Great Movies for Recruiters

by Dave Nerz

filmWell, I thought it was an original idea. I wanted to create a list of great movies for recruiters to watch. I learned it has been done before! If you google “Best Movies for Recruiters”  you will see other lists created by people in the industry. There are some similarities, but a few different ones on my list. Maybe you want to create your own list?

 

  1. Jerry Maguire, starring Tom Cruise, Renee Zellweger
    If you ever had a demanding candidate or client, this one will resound with you. The little guy working against the big competitors is a theme in this movie. Some great energy shown by the “agent” to win over his client. We all remember the “Show me the Money” moment in this film!
  2. The Pursuit of Happyness, starring Will Smith
    A true story about motivation lifting someone out of really tough circumstances. Recruiters can relate to this if you ever had a really bad day, but just had to go on in spite of the odds. Click the link to see a really tough job interview and then an offer where the candidate has second thoughts about accepting the job he fought so hard to get!
  3. Tommy Boy, starring Chris Farley, David Spade
    Tommy is working hard to save his recently deceased father’s business. Tommy faces some really tough circumstances and much rejection. While this is not a model for great sales technique, it does show the power of persistence. As a recruiter, if your recruitment guarantee has ever been questioned, this scene might strike a note with you.
  4. The Intern, starring Robert De Niro, Anne Hathaway
    A very current movie that gives an interesting look at how interviewing for interns is a very age-biased process. Good message for us aging folks that we can have value to a new generation, but it requires give and take on both sides. Worth a watch.
  5. 12 Angry Men, starring too many greats to list…
    There are two versions of this movie and both are really good. One was from 1957 and the other in 1997. This is a great study in personality profiles. If you have ever put anyone through a DISC program, it might be good to try to map the styles of each of these jurors deciding the fate of the accused. Lots of themes are present for you to consider. I often picture the selection committee on proposed candidates to be a bit like this group. See if you agree…

Post your favorite selections or additions below and keep the ideas coming…

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Internal HR and Independent Recruiters: Causes of Friction

by Dave Nerz

man-couple-people-woman-large-300Talent acquisition is red hot in some markets right now. That means that even the best-intentioned and hardest-working internal HR manager/recruiter will find it difficult to keep up with the demands from hiring managers. As internal company recruiters require assistance from the outside, independent recruiters are a common way to supplement internal efforts. Every employer is different, but sometimes this relationship between internal staff and third-party recruiters can become uncomfortable, contentious, and even adversarial.

Here are some issues that cause friction and suggestions on how internal HR can create “the fix.”

Competition
It will often depend on the employer and the individual recruiters involved, but a search can turn into a competition. Each party is working to outperform the other and along the way creating opportunities for sabotaging the process.

The fix: Independents or third-party recruiters are often paid on a contingency basis. Make sure to give the independent recruiter credit for any action that leads to a hire. Yes, you had the candidate in your database, but you really had zero interest in the candidate until your third-party recruiter updated the candidate’s background and found they were willing to take a pay cut, move halfway across the world or some other condition internal HR had no insight to. Independent recruiters should be viewed as an extension of the internal HR department. They are selling your company to candidates and representing your brand in the marketplace. They want to be successful; let them help. Coach them to better performance; do not sabotage or create more difficult conditions for these folks that are attempting to help you reach a goal.

Urgency
It is not unusual for internal HR to maintain the easier openings to fill and offer the more difficult assignments to the independent recruiter. As this happens, there are limited resources that must be shared including time and access to the hiring manager. This causes an issue because the best candidates are highly sought after by many and reaction time is often critical.

The fix: Create benchmarks for performance. If a candidate is delivered, what is the agreed maximum response time allowed by internal HR? Pick a time and live with it. Hiring managers need to be held accountable for being accessible to recruiters whether the recruiter is internal or external. Hiring managers likewise need to respond in a maximum number of hours to requests for interviews, interview feedback, or details that will allow a candidate to make a yes decision. If these jobs are not urgent, then please tell your independent recruiter to “stand down” until a priority has once again been established. Nobody likes to hurry up and wait. Callbacks the same day or within a 24-hour window is a basis of most businesses. It is a basic requirement of being a good partner…make it happen.

