Scheduling Interviews
Thursday, August 28th, 2008Many firms, especially technology and engineering companies, have an involved interview process. In fast growing successful companies it is common for technical candidates to be interviewed by five to eight people for 40-60 minutes for each interview. These same organizations are trying to attract top talent. Our customers tell us that in order to attract top talent you want to make the interview process intense, but as smooth as possible for the candidate, the recruiter, and the interviewers.

Imagine that you are a talented engineer applying to a fast growing technology company. You’ve flown across the country, showed up for your interview on time, only to be told that you’ll have to wait an hour. After your first one hour interview, you then have to wait an hour before the second interviewer has time to interview you. You’re told to write a technical test, but there’s no room for you to write it in so you end up sitting on a chair in a hallway trying to concentrate and ace the test. Not the greatest first impression of the company that is trying to get your commitment, energy, and enthusiasm.
It’s not much better for the recruiters trying to arrange for five to eight interviews of a candidate in a single day. They know who the interviewers are, but not their schedules. Many phone calls, email messages, and other interactions later the five interviewers are lined up to interview a candidate, a room is booked for the test, and there are a minimum number of delays in the interview schedule.
The day of the interview arrives. The candidate is late because the plane flight the recruiter booked for them is late. One of the interviewers calls in sick. Another interviewer is late finishing one interview and the recruiter has to rearrange everyone’s schedule. The result can be a real mess. As one recruiter told me “I feel so sorry for candidates that have to sit and wait around for three hours because we couldn’t rearrange everyone’s schedules during the day.”
The solution is automated scheduling. When first booking the candidate interviews, all the recruiter should need to do is enter the name of each person doing an interview, indicate any extra resources needed (e.g., a room to write a test), then ask for scheduling solutions. Solutions that integrate with Microsoft Exchange will be able to accurately check each interviewers free/busy time to come up with viable solutions. That’s a great time saving for both the recruiter and each interviewer, but where this really makes a difference is on the day the candidate shows up. Last minute schedule changes can be manually or automatically adjusted throughout the day, minimizing gaps in the candidate’s interview process. If a gap does develop, it can be accurately communicated to the candidate. Automated interview scheduling improves the candidate experience, saves time for each of the interviewers, and dramatically improves the life of the recruiter. Isn’t that what automated scheduling is supposed to do?
David Greer

