Click here to close


Please take a moment to complete our survey. Click here for details.

Consumer Products


People parts



How to hire the best people for your business

By Kristy J. O'Hara


Smart Business Dallas | August 2008

Page 1 of 2

Print This Page
Send this page to a friend

Clinton Howard<BR />Founder, Chairman and CEO, RBC Life Sciences Inc.
Clinton Howard
Founder, Chairman and CEO, RBC Life Sciences Inc.

When Clinton Howard founded RBC Life Sciences Inc. in 1991,he was the entire company and did everything himself.

Today, as chairman and CEO of the $27 million nutritional supplement and wellness company, he knows that to move forward in business, you have to hire with the skills to get you there.

“I can’t come to work in the morning and open the door and do all the work,” he says.

“I can’t be very productive, and if we want to grow, we have to have people who I can delegate the jobs [to], who have skills greater than mine in specific areas.”

Smart Business spoke with Howard about how Henry Ford’s words on hiring guide him today and why conducting multiple interviews with a potential employee is critical.

Q. How do you identify which qualities you’re looking for in potential employees?

You bring in people who have skills. Henry Ford said it’s easy to run a big company — all you have to do is hire people who are smarter than you are in each area and get out of the way. If you’re going to grow, you got to have good people. It’s very important.

Honesty has always been No. 1. A person has to have good moral fiber to be able to work with them year after year. You look for honesty, and you look for people who have a positive attitude toward their work and a positive attitude toward their relations with their fellow employees.

Q. How do you gauge these characteristics during an interview?

You can’t just by a conversation because some people who aren’t honest are very skilled at appearing to be very honest. It’s important to know what kind of record a person has in their past employment or school if they’re coming out of college or graduate school.

It’s really important to check their references. A lot of times people don’t bother to check references, but that’s very important because I’m not a psychologist or an expert in sitting across the desk and evaluating a person in my interviewing them.

That would be No. 1, to see how they’ve worked out in their previous activities.

More Consumer Products




Speaking up
How Fred Klipsch was able to alter course at Klipsch Group through clear and comprehensive communication


Corporate makeover
How Lyn Kirby used a new vision to guide Ulta beyond cosmetic change


Style and substance
How Farouk Shami gets his people to take responsibility at Farouk Systems




Tying it together
How Matt Smith helps his leaders learn from each other to grow Shoes For Crews LLC


Be aggressive
How to take the lead on putting a good face on your brand


3 Questions
Gene Lovell, president and CEO, First State Bank


Input all around
How to get better ideas


Game face
How Brian Farrell steers through downturns to keep THQ ahead of the curve


Lift off
How to create better systems for customer service


Playing nice
How Tom Richmond uses honest discussions to find solutions at The Little Tikes Co.


Searching for the bottom
How Jon Vrabely keeps Huttig Building Products afloat during tough times


See all articles in Consumer Products


search



Copyright © 2009 Smart Business Network Inc.  •  Publishing, Sales, & Editorial Office  •  Smart Business Online
835 Sharon Drive,  •  Suite 200  •  Cleveland, OH 44145  •  P: 440-250-7000  •  F: 440-250-7001  •  E: webmaster@sbnonline.com

Website Development: Veridean Technology Solutions, LLC.