The MMO Manager: Selling through Interviews

Games & Gadgets 4 March 2009 | 0 Comments

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There are many lessons to be learnt from taking part in the running of online organisations, and MMO guilds are no exception. Having participated at leadership level in both a professional FPS clan and a world-ranked WoW guild, I’ve noticed a lot of parallels between the two and plenty of lessons that reflect real-world situations perfectly. In the ‘MMO Manager’ series I’ll be looking at some of these situations and what we can learn from these virtual teams.

Selling through Interviews (Managing Expectations)

From Saturday job to the Cambridge milk-round, I’ve attended more interviews than I can count. They’re a two-way process: not only are you trying to predict whether the candidate would suit the job, the candidate is also assessing you in return. What impression do you want to give the candidate? Do you want them to walk away thinking that you’re their perfect employer, offering the perfect job? Do you want them to be excited about joining you for your own sake, rather than motivated by salary or location?

When it comes to MMO guild recruitment, especially at higher levels, selecting players is very much akin to recruiting employees. You’re asking people to commit to a certain amount of time – usually fixed hours – in return for rewards, to perform a particular task that they have experience doing, and to maintain set standards. However, players tend to have freedom of choice to some extent. If a guild really likes a player, but hasn’t convinced the player that they would find their perfect home, the guild’s offer of a place may not be accepted. (In a way this reminds me of the university selection process!)

One tactic I’ve seen used to great extent in my current World of Warcraft guild is to sell the guild through interviews with potential recruits, especially through asking key questions that reveal the guild’s self-image and goals. What I find somewhat amusing is that these questions are sometimes misrepresentative: the guild’s image of itself doesn’t quite match up to the reality. Recruits buy into the glamour of being a top-ranked guild, and only realise that it’s more or less the same as their old one once they join and are trapped for a month — disturbingly similar to jobs’ notice periods.

People don’t react well to overt sales pitches, especially if they think you are trying to curry favour. However, by working ’sales’ points into interview questions, you get to see if your interviewee has ethics and goals in line with yours, as well as emphasising the positives about your workplace and the role on offer. An example may be to ask a programmer if she enjoys hobby projects, and what she would do if given 20% of her ‘work’ time to play around with cool stuff using the company’s resources. For a lot of hackers this aspect of a job would be very welcome, and a major selling point; by asking directly about it you get to find out what the candidate is excited about, and whether the company would gain from this employee’s ‘hobby’ efforts.

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Meeting goals, and what happens next

Featured, Productivity 9 February 2009 | 0 Comments

From wwwworks on Flickr.

Today I met a personal goal of mine that I started last summer. It hasn’t been an easy ride, but by gradually setting smaller goals while focusing on the big picture, altering fundamental behaviour and habits, keeping things interesting with experimentation and adding a social element, it’s seemed a lot easier than it really was. I’ve learned a lot about goal-setting and achieving as a result, but many blogs cover these topics — what I haven’t seen written about as much is what happens next.

Depending on the goal, meeting it is everything. Once that deadline’s over, that mountain scaled, you’re done. For more generic, ongoing goals – things like “I want to manage my money”, “I want to get fit”, you’re putting changes in place while achieving the goal that will help you maintain the end state once you get there. However, without anything to motivate you to continue, it’s easy to slip from the mark.

What I’ve done is extend my goal. I’m happy with what I’ve achieved, but having something slightly further away – and a lot harder – to work towards is going to keep me motivated. I’ve also built in other life goals into this one, combining fitness goals with personal finance and development ones, so I’m motivated to work on other areas as well as focus on the one I know I can achieve.

I will briefly reiterate the most common piece of life-hack advice when it comes to goal setting: be specific and set a deadline (yes, yes, be SMART). It makes the moment when you reach that goal very tangible, and also extremely awesome.

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