LEAN, Just-in-Time Recruiting!



Archive for the ‘Talent Aquisition’ Category

Do you have 20 minutes, pen, paper and your calendar handy?

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Three steps to a successful offer presentation

  1. Schedule 20 minutes to deliver the offer – Don’t just call up a candidate and deliver a verbal offer during the middle of their busy day. Remember, this is a formal offer of employment from your firm (or your client’s firm). Schedule a time to present the offer to them. Make sure they are at a location where they can listen and talk freely, as well as take notes. Ideally, if they are local, I would recommend scheduling a meeting in person to deliver the offer! But minimally, schedule a 20-minute block of time that is 100% dedicated to learning about a life changing offer from your firm.
  2. Make sure they have a pen and paper to take notes – Before you start discussing the offer, confirm they have a pen and paper handy to take notes. You want to make sure they completely understand the offer from your discussion. If you’re like most firms, once a verbal offer is presented, you will send the hard copy in the mail. Again, if you can meet in person – even better. Discuss the offer, have them take notes and then present the written offer in person.
  3. Discuss Non-Monetary Selling points of the offer FIRST. When presenting offers, most recruiters only discuss the monetary components of the offer. In a recent blog post, “Don’t forget the reason we are here in the first place,” we discuss the significance of reconfirming the non-monetary selling points of the position (chance to work with new technology, large scope of responsibility, promotion, less travel, etc.) BEFORE you discuss the monetary components (salary, bonus, vacation, benefits, etc.). The majority of people change jobs for non-monetary reasons. But instinctively, they will try and NEGOTIATE the monetary parts of the offer. If you get them excited about the non-monetary components of the offer, you can control the offer/negotiation.
  4. Make sure they have their calendar handy: Once you have presented the offer, you have the opportunity to pre-close by discussing the following dates:
  • Set a time to answer any questions once they receive the written offer
  • Date they will put in their notice
  • Start Date
  • Set up any appointments between resignation and start date (fill out benefits, background check, meet with hiring manager for lunch, etc.)

Make sure you put these dates in your calendar, as well to continue to follow up and support them during the process.

Changing jobs is one of the top 4 most stressful things a person can do! It is also a big commitment we are making on behalf of our company (or client). It is your job to manage this part of the recruitment process with the respect and attention it deserves.

Your candidates will appreciate the formal nature by which you conduct this step and most importantly – - you will be less susceptible to a counteroffer.

If you know your candidates Motives, no need to sell – - they will buy!

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

I’m at the ERE conference in San Diego! Honestly, given the economy, I am actually surprised at how many people have attended the event. I think it illustrates that organizations want to improve their Human Capital functions by investing in learning new methodologies, tools and techniques.

On Monday I facilitated a pre-conference workshop with the renowned Shally Steckerl (www.jobmachine.net) on Sourcing Candidates with LEAN budgets. We had a great session and a ton of fun with those in attendance.

As always, the group interaction provided insight and inspiration on how I can improve my recruiting skills!

Probably the biggest “ah-ha” moment, or “take away” for me was reconfirming the importance of controlling the initial conversation with a quality, passive candidate you “cold called,” and then identifying their true “Motives to Move.”

Without this information, how can you possibly understand if you have a position within your organization that will clearly be better the one they have currently?

As Jeffery Gitomer says, “No one wants to be sold but everyone likes to buy.”

Hence, before you SELL anyone on an opportunity, it is probably better to understand exactly what they are looking for in a new opportunity, and if you have that answer, they will most likely want to BUY it!

Oh, by the way, if you approach the call with this attitude . . . it becomes a much more enjoyable conversation!

In upcoming blog posts, I will discuss some tried and proven techniques to “cold calling” passively-looking top talent, overcoming the initial awkwardness of the call, and capturing their “Motives to Move!”

I am looking forward to Day II of the ERE expo!

Hope you have a great week!

Creative Ways For Recruiters to Add Value

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

While this economic downturn has jumped our nation’s unemployment rate to its highest level since 1982 (9+ %), many experts also point out that the unemployment rate of recruiters (corporate, third party, staffing) is closer to 50%!

