Many organizations struggle to get enough high-quality applicants. While corporate websites, job boards, and events generate lots of flow, most agree that the quality is lacking in a vast majority of applicants.
" w, H9 h7 {3 Z* xThe culprit might be how organizations sell their opportunities. A quick scan of major job boards, print advertisements, and corporate career sites reveals that organizations rely on ordinary, bland recruiting materials and dull position descriptions to attract talent.
~8 w/ c5 D8 z8 M$ @It is evident that little emphasis is placed on making the recruiting pitch truly exciting. The lack of effort is indicative of an often oversubscribed premise that the talent you are after already knows how great you are as an employer, so you don't need to spark their interest in your openings.
% u9 h' S! K0 x+ T; A7 b2 ?! D, lIt's a premise that is rarely true, unless you happen to work for a small handful of rather elite companies. If you don't, there is an alternative approach that accepts recruiting as a form of sales and dictates that recruiters become more adept at articulating differentiated "selling points" (i.e., a value proposition).
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Compile a List of Your Selling Points
( c4 k9 g4 \# V/ Z" ?) b; L) DIt seems like such an obvious step, but only a small percentage of recruiting leaders invest significant time in establishing points of differentiation with talent competitors and distributing them to those in the recruiting process to establish a shared mindset.
' |5 v0 F5 c& h; R) L; a& Z! ~/ zThis list helps to ensure that on the off chance such talent does encounter your message via any channel in use, your opportunities will stand out from all of the others competing for their limited attention.
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Consistent, compelling messages have a better chance of being recognized, so selling points must permeate everything that touches the recruiting function, including:
" T; ^! h' @3 Y, P2 C7 g# p/ u- Position descriptions
- Corporate background profiles
- Recruiting collateral
- Corporate website (all aspects, not just the career site)
- Press releases and media kits
- Recruiting process communications (including the all-important offer letter)
Consider other important steps, described below, to help leverage such selling points to attract high-quality applicants.
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Develop a Comprehensive List of Possible Job Application Factors
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Before you can successfully make a sales pitch that would attract the very best, identify what specific features the best potential applicants expect in a good job and in a great company.
. f- V8 g { G6 U, {I call these selling points "job application factors" because they are the factors that drive the very best candidates to take the time to actually suffer through applying for a position.
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Methods for identifying such factors include holding focus groups with your own best employees, asking applicants during interviews, asking new hires, and compiling a list of other firms' selling points. Remember to scan position descriptions from competing firms to document things such as tools used and the scope of competing positions.
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Develop Your Selling Points
: t# _6 i& U0 s4 GYou might think that you're done, but unfortunately, developing a pitch around selling points that your organization cannot live up to is a sure-fire recipe for disaster. With that in mind, the next step is to pare down your list of ideal factors into a list of selling points that your company can actually deliver on.
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While you may perceive that your company can execute to a particular point, it is much better to test than assume. Assemble a test panel in specific job families to review the ranked list of factors, then assign a rating of how well your organization delivers on each point. Develop those selling points that rank high in terms of attractiveness and rate high in terms of execution.