百宝箱 2007-3-15 11:37 AM
Recruiting Circa 2010: Critical Hiring Trends You Must Watch
Web 2.0 has resulted in a rapid change in how hiring top talent could be conducted. But from what I can tell, very few companies are moving rapidly enough to take full advantage of this great opportunity. Mf+wQ#C,@@P|l
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A recent Business Week article (March 12, 2007) referred to Harvard B-school professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter's Innovation Pyramid. The basic concept is that successful companies innovate based on a variety of risk from simple and safe to placing major strategic bets.
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Those that lose their competitive edge emphasize safety and short-term results. Maybe a little more risk is in order for the recruiting department. Here are some ideas to consider if you want to increase your market share of top talent:
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[b]Implement a top-to-bottom consumer marketing approach to sourcing.[/b] In general, the best people don't post their resumes or hunt for jobs on the big boards. And even if they do, it's a low-yield process at best. The big shift in the next few years will be to adopt aggressive consumer-based marketing approaches to attract top active and passive talent. Good people, even those actively looking, want to first know something about the company, its growth prospect, and the importance of the work they do to the company's overall business. Yet few companies provide this type of interim or warm-up step; instead, they force candidates to look for a specific job at a specific level in a certain geographical area. This is counterintuitive. The big new trend here is the use of talent hubs that can be easily found using search-engine optimization techniques. From these micro sites, interested people can search directly for open jobs or input their resumes into a nurturing pool powered by a CRM engine like salesforce.com. Recruiters can then contact and network with these top people as needed.
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[b]Implement staffing requirements planning (SRP).[/b] This is also known as workforce planning on steroids. If you think about the old days, around 1970, computer-based sales forecasting was just emerging. This led to automated production planning, which led to Material Requirements Planning and soon thereafter, Enterprise Requirements Planning. Collectively, these tools allowed companies to manage all of their resources, especially inventory, more effectively. Workforce planning has been around for about the same length of time, but I'm surprised that only companies who have rapidly changing labor needs (e.g., retail, hospitality) or those who watch their costs like hawks (e.g., manufacturing) really do it well. SRP takes workforce planning up a few notches using multiple tools to predict worldwide workforce needs on an ongoing basis. This way, changes in economic conditions or business strategies can be acted upon immediately. Using SRP-type tools will allow a recruiting department to reallocate resources and change priorities within days to meet their company's new hiring needs. 8lSC+~#t*D,G,M S1IwP
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[b]Link business strategy directly to recruiting and sourcing.[/b] This is part of a strong SRP effort. The idea here is that changes in business strategy need to be instantaneously reflected in a company's recruiting efforts. For example, in the same Business Week edition mentioned above, there was a story on how Symbol Technologies (the bar-code company) had to reinvigorate its R&D efforts after seeing its stock price drop dramatically. Part of this was a major increase in hiring a new breed of technologists while cutting back in other business functions. This required a major redeployment in recruiting resources to pull it off. As companies expand globally, this same shift is necessary to find the people who can operate effectively on a global scale. More than likely it's not the same people or the team onboard right now. These strategic business changes also require different approaches to sourcing and recruiting, a constant barrage of advanced training and new recruiters who are willing and able to use new tools, techniques, and technologies.
百宝箱 2007-3-15 11:38 AM
[color=Blue]Systematize the entire hiring process.[/color] In most companies, sourcing, interviewing, assessment, selection, and closing are more art than science. Managers tend to use their own interviewing methods, recruiters are an independent breed among themselves, and recruiting and negotiating is problematic and unpredictable. Hiring can become a systematic and scalable business process, but it won't be if recruiters and hiring managers aren't true partners all using the best tools and technologies in the right way. You'll soon be seeing some form of Performance-based Hiring serving as this foundational business process. The key here is that each phase in the process (sourcing, interviewing, recruiting) is coordinated, connected, and reinforcing, not contradictory and counterproductive.
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[color=Blue]Increase specialization of the recruiting team.[/color] A generalist recruiter handling the process from the beginning to the end is not possible in a high-volume corporate environment. Given the increase in workforce mobility, changing demographics, and the insatiable demand for top talent, recruiting in general is undergoing rapid transformation. Sourcing is a great example, as it becomes a specialty by itself. Developing pools of top talent requires the use of every networking site available, personal knowledge of functional and industry trends, the ability to deliver candidates Just-in-Time using the latest technology, attending industry events, and personal acquaintance with the movers and shakers. Recruiters must act as counselors to their candidates and advisors to their clients. This means they must know the intimate details of the job and be able to present the situation as a long-term career opportunity, not just another job. This requires strong solution and consultative selling skills with a corresponding shift away from a transactional processing mentality. #lFF9v.s#R3W.D;`B