Minnesota Municipal Beverage Association Newsletter
(January 25, 2015 - January 31, 2015)
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for the
As I See It...

care

ker/noun

 

noun: care

 

 

 

  1. 1. the provision of what is necessary for the health, welfare, maintenance, and protection of someone or something.
  1. 2. serious attention or consideration applied to doing something correctly or to avoid damage or risk.  

We have all heard someone comment, " He was a caring person."  

 

We want our doctor to be caring. We want our kids' teachers to be caring.  

 

Truthfully, caring should not be considered a virtue, but a responsibility.

 

If we care about the consequences after a decision is made, it is our responsibility to care enough to influence the decision makers.  

 

With Sunday liquor sales a popular topic this legislative session, this is the time for you to care enough to impact the decision.    

 

February 9 is Legislative day.  

 

This is a perfect opportunity for you to address your cares and concerns with your elected officials.

 

The time is now.

    

                Unless someone like you cares a whole, awful lot.

               Things aren't going to get better, they're NOT!

                                             -Dr. Suess

 

Cathy Pletta

Kasson  

2015 Hospitality & Tourism Day at the Capitol


This year, MMBA and MLBA (MN Licensed Beverage Association) are joining Hospitality Minnesota (Restaurants, Hotels, Motels, Campgrounds) for our Legislative Day: 




Monday, February 9, 2015

10 AM - 6 PM  

Minnesota History Center
345 W Kellogg Blvd
St. Paul, MN 55102

This partnership allows for an improved setting and logistical support -- especially with the on-going Capitol renovation.

Cost is $25 for the first attendee from an establishment and $10 for additional representatives.

Registration information can be found at:

http://web.mnrestaurant.org/mnrestaurantassoc/events/Hospitality-Tourism-Day-at-the-Capitol-341/details

Although not indicated on the registration page, there will be a separate breakout room for off sale members.

Please contact the MMBA office if you have questions.


The Hidden Flaw In Behavioral Interview Questions

By Mark Murphy, Forbes.com 

 

We've all used behavioral interview questions-questions that ask job candidates to recount a past experience so we can assess their likely future performance.  

 

In theory, behavioral interview questions should work just fine (because past behavior is usually a decent predictor of future behavior).

 

But most interviewers ask behavioral questions in a way that gives away the correct answer and thus ruins the question's effectiveness.

 

Here are some pretty typical behavioral interview questions:

  • Tell me about a time when you adapted to a difficult situation and how you did it.
  • Tell me about a time when you had to successfully balance competing priorities.
  • Tell me about a time when you were bored on the job and what you did to make the job more interesting.
  • Tell me about a time when you successfully persuaded someone to see things your way.

You probably noticed that all of these questions ask the candidate to recount a time when they 'successfully' did something. The candidate is asked about times they adapted to a difficult situation, balanced competing priorities, made their job more interesting and successfully persuaded someone. And that leads us to the flaw in these questions.

 

The flaw in behavioral interview questions


These behavioral interview questions make very clear that the candidate is supposed to share a success story about adapting, balancing, persuading, etc. No candidate in their right mind would answer these questions by saying "I'm terrible at persuading people, and my boss is a jerk who never listens to me anyway." Or "I'm constantly overwhelmed by competing priorities, and I can't live like that."

 

These questions give away the right answers; cuing candidates to share success stories and avoid examples of failure. But how are interviewers supposed to tell good from bad candidates if everyone shares only success stories? Wouldn't you rather change the question so that candidates feel free to tell you about all the times they couldn't balance competing priorities? Or failed to persuade people? Or couldn't adapt to a difficult situation?

 

Let's take the question "Tell me about a time when you were bored on the job and what you did to make the job more interesting." Because the question gives away the correct answer (talk about going from bored to interested), anyone who answers is going to say something like "here's what I did to make the job the more interesting, and I grew professionally, and I was so enriched, etc."

 

But now, imagine that you tweaked the question to not divulge the answer and you asked "Could you tell me about a time when you were bored on the job?" Because you're not giving away the correct answer, you're going to hear a wide range of responses.

 

Some candidates (people who are 'problem bringers' in their current job) are going to say things like "OMG, that job was sooo boring" and "I couldn't wait to quit" and "I was bored, but hey, I needed the money." 

 

Answers like that are a great gift because they immediately tell you not to hire that candidate. And those answers make your job as interviewer much easier because they help you weed-out the weaker candidates.

 

By contrast, people who are 'problem solvers' in their current jobs will have success stories that they'll happily share. Their answers will highlight successes with details, context, evidence of deep thinking, and much more. And because you will have culled out the poor candidates, these potential star candidates will be that much easier to identify.

 

When I wrote Hiring for Attitude, my research found that up to 50-60% of candidates will give you answers about failures rather than successes when the interview question doesn't directly divulge the correct answer. In essence, half of candidates could be 'problem bringers' rather than 'problem solvers.' While that's probably bad for society, it makes your job as an interviewer much easier when half of all candidates self-identify as having a subpar attitude.

