are made within the company
We all want to do what's right for the tribe

The soft stuff is not easy.
Most CEO’s don't know what the real values are
Profitability is what is really valued
Transparency on the financials are missing

Management decisions are the values
Culture is the way things get done around here
The way things get done is by making decisions
Decisions are made reflective of the values

How do we Hire for Values?


Running, Knees, shoes analog
Know what the real values
Ask questions to determine the person’s values
Uncover the person’s values
How someone works with others and makes decisions
Ask questions that validate the core values
Let the silence do the heavy lifting!
When they have the values
Reveal the mismatch in what they have now and where you align
Skills can be learned
The person you want is not on the street
Hire them

Rick’s Nuggets


Design questions around the corporate values (Amazon's leadership principals) 
Ask behavioral questions and dig deep. This uncovers the truth about who the person is
"Walk me through a time"... Then ask why, why, why?
Do not ask leading questions
Ask the question and shut up!

Key Takeaways


· Values are the foundation of an organization's culture.
· An organization’s leader has only one critical job, and that’s to actively manage the culture
· The leadership team must believe in and live the values every day