天空之城 2006-9-25 05:18 PM
What's Hot, What's Not — and What Should Be
I think I have been to every ERE Expo since the dawn of the Internet, but Dave and crew outdid themselves in Florida this year. It was filled with fresh faces, new ideas, and a new take on some lingering problems.
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But the big news flash is that even with all of the new tools, hiring top talent is not getting any easier for anybody. In fact, it will be getting harder as the supply of the top-talent labor pool begins to decline as demand increases. Worse, the Internet has profoundly increased workforce mobility, and now everyone is looking. So expect turnover to increase. With this in mind, here is some critical advice:LkO NVP5O2v
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Even if you're now hiring enough top people, don't rest on your laurels. With everybody accelerating their sourcing efforts, you'll have to become more innovative and work harder just to maintain whatever competitive edge you have.
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If you believe you're making progress but are not quite there yet, you'll have to intensify your efforts just to stay even.
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If things are getting worse, you must do something massively different — fast.
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Here's my quick take on some of the important ideas that were presented and discussed both during the Expo and into the wee hours of the morning.
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Anarchy plus bureaucracy yields chaos. While a Lone Ranger model might be appropriate for a third-party recruiter where you can cherry-pick jobs, permitting every recruiter in a corporate environment to do their thing is not a workable or scalable business process. This is akin to anarchy. Making matters worse are hiring managers who all interview differently, and members of the interviewing team who rarely agree on real job needs. This is chaos. Now overlay this with a misguided HR bureaucracy using the wrong controls and meaningless metrics. If this picture resembles your corporate recruiting department, there are only a few options available if you want to get better: civil war, revolution, or dictatorship. Regardless of the path you choose, don't put a bureaucrat in charge. A dictator may be more appropriate for the short term.
天空之城 2006-9-25 05:19 PM
[b]Recruiting is marketing. [/b]Seth Godin's keynote speech set the tone — if you want to hire top people, your jobs must stand out from the crowd, they must offer a compelling value proposition, and they must be designed to draw people in, not weed them out. If you're doing what everyone else is doing, you don't stand a chance of hiring the top 10% to 15%. So the key is to be different. I guess the real point here is that great sourcing starts with great advertising. If you're not now seeing enough top people, this could be your problem.
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Are job boards relevant? According to the job boards themselves, the answer is a resounding yes. According to the companies using them, the answer is far less positive. Personally, I like The Ladders. This is a board for $100K+ positions where candidates pay a modest fee to view jobs. This yields a slightly more serious-minded candidate. I've used this board, and the candidates tend to be of higher quality. However, the big issue about job boards is that they are relevant only if you post compelling jobs that capture the candidate's attention. If you post traditional job descriptions that are the same as everyone else's, you will get average results. There are a host of other things you can do to get your jobs noticed by the right audience, but if your jobs are boring it won't matter where you post them or who sees them.