Communication
It is at the root of most issues in business. Independent recruiters expect and deserve the basics of direct, accurate, and timely communication. Sometimes due to the detached relationship and compensation structure of independent resources called in to support internal HR and recruitment, the independent gets slow or less-than-accurate communication.

The fix:  When things change, think about who is representing your company in the marketplace. Often that is an independent recruiter. If the job is canceled, the project delayed, the funding canceled, your partner on the outside needs that info immediately. Return calls and emails as you would if it was a great candidate calling or emailing directly, because it very well may be a great candidate being represented by the independent recruiter you have partnered with.

Ego
Sometimes partners that should be supporting each other like to show that they are superior. It is more than just competition when this happens; there is a need to be dominant and have someone subservient to the power that one side can wield.

The fix: We are on the same team. One party may have a better degree or a regular paycheck from an “important” employer, but we are both just trying to do a good job and to help that important employer get the best talent available. Sometimes independents have great instincts honed from the experience of headhunting thousands of successful placements in a lifetime. Sometimes our advice on offers is meant to help you get what you want and need. You are not always right and we are not always wrong. We have different experiences, perspectives and points of view. The more you listen, the better informed you will be. We win when you win.

Obviously this is a very heavily weighted point of view on this subject, from the independent recruiter’s side of the transaction. I’m sure there are other ways to view these situations. Please feel free to correct the errors of my thinking.

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Best Jobs in 2016

by Dave Nerz

best-jobs-wordleI read with interest Glassdoor.com’s listing of the Best Jobs in America. Sometimes I think there is a direct relationship between the best jobs and the most highly recruited candidates. According to Glassdoor, what makes a job the best job is the combination of compensation,  demand for the skill, and advancement opportunities. Those in recruiting and HR know that hot job categories and in demand skills are multipliers when it comes to compensation. So the relationship between best jobs is in effect right now.

Here is the list of best jobs in 2016:

  1.  Data Scientist
  2.  Tax Manager
  3.  Solutions Architect
  4.  Engagement Manager
  5.  Mobile Developer
  6.  HR Manager
  7.  Physician Assistant
  8.  Product Manager
  9.  Software Engineer
  10.   Audit Manager
  11.   Analytics Manager
  12.   Software Development Manager
  13.   Product Marketing Manager
  14.   Marketing Manager
  15.   QA Manager
  16.   Finance Manager
  17.   Business Development Manager
  18.   UX Designer
  19.   Strategy Manager
  20.   Technical Account Manager
  21.   Consultant
  22.   Construction Superintendent
  23.   Nurse Practitioner
  24.   Electrical Engineer
  25.   Software Architect

Without exception I can say these are highly sought after candidates by the independent recruitment agencies in our network. Good-performing candidates in any of these professions can be easily placed by independent recruitment agencies into new and better jobs.

This is the list for the best jobs in the US. What are the hottest jobs in your market?

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Recruitment Fees and the Rule of Supply and Demand

by Dave Nerz

Profits

Do you all remember when fuel prices were skyrocketing? It really was not that long ago. Everyone raised their prices. Airlines started applying added fees to your ticket. Delivery charges went from $25 for local furniture companies to $50. Everyone was tuned into the hardships created by the rising costs. We choked down the increases and went on with our lives.

So has anyone heard of a company or service that has reversed those increases driven by high fuel costs? I don’t know about you, but I can now fill my car with fuel for the week for less than half of what it cost just two years ago. Are airlines offering those who booked tickets six months ago a $50 check when they board the flight? Is a company that does landscaping saying costs are down for one of the major components of variable costs and now you, the customer, will see a 10% decrease?

What the heck does any of this have to do with recruiting? Here is my point…we live in a world of supply and demand. It is difficult to raise prices, but easy to keep the increase for a longer than a deserved period of time once you make the effort to implement an increase. Check your invoices this month for surcharges driven by old news regarding fuel if you do not believe me.

Have you been filling jobs with ease in record numbers, or are you getting more difficult assignments for a very limited collection of candidates? Thinking that tough jobs with limited candidates to fill from describes a typical job now. Am I right? Guess what that means? Good recruiters are in demand…supply is low!

Now is the time. Charge what you are worth. Once you battle through the pain to  increase recruitment fees, you will reap the rewards for many months, perhaps even years after.

