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What are you looking for in a candidate when hiring a team manager?

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Question added by Rana Alnajjar , Web developer , Lebcards
Date Posted: 2015/07/22
Eltayeb Mohammed Hussein
by Eltayeb Mohammed Hussein , Production Manager , Sanabel Al-Deerah Feeds Factory

Don't tell him directly that he is wrong, in mind this is impolite behavior, make related issues show him indirectly that he is wrong or you can take him easy if necessary.

Vinod Jetley
by Vinod Jetley , Assistant General Manager , State Bank of India

Looking for a combination of characteristics in the manager: an experienced, mature person who is also very dynamic, forceful and able to do the job for you. Ideally, you'd like to hire dedicated and honest management as well. This is why you need to apply strong tests of character and ability to your search for the right person. In order to do this, the first thing you have to do is determine what it is that your business requires and what is really important. Write down what it takes to do the day-to-day management. Also, look ahead a few years and see if the requirements for your manager are going to change. If you can anticipate that, add those requirements to the description of the person you're looking for now.

Ibrahim Hussein Mayaleh
by Ibrahim Hussein Mayaleh , Sales & Business Consultant and Trainer , Self-employed

- Self confidence

- Interpersonal skills

- Clever

- Takes initiatives

- Can lead a conversation

- Likes challenges

- Respect others and force to be respected

- People oriented

- Inspiring spirit

Mehboob Ali Laghari
by Mehboob Ali Laghari , Social Mobilization Team Incharge , TRDP-European Union

i will be looking for a sense of responsibility and ownership. i rank as:

1. Sense of Responsibility

2. Interpersonal skills.

3. Humble and cool-minded

4. Innovation (New ideas which never been used in my company/organization)

5. Team Player

Duncan Robertson
by Duncan Robertson , Strategy Consultant , Duncan Robertson Consultancy

The crucial point at interview is, does this candidate actually want to have the responsibility of being a team manager? Or have they simply drifted up the ranks?

Emad Mohammed said abdalla
by Emad Mohammed said abdalla , ERP & IT Software, operation general manager . , AL DOHA Company

There are few experiences more humbling (and sometimes frustrating) than reducing your life’s work and experience to the few pieces of paper known as cover letter and resume. Furthermore, after boiling down who you are to a handful of pages, the person making an organization’s initial hiring decisions will spend, on average,15 seconds perusing your effort before placing you in the “yes”, “maybe”, or “no” pile. While presenting yourself through a resume and cover letter is a challenge, there are several useful tactics that will genuinely make you and your potential value to the organization stand out.

Each time you sit down to prepare a cover letter and resume, take a moment to get inside the head of the person doing the first screening. There are ultimately only three things this person asks during those crucial seconds of analysis:

1. Can you do the job?

In other words: do you have the skills, experience, and education to be able to fulfill all the requirements listed in the job description? Have you demonstrated that you were able to succeed in a similar role or under similar circumstances?

 

Don’t expect the employer to figure out how your past experience can be applicable to the position in question. Every bullet point on your resume should demonstrate what you could do if you were hired. For example, you may know that your Peace Corps work overseeing a village well-digging project shows management skills, but few hiring managers have time to sit and figure out that connection. Spell out how your experience directly relates to the job for which you’re applying—be explicit about how your management of the well digging exemplified your ability to organize, motivate, and stay on schedule, and list the leadership skills you developed while leading the project. And highlight other positive aspects of your work: did you finish early or under budget, or recruit new partners? But remember to mention only the qualities that are relevant—you can leave out your dexterity with a shovel if it’s not explicitly asked for in the job description.

2. Will you do the job?

Are you committed to the mission and/or central issue of the organization? Have you already demonstrated the work ethic necessary to succeed in this specific line of work? To nonprofit employers, your demonstrated commitment to and passion for the cause is important to your credibility.

To help your case, emphasize any previous experience you’ve had with the mission or central issue of the organization, whether through volunteer service, work, or education. Highlight your commitment to other issues if you think it’ll describe other relevant skills you have, but concentrate when possible on the focus of the org in question.

3. Will you fit in?

Do you speak the language of nonprofits (i.e., do you know when to say “organization” rather than “company”)? Do you exhibit enthusiasm for this particular job at this particular agency? Do you use language that reveals your familiarity with the organization’s mission? Does your sense of humor resonate with the prospective workplace? Employers want to know that you will feel comfortable working in the organization and that your colleagues will get along with you. By the same token, you want to find out if you would like to work among the staff here, and if you’d be happy coming to work in this office every day.

 

Your ability to fit in with any organization’s culture is not something you have a lot of control over. It’s like dating—you and your date either have the chemistry to continue, or you don’t. It’s never advisable to try to be someone you aren’t in order to get the job. If you are passed up for a job that seemed perfect for your skill set, have faith that another job will come along that will be a better organizational fit for you.

 

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