It is critical that folks do have empathy and this needs to be carefully scouted. However, i will also say that there exist folks who carefully mimic empathy as well to pursue their agendas. That is never good news.
This item shows us the nature of the problem and needs to be appreciated.
Yet recall that in a task oriented environment, that this behavior can stay under the radar..
The Single Most Important Interview Technique That Nearly Everyone Leaves Out
Ignoring this foundational human ability will come back to haunt you each and every time.
Thomas Koulopoulos
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-single-most-important-interview-technique-that-nearly-everyone-leaves-out
What's Behind Door #2
Of all the things that I look for in people when hiring—for the
matter in anyone I choose to build a relationship with—there is one that
is without doubt the most important. It is the rock solid foundation on
which all trust is built and the superglue that ties together people
and organizations, or, in its absence, destroys them. I am going to
share it with you, but first let's play a little mind game to set the
stage.
You're in a nondescript room with two doors. One
leads to heaven and one leads to hell. In front of each door is an
identical twin. There is no way to tell them apart. One always lies and
one always tells the truth. You do not know which is which. What single question could you ask either one to lead you to heaven's door?
Hold that thought, we'll come back to it. But before I divulge
the answer, and share what the one quality is, I'd like to ask you to
think of the worst hires that you've made. Or for that matter the worst
people you've ever had to associate with. What was the one quality that
they shared which made the relationship so awful or challenging?
You may be coming up with myriad reasons, but I'll bet that the
root cause had to do with their inability to see the impact of their
actions on others clearly.
You've probably tried to work with these people to help them
better understand their behaviors or the impact they have on others. And
each time you've hit a wall. Try as you may you just couldn't get them
to see the repercussions of their behaviors objectively. Not to be
overly harsh, but in a word they seemed oblivious.
I recall an exceptionally talented sales person I hired years
ago . They came across with polish, poise, and an abundance of
confidence. And they had an apparent track record of success. Yet, it
soon became obvious that they were absolutely horrid when it came to
building trust. They would tell you what you wanted to hear, but their
actions didn't follow suit.
At first I turned a blind eye towards it because they did
perform. Meeting quota wasn't the issue. The issue was that there was an
ongoing undercurrent of small deceptions and sometimes outright lies
that made it increasingly difficult to trust them. The best way to
characterize it was that they were the kind of person for whom you had
to constantly try to reconcile what they said with what they did. I
affectionately call it a "WTF personality disorder" because there's
virtually no way to make sense of it
You're Blocked!
Sure enough when I finally fired this individual one of the
first things they did was to send an exceptionally bitter and toxic
email to everyone in the company. To the credit of the extraordinary
team we had built, most people responded to the email with a simple
reply saying either "get lost" or "you're blocked."
I spent countless hours trying to figure out why it was that I
had so misjudged them. How could I not see how toxic and untrustworthy
this person was? After I was done blaming myself it finally dawned on me
that I had hired a pathologic liar who had no problem using others to
serve their selfish desire for success. In short, only they
mattered and every means to their success was fair game no matter the
toll it took on others. That may work if your fighting the enemy, but
the enemy is not the person in the next cubicle!
What they lacked was that most important quality that you need to look for in every hire, empathy.
Their every toxic behavior stemmed back to that simple truth
that they did not have the ability to feel for others. The insecurities
this person harbored were so deep and so consuming that they were driven
by a fundamental fear which made it impossible to step outside of
themselves and see the world through someone else's eyes.
Empathy is not weakness, it is the courage to suspend your own
ego long enough to really understand someone else's opinion.
It's An Interview, Not A Rehab Clinic
I've since come to realize that empathy is perhaps the most
critical of all human emotions. It is what ties us together as partners,
teams, organizations, and to our customers. It is the ability to
suspend our own interests, opinions, and convictions momentarily and
listen long enough to feel what someone else is feeling; to truly
understand their interests, opinions, and convictions. None of us are
perfect at that but some people simply lack the capacity, ability, or
interest. I'm sure these people have some old and deep scars that
account for their lack of empathy, but I'm not a therapist and my role
(and yours) isn't to run a rehab clinic, but to choose people who will
add value and integrity to your company.
So, how do you interview for empathy? Well, the good news is that you can. But first let me tell you how you don't.
The interview techniques most of us use will never surface a
lack of empathy. The reason is that virtually every question we are
accustomed to asking is about how the person feels about themselves.
It's an ego-centric approach to understanding the person's opinion of
themselves. If you talk to a narcissist, which is the supreme form of a
person who lacks empathy, you will get outstanding responses. Everything
they say will be exactly what you need to hear to be confident in his
or her ability to do the job. In fact, narcissist are the Oscar nominees
for Most Charming and Convincing. So, you really need to get beyond the
veneer. Here's how.
An Out Of Body Experience
To get at a person's inherent ability to express empathy you
need to get them to step outside of themselves. The way to do that is to
ask them how they would respond if they were someone else observing or
reacting to their actions or behaviors. The empathetic person will never
get frustrated by this line of questioning, in fact they will welcome
it because so much of their self worth comes from understanding others.
On the other hand, someone who lacks empathy will get increasingly
agitated if you pursue this course of interviewing.
For example, rather than ask "What's your greatest
accomplishment" try "What would coworkers in your last position say was
your greatest accomplishment?" Instead of "What's your greatest
weakness" try "What would coworkers in your last position say was your
greatest weakness?" While the answers to these questions are insightful,
what you're looking for is the person's level of comfort and engagement
with the questions. Do they really try to get into their coworkers
heads? Do they value that skill? is it a core part of the way they
interact with others, how they manage and lead? Do they even use the
term empathy?
Don't preface any of this by telling the person you're
interviewing why the questions are being asked, just keep plodding away
as if it's perfectly normal. After a steady barrage of these sorts of
questions I'd suggest you try a few of the questions from this quiz that Berkeley created to establish someone's degree of empathy.
It won't take long to figure out if the person you're
interviewing does in fact have a capacity and a competency for empathy.
Keep in mind that none of this is suggesting you look for people
who do not hold strong opinions or who lack a backbone and confidence.
But these qualities are not in opposition to empathy; it's not zero sum!
If you expect to hire leaders and team players who will build long term
trust and committed teams then you need to hire people who have the
capacity to listen to and feel for others.
Empathy is also not about telling people what they want to hear.
Every leader has to make a steady stream of unpopular decisions, and
that's exactly why empathy is critical. Empathy actually increases trust
as well as the honesty and the integrity of communications. Its lack
undermines all three by discounting the role others play, and their
opinions, in a decision making process that involves their lives and
livelihoods.
The bottom line is that seeing ourselves clearly and objectively
is a journey the begins by understanding how our actions and behaviors
impact others.
So, back to our nondescript room, Have you figured out the
solution? Do you see a tie to the importance of stepping outside of
yourself? The only correct answer is to say to either twin, "If I were
to ask your twin which door leads to heaven, what would they say?" Then
just take the opposite door!
Okay, granted, it's not as easy in an interview! Still, I can
assure you that if you hire people who have the ability to step outside
of themselves and to express empathy, while making even the toughest
decisions, you will build an organization that has a rock solid
foundation for success.
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