4 Tips in Hiring Candidates with Grit!

In our ever-constant struggle to find the secret sauce of finding the best talent, many organizations are looking to hire candidates who have grit. What the heck is grit? Candidates who have grit tend to have better resolve, tenacity, and endurance.

Ultimately, executives are looking for employees who will get after it and get stuff done. Employees who aren’t waiting around to be told what to do, but those who will find out what it is we should be doing and go make it happen. Grit.

In tough economic times, our organizations need more employees with grit!

It seems so easy until you sit down in front of a candidate and try and figure out if the person actually has grit or not! You take a look at that guy from 127 Hours, the one who cut his own arm off to save his life. That’s easy, he has grit! Susy, the gal sitting across from you, who went to a great state school, and worked at a Fortune 500 company for five years, it’s hard to tell if she has grit or not!

I haven’t found a grit test on the market, so we get back to being really good at questioning and interviewing to raise our odds we’ll make the right choices for those with grit over those who tell us they have grit but really don’t!

When questioning candidates about their grit, focus on these four things:

  1. Passion. People with grit are passionate about something. I always feel that if someone has passion it’s way easier to get them to be passionate about my business and my industry. If they don’t have a true passion for anything, it’s hard to get them passionate about my organization.
  2. Doer. When they tell you what they’re passionate about, are they backing it up by actually doing something with it? I can’t tell you how many times I’ll ask someone what their passion is and then ask them how they’re pursuing their passion and they’ve done nothing!
  3. What matters to them. Different from a passion, you need to find out what matters to these people in a work setting. Candidates with grit will answer this precisely and quickly. Others will search for an answer and feel you out for what you’re looking for. I want a workplace that allows me to… the rest doesn’t matter, they know, many have no idea.
  4. Hope. To have grit, to be able to keep going when the going gets tough, you must have hope that things will work out. The glass might be half full or half empty, it doesn’t matter, because if I have a glass, I’ll find something to put in it!

I’ve said this often, but I believe individuals can acquire grit by going through bad work situations. We tend to want to hire perfect unscarred candidates from the best brands who haven’t had to show if they have grit or not.

I love those candidates with battle wounds and scars from companies that were falling apart but didn’t. I know those people had to have the grit to make it out alive!  I want those employees by my side when we go to battle.

6 thoughts on “4 Tips in Hiring Candidates with Grit!

  1. 20+ years later, and still waiting for this “passion” buzzword to end. You know what passion is? Another word for love. You know what love is? A feeling. You know who doesn’t feel comfortable talking about their feelings? A lot of people, actually. For one, many men and also rational (NT) personality types (of which I’m both). This never ending fixation on the word passion forces many people to communicate in a way that feels false to them. Newsflash, not everybody relates to the world in the same way. How about saying, “what do you really like and find fascinating?” That’s easy to talk about and provides the exact same information, without forcing people to not feel true to themselves.

    • I could not disagree more. Passion is clearly not a “buzzword” if you are still waiting for it to go away after 20+ years. What is successful in a work environment has evolved over the years; long gone are rigid environments that are successful. Love is also a verb and a lot can be said about people’s actions. One way I gauge passion in an interview is to ask what they like to do for fun since it’s one of our core values.

      • Finding out what people find meaningful and interesting in a work environment is important. My point is that insisting on framing that as “passion” alienates some. As Tina Turner said, “What’s love got to do with it?” I’m sure people who are more on the Feeling (Myers Briggs) side are more comfortable talking about Passion. But, I’ll bet if you recruit tech people, a sizable % of them don’t appreciate their interests being framed that way, but are forced to conform, because so much emphasis is put on it. Here is the dictionary definitions of passion, and tell me why there isn’t a better word to apply towards the work setting.

        passion:
        any powerful or compelling emotion or feeling, as love or hate.
        strong amorous feeling or desire; love; affection.
        strong sexual desire; lust.
        an instance or experience of strong love or sexual desire.
        a person toward whom one feels strong love or sexual desire.
        a strong or extravagant fondness, enthusiasm, or desire for anything

        Okay, maybe the last one, but I’ll bet that has been added since this whole passion fixation began, probably by some life-coach guru 20-30 years ago.

  2. Bad employers are what have gotten me to my current employer, which is the best I have ever had. It’s a learning experience; I have a lot of battle scars. But in the end, I found my home.

  3. Lou Grant to Mary Tyler Moore: “Mary, you got spunk….I hate spunk”! Grit? Well, that’s a “horse of a different colour”, right Dorothy?

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