Hiring the “A” Team: The Right Ingredients for Recruiting Success

By Ryan Leary, Kenexa

Ryan Leary, Executive Talent Acquisition Consultant, Kenexa Technologies

Shifting demographics are significantly impacting the composition of the talent pool.   In today’s global economy where the most critical competitive differentiators are derived from a higher performing workforce, HR professionals need to support their organizations with a firm strategy that addresses hiring challenges.  To sustain and drive a market leader position, hiring the ‘A’ team is a necessity, not an option.

Admittedly, the game has changed.  Gone are the days when posting to a job board resulted in a flurry of qualified candidates.  Even social networking sites – such as LinkedIn and Facebook – aren’t fresh ideas when it comes to sourcing candidates.  Fortunately, there are new ways of addressing hiring challenges, if you start with three main ingredients: employment branding, creative sourcing and pre-hire assessments.

First, when was the last time that you checked your company’s employment brand?  While we’re all familiar with readily recognizable consumer brands, when a job candidate peers from the outside looking into your organization, what do they see?  Is your company the brand – such as Hewlett-Packard or IBM – or is your company a house of product brands – such as Crest, Tide and Bounty?  Is your company socially responsible, a purveyor of environmental and community best practices?  Or, has your brand been tarnished by workforce reductions and high profile litigation?  Ask yourself: is my company an employer of choice or one that candidates chose to avoid?

A positive employment brand must be as carefully crafted as the company’s marketing brand.  Researchers at McKinsey encourage employers to apply the same “rigor and precision” to their employment branding efforts as they do to brand the overall company.  However, establishing an employment brand isn’t as simplistic as linking the company’s brand to HR’s efforts.  Knowing what motivates your ideal candidate is an important component of creating the brand that will attract, retain and motivate them.  It’s also worth noting that generational differences drive candidate expectations so whereas a baby boomer might be more receptive to a “stability” brand, the millennial candidate is more concerned with training opportunities and a company’s innovation.

Another important aspect of brand management is to consider which other companies compete against you for talent.  Whether you’re sourcing candidates against each other geographically, or within a specific field of expertise, a “win-loss” analysis will help determine why other companies are attracting the candidates you’re seeking to hire.  This analysis should also include examination of how your brand messages are being delivered to candidates, from radio, TV and newspaper advertising, to the reception that a candidate experienced the first time they step into your lobby, and to how the hiring manager supported the brand messages during the interview process.

Employment branding is a strategic initiative that requires constant nurturing.  Creative sourcing of candidates requires the same level of attention; without a healthy qualified candidate pipeline, HR cannot possibly serve the needs of its internal customers and support overall organizational goals.  The time to source candidates is now, proactively; not reactively when the position goes open.  This allows your talent acquisition team to maintain a lean, qualified pipeline of “ready talent” to be called on when the needs arise.

Logically (and conveniently) when one thinks of sourcing candidates, job boards are the first place to start.  The proliferation of job boards has made it the predominant sourcing tool; however, this must be incorporated with an active recruitment strategy to canvass all potential talent.  Casting the net too wide and far will result in an overwhelming deluge of likely non-targeted talent. This “spray and pray” approach also backfires by sullying your employment brand when earnest candidates expect to hear back from the company on their submission.

Many times, the most effective means of sourcing candidates is right in front of you.  Your existing workforce and relationships are rich sources of referrals.  Implementing a referral program that incents your employees for candidate referrals will also result in more engaged employees, which directly impacts retention and productivity.

Which brings us to the third ingredient in our recipe for success: how do you know a candidate is really the right fit?  After making the investments in your employment brand and sourcing programs, make sure that you have the right pre-hire assessments in place to qualify candidates.  For example, are you recruiting for frontline positions that require outstanding customer service skills?  Or, is the job requirement to spend hours, if not days, alone and heads down on extremely detailed projects?  Taking this scientific approach diminishes variances in hiring and interviewing practices, and also supports other key programs, such as succession planning and building a pipeline of high potentials.

A good example is McDonald’s U.K. and Northern Ireland new pre-hire assessments tool for their hourly-paid staff.  Each year that organization receives more than 400,000 applications for its crew, customer care, and maintenance positions and the new assessment is an integral part of its ‘Hire the Smile’ recruitment process for the organization’s 1,225 U.K. – and Northern Ireland-based restaurants.  The assessment measures candidates against the key competencies necessary for a successful career at McDonald’s, namely: customer engagement, personal interaction, teamwork, and speed and accuracy.

