There is no longer a hidden job market. The line between active and passive candidates is blurring. Turnover is on the rise. Workforce mobility is increasing. It's easy to look for a new job, apply, and be interviewed from your desktop. The barriers to entry and exit are falling.
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The cost of looking for a new job (taking time off, making a physical presence, time investment, etc.) is dropping. Candidates are shopping offers with abandon. Counter-offers are commonplace. No one has to make a commitment. Offers are nothing more than inflated currency.
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Have we created a monster that will affect our economic competitiveness? How will our future executives be trained, groomed, and tested in this environment? My sense is that we are going through a cultural shift of significant short- and long-term proportions.
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H' V* l: e3 u( E: A0 V+ z1 PWhile the short-term affects are now being felt, the long-term negative impact could be far more significant. We might be moving too fast, and it seems like we're accelerating. Consider this:
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Don Imus got fired a few days after his infamous remarks. Two weeks later, 62% of the population thought it was not justified. (Go to
www.supportimus.org to register your opinion and see how emotions still affect business decisions.)
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( N: W. W& v. z2 t9 r# G4 L6 R% yI was just with a major aerospace company that considered the ability to offer someone a job on the same day as the interview a major coup. 9 S" \- W7 D3 j* S9 Y; m( T2 R
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Managers make long-term decisions about whether to hire or reject a candidate within minutes, and then use the balance of the interview to justify it. 8 |9 [+ ^" `# I# B1 S2 N1 x
+ B! M" j" W* e a( S- k4 p2 ~! ?Managers are too busy to give their recruiters enough time to understand real job needs. 2 ~. ]. _( N0 K5 w4 ~+ ?2 G
' }- M8 |1 v& A. ?1 I/ V' bBlink is used to justify our hasty decision-making, and in fact perpetuates it. (Yet even in his book, Gladwell cautions about making hasty decisions without all of the facts. But somehow people read the book too fast and miss this critical point. (Here's a Blink-like three minute article you might want to read for more on this.)
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[5 r/ y4 g) p( U0 XOne of my clients was ready to make an offer to a COO candidate from another search firm after a 90-minute interview. They asked me to confirm their judgment. (I couldn't after a 60-minute fact-finding interview.)