Making the right experienced hire is one of the hardest things about growing a successful recruitment team.
It is no secret that securing top talent can be a considerable investment of your time and budget as a hiring manager within a recruitment company.
While there is no magic wand, the questions you ask during an interview can dramatically impact your perception of a consultant’s ability to succeed in selling to clients.
Below are 35 key interview questions that will extract the Consultant’s ability to sell for their current business strategically, and if you decide to hire them for your business too.
These interview questions will draw out six unique attributes of top billing recruitment consultants that are proven to lead to sales success:
Let’s take a closer look below.
To offer unique perspectives, a consultant needs to re-frame the way clients think about their business. They need to draw on insights to align key client priorities and tie them back to their organization’s USPs.
1. How do you open a business development call with a potential client?
2. Tell me about a time you got a client to think about their problem differently.
3. How do you decide what to put in your pitch?
4. How do you know that a customer agrees with you on an insight?
5. Tell me about a time when a business development pitch did not work, how did you react?
6. How do you adjust your pitch depending on the person you are speaking to?
Two-way communication is about clearly articulating the business’s USPs and engaging the client to address their business priorities mutually. It requires reading nonverbal cues and anticipating the clients’ needs. With strong two-way communication skills, a consultant can secure and coordinate buy-in from different stakeholders.
7. Describe your typical relationship with a client.
8. How do you get your clients to talk about their business priorities?
9. During a sales interaction, what nonverbal cues do you look for?
10. Tell me about a time you proactively addressed an unspoken client need.
11. How do you approach gatekeepers to gain access to your target contact in an organization?
12. Tell me about a time when you overcame a struggle in coordinating across functions?
To know a client’s value driver, the Consultant must have a comprehensive understanding of their client’s organization and discuss issues that arise from different angles. This requires being comfortable speaking with a range of decision-makers and influencers. To overcome barriers to purchase, a consultant must associate their USP to the client’s individual goals.
13. Describe your process for gaining buy-in from client stakeholders.
14. How do you determine who the key decision-makers and their influencers are?
15. How do you establish what is of most importance, and what is not to a decision-maker?
16. Tell me about your research process and approach when learning about a client’s business.
17. How do you identify and track people that are opposed to your services in a client’s business?
18. Tell me about a time that your services did not align with your client’s needs.
To identify economic drivers, a consultant must closely track and assess industry and economic trends and have a strong understanding of how it can affect a client’s business and potential new business opportunities. It is essential that the Consultant educates and teaches clients about current industry trends and best practices adopted by their competition.
19. How has the current economy has affected an industry that you work with?
20. Tell me about a time you modified or helped shape your client’s business priorities?
21. Would your colleagues consider you an expert on the industry and economic events? If so, why?
22. What resources do you utilize to learn about the current economy?
23. Tell me about a new business opportunity that you found and pursued.
24. Describe a time you taught a client about an industry best practice.
A consultant must know how theirs and their competitor’s service is priced while also understanding the clients’ budget. To overcome pricing negotiations, they must associate their USPs to the cost of their service. It is essential that they also know when to walk away from a deal.
25. Describe a time when you successfully got around a price increase
26. How do you respond to a client demanding a price concession?
27. Tell me about a time you successfully negotiated when the price guidelines were unclear.
28. How do you react to a competitor who constantly undercuts your prices?
29. Tell me about a time you walked away from a deal because of money.
To put pressure on a client successfully, the Consultant needs to know the decision-making process within a client’s organization and influence the critical decision-makers throughout that process. They must foresee potential roadblocks and push the client through them to achieve a positive outcome. An advantage of putting pressure on the client is that they begin to advocate on the Consultant’s behalf within their organization, building consensus around your services.
30. What is one thing your clients would say about you?
31. Describe how you build consensus among different stakeholders?
32. Tell me about a time you advanced a stalled deal.
33. How do you deal with clients that are agitated by your negotiation tactics?
34. Tell me about a time you conceded to close a deal. What was the final offer?
35. Tell me about a time you convinced a client to advocate and sell on your behalf.
An Interview will not tell you with 100% certainty that a candidate will excel at their job. However, if you ask these interview questions based on top billing recruitment consultants’ unique attributes, it will help.
Interviewing is a considerable investment of your time, and likely your budget. Get the right candidate the first time and be assured they can sell.