 

How to fix behavioral interview questions


The good news is that the problematic interview questions we've been discussing are fixable (as are most behavioral interview questions). The first big fix is to replace loaded words (like adapt, successfully, balance, persuade) with less presumptuous language.  

 

For instance, instead of asking candidates about when they 'balanced' competing priorities, we should ask them about when they 'faced' competing priorities. Instead of asking about when they 'adapted' to a difficult situation, we should ask about when they 'faced' a difficult situation.

 

The second big fix is to eliminate leading phrases like "tell me how you did it." We want to ask questions that are so open-ended that candidates feel comfortable telling us when they did not take any action. Again, we want to let them self-identify as 'problem bringers' rather than 'problem solvers.'

 

Here are some examples of how we could fix those interview questions...

 

ORIGINAL: Tell me about a time when you adapted to a difficult situation and how you did it.
CORRECTED: Could you tell me about a time when you faced a difficult situation?

 

ORIGINAL: Tell me about a time when you had to successfully balance competing priorities.
CORRECTED: Could you tell me about a time when you faced competing priorities?

 

ORIGINAL: Tell me about a time when you were bored on the job and what you did to make the job more interesting.
CORRECTED: Could you tell me about a time when you were bored on the job?

 

ORIGINAL: Tell me about a time when you successfully persuaded someone to see things your way.
CORRECTED: Could you tell me about a time when people didn't see things your way?

 

Notice how each of the corrected questions doesn't divulge the correct answer? The corrected questions allow candidates to share failures or successes, and in doing so, allow candidates to reveal their true attitudes.

 

You probably also noticed that my corrected questions are a bit more difficult for candidates to answer. And that's intentional. Your job as interviewer is not to help candidates answer your questions. While leaders generally want to help people succeed, this is one occasion where you have to sit back and allow them to fail (i.e. give really bad answers). I know it seems harsh, but it's much better to let them fail in an interview than to hire them and watch them fail on the job.  

Simple Code of Conduct

1. Always be on time.
2. Never steal.
3. Come to work happy & stay happy at work.
4. Surface all issues/problems with the appropriate person or management. DO NOT bicker or whinge about others.
5. Be flexible in your start and finish times.
6. Hard work and enthusiastic attitudes will be
rewarded.
7. Treat our guests like "guests".
8. Nothing is too much trouble for our guests.
9. Always keep busy. When there is nothing else to do - clean.
10. Always help a co-worker in need.
Great leaders do not tell people what to do.

Rather, they create an environment that enables individuals to achieve their full potential. 
Future Dates to Remember

2015 MMBA Boot Camp 

 

February 17 & 18

 

Breezy Point Resort

 

2015 MMBA Annual Conference

May 16 -19
Arrowwood Resort
Ask A Director

Gary Buysse
Rogers
763-428-0163

Cathy Pletta
Kasson
507-634-7618
  
Bill Ludwig
Paynesville
320-250-3325
  
Candice Woods
Hutchinson 
320-587-2762
  
John Jacobi
Isanti
763-444-5063

Michael Friesen
Hawley
218-483-4747

Lisa Kamrowski
Nevis 
218-652-3135

Steve Grausam
Edina
952-903-5732

Toni Buchite
50 Lakes
218-763-2035

Brenda Visnovec
Lakeville 
952-985-4901
 
Bridgitte Konrad
North Branch
651-674-8113
  
Shelly Dillon
Callaway
218-375-4691
  
Karissa Kurth
Buffalo Lake
320-833-2321
 
Paul Kaspszak
MMBA
763-572-0222
1-866-938-3925

 
Click Here For Newsletter Archives 
Sunday Sales: Convenience at What Cost?
The MMBA website now contains comprehensive information on Sunday Sales. 

It is a reference for members, legislators, media, city councils and the general public.

Click Here for the Website

 

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Beverage Alcohol Training

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 Contact Bob Leslie at:
 
320-766-3871
 


Contact Gary Buysse at:

763-428-0164

Are We in Control of Our Own Decisions?
Editor's Note:

We are in the "decision" business. 

We want people to make the decision to purchase at our facilities.


  We want people to purchase certain products etc.

Behavioral economist Dan Ariely, the author of Predictably Irrational, uses classic visual illusions and his own counterintuitive (and sometimes shocking) research findings to show how we're not as rational as we think when we make decisions.

 

 Click Here 

A Guy Finally Got Tickets to the
Super Bowl...
Vikings

A guy finally got tickets to the Super Bowl, but his seats were in the nosebleed section -- but he didn't care, he had always dreamed of going to the Super Bowl.  

 

So he wants to find a seat closer to where he can see better.  

 

He finds this seat toward the front and he asks the guy next to it whether anyone is sitting there.

 

The guy replies, "No, because my wife just died."   

 

"Well," says the first man, "why didn't you just bring a friend or relative?"

 

The guy replied, "Oh, they're all at the funeral."


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