The following experts have contributed answers to this edition of Ask UXmatters:
- Dana Chisnell—Principal Consultant at UsabilityWorks; Co-Author of Handbook of Usability Testing
- Leo Frishberg—Principal Architect, User Experience at Tektronix Inc.
- Pabini Gabriel-Petit—Publisher and Editor in Chief, UXmatters; Principal User Experience Architect at BMC Software; Founding Director of Interaction Design Association (IxDA); UXmatters columnist
- Adrian Howard—Generalizing Specialist in Agile/UX
- Jordan Julien—Independent UX Strategy Consultant
- Whitney Quesenbery—Principal Consultant at Whitney Interactive Design; Past-President, Usability Professionals’ Association (UPA); Fellow, Society for Technical Communications (STC); UXmatters columnist
Q: We’re a small UX team in a large organization, and in the past, we’ve had bad experiences with agency staff not really knowing very much about user experience. Now, we have an opening for one new team member. Can you suggest some interview questions or tasks to help us check out our candidates’ skills and their fit with our team?—from a UXmatters reader
Three of our experts—Dana, Pabini, and Adrian—recommend that you read Lou Adler’s Hire with Your Head. “There is also lots of great, free content about hiring on The Adler Group Web site,” suggests Pabini. “If you’re a hiring manager or do a lot of interviewing, I recommend that you subscribe to their newsletter.”
“This book is awesome for a bunch of reasons, not least that it takes the emotion out of hiring,” recommends Dana. “Adler proposes one key question, which goes something like this: Of your recent, related experience, what’s the accomplishment you’re most proud of? Why? The answer reveals what a person is passionate about, why he or she is passionate about it, what a candidate’s signal strengths are, how he or she worked with other people on the project, and what’s important about that story. The interviewer can then ask follow-up questions about all kinds of things as part of learning about that person’s story.”
However, Pabini cautions, “While this can be a revelatory approach to interviewing job candidates, it’s important to state this question in a way that focuses the person you’re interviewing on a recent accomplishment that is relevant to your need. This is particularly important if all the information a candidate has is a generic job description that reveals little about your actual need, as is all too often the case. Adler’s book also offers great advice on writing effective job descriptions that attract the best candidates.”
“Adler has a brilliant—and easy—method for turning the typical job description into realistic, actionable objectives,” continues Dana. “This also makes interviewing much easier and more interesting for everyone involved.”
“While Adler’s book doesn’t address hiring UX designers directly, it provides some really excellent advice on how to approach interviewing and the hiring process in general,” says Adrian, who also recommends Adler’s ‘Use the One-Question Interview to Make More Placements with Fewer Candidates.’
“Having a focus on accomplishment-based questions—drilling down into a candidates’ experiences on real projects—is a hugely useful technique,” recommends Adrian. “Talking about the work in detail helps you separate candidates who interview well from those with real skills.”