Unfortunately, many organizations still perceive recruiters to be “overhead.” And, if your organization is not hiring a ton of folks, “overhead,” is an easy target for them to cut headcount/costs.

What can you (recruiters) do to show value to your organization and stay (or get) employed?

Bonita Martin from P|Form asked this question to the folks in her network. While some of the ideas presented seem like natural fits, I thought some were very creative.

If you feel your job situation is uncertain, and/or you actually do have some extra time on your hands… I recommend you do some of the things listed which will add value to your organization (as well as improve your skills).

Hope you are having a great week!

I have worked with our sales team to help them identify contact names and contact info at target companies where calling through the main line has not worked. I’ve also streamlined our EPA reporting because of my experience with metrics and Excel. Like Frank, I have been “upgrading” because there is so much talent available. I am pipelining and referring candidates to other people in my network because these candidates may also be clients one day (and in fact, two have referred business our way.) And, most importantly, I am responsible for the retention of key employees. I know why they joined the company and am in constant communication with the President about what we can do to retain them.

  • Bonita Martin, Director of Human Resources, P|FORM


I think being a part of the outplacement process is a natural fit that recruiters don’t think of. They have lists of competitors, can help with resumes, directories of headhunters, interview tips.

  • John Cressy, Executive Recruiter, Supply Chain Consulting Search


Recruiters can help writing/editing company newsletter articles, assisting the Sales team with more leads, revising the internal resume template format, helping our services team plan activities for spring and summer company events. And, of course, building your pipeline and maintaining those relationships for future hiring needs.

  • Mike Brogan, Sr. Recruiter, Systems Evolution SEI


I would suggest that instead of recruiters asking “do you have any positions I could work on”, they try a different angle; “with all the turmoil, top shelf candidates that wouldn’t even talk to me before will now entertain opportunities–with the talent available, this is the perfect time to top-grade your staff. If you have any marginal performers, let me show you a couple of alternatives–if they’re better, great, if not, you haven’t lost anything….” Second idea–I’ve always felt that good recruiters are salespeople wearing an HR hat, I’d suggest assisting with sales.

  • Frank Steele, Director of Recruiting, FirstGroup America


We are establishing a structured process that can be used at all of our locations in hiring and on-boarding. We are also looking to go to an on-line application system to ensure better hires coming in.

  • Steve Browne, Director of HR, LaRosa’s


Recruiters can help with lay offs – inform employees about resources (government, non-profit) available, research and provide training on employment or other new laws, turn into mini generalists with the people they’ve recruited-ask if they need help with benefits, etc, and work on retention, make sure other groups in the organization know what’s going on in the organization.
Always be as positive as possible.

  • Tom Pellegrino, HR Manager, Fecon


We’re using this time to finally get around to projects that have been on the back burner for far too long. For example, we’re currently working on updating (actually, OVERHAULING) our careers site. We’ll determine the content and format and then work with our internal Marketing and IT people to make the changes. We’re also building our pipeline of candidates for roles we know we generally hire into very often.

  • Laura Hennel Albert, Recruiter, Siemens PLM Software


It is not glamorous work, but vital to any organization is cash flow. There are many companies right now feeling the credit crunch and are Account Receivable is becoming an issue. I have volunteered to make ‘collection calls’. Recruiters are not afraid of the phone and if you have a significant amount of receivables outstanding there’s a great place to made an immediate impact on the bottom line.

  • Gregg Fitzgerald, Recruiter, Burke & Schindler

  1. Be prompt and accessible. Return calls and emails promptly. If a candidate or client takes time to seek me out, I value that by being prompt. No waiting for weeks to get a response.
  2. Be honest and trustworthy. In our uncertainty in society, I can guarantee with certainty that I will not misrepresent an opportunity or candidate. Building relationships is important in stable times, and is even more vital right now.
  3. Be resourceful – go the extra mile. Is my candidate thinking of relocating? If so, get them in touch with relo experts who can inform them about their new location. With my clients, following up after the placement, even long after the guarantee period has elapsed, can give us both feedback as to what we can do next time to improve the process.
  • Diana Heath, Recruiter, Wright Health Care Consultants


We are focusing our team on four initiatives:
On boarding – improving the new hire experience resulting in engaged, productive and informed employees
Pre-hire assessment tool – evaluating the value-add and effectiveness of a tool to better assess sales skills for retail hires
Redesign of Career section on website
Building candidate pipeline and implementing CRM tool
Refining Talent Acquisition Scorecard

  • Fran Gordon, SVP/Director of Talent Acquisition, Rabobank


Grow the business with new marketing techniques with social media and internet marketing techniques.

