3. Create an Ideal Candidate Profile
Work with your team to develop an ideal candidate profile for each role you hire for. In addition to the job description, a document outlining the ideal candidate can help you further tailor your interview questions and find the right person for the job.
This candidate profile should include the experience, skills, education/training, personality traits, and culture fit that your company feels is ideal for the role. Ensure that multiple team members are involved in crafting these profiles to avoid bias and create a stronger, more accurate tool for your hiring process. Continue to refine these profiles over time as needed.
The ideal candidate profile serves as a strong base for vetting candidates and keeps you focused on what your agribusiness is looking for. You can use these profiles repeatedly when developing interview questions to guide consistent, successful hires.
4. Tailor Behavioral Questions
Behavioral-style interview questions are designed to ask candidates to share details about specific scenarios in the workplace. These questions help an employer gauge some of the soft skills of the candidate and how they navigate certain situations.
Tailoring behavioral style questions to make them relevant to each position is a great way to further vet ag candidates beyond their skills and qualifications. Asking these questions will help you understand how the candidate handles scenarios in the workplace that relate to their position and give you a glimpse into their personality.
For example, if you are interviewing candidates for an agriculture sales position, tailor your behavioral questions strategically to better understand scenarios they have encountered as a salesperson. Behavioral-style interview questions tailored for sales may sound something like these:
- Tell me about a time when you negotiated with a difficult customer.
- Tell me about the most challenging sale you’ve closed. How did you overcome the challenges?
- Tell me about a time when you lost out on a large deal. How did you handle that?
While basic behavioral questions such as “Tell me about a time you failed and what you learned from it” can still be effective, the more you tailor each question to the role, the further you will uncover the candidate’s potential fit.
5. Differentiate Required vs. Preferred Qualifications
When developing your interview questions, prioritize the required qualifications for each role, while keeping the preferred, but not required, qualifications in the back of your mind.
If a position requires 3+ years of ag sales experience, experience selling through a distribution network, and CRM experience, you will want to prioritize asking questions that are tailored to those requirements. Qualifications that are preferred but not required, or are considered a “plus”, should still be hit on during the interview, but avoid spending too much time on these.
Conclusion
While it will take some extra time and effort to tailor your interview questions for each role you’re hiring for, the results will speak for themselves. Tailoring your interview questions can help you find the right hire the first time and improve your retention rate, setting your farm up for future success.
At AgHires, we work hard to provide farms and agribusinesses with only the best hiring tips from our team of recruitment experts. Discover more agriculture HR and hiring advice here.
AgHires offers full-service recruiting, job posting packages, and custom solutions for employers across the entire ag supply chain. To learn more about how AgHires can help hire top talent for your agriculture business, check out our Hiring Services or set up a meeting.