At the Mirage, we pioneered the concept of hire for attitude. Back then, my simplistic idea was to screen for people who didn’t mind being interrupted, something that happens often to service employees. Meaning they should be flexible, open, and resilient. We factored that into our hiring decisions and everyone we hired generally had the technical skills for the job AND had the right attitudes for success. Back then, that was an innovative idea. Years later when I partnered with a clinical psychologist in a consulting practice, he showed me how the attitudes I was seeking back then equated to people with optimism and grit ... people who don’t believe that failure is permanent and see it for what it is, a temporary challenge and learning opportunity. They roll with the punches and see the glass as half full. Companies should decide the basic attitude and qualities they want in employees and screen applicants for them, and then only refer candidates with those qualities to the hiring managers. Those managers can then assess them for whatever technical skills needed for the job; that way, everyone hired has both the skills wanted and the attitudes needed … that’s a recipe for good hiring. Because when things don’t go as planned, you want employees who see that as an opportunity to make it right today.
Angela Lee Duckworth (born 1970): American psychologist, popular science author, and academic who studies grit and self-control.