  • Amanda Blazo, Recruiter and Business Analyst, Sente Global


  1. Release our contract recruiters. I would deploy researchers/sourcers on business development activities. We gained access to our Sales Dept’s CRM, and then scanned those prospects that had weak or limited knowledge recorded in the database. We entered a full Company Profile – sort of like a D & B Plus workup, and at no cost to the organization.
  2. Researchers/Sourcers, working with the Senior Admin staff, can get a “heads up” on all planned executive travel that would be visiting customers or prospects. Once we know who they were meeting with, we create a “Personal Dossier” on each of the individuals, (including home addresses, photos, personal data, etc,), on each of them, put it in a packet, and give it to the traveling Exec. the day before departure, as “airplane reading”
  3. For the regular Recruiters, we created a Getronics Career University —- in essence a full outplacement program modeled after those offered by external vendors (at ridiculous prices). The recruiting staff would run workshops, on and off-site, such as Resume Writing, Interviewing Skills, Campaign Management, Negotiating Offers, Use of the internet, etc. Sometimes these were even run for employees before their release date. We also purchased the inexpensive services of a virtual Outplacement program that would stay active for the employees up to 3 mos after departure.
  • Dan Kilgore, Principal, Riviera Advisors Inc.(formerly of Gentronics)


Providing training classes for our Team Leaders, Directors or and staff member. One of these classes included the basics of interviewing which included a section on legalities. Basically questions that you can and cannot ask. In another class we focused more on “drilling down” with candidates when interviewing. In this class we included a section on Behavioral Interviewing.

Turn our knowledge around and provide outsourcing services. We could help people write resumes, provide interviewing training form a candidate standpoint, and help people research information on the Internet and so on.

We have provided help with students that will be graduating in June with resume writing, interviewing, etc. as well.

  • Chris Seidel, Human Resources/Recruiter, Hancock Regional Hospital


Recruiters can transfer skills to sales and customer service positions. Strong sourcers can assist in market/competitive intelligence. Recruiters can help sales organizations identify selling opportunities, key industry contacts, etc. Recruiters can also act as internal outplacement services for companies letting folks go and/or recruitment firms as a service.

  • David Szary, President, Recruiter Academy

Who is Responsible?

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009


In the last two weeks, I participated in discussions when this “age old” question popped up!

Please allow me to Rant a bit!
________________________________

Get a room of Hiring Managers, HR/Recruiting professionals, and sourcers together and you will get a lively debate going about “Whose Responsible?”

  • Who is responsible for Turnover of new hires?
  • Who is responsible for ’sourced’ candidates/leads that don’t get hired?

Regarding Turnover:

You ask Hiring Managers and many will “blame” it on poor candidate quality.

You ask Recruiters and they are likely to blame management for the ‘on boarding,’ (or lack of), process.

HR might blame shoddy assessment tactics by both parties!

Regarding ‘top’ candidates not getting hired:

Sourcers are likely to ‘blame’ recruiters that “can’t recruit and/or properly network with the leads provided.

Recruiters are likely to say, “…candidate was not a match and/or was not interested…”

At the end of the day; Who is responsible?

WE ALL ARE RESPONSIBLE!

WHO should be accountable?

WE ALL SHOULD BE ACCOUNTABLE!

Instead of “pointing fingers” and/or “passing the buck” – it is time for everyone involved to “take a check up from the neck up” and help identify solutions rather than excuses. As Les Brown says, “…you’re either on the way or in the way…” Are you part of the problem or part of the solution?

All too often we spend more time trying to define “who is responsible” or, who should “own” that metric rather than identifying solutions to the actual problem.

If the goal of the hiring/recruitment process is to “produce” top performers that are retained by your organization for a long period of time – then let’s work together towards that goal.

