Do you know that recruiting is one of the least efficient processes in an organization? Transaction costs (cost per hire) are large and there is almost no effort being made to connect that cost with delivering value (quality of hire).
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At conference after conference, I hear the same old measures being touted proudly: cost per hire, time to fill, number of interviews to offer, and so forth. It seems like no one is measuring the effects of our recruiting activities. Senior executives are asking what value we are delivering to them, and sadly, few of us have any answers.
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Recruiting is one of the few functions that has not examined in-depth what it does and how it could begin to do things differently. As long as we find people in a timeframe our hiring managers accept, we think we are doing a good job. There are no standards, few expectations, and no real improvement targets for the majority of corporate recruiters.
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Maybe we should just blow the whole thing up and start over. There is no time left for evolutionary tweaks.
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Many recruiters feel that there are too many things they cannot control, so they just do what is historically accepted. Yes, they do have to deal with a lot, including fickle hiring managers, rigid compensation schemes, corporate culture, and geography. But so do managers in other functions.
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Manufacturing managers have had to learn the discipline of keeping costs at rock bottom while improving quality and increasing output. They do this against a backdrop of highly variable customer demand, supplier uncertainties, and the impact of national and international disasters.
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Finance has transformed itself over the past decade, reducing the cost and time it takes to close the books each quarter, enforcing better cost-accounting measures, and moving everything to the computer.
# n& T4 Q1 l( v8 k+ I9 m! UFor decades, recruiters have been using the same techniques for finding, enticing, assessing, and hiring people. All of these steps are based on a number of assumptions.
/ i% v& p |# BI have identified more than a dozen commonly held assumptions, but I think these five are the most dangerous:
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- Only passive candidates are the best.
- It's not possible to keep people as candidates for more than a short time.
- Most candidates want to apply with a resume and don't like online screening or profilers.
- Each candidate will have to be interviewed in person.
- There is no way to show a direct correlation between the sourcing and interview process, and the eventual performance of the candidate.
I contend that all of these assumptions are either plain wrong or need to be challenged for their relevance in an information- and Internet-based world. Let's look at each one.