listening in to Warehouse and Operations as a Career today, I’m Marty, and we
appreciate you stopping by! Last week we
were in Atlanta Georgia, I had the opportunity to be a part of a large hiring
event there, it was my second time to get to visit and meet job applicants out
there and I really enjoyed meeting so many Career driven individuals! This week
I’ve been helping out again in the recruiting departments here in Texas, I
really enjoy talking with all the applicants and visiting with them, learning
from them actually. We’ve talked a lot
about our resumes and how although they don’t have to be a professional
document, at least in our fields, they should state what we’ve done in the past
and I believe we should tailor them to each position that we’re applying
for. And I think the phone interview and
the face to face interview techniques has been discussed so I won’t go into
each of those again. If you’d like to
review our thoughts on them just scroll through the past episode library and
look for anything social media or recruiting, there’s several shows on those
important subjects. Well, I jumped off the page again, I wanted to get a few
more questions answered about our powered industrial equipment today but let’s
run with down the road I started on, I guess.
I’d like to share a couple of stories I’ve experienced the last 10 or 12
this one gentleman come in, I’m sure a recruiter had called him in after a
phone interview, everyone was busy so I was asked if I could interview him. Upon entering the interview room, I noticed
he had 2 little boys and his daughter with him.
Now I personally don’t think coming to an interview is or should be a
show stopper but I’ve learned most recruiters are not of the same opinion. I see their point, I mean that’s how they
make their living, their professionals, and we should probably be more
professional ourselves. Anyway, it
didn’t bother me, we started the interview, we were just getting into his
experience with powered units, he’d been a counterbalance operator for 4 years,
with the same company. As I was being
impressed the little girl had to go to the restroom, she wasn’t shy about it,
was very matter of fact about it actually.
The gentleman said he needed to take her, or she’d just keep pestering
him, and he asked if I could watch the two boys? The girl was the youngest, I’d guess around 4
years old and the boys were like maybe 6 and 7 years old. As much as I didn’t mind, they were there, I wasn’t
going to be comfortable watching his children and suggested he take’em all with
him. I guess everyone had to go once
they all made it to the bathroom because I know it was over 6 or 7 minutes
before they returned. Well we geared
back up, talking about where he’d worked, why he’d left, what he was looking
for in his next position etc when the youngest boy decided he needed to run
down the hallway and got really upset when his father tried explaining that he
needed to sit down and be quiet. I spent
the time to conduct the interview, but I can understand how a Recruiter would
have giving up or out right asked the gentleman to leave and come back the next
day. I see this pretty often. I know its hard to find or pay for a babysitter,
especially when your looking for a job.
But, and we’ve talked to this point before, Isn’t our job interview
really kind of like our first day at work?
We’re showing our value, our skills, we’re going to want to impress the
boss with our knowledge right. I’ve
heard all the arguments, I’m not being paid for the interview or they placed an
ad and need me so they should cut me a little slack or my personal favorite I
was walking by and saw the sign. If
we’re walking by and saw the sign, I know we haven’t done any research on the
position or the company, we’d have to just be, or it makes it sound like, we’re
willing to take any kind of a job that’s being offered. I once had a recruiter tell me she doesn’t
interview anyone that comes in and ask do you have any job openings. She explained that in her experience if a
person does not come in and apply for a particular position, they’re not
interested in a long-term career and they may not stay. If they’re willing to accept just anything
from you they may not have a direction, there prone to leave if the jobs not
what they were looking for. There I go
again, losing my place, anyway, so my guy had impressed me and against the
advice of the pro’s I felt like the gentleman would be a good hire, he had the
knowledge and experience and wanted this particular job. I asked a recruiter to go ahead and onboard
him and I set him up for his PIT or powered industrial training for the next
day. I did explain to him to make sure
he was on time and brought his steel toe boots with him and after class we’d go
ahead and get him started. Very appreciative
and excited that he’d landed a job. Well
he didn’t show up for the class the next day and nor did he call with any
reason or apologizes. It by no means was
my first bad hire, well I’m not going to say bad hire, I’ll say the first time
I stuck my neck out only to find I may have been wrong about the call. So, when I gave the gentleman a call the
following day and asked him why he no showed he said he couldn’t find a sitter
again. I politely told him to give me a
call when he could commit to the job and we’d see what I could do for him
then. Another lesson learned, or in the
eyes of the recruiter anyway.
one, a recruiter called about a pit class for a young man, he had experience on
the sit down or counter balance lift, a cherry picker and the electric rider
jack. All he needed to be certified on
was the electric rider jack, that’s the only piece of equipment they had over
at their facility. The young man showed
up on time, had his steel toe boots on and breezed through the classroom
portion of his PIT class! A star
associate until it came time to operate the electric rider jack. The truth came out about then. Although he did have quite a bit of
experience on the Cherry picker or order picker he’d never operated or even been
on a rider jack before. The position
he’d been hired for was for a pallet runner and at a facility that had no time
to train him, in a very fast paced and productivity driven environment. When his instructor asked him why he’d
misinformed his hiring agent he stated that he figured he’d be able to fake it
until he learned it. I probably don’t
have to tell you that he didn’t get a position with that firm.
great time the last two weeks, recruiting and interviewing is a part of my
duties I really enjoy. It’s so rewarding
when your able to help someone find employment.
I love the challenge of placing them in just that right job, the right
environment where they can prosper and grow.
I guess what I’d like to get across today, whither we’re looking for a
job or already have a job is that we shoulder a lot of the responsibility for
getting and keeping that job. We all
need the paycheck, and its hard to remember that we’re, or I hope that were
working for more than just the job or the money. Here at WAOC we’re always talking about how
we have to enjoy our work. With most
light industrial positions, we’ll be working at least 2,080 regular hours, with
many of them we’ll work over 2600+ hours when you figure in over time. Then if we average 7 hours of sleep a day
that’ll be about 2,550 hours. There is only 8,760 hours in a year. So if you add our working hours and our
sleeping hours together that only leaves us with about 3,600 hours for
ourselves, our families, friends and hobbies or the things we enjoy. Pretty much 1/3 or our adult lives we’re
going to be at work, we’d really better enjoy it and have a plan, we’re
investing a lot of time to our jobs.
Might as well use that time wisely and make the most out of it
right!
Well I feel that I had a very productive week,
and I definitely enjoyed it. I hope you
did as well and are looking forward to doing it all again next week! Thanks for listening in, and I look forward
to seeing you again next week! Until
then we’ll be on the social media feeds and of course would love for you to
send us a message at
[email protected]. Be wise
and productive this week and above all keep everyone safe!