  • New Hires not performing? Let’s figure out why.
  • Quality new hires leaving within the first six months of employment? Let’s perform a Six Sigma project to isolate process errors and remove them.
  • Sourcing leads not getting hires – - Lets get the sourcing and recruitment teams together and fix the problem.
  • Who “owns” these metrics? — Who cares? All of us should take ownership.

I don’t want to get too philosophical on a Wednesday afternoon, but – - maybe this attitude among hiring managers, recruiters, HR & sourcers on this topic is the root of the problem with our economic situation.

Sure seems like there is more time spent trying to identify “Who is responsible,” and “Who is accountable,” rather than developing tangible, actionable solutions.

Moving forward, can we stop debating “Who is responsible” or should be held “Accountable”?

Rather, lets all take responsibility for identifying, engaging, hiring and retaining top performers.

End of story.

Do you have enough CIE time in your daily schedule?

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009


For those that know me, I am passionate about planning, time management, and continuous improvement. Of late, I have noticed that I haven’t been getting through my Perfect Day as crisply as I would like (or normally do).

The root cause is that I haven’t been planning in enough CIE time!

Rather than me managing my return calls, interruptions and emails (CIE’s), I have been letting them manage me!

Since I haven’t been allocating time into my daily schedule to get to them, I’m constantly in reactive, “firefighting” mode returning calls/emails and responding to interruptions “whenever I get time.”

Of course the end result is that these CIE’s are interrupting the time I have dedicated to getting work done!

If this sounds like you at times, some helpful advice that I have implemented into my daily routine:

  • Plan 1/2 hour (morning, lunchtime, late afternoon) 3x’s a day to deal with CIE’s.
  • When you have to get into a “work flow zone” (working on presentation, in an interview, etc.), drive your calls to voice mail and shut down email.
  • Publish your schedule with your teammates (post outside your cube/office – with a sign over it – - STOP – READ MY SCHEDULE BEFORE ENTERING) so people know when you are in a “work flow zone”.
  • Make sure your peers know that just because you’re not on the phone and/or in an interview, it doesn’t mean you are not working and CAN be interrupted. Posting your schedule + discussing this with your peers can help eliminate 80% of the interruptions that you actually can avoid (versus client calls, etc.).

Of course, all of these tactics take discipline – - the most important attribute to being productive and managing your day/week/year, etc.

I hope you have a Perfect Day and don’t let CIE’s get in your way!!

Thoughts from "The Changing Role of the Recruiter"

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

We interviewed numerous industry leaders to gather information for our presentation – “The Changing Role of the Recruiter.” I thought I would share some of their insight/comments that were not covered during the webinar (due to time)!

As always, we appreciate your comments, thoughts, opinions, perspectives! (email David Szary).

  • “50% of “outside” recruiters and 60% of “inside” recruiters will leave the industry during this economic downturn.”
  • “Everyone is focused on the 8% not employed versus the 92% that are employed!”
  • “Given the economic situation, the ‘perception’ is that it will be simple to ‘put the right person in the right chair.’”
  • “With requisition loads down, recruiters will be asked to do “more with less” while the # of applicants per position will increase dramatically.”
  • “We are connected more than ever but isolated (work remote/home) with less human interaction (more email, txt, etc.).”
  • “If 50-70% of positions are filled through referrals/networking (and 70% of job seekers claim they find employment through networking), how dominant can social networking sites be as recruitment tools?”
  • “We feel guilty when we actually find and hire a great candidate from a job posting! It is not in vogue!”
  • “The ‘Public at Large’ contain more information (uncontrolled – blogs, social network sites, internet) about your firm than your organization does.”
  • “Companies are thinking twice about ‘outsourcing’ recruiting!”
  • “Technology has enabled us to find/connect with people easier but doesn’t enable us to hire them any easier!”
  • “No ‘silver bullet’ in/to sourcing. Recruiting is like an 8-cylinder engine – firing on 4 or 5 just won’t cut it!”
  • “Don’t forget your ATS as a sourcing tool!”
  • “You don’t win the Super Bowl with ‘trick plays’ – sourcing ‘basics’ fill 80-90% of positions, Web 1.0 to fill 5-10%, Web 2.0 to fill 5-10% today.
  • “Unbundling of sourcing/recruitment services (name generation, candidate development) continues.”
  • “Most organizations are still building sourcing teams by “what is left in the budget” and/or ‘let’s crawl before we walk.’”
  • “Corporate recruiters are learning to become more like Project Managers.”
  • “Further specialization among recruiters.”
  • “Deeper sourcing strategy alignment between departments, sharing and creating economies of scale.”
  • “Next-generation CRM solutions with true ‘Contact Management’ features seamless integration with ATS and HRIS.”
  • “Building corporate ‘career portals’ directing candidates into ‘best fit roles’ instead of open requisitions.”
  • “One-on-one ‘niche based’ targeted marketing, viral marketing.”