A word of caution…do not be that company that fails to pay attention and keeps surcharges well beyond the period they are appropriate. Adjust recruitment fees to market conditions…your services are in demand right now, so act accordingly.

Perhaps a surcharge is a way to make this more palatable to a client. “Wow, that is a tough job in a limited candidate pool. We charge a 5% premium for those types of positions. Or, this type of search requires an engagement fee of 25% of the fee up front.” Figure out a plan and a message that will work for you. No gouging or being unfair. Be realistic and strike a balance with regard to recruitment fees.

Not too long ago it was Valentine’s Day here in North America…maybe the customs are different around the world but a dozen red roses is considered a nice way to mark the occasion for your loved one. Guess what happens to prices for roses at this time of year? Yes, they double or triple in price. And red roses, a sign of love (in greatest demand), rise in price the most.

Convertible cars cost more to buy in the spring than at the end of the summer. Concert tickets cost more for popular groups or performers than those that are out of style (demand). Hotel rooms cost more on Friday and Saturday nights. A beachfront vacation rental home costs more in the summer than in the dead of winter. I could go on….

Supply and demand…think about how your recruitment fees are connected to the bigger economy and act accordingly.

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2016 Workplace Trends for Recruiters

by Dave Nerz

JA1HKXSB6M-300Below are six trends for recruiters to watch for this year:

Trend: Workplace Flexibility

Technology and expanding work hours are driving the need and employee expectations for greater options for when, how and where we all work. Employees are now working and available outside of traditional work hours and the average work day is expanding from 40 to 47 hours in North America. Employee work-life balance is more challenging and employees are now willing to switch employers to keep demands in balance.

Trend: Office Space and Design

As less companies are providing full office space for employees, some companies are using office space as a drawcard to attract employees. That is a strange one, no??? With features such as lounge areas and flexible work settings, you will find that some employees will want a more traditional work environment.

Trend: Boomerang Employees

“Boomerang Employees” are employees that leave a company, only to return later. As employees venture off to new assignments with new employers, they are sometimes disillusioned and return to prior employers where the fit was better. With job swapping becoming increasingly frequent, it is now much more common to accept back a staff member who has ventured out. Recruitment professionals need to consider the impact on searches. Don’t eliminate former employees from your search criteria.

Trend: Rising Benefits Cost

The cost of healthcare premiums is on the rise. The result causes companies to rethink taking on full-time employees. This may even lead to layoffs, and an increase in the use of freelance staff to minimize the cost of employing full time professionals. This represents an opportunity for recruitment agencies to position part-time contracted employees.

Trend: Generation Z in the Workplace

Graduates from tech-savvy Gen Z are entering the workplace. As witnesses to the global recession, these young professionals have realistic expectations, entrepreneurial approaches and flexible work attitude. Get ready for the impact! Professional recruiters should become savvy on generational differences.

Trend: Temp Assignments/Short-term Projects

Job roles are now looked at on a more short-term basis, as job-swapping has become increasingly common and accepted by employers and recruiters. Experienced professionals are often seeking a short term “gig” to suit their current needs. The freelance market is also growing, with more professionals offering their service ad hoc as opposed to a full time role. Variety and flexibility are valuable to this employee. Recruitment professionals need to ask about the desired duration as this may be counterintuitive.

What trends are you seeing?

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Headhunting is Back!

by Dave Nerz

vviftdjakyk-matthew-wiebe-300We are in the midst of a severe talent short market. Some predict it will last for years into the future. Even during the recent recession, the unemployment rate for those with four-year degrees and those with advanced degrees was not remarkably high. Today, some career segments, like IT, are at near full employment. Employers and the global recruiters supporting their search for talent are having a tough time finding qualified talent.

So what is this all about? Many employers use “talent shortage” as code for “the people I want at the price I want to pay are not available.” The market has changed and some employers are unwilling to recognize the result of these changes. It makes recruitment virtually impossible for some openings. I hear recruiters say, “I have 5 of these openings in the New York City area and they pay $63,000.” When the market is $75-$80K, this is a pointless search. All the more reason for employers to hire elite recruiters and ask them to properly define the position and market for that position before beginning a search.

