Some of the best decisions I've made were the people I hired. And some of the worst decisions I've made were the people I hired."
This is often my answer when people ask me about building high-performing teams.
When you hire the right person, they are a force multiplier.
They change your team dynamic and raise the bar for everyone around them.
Betting on the wrong person does the opposite, it's...
So how do you make sure you're hiring the right CSMs?
I've hired over 100 CSMs in my career and learned a ton about what makes a great CSM.
This newsletter is here to help you nail your CSM hiring process and incorporate the best interview questions to help you separate the top talent.
Interview Process
Many companies have lost the run of themselves with their 10-stage interview processes (Forbes even wrote an article on the madness of this).
It's a poor candidate experience, a poor hiring manager experience and frankly a waste of time.
What I found works best is to:
This process can happen over a 2-4 week period, making it ideal for those who need someone to join the team ASAP.
Interview Questions
Everyone can use ChatGTP to spit out customer success best practices.
Your interviews should help separate those who have experience doing it from those who don't. And to help you understand the depth of expertise of the candidates.
How do you do that?
Example-based competency-anchored interview questions.
I've written this article on the 8 top skills every CSM needs and the questions you'll see below are connected to 5 of these top skills.
Your interview questions should bring up real-life examples of when people have had to use the skills you're looking for. They make the interview feel like ACTUAL conversations.
See below 11 questions to add to your interview process:
Driving Results For Customers
Effective Communication:
Business Acumen/Adaptability:
Leaning Ability.
The main thing to remember is that these questions are conversation starters.
You should dig into the answers and ask follow-up questions to get to the core of these examples.
At the end of the conversation, you should have a strong perspective of the candidate's experience level and approach to managing a book of business.
A common issue you'll run into is someone who gives you an example, and when you dig into what THEY did in the process, it's clear that other people drove/owned the process.
This should be a good indicator of the CSM's ability to deliver autonomously!
If you want to test for specific skills, an interview assignment might be added for your top 2 candidates. There's an entire thread discussion on the merits of this stage at Gain Grow Retain.
If you decide to add a presentation, why do it at the end?
These mock presentations take a lot of time.
You don't want to ask 10 people to do them. It's disrespectful of their time, and it's a waste of yours to sit through all these presentations for people you are not yet excited about.
Making a Decision
With a panel of 2-3 people who are cross-functional and at different levels in the org, you should already have a diverse enough panel to mitigate some simple biases (learn more on how to mitigate bias)
The best way to ensure your panel debrief is objective is to leverage an interview scorecard.
Most recruitment apps will offer this. However, if you don't have one, you can make an Excel version of the scorecard. It works as well!
The panel can come together once all the interviews are done to decide who the finalists are.
My top tip for making a strong decision is: If it's not a hell yes, then it's a no.
Finally, make sure you are circling back to your decisions.
That reflection will help you build a strong gut feeling for what great looks like for your team.
TL'DR
Great CSM interview processes follow this model: