Automated Interview: Can this save your candidate filtering blues?

VoiceTree is not a hiring or headhunting agency, but like any other normal company we do need to hire people to join our team. And for what its worth, we decided to come up with a solution using our own technology skills to help us in the hiring process. Being a startup, we want to cut as much costs as possible like paying a headhunting agency to send us shortlisted résumé of candidates.

Here is what we did:

VoiceTree - Voice Interview

  1. For our job post of “Marketing & Sales Manager” we decided to include a line mentioning “To apply for this job post you also need to take an automated interview at 011-66020228″ using your mobile phone which can be attempted only once from a number.
  2. On LinkedIN Jobs, we received around 122 application interests. We call this “interests” because, not 122 of those candidates read the instruction that they need to call on a number as a part of the hiring process.
    VoiceTree - Voice Interview - LinkedIN Case Study
  3. We were surprised at the numbers. We only got 6 candidates out of 122 (thats ~5%) who actually read the complete job advertisement and follow the instructions to dial and participate in the Automated Voice Interview. They call a number, a set of 5 questions were played to them one by one and they were supposed to response to each question, which was recorded by the system and upon completion emailed to us as a single audio file.
    VoiceTree - Voice Interview - LinkedIN Case Study

Let’s hold here for a moment and notice that so far this has potentially saved us from going through all the 122 applications for a simple reason that they didn’t bother to read the complete instructions and follow. Would you want to hire someone like that? We’d like to think not so.

We’d like to pose this question to the HR people and headhunting agencies who do this kind of filtering and compare with the time and effort spent on the same. Can this process reduce your workload and save a lot of your time, and in return increase your team’s efficiency? Do let us know, we’d like to hear from you!

Now that we sorted the applications we got and only got 6 of them the next task was to listen to each one of the audio file and assess the candidate and make a final list of them to issue a “Call for Interview”. Listen to the audio interview sample below:

Voice Interview - Audio - Sample: Candidate (You can download the mp3 if your browser playback is flaky, esp. in Chrome)

One of our senior persons would go through the set of audio files received per candidate and do a screening of potential candidates. Listening to this audio interview would give a good idea to any senior HR professional to identify if the candidate should be called for an in person interview or not.

We felt that it was drastically reducing a lot of overhead when it comes to filtering candidates and the senior HR person did not need to go through the résumé initially. After listening to the audio interview, the person can then look at the resume and issue a call.

We think the product is of great use and potential for any agency or company to support them in their hiring process. We’d be willing to let people test it out for free and gather feedback. In case you are interested do get in touch by filling up this form and we’d be more than happy to set up a demo for you.

Other application is: What if you are into mass data gathering and surveys? Does this product sound useful? Do let us know :-)

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’86% of all medical trips are made by rural Indians’

NEW DELHI: The story of India’s international medical tourism industry is now well known, but the first ever figures on domestic medical tourism are simply staggering. Indians made 126 million domestic trips for medical purposes, spending over Rs 23,000 crore on such trips, over the span of one year (2008-9) alone. That, incidentally, is about 30% more than the Union health budget for the same year.

But just as international migration into India largely reflects a choice of greener pastures while domestic migration is more as a result of the lack of economic opportunity in rural areas, domestic medical tourism too is largely the outcome of poor health infrastructure in rural areas and small towns. 86% of all trips taken for medical purposes are by rural Indians and the poorest spend much more proportionally.

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