Know what makes a great blog? Comments from readers. We really want to hear what you have to say. Your thoughts, ideas, comments. Agree? Disagree? Let us know. Other readers will appreciate your input and it will position you as a thought leader.

Relocation Rollercoaster

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Our wonderful economy has created stressful times for many folks. In order for some people to secure employment, relocation is necessary (providing they can sell their homes).

In a recent conversation I had with 2 individuals over lunch, I was reminded how stressful relocation can be even in positive career move situations (both of these folks were relocating for promotional opportunities with their respective firms).

Here are a few comments they made over a casual lunch.

  • “I’ve been traveling back and forth since June. Heavy since Oct. (every week).”
  • “I’m not going back home this weekend since my husband is home with the flu, and I have a weekends worth of work to do anyways!”
  • “I figured I would spend some time looking for temporary housing; a place I can store some items during the move.”
  • “Next Friday I have to put the house on the market; paint and clean out garage, etc. I would rather be working!”
  • “My husband needs to update his resume and start looking for a new job.”
  • “I got a call on Thursday afternoon; the Realtor locked the door after showing our house! My wife was locked out with our 6 year old and 8 month old! She was stuck at the neighbors until the Realtor made it back (2 hours later) to unlock the door. My wife told me I’d better be well rested because I would have kid duty all weekend; I’ve got to prepare for the new job…” “…I’ve been working 12 hour days just to prepare!”
  • “Next week I will be moving Monday-Wed; staying at my folk’s house in Florida from Thursday to Saturday; getting into rented condo on Monday with some of our stuff and storing the rest until we find a house. The house we wanted to buy we missed by 4 hours. I will be back in office for meetings on Thursday.”

A peer of mine shared the following story with me: She ran into a person she had recruited to her organization 10 months earlier. She had been hearing great things about this gentleman from his boss. His boss said he was assimilating well into the culture, doing a great job, etc.

When she mentioned to him how well she heard things were going . . . He commented:

“The job and company are great! It’s when I get home that is tough. We still haven’t sold our house. My daughter just started talking to me again last month. My wife is having a tough time adjusting including being home sick. The personal side of this move has been really, really tough.”

Changing jobs is one of the top 5 most stressful things humans do in their lifetime. Changing jobs and relocating in a difficult economy…? …WOW; much easier said than done!

With that said, if you and/or your organization recruit candidates that must relocate are you doing everything possible to make the process less stressful? Are you reaching out and asking how you can assist with the “personal side of the move”?

Doing any/everything you can to make the transition as smooth as possible makes all the difference in the world!

The "indirect, networking" call!

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

While technology and web 2.0 sourcing tools are making it easier to identify talented prospects the ROI on “indirect, networking” calls is at an all time high!

For anyone not familiar with “indirect networking;” it is the art of contacting, and networking with active job seekers who interface daily with the professionals you’re trying to hire.

Let me give you an example: We are currently searching for a Senior Accountant with manufacturing experience. Given the unemployment rate, skill set, etc. you would think this would be a pretty easy search. Well – it hasn’t been. We have tried numerous sourcing tactics (Web 1.0, Web 2.0, referrals, etc.), and have not found qualified candidates that meet our criteria.

As a result, we went online and harvested resumes of Controllers from manufacturing companies in the area; ideally, folks who were recently laid off or let go. The majority of these Controllers had accountants reporting up to them, either directly, or indirectly (reporting to an Accounting Manager).

I LOVE THESE CALLS!!!! Why??

First off, these folks are active seekers and are usually easier to reach.

Secondly, if they have recently left the company, they are more inclined to provide unbiased information, referrals, etc.

