Cultural fit has long been a key factor in hiring decisions. But is it still relevant?
The answer is complicated. Cultural fit still matters, but to put it bluntly, many companies have it back to front. In the past, culture fit has referred to hiring a team of similar people, who ‘fit’ a certain mold. This often resulted in cognitive, gender, or ethnically homogenous groups who were prone to bias and blind spots.
Culture fit is still important, but consider what you mean when you say fit, and what, exactly, you want new hires to fit into. Rather than looking for new hires who fit a mold, you should look for candidates who fill gaps in your workplace culture. This reduces organizational silos, increases diversity, and builds a more vibrant company culture.
With this new take on the hiring process, it's necessary to make some adjustments to your culture-fit interview questions. F4S has put together this guide to help you get started.
Traditionally, a cultural fit assessment or interview is a part of the job interview process where an employee is assessed for their fit within a given organizational culture.
The aim is to determine the candidate's personality traits or core values, and whether they align with company values and the rest of the team. During this part of the interview process, candidates may be asked questions about their personal values, approaches, and how they would handle specific workplace scenarios.
With this information, hiring managers make a judgment as to whether the employee will integrate into the company culture, and will use this information as part of their hiring criteria.
The issue isn't that cultural fit is no longer important. Companies often fall into error when they preference sameness over difference in hiring decisions, which can lead to issues down the track.
Birds of a feather flock together, right? Many hiring managers abide by this maxim when putting together a team. They do so because they believe this will create a positive work environment and that it will limit the stressful situations that arise with a team of people who think and work in different ways. But, just because it's easy doesn't mean it's the ideal work environment. In fact, it's quite the opposite.
Research has shown that homogenous teams may have fewer conflicts but often perform worse. Building a diverse team can cause more friction, but without friction, you can't create fire. It's the friction of different people with different temperaments, motivations and personalities bouncing against each other that leads to innovation, and this is the real culture fit that matters.
While yes, it's necessary for teams to have strong interpersonal skills, as well as strong communication skills to work effectively within a diverse team, and it's often necessary to ask behavioral questions to determine these skills, diverse teams are still worth the effort.
The question to ask yourself when assessing a job candidate for culture fit is: Will this person contribute to a richer, more cognitively diverse workplace? Do they have soft skills, personality traits, or career goals that will complement, rather than mirror that of your current team?
When it comes to achieving business goals, diversity, not sameness is the right approach when hiring for cultural fit.
When taking the traditional approach to cultural fit, here's what could go wrong:
Hiring ‘mini-mes' can reinforce poorly thought-out assumptions, and prevent those assumptions from being tested and challenged. This is how team blind spots and unconscious biases are formed. It happens easily, and is hard to detect. After all, who is going to call you out on your blind spots when you're surrounded by people just like you?
Many organizations have these kinds of cultural blind spots. This is often a byproduct of bad practices in hiring that preference traditional ideas of cultural fit.
Overly homogenous teams can be fragile as they lack the means to handle disagreements in a professional, positive way (and grow from the experience). If the team members are too similar and have developed friendships outside of work, it becomes even harder.
People don't want to argue with their friends, especially over deliverables. When you remove the ability to challenge and hold each other accountable, team development can be skewed.
As above, you can't make fire without friction. Nothing novel, outside of the box, and therefore, valuable, can be created without different ideas, opinions and styles colliding. It may be slightly more chaotic, even difficult, but this is where the magic happens. Creativity is not an orderly, or easy process. It is, however, vital for organizational success.
By building a team around cultural fit in the traditional sense, you're blocking the very engine of creativity in favor of ease and efficiency.
Hiring for this new concept of cultural fit is, more or less, the opposite of how it's done in the traditional sense. This means that the way you ask cultural interview questions needs a rethink.
Instead of formulating questions to find out how the candidate's personality, or whether their values mirror that of your current team, you need to look at your culture map (talk to the team at F4S about setting one up). Find out what is missing and who the perfect candidate is to fill the gap.
Ideally, all bases will be covered; and you’ll have a team that runs the full gamut of motivations, cognitive styles and soft skills needed to make your company stronger. The one thing that each candidate does need, is the ability to work with people who approach their work differently and hold diversity of approach as a core value.
Now that you've assessed what gaps need to be filled in your organizational culture, here is a list of culture interview questions to ask your next round of potential employees, to help you land more successful hires.
Want to take the guesswork out of hiring for culture fit? F4S can help. Use F4S to develop a culture map for your existing team, identify the gaps and use this data to make smarter hiring decisions.
F4S's proprietary measure of workstyle motivations is based on more than 20 years of evidence-based research, and has helped companies such as Canva, Atlassian and KPMG to improve team culture, and make smarter hiring decisions.
Canva for example invites candidates to take the F4S assessment as part of the onboarding process. This allows the hiring team to optimize team fit and discuss any blind spots that may require development.
Here are some examples of the workstyle motivations, and how to formulate interview questions the F4S way.
Action direction refers to whether an individual is motivated by goals, (Goal Orientation), or motivated to avoid problems (Away From Problems). A successful company culture needs both of these traits to get things done, and avoid and mitigate risks.
Here are some basic questions to get you started:
Let's say that, after assessing your culture map, you've determined that your current culture is full of goal-oriented go-getters, but you don't have enough cautiously-minded people to keep their eyes peeled for risks. Here are some questions to ask to determine culture fit:
Responsibility refers to an individual's tendency to assume Sole Responsibility for their work, or share responsibilities throughout the team (Shared Responsibility). These traits often denote an individual's approach to teamwork. Depending on the job requirements, or the existing corporate culture, or company objectives, candidates with either of these traits may be the right hire.
Here are some open-ended questions to get you started.
Authority refers to an individual's tendency to trust their own intuition and make decisions and appraisals based on gut feel (Internal Frame of Reference) as opposed to asking questions and doing research (External Frame of Reference). A balance of both tendencies can be important aspects of company culture. Getting the balance right matters.
Here are some open-ended questions to get you started.
If you want to take your current culture to the next level, F4S can help. By removing the guesswork, and making precision hires based on data and evidence, strong culture fit is easy, and your team will flourish. Join a host of smart, innovative companies such as Canva, Atlassian and KPMG who leverage F4S tools. From making better hires, to improving team cohesion, productivity and creativity. Get started with a fun, easy and short assessment, today.
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