Get All Access for $5/mo

Hire the Right Recent Graduates for Your Startup With These 4 Tips You may find yourself with an influx of applications from new entrants to the job market. How do you find the best?

By Chuck Cohn Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

One of the most important tasks you will face as a business founder is the recruitment of your first team members. Many founders struggle with this task -- I did when I started my company. Industry veterans might command a salary that you can't afford, or candidates whose impressive skill sets you can afford may not align with your core values.

Your search for the ideal hire may be further complicated by the rapid influx of recent college graduates into the job market. In the weeks following their May and June graduation ceremonies, you may find dozens -- if not hundreds -- of graduates applying for open positions at your company. Given their relative lack of employment experience, how can you identify the college graduates who are best suited to the swift pace and constantly evolving nature of startup life?

Related: The 8 Biggest Mistakes on Resumes, and How to Correct Them

Impressive candidates can come from all sorts of experience levels and ages, so you should try not to limit your search to just one group. If you do, however, choose to pursue recent graduates, here are four pieces of advice that can help identify the right ones to join your team.

1. Narrow your search.

You can narrow your pool of candidates to students with internship experience at startups. These individuals have already self-selected themselves for startup environments.

If you're located in an area without a concentration of startups, you can also consider looking to schools that offer entrepreneurship programs. Try to form connections with these schools' career centers and professors. Taking the time to establish connections can help you develop a pipeline of promising recruits.

2. Remain in sync with hiring cycles.

If you plan to target college graduates, a great first step is to familiarize yourself with the academic calendars of the colleges and universities at which you are recruiting.

Many companies begin to secure talent as early as January or February. While you may find a stellar applicant in May, don't feel compelled to wait until late spring to begin your search. Instead, consider building awareness of your business as soon as the spring semester starts next year.

Related: 5 Vital HR Tasks Startups Must Complete Before Hiring

3. Focus on fit.

It's all too easy to be swayed by a candidate's impressive skill set, but no amount of programming expertise or marketing know-how outweighs the importance of company fit. In an ideal world, the person you hire should complement the personalities of your existing team members. Take the time to determine whether the candidate believes in your company's mission and vision.

4. Vet your candidates.

Once you begin to recruit promising candidates, vet them heavily to determine whether they're strong long-term fits for your business. You might ask why they want to join a startup, or you might ask how they plan to contribute to your company's growth. Candidates who have done research prior to their interviews are more likely to be genuinely interested in your startup's mission.

You can also inquire about projects that candidates completed during college to gain a sense of their work ethic and ability to coexist on a team. Consider posing a challenge during the interview, such as asking marketing applicants to describe how they've used data to inform and guide a marketing strategy. Their answers will show you how well they think on their feet -- and the extent to which they can add value.

Running a high-growth company puts you in the unique position of offering job candidates one of the things they seek most: career potential. This happens to be something that recent college graduates in particular seek. Any candidate you hire can, in turn, offer enthusiasm, skills and a unique outlook on the business world.

Related: 4 Ways College Grads Can Prepare for Their First Real Job

Chuck Cohn

CEO and Founder of Varsity Tutors

Chuck Cohn is the CEO and founder of Varsity Tutors, a live learning platform that connects students with personalized instruction to accelerate academic achievement.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Side Hustle

'Hustling Every Day': These Friends Started a Side Hustle With $2,500 Each — It 'Snowballed' to Over $500,000 and Became a Multimillion-Dollar Brand

Paris Emily Nicholson and Saskia Teje Jenkins had a 2020 brainstorm session that led to a lucrative business.

Business News

'I'm Not Trying to Land on Mars': Mark Cuban Takes Dig at Elon Musk to Explain Why His Online Pharmacy Isn't Trying to Make More Money

Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. is an online pharmacy co-founded by Cuban and radiologist Alex Oshmyansky.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Meta Makes $1 Million Dollar Donation to Donald Trump's Inaugural Fund

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg also reportedly gave Trump a pair of Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

Starting a Business

How to Start a Freight Brokerage Business

Get your entrepreneurial destiny really moving by becoming a broker--matching shippers and transportation servicess--for the freight industry.

Business News

'It's Not About You': How to Fire Someone Effectively, According to Kevin O'Leary

O'Leary says that if you can't fire someone, you aren't the right leader for the organization.