Most importantly- – these calls are fun and generate qualified prospects with a built-in referral source! There is very little outright rejection. You are asking for their help, networking with them, learning more about their previous organization(s) as well as the types of opportunities that interest them.

A call can go something like this:

    “Hi John. I am searching for a SR. Accountant with manufacturing experience. I found your resume on ________ and saw that you recently worked for _____ . I see that you had a team of 5 accountants reporting to you and thought you might be able to assist me in my search.

    This is an excellent opportunity for someone to interface with key executives performing analysis and auditing for three divisions that operate globally.

    Of the 5 folks that worked for you, do you think anyone of those folks would be qualified for this position? If so, I would sure like to talk to them about the opportunity…”

After they provide feedback, I would ask if I could use them as a referral source.

    “John – is it ok to mention I received their name from you?”

After I have harvested some qualified leads, I would return the favor and ask if there was anything I could do to assist them with their search.

    “John – we are not looking for a controller today but will keep your resume on file. Is there anything else I can assist you with in your job search . . .? “

Indirect, networking calls are low-tech, BUT, highly effective and fun.

Think of your current searches today and if this tactic might apply! Happy Recruiting!

"Changing People’s Lives"

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Are we forgetting what we do for a living?

Are we getting complacent and forgetting how we impact an organization? Have we forgotten the critical role we play in people’s lives every day?

Anyone that has recruited for any length of time has probably experienced a wonderful and gracious thank you from a candidate. We all know how amazing it feels when a candidate shares their sincere gratitude and deep appreciation for “changing their life” for the better.

Here are 10 things you should consider each and every day to ensure you are motivated with the proper mindset to have an “impact on people’s lives” as a recruiter.

  1. Every candidate is someone’s brother, sister, father or mother. Treat candidates like you would treat your own family.
  2. Do you recall that passive candidate you called some time ago who said they were not interested in your opening, but called you back a month later and got engaged, got hired and is grateful you called that day? You will make more of those calls today!
  3. Most people (candidates) don’t interview for a living. If you can provide constructive advice that may improve someone’s resume or interview skills, please do it; regardless if the position is with your firm/client or not. It’s the right thing to do!
  4. Be respectful of every person’s time. If you made a commitment to call at a scheduled time; then call at that time; Interview at 2 – - meet in lobby at 2!
  5. Everyone deserves feedback. Be respectful and return all calls/emails!
  6. “Be There” – - while it might be your 10th interview, it is the candidate’s first interview with you. Engage, focus and provide them 100% of your attention.
  7. Don’t let them see you sweat! Don’t wear your emotions on your sleeve. If you’re having a bad day leave it at the door and delight everyone you are in contact with each day.
  8. Remember, the majority of hiring managers want positions filled as much as you! Yes, hiring managers can be frustrating, but understand why they don’t like your candidate(s) and then be a true consultant and come up with a solution.
  9. Be interested, not interesting. Engaging with candidates, learning about what they do, and understanding how we can help them achieve their goals is the best part of this job!
  10. Before you start each day, remember; you can (and will) impact people’s lives. Today you have the opportunity to pick up the phone, engage in conversation with someone, schedule a meeting with your hiring manager and potentially make both parties very happy (a 2 for 1 day!).

Best & Worst advice for finding a new job!

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Last week it was announced that Michigan’s unemployment rate hit 10%! Most likely, that means most employed folks in Michigan know at least 1 person that is NOT employed!

Of course, this is creating very difficult and stressful times for many people.

With that said, there seems to be in increase of self-proclaimed “experts” providing career coaching/job search advice to those in need. While I sincerely trust that these individuals believe they are providing helpful guidance, the reality is that some of the information provided is counterproductive to finding a new career opportunity.

I am in the midst of writing a helpful “Do’s and Don’ts” guide to finding a new career, based on my 20 years of experience working with recruiters and candidates! I hope to have it completed within the next month.

While working on this project, I uncovered an article I wrote a couple of years back. While it may seem a little “edgy,” I thought it might be something worthwhile for you to share with anyone looking for employment.

In addition, if you have additional advice to candidates on this subject . . . please shoot me an email! I would love to add it to my guide!