20摄氏度 2006-9-18 10:56 AM
Being Strategic Requires 2 Separate Recruiting Teams
"Broad purposed recruiting teams that attempt to excel at both "mission critical" jobs and at high volume jobs, will invariably fail… at both",o#U+i`u)_
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Being strategic, by definition, means focusing on high-impact things. On the other side of the coin are tactical things, where your output is still important, you just work on more operational-level items. The two levels of work are both important but the one thing that will lead to the failure of both efforts is to attempt to combine the teams that work on the two distinct levels. Why? Because just like combining champagne and beer in the same glass, the mixing of tactical teammates with strategic team members dilutes the strengths of both groups. Combining the rules, expectations, and processes of any strategic and operational teams into one will make both ineffective. Just as combining the rules, metrics and training regiment of a team of long distance race walkers with a 100m sprint team will mean lost races all around.
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Unfortunately, combining strategic and tactical teams is exactly what 95% of all recruiting and HR functions do. In order to be strategic and successful, the recruiting function needs two separate and distinct teams that target the two distinct and different types of jobs and candidates a firm has.iS&j.Tn
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Strategic recruiting team: It focuses on the very highest impact jobs, including mission critical jobs, senior execs, revenue producing jobs, jobs with a high consequence of an error, and "high value customer" impact jobs. These jobs require a firm to hire candidates who are in high demand and convincing these individuals to join the firm requires a unique mentality, skill-set, and a totally different candidate experience.4e!X3h\S
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Operational or tactical recruiting team: This team's focus is on the rest of the firm's jobs including most high-volume, back office, shared services, hourly, temps, and the rest of the workforce.
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Many Firms Do Have Separate Strategic and Tactical Teams
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Nearly every large organization has a strategic and tactical team of some kind.
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In football, you have the more strategic team that scores (the offense), and the lesser but still important teams of defense and "special teams." In hotels, the two teams are called the front and the back office, and in restaurants it's front and back-of-the-house teams. In jewelry, high end salespeople are on distinct teams from high-volume cosmetic sales people for a good reason. Real estate teams are also separated into high-end properties and midrange property teams because the customers are quite different and the cost of a lost sale is double or triple with high-end properties.
20摄氏度 2006-9-18 10:56 AM
If you doubt the different impacts of the two different teams, just look at the typical pay structure. Scorers in football and basketball get several times more pay than non- scorers, and any 3rd string player or punter will get 20 times less than the star scorer or QB. It's just a fact that some jobs have more impact and that finding and selling people on these positions requires a unique approach to recruiting that must not be diluted or combined with the approach used to recruit candidates for operational and tactical positions.
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Why Doesn't Recruiting Have Distinct Teams?
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Well that's easy. Anyone should know that recruiters who can effectively hire 30 accounting clerks wouldn't have the tools, time, or skills to recruit a CFO. That is why external executive search firms don't recruit operational people and mid-level agencies don't recruit top executives. But unfortunately, logic often fails in HR and recruiting and criticism of the status quo is seldom tolerated.
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When asked to prioritize jobs that are strategic to the organization for the first time, many recruiting professionals come back with the jobs on the top few rungs of the organization chart. This is a huge mistake. Managers need to be forced to really think about what positions in the organization have the ability to immediately impact a firms time to market or quality of goods or service being offered, because when they are, the list of critical positions looks a lot different. In fact, the focus moves from the top of the organization to positions much lower and throughout the organization. One could almost say that the 80/20 rule is in effect here. Eighty percent of what drives the capability and capacity of a firm to execute its strategy lies in just 20% of its jobs that are scattered among organizational levels. P${Q8q?
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Exacerbating the problem of making the transition to separate teams, in my experience, is the fact that the majority of HR and recruiting managers have such a strong "social work" mentality that demands that they use a misguided equal-treatment approach, which means that no team or individual can be separated out and designated as superior or strategic. Well, it takes courage to say that something is more important than something else and it is true that the whining that occurs when you do create level 1 and level 2 teams is almost always deafening. I suggest though that you ignore it and instead, do what is right for your customers and the business. SXQ~xM
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Combining the Two Levels of Recruiting Guarantees FailureYB$D ho.E;A
Putting recruiters skilled in filling strategic jobs on the same team as tactical recruiters (or even worse, having a single recruiter do both levels at once) unfortunately results in "high-volume tools" being used for all levels of jobs.
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In fact, if you actually track how many recruiters source for say, an accounting clerk and a head loan officer, you will find that they will all too often use the same identical sourcing plan and sources for the two distinctly different job levels. And the consequence of this tendency to shift to the lower-level tools is that the higher impact jobs go under-filled or unfilled. Why? Because you are using "active candidate" tools and recruiters that love them, on individuals in jobs that require high-touch recruiting approaches. Or, using an analogy, it is true that people who make good beer should receive their due importance, but never mix a team of beer brewers with a team of great winemakers, because the resulting brew would embarrass both teams.
20摄氏度 2006-9-18 10:57 AM
[b]You Won't WOW Anybody Recruiting 1,000 Clerks[/b]
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You have to decide at some point what kind of an impact you want to obtain. Few organizations have enough recruiting talent or budget to do a great job for every open position, so it only makes sense to focus your resources:f3fd"a7A
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[color=Blue]Where you can have the most business impact $lE;v,`U]:QS[/P
Where you get the maximum visibility c"O LWEU S"X:Au
Where quality and customer service matter more than efficiency and cost cutting
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Action Steps for Recruiting Managers Who Want to Dramatically Increase Their Impact and Visibility
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Here are some action steps to get you started.[/color]ESa NG7ru
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[b]1) Identify mission-critical and high-impact jobs. [/b]First talk to the senior managers in your high-growth and high-profit business to verify the fact that some jobs really are mission-critical and have more impact (to reassure yourself that Dr John isn't spieling out a bunch of theory here). Also consider benchmarking with firms that routinely do this. Start with Valero (Dan Hilbert), the worldwide leader in allocating recruiting resources scientifically to reach a measurable and maximum business impact. Other leaders in designating distinct recruiting teams for unique needs include B of A, Microsoft, Google, Quicken, and Booz Allen.
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[b]2) Identify the targeted jobs.[/b] Next, you need to develop a process for determining which jobs need to be allocated to the strategic recruiting team. I recommend…
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Looking at the highest paid jobs in all job families. 5w t-v4K%EfwXp
Doing the calculations or just ask the GM which jobs have the biggest negative impact when a new hire fails (Ex. safety, sales, revenue producers, critical patient care).