The manager-employee relationship is the heart of any workplace. Great managers build relationships with employees, create an open and trusting environment, and motivate their team members under a shared mission.
So why is it so hard to find great managers? An SHRM study found that 84 percent of Americans say poorly trained managers create a lot of unnecessary stress at work. Nearly 60 percent of the workforce believe that managers need further training on how to work with a team of people.
A Gallup study found that only one in ten people possessed the qualities and talents to be a manager, which isn’t great news for team leaders, hiring teams, and employees. There are, however, ways to identify qualified candidates for management positions.
Along with talent sourcing, screening, building talent pools, and optimizing your job descriptions, you can rely on digital reference checks to assess potential hires.
The same Gallup study found that managers account for at least 70 percent of employee engagement, which means that your levels of employee productivity, engagement, and enthusiasm at work depend a lot on your leadership.
Reference check questions need to identify if your candidate has the skill set to organize, lead, and motivate a workforce, however big or small it is.
You model the following reference check questions in your own search for a manager.
This is a great opening question that will help jog your references memory and give them an opportunity to make a general statement about the candidate in question.
This is a good question that will allow your reference to pen up more about the candidate. By asking for both pros and cons, you’re making it clear that it’s okay for them to discuss the good and bad. If there are any red flags or serious problems in the candidate’s history, they will likely come up here.
Being able to motivate employees is so important for management positions. The Great Resignation and the advent of quiet quitting are significant indicators that employees want more out of their careers, workplaces, and managers.
Examples and demonstrations of talent are often far more compelling than general descriptions. These examples will allow your reference to reflect on the candidate’s achievements and provide a concrete example of how the candidate excelled in their role.
This is a good question to ask a peer reference or former employee who worked under your candidate. 80 percent of employees say that open communication is important to them, and teams with effective communication strategies outperform the competition by 3.5 times… which means communication style should be a top priority when evaluating candidates.
This is another essential question that will tell you what kind of contribution this individual made to the workplace and company culture. You want individuals who work well with peers, respond well to their own managers, and contribute to your team in a positive way.
This is one of the most important questions you could ask anyone for a reference check, regardless of what position you need to fill. It’s a polarizing question that asks the former employer/manager to identify any red (or green) flags.
There are some pros and cons to conducting a reference check both at the beginning and at the end of the hiring process. Overall, however, your reference checks would serve you best at the beginning of the process.
Here’s why:
Team leaders, recruiters, and corporate executives want to find quality candidates in the shortest possible amount of time. The fear is that a quick time to hire might take away from a quality candidate and vice versa. Automation, specifically digital 360 reference check automation, helps solve this problem.
Automated reference check tools, like Crosschq, allow you to:
The longer it takes to fill a manager position, the more money it will cost your organization. This includes both hiring costs as well as the missed productivity, engagement, and organization that quality leaders offer. Crosschq’s automated reference check technology can help you identify talented leaders in no time. With Crosschq, you don’t need to jeopardize the quality of hire for quick hires or vice versa.
Crosschq’s “Q” Report looked at 24+ million pre-hire and post-hire decisions we’ve helped leaders make, along with the radical insights from those data points that can help you hire, retain, and develop talent. And if you want to learn more about how Crosschq can help leaders and hiring teams attract, retain, and measure the performance of top talent, sign up for a demo today.