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Ask the right questions to hire immigrant IT help

Ask the right questions to hire immigrant IT help

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 25 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Ryerson's Chang School launches a program called Talent Development For Organizational Effectiveness that focuses on bringing foreign workers on board. First tip: Don't let the accents put you off

Hiring managers, including those in IT, are having difficulty recruiting internationally-trained employees, according to a new talent development program at Ryerson University.

The Talent Development for Organizational Effectiveness (TDOE) program, recently launched by The Chang School at Ryerson, aims to help employers tap into the growing pool of internationally educated immigrants. TDOE said that while organizations are starting to see the advantages of hiring new Canadians – whether to fill their talent roster or gain valuable international perspectives – many employers are struggling to follow through on these plans.

Navpreet Singh, program manager at the TDOE, said that most companies are having problems in sourcing, screening and interviewing immigrant candidates. The solution, she said, is for hiring managers to focus on the actual requirements of the job rather than the candidate’s accent or language proficiency.

“Often employers will harp on language proficiency even though it may actually surpass the requirements needed to successfully perform the job,” Singh said.

In the case of many IT jobs, she said, a hiring manager would be better served to put more emphasis on technical skills rather than soft skills. Singh said that far too many good, or even overqualified candidates, get bypassed on the basis of a strong accent or other surface level factors. The most critical mistake for many companies, according to Singh, comes during the interview process, where the cultural differences make many questions difficult to answer for some new Canadians. For instance, immigrant candidates coming from a very hierarchical structure abroad would have difficult answering an interview question that might require them to challenge authority.

“So if you ask them to describe a situation where they’ve had a conflict with their boss and resolved the situation, the candidate would experience tremendous difficulty in answering,” Singh said. “A hiring manager could overcome this challenge by allowing an interviewee to provide an example outside of work, where they had to overcome an obstacle in their personal life that demonstrated problem solving or resolution conflict skills.”

Singh said that too much emphasis gets placed on workplace examples and that employers need to understand that these skills can be honed outside the office. In some cases, a hiring manager’s failure to acknowledge cultural barriers can prevent prospective immigrant employees from even getting to the interview stage.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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