1.10 Your Reputation Matters

A few weeks after joining my team – one of the senior PMs casually told me “Venkat, before joining here, I spoke to your previous team members and got very positive feedback. Only after that, I decided to join your team” 

Surprisingly, PM after PM who joined my team shared with me about having made reference checks from my previous teams. 

It was not unexpected. 

But then it became increasingly clear that it has become so easy to find appropriate contacts and complete a reference check on a prospective manager. Nowadays almost all candidates use this tool before accepting an offer. 

Thanks to Linkedin, startup communities, alumni networks, etc, the technology industry ecosystem is so connected that anyone in the industry is a 2nd-degree connection. 

Keeping a good reputation as a manager therefore cannot be overrated and can make or break your speed of hiring.

But what if, sometime in the past you have been a bad manager which is probably risking your ability to hire now? 

One way to handle this – During your interaction with the candidate, talk about your journey, mention your evolution from being a poor manager to a good one now and what are the lessons you learned along the way. When the candidate does a reference check, they can take any negative feedback in perspective and could discount them as outdated feedback.

Picture of Venkatraman RM

Venkatraman RM

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Telegram
WhatsApp

Subscribe to Email Update!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Read More Articles

The ROI Trap

The ROI Trap: When We Expect Too Much From Our Time A coachee once told me he feels anxious whenever he has to deal with

Read More »

Is work place family?

Why “We are like a family” can create disappointment at work. A coachee once came to me unhappy with his workplace. He said: “People here

Read More »

Learning after Failure

A couple of years ago, one of my mentees called me. He had just joined a new company. Bigger title, leadership role and a larger

Read More »

Procrastination

Procrastination.  When someone complains, “I keep procrastinating” on something important, the natural instinct of the listener is to think ‘Oh, maybe he/she is lazy”, “Oh,

Read More »

Unmet needs

A young professional I coached recently shared his story. He had just landed his first job out of college. 
Moved to a Tier-1 city.
 Good

Read More »

Identity

Identity. Ever wondered why some senior executives — financially secure for life — continue doing roles they dislike? I used to wonder the same. Once,

Read More »