The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hawks, State Farm Arena host hundreds seeking employment

Hiring managers from different arena department­s there.

- By Jillian Price Jillian.price@ajc.com

On Saturday, the Atlanta Hawks and State Farm Arena held their inaugural “Interview Day,” hosting hundreds of people looking for jobs.

Candidates met with hiring managers from several department­s in the arena, including food and beverage, security, Hawks retail, guest experience, the ticket box office and uniform management department­s.

More than 1,000 people signed up looking for various part-time positions, said Camye Mackey, executive vice president and chief people, diversity and inclusion officer, for the Atlanta Hawks and State Farm Arena. The arena was looking to fill about 500 positions, she said. The job openings have a starting salary starting at $16 per hour.

One job candidate, Tina Gaston Williams, 40, attended the event, looking for a job working in guest experience at the arena.

The Atlanta sports fan said she always wanted to work at State Farm Arena and wasn’t going to miss the next interview day.

“I’m gonna make sure I’ll be there,” Williams said of seeing news of Saturday’s

job fair. “That’s what led me here today, and I love sports and entertainm­ent.”

Throughout the process, candidates went through three steps: registrati­on, assessment and the interview. If a candidate successful­ly completed the steps, they received a “draft letter,” meaning they received a job offer. The process, however, is not complete after receiving the offer, as candidates are required to complete a background check.

After receiving an offer, candidates could attend a festival, located in the arena bowl that included an immersive and engaging candidate experience to display the company’s SMILE (Southern Hospitalit­y, Make A Moment, Individual­s Matter, Listen and Learn, and Empowermen­t) service culture. The festival also included food, photo opportunit­ies, wellness stations and interactiv­e games and prizes.

Williams’ efforts paid off: She was “drafted” to work in the pleasant-sounding job known as a guest experience­s smile maker.

“I’ll be engaging with fans, helping them to their seats, making sure their experience is great,” Williams said.

Mackey said it’s exciting to see the smiling faces of those who received offers. She hopes that this day allows the metro Atlanta community to return to a sense of normalcy, after having to mainly apply for jobs online due to COVID-19.

“You can come out, you can interview for jobs. You have that face-to-face interactio­n; you get to feel the experience,” Mackey said. “We need our community. Our community is made up of our workforce. So we’re excited to have them come out.”

Brett Stefansson, the executive vice president and general manager of State Farm Arena, said the part-time positions play an important role for the organizati­on.

“Truth be told, the parttime staff that works and operates in this building is just a critical, critical component to our success,” Stefansson said. “(It’s) a real driver in bringing out that true fan experience that we’re looking to engage in.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM ?? Tina Gaston Williams (right) and Stacy Gaston celebrate Saturday after making it through the interview process at the Hawks Interview Day event at the State Farm Arena.
STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM Tina Gaston Williams (right) and Stacy Gaston celebrate Saturday after making it through the interview process at the Hawks Interview Day event at the State Farm Arena.

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