You would have to have had your head stuck in the sand to not be aware of the intense interest that the environment holds in today's political and social debates. While candidates of all generations have begun evaluating potential employers based on their "greenness," few in recruiting have leveraged this hot topic in recruitment communications and activities.
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For some unaccountable reason, recruiting managers and leaders almost universally fail to implement a process that regularly discovers "job switch" decision criteria used by the best and brightest, and this latest oversight is nothing more than history repeating itself once again.
# D/ F2 M# ~9 ~4 lBecause so many recruiting leaders fail to do their research, the vast majority of employers underestimate how important a company's degree of "greenness" is to potential hires. It is now becoming important for firms capable of touting their role as good environmental citizens to formally manage perception around environmental issues through employment branding activities.
2 W- M }3 }8 f4 QIn addition, individual recruiters need to make the firm's environmental stance a critical element of their sales pitch to potential applicants and candidates. The time to implement what I call a "green recruiting" strategy is now!
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Environmental Sustainability Goes WideCompanies like Honda, S.C. Johnson, Goldman Sachs, Starbucks, Patagonia, Timberland, and GE have successfully used their environmentally friendly policies to sell their product and gain media exposure.
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However, until recently, few firms have made a concerted effort to leverage the company's environmental stance as a critical point in recruiting pitches. Firms like Google, Timberland, and yes, even old-school General Electric have led the way by undertaking major efforts to make being environmentally friendly a critical element of their employment brand. Google, the world's only "recruiting machine," leads the way not just in its environmental practices but also in publicizing their environmental record and approach. Like many emerging green companies, Google has hired a director who coordinates corporate environmental efforts in an attempt to match their corporate business strategy with their environmental efforts.
; F: n _( t4 lSome sample programs at Google that support environmental issues include:
/ E$ B% r2 e" E5 S6 Y$ D0 f/ j- $5,000 subsidies for employees buying hybrid cars (Timberland offers $3,000)
- Company dining facilities that serve organic sustainable foods
- Charitable contributions to organizations that fight global warming
- On-site farmers markets
- On-site composting of food waste
- Use of green fuels and solar power
- Fully subsidized employee bus pools for commuting employees
Google has developed so many green programs that even former Vice President Al Gore, producer of the controversial documentary on global warming called
An Inconvenient Truth is proud. It's no coincidence that Al Gore has been an advisor to the company for many years.