You Won't WOW Anybody Recruiting 1,000 Clerks/ h2 m# v* F" R
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You have to decide at some point what kind of an impact you want to obtain. Few organizations have enough recruiting talent or budget to do a great job for every open position, so it only makes sense to focus your resources:
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: B% ^) W4 a: P% x$ IWhere you can have the most business impact 4 L* f( v6 C& ^ s
Where you get the maximum visibility
$ p4 a$ G; V8 ~# I: z6 MWhere quality and customer service matter more than efficiency and cost cutting( E* z+ a+ g9 K$ Y
Action Steps for Recruiting Managers Who Want to Dramatically Increase Their Impact and Visibility
9 o, d9 ?/ J/ ?+ |" YHere are some action steps to get you started.3 J: \# }. z9 K) Q1 B
+ F7 M' j5 V, R6 G/ j" s, P1) Identify mission-critical and high-impact jobs. First talk to the senior managers in your high-growth and high-profit business to verify the fact that some jobs really are mission-critical and have more impact (to reassure yourself that Dr John isn't spieling out a bunch of theory here). Also consider benchmarking with firms that routinely do this. Start with Valero (Dan Hilbert), the worldwide leader in allocating recruiting resources scientifically to reach a measurable and maximum business impact. Other leaders in designating distinct recruiting teams for unique needs include B of A, Microsoft, Google, Quicken, and Booz Allen.: h* ~0 M7 o" X1 Y
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2) Identify the targeted jobs. Next, you need to develop a process for determining which jobs need to be allocated to the strategic recruiting team. I recommend…
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# S1 O5 Q: G! S, JLooking at the highest paid jobs in all job families.
3 K7 j+ {2 }2 ]4 u+ @% cDoing the calculations or just ask the GM which jobs have the biggest negative impact when a new hire fails (Ex. safety, sales, revenue producers, critical patient care). / Y9 ^# p: P; U v6 B, F
Doing the calculations or just ask the GM which jobs have the highest performance differential. That means those jobs where a top-performing employee produces 3x or more output than an average performer in the same job.
7 h# L: y |. l# `2 GAsking which jobs cause them to cuss out loud when someone in it quits.
! J+ F# w- i7 z6 {+ a6 VAsking which jobs when unfilled cause the most negative impact to meeting their business goals.
$ { x: X4 B0 LAsking which jobs require skills that will be critical to the firm's future. " j. Z- L3 x; N& E# l1 z
Asking them if there are mission-critical teams or units where every job is mission-critical.
% {& D7 v# z+ w" NAsking them which jobs are currently filled with experienced "baby boomers" who are likely to retire soon. ' U; m( y+ a R! ]
Identifying jobs with high levels of customer interaction with high-profit customers, because these positions, even though they may involve hourly employees, can also have a dramatic impact on revenue. 5 {7 \9 Q$ [8 v2 _; ?5 E/ ?9 w! m
Identifying jobs that in the past have been filled by external executive search. You might have to outperform current executive search agencies to capture these jobs (Which is not that hard to do)., s) g4 X+ m5 p
You then need to pick your targeted jobs from this combined list but before finalizing it have the executive team fine-tune and approve your focus. Generally these high impact, revenue-producing and mission-critical jobs usually end up being between 12% and 20% of all of the firm's jobs. Most errors occur when too many positions are included, rather than too few. Also, never forget that these strategic jobs require a different sourcing and recruiting strategy and different rules, budgets and recruiter skills in order to be successfully filled 3 L! V- i& c" g8 ?8 U* m0 e
/ n& o z e% W) z3) Develop the two-team strategy and a plan. Next identify the tools, rules, metrics, budget, req load and approaches to recruiting that best fit the job level and type of target candidate for this strategic team, i.e. , j2 `" }; G o; Q, C2 `. P
$ B/ t. ]8 b- ` Z2 F9 P2 ^4 ?They are currently employed in this or a related job + z1 k9 w) y4 B' @
They are currently treated well in their current job " r8 M i: }1 H0 Y+ V
A great high-touch candidate experience is required
2 F- q; H$ l" G% D% tA partially customized job is required 8 F4 C* m. J0 E1 k" l% L6 l
They are not actively looking for a new job
% G9 W5 |5 F( [5 |( k% d- B9 a+ VAlso assume that, with the impending baby-boom retirement wave, that replacing these individuals with other experienced and capable managers will be a primary goal of your strategic team. Don't forget that this team must be trained and given bonuses for quality customer service, hiring by the "need date," and for hiring top-performing hires.
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4) Select team members. Identify who on your current team has the attitude, knowledge, experience as well as sourcing, customer-service, and closing skills to be successful in the lower volume but higher complexity job. Avoid the temptation at all costs to fill the slots on this team with "resume processors," wimps; job-board lovers; or people who want to be generalists (trust me on this one). Instead, look exclusively for ex-headhunters, salespeople, marketing pros, people with P&L experience, and people with the attitude of a warrior (it is a war for talent after all)./ A/ P/ a$ Q9 N( N0 b" ~$ N6 ]' \
( v9 o0 F- C5 D' O* n* t) x) h+ z5) Assemble the tactical team. The next step is to assign the remaining recruiters to the tactical team. Their skill-set, rules, budget, metrics, and req loads should be geared to high-volume, low-touch, and fast but efficient hiring in the remaining important but not strategic jobs. Team members and approaches need to be geared toward efficiency, high hiring volumes but with on-time hiring. You might also consider outsourcing some or all of these important but high-volume jobs that require efficiency and cost containment, especially if your talent management leadership doesn't have the bandwidth to manage two distinct teams of recruiters (Never consider outsourcing the strategic team's work which gives you high visibility, as well as a high impact, and most important, a competitive advantage). You might designate sub-teams within this tactical group, such as like college, hourly, or temps.
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6) Do a test or pilot. It's critical that the strategic team refine its approach before it goes prime time. I recommend a pilot in one business unit to show others your increased capabilities and to refine your approach. Also, pick a manager who will agree to be your champion if/when you kick butt. Having them take ownership and credit for the approach means they will brag more about it to other managers, thus creating increased demand for it from other managers. When the pilot is over, try to get your new approach approved by the executive team for "rollout" throughout the firm.! j, L* Q, ]2 A
: ]& D" D: B; ?. a7) Demonstrate your increased business impact. Work with cost accounting, risk assessment, the CFO's office, and the GMs to convert your outputs (quality of hire and fewer vacancy days) into dollars, and to show the increased performance from both of the teams, now that both of their focuses has been narrowed.