There are options, but for more than a decade the level of corporate investment in development, education, and training has been nearly non-existent. Do you see training and development programs in place at the employers you know? Some of the market leaders and trend setters, like Google, Apple, and even oil companies, were investing before oil dropped to record lows. Many of these leaders have been seen abandoning training and development in favor of benefits, perks, signing bonuses and cool work cultures.

So we are in a zero-sum game. This means recruitment will change even more dramatically in the next few years. Headhunting as it is called will be back in vogue. No longer will there be a host of readily-available talent to be found on LinkedIn and other social sites. Finding candidates will require precision-based recruiting to engage, excite, extract and move a candidate from one great position to another.

If employers want to avoid being victim to the talent shortage that is upon us, they will need to pay market rates, hire the best recruiters, and create a desirable work environment with good managers, fair benefits, a positive culture and a healthy work-life balance. Become the job that employees want versus the one they want to leave!

Headhunters: have at those that do not respond…they are called “source employers” and will provide the talent for those employers that are more progressive and realistic.

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3 Great Questions Recruiters Should Ask

by Dave Nerz

coffee-meeting-300I recently attended the National Association of Personnel Services (NAPS360.org) conference in Boston. If you are a recruiter serious about your trade, you should belong to NAPS (your industry’s trade association). You can learn much from attending the conferences because there is considerable focus on training. It is some super content delivered by real recruiters!

Jeremy Sisemore was one of the presenters (www.asaptalentservices.com). I really liked his style, but even more importantly his content. One of the topics he covered was learning to take a good job brief. There is obviously an opportunity to do this well or to do this quickly. He shared how a great recruiter can do this well. Read the rest of this entry »


Stop Multitasking to Improve Recruitment Productivity

by Dave Nerz

multitasking-300Recruiters lead an interesting and often fast-paced work day. The recruiting life consists of phones, emails, ATS searches, LinkedIn profile checks, data entry, live conversations, and co-worker interruptions, just to name a few.

A recent article by Devora Zack, an author, consultant and coach (myonlyconnect.com), highlights a few of the myths we have failed to recognize for what they are. Zack says, “Multitasking is a myth. The brain is hard-wired to do one thing at a time. When we think we are multitasking we are actually engaged in what neuroscientists call ‘task switching’ – switching rapidly between tasks.” Read the rest of this entry »


Is Working with BountyJobs Like Working with a Client?

by Dave Nerz

cloud-speech-bubbleLet me start with the fact that I am not using BountyJobs. My thoughts on this subject are based on  what others tell me, what I read and the posts I have seen on the topic. So if I have something wrong or I am missing an important point of view, please add to the conversation. The point is for all to learn from those who know the most. Read the rest of this entry »


Attracting Global Talent

by Dave Nerz

global-communicationsAttracting global talent requires a new perspective. Employers must think about their marketplace for talent internationally rather than just locally. Based on the studies and reports from those that survey employers, many are experiencing difficulties finding qualified candidates for job openings. In fact 80% of employers reported difficulties filling openings in CareerBuilder’s Skills Gap Report. So perhaps now is the time for employers to expand their reach and seek candidates in other markets.

Getting started requires innovative efforts and new methods to connect with the talent that exists internationally. Here are a few things to consider:

  • Connect where the candidates are. Do research to find out what organizations and communities exist and are attractive to the types of candidates you desire. Connect to schools that are graduating degreed individuals that you desire. For example, international engineering schools or medical programs. Are there local communities like “Engineers Australia” or “Philippine Nurses” that are hot beds of discussion and offer an opportunity to attract and connect with future candidates?
  • Get social. Start a LinkedIn Group or Facebook page to attract the types of international candidates you want to engage.
  • Join social discussions. Place your organization into the social dialog. Get active, offer insight, contribute to the conversation.
  • Schedule interviews. It is virtually free to interview. Set aside some time early or late in a day each week to entertain international candidate interviews via Skype or some other distance connecting tool.
  • Speak or do webinars that will draw the global talent audience you seek to engage.
  • Find partners. Look to establish a connection to an international recruiter or a collection of global recruiters.

Distance is no longer the reason blocking access to global talent. Technology has enabled connections to anyone virtually anywhere. Leverage the tools out there to connect.

Anyone have a favorite tool for connecting with global candidates they want share with us? LinkedIn and Skype are my “go to” tools!

Image courtesy of siraphat / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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