“Best fit” candidates become engaged employees and research supports that the more engaged your employees are, the longer they stay with and the more valuable they are to the corporation.  Research consistently indicates that engaged employees are more likely to recommend their employer as a place to work and have pride in the organization.  Pre-hire assessments enable employers to determine if they’re advancing the right candidates in the hiring pipeline and investing in those candidates that have high probability of staying with the company.

Regardless of economic fluctuations, the recruiting game has changed.  Today, even public sector employers are feeling the pinch.  A major Canadian city that only 10 years ago had turnover rates of 2.5% is struggling with turnover exceeding 10%.  Well-planned and executed recruiting programs are the only means of “seeing around corners” to make certain that your company’s efforts aren’t casualties.  Assembling and mixing the right ingredients will help you ensure recruiting success.

Ryan Leary is a Senior Sourcer and Client Recruiter at Kenexa.  He is also the author of CruiterTalk.com, a fast paced highly visible blog within the social recruiting space that was recently acquired by the social network for recruiters, RecruitingBlogs.com. He is a graduate of Temple University.

Email: ryan.leary@kenexa.com
Twitter: ryanleary
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ryanleary
Blog: www.CruiterTalk.com

Posted by on April 5, 2010. Filed under Recruiting, Thought Leadership. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

2 Comments for “Hiring the “A” Team: The Right Ingredients for Recruiting Success”

  1. Ryan,
    WOW!! This is the best article I have read that showcases an in-depth analysis of the current job market helping companies better understand how they must be engaged at all levels in the company and in the community to attract the right talent.

    I also agree social networks are great to find potential candidates.. learn about companies … but it does not mean that your hiring will be easier, quicker, better or cheaper. Quite the opposite, companies are having a harder time attracting the right candidates even with all this access with social networks. You still have to attract, recruit and invest in your hires.

    Recruiting now for 30 years… I have never seen so much frustration in hiring, delays in hiring and companies not understanding why they can not get the right candidates. A better question would be … What does the candidate think about my company and do they know who we are and what we offer.

    Since 9/11, the biggest disruptor in our life time, combined now with a lack of trust in companies in how they responded to this current financial crisis with massive downsizing, start ups failing with less capital and employees feeling very undervalued and wearing too many hats. We now have the highest percentage of unhappy employees ever, the most turnovers in the past 18 months of new hiring and a revolving door at the executive level. We also have less candidates available in the market today, a huge exodus of baby boomers leaving the market, 3 generations in the market and a very lean bench of talent to build the future of your company.

    What needs to change?
    Well… I say this with love … it is you the company. You can not “sell” your company to a candidate. It is very evident in candidates negative response to potential interviews and seeing where companies are increasing dollars for content out of advertising budgets.

    Candidates today are better educated, have great access to information and your employees. What do your employees say about your company?

    Candidates want to work with the right company, the right leadership and know your customer. As a headhunter .. we always ask .. Why would you consider making a move today from your current employer? We are talking to the top 10% in these companies and the answers are: not feeling valued, wearing too many hats, less than stellar management, less internal communication or not engaged to have input to help the company.

    The biggest competitive difference in the market today is your employees who take the extra steps to support better outcomes, bring ideas that are the aha moment. Also, have you asked your customers how they feel about your company and your competition?

    The good news is we have a workforce who recognizes that they need to be an integral part of the success of a company. You need to know how to define your candidate requirements, assess behaviorally and how to reach out to speak with these qualified candidates and find out are we a good fit?

    We built a new site to support the voice of the candidate http://www.medcareervillage.com to help them better understand how to be successful, provide education, access to experts, thought leaders and peers.

    Hiring is a partnership and we want to see good companies become great, improve outcomes with services, expertise and products and your best “recruiters” are your employees.

    Ryan, I am Southern .. we like to chat.. thank you again for such a great article. I will share this with our networks, groups, candidates, clients and recruiters.

    In such great change… creates an incredible opportunity to innovate and leverage with the right hires.

    Today,IT Takes A Village,

    Pat
    pat@medcareervillage.com
    pat@patlicata.com
    MedCareerVillage
    Pat Licata & Associates

  2. Pat, Thanks for the kind words. There are many different things to take from the info here but I firmly believe that the proper engagement with employee form a company creates an amazing atmosphere.

    In the end, that’s what is going to drive the brand and create a significant differentiators between companies.

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