Category Archives: Attraction

All these small things – how a phone call can make the difference between hiring and losing top talent

I really liked the idea behind the movie’ Sliding Doors’. How one small event could dramatically change the course of your life.

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For me, that could have been a phone call (or an email) which, if it had come just a little sooner, could have resulted in me taking one job offer and turning down another.

Before accepting my current role I explored some options with the big four consultancy firms. They’re unusual in the recruitment world in that they’re all pretty homogeneous, they’re all going after the same people and they all have near-identical structures and grades, so it’s very easy to compare like with like.

Their respective brands and employment propositions are really the only things they can use to differentiate themselves – the work is, essentially, the same.

If you’re involved in the operation of your organisation’s recruitment function, I’d like to offer my own experience with three of these firms as a reminder from the front line as to how important the small details can be in you successfully attracting talent; or losing it by a whisker.

When I started my job search I thought these firms represented the pinnacle of the consulting profession and that’s where I wanted to work. One of them felt they could somehow struggle on without me, but I successfully engaged with three others (all direct with the firms through network connections, not through agencies).

That’s when it became apparent that they run very similar recruitment operations – but deliver very different experiences.

Each assigns a Recruitment Manager to liaise with the candidate through a multi-stage selection process. One made a really strong impression: very personable, interested in me, always kept me updated, shared useful information about the next stage, always called back when she said she would, etc. One did OK, but wasn’t quite as on the ball, and one was appalling – uncontactable, repeatedly failing to honour call backs, letting the process slip by weeks at a time.

Ironically, the worst relationship manager worked at the firm I was most engaged with originally. I had been interested in their work and bought into their brand for the last ten years! I also had the strongest network connection here – a hiring manager I had known for over two years. Unfortunately, they managed to undo all that goodwill in a very short space of time. I was onto my third Recruitment Manager by the end of the process (the other two having left – one within two months of starting!) The experience was abysmal. Interview feedback by text message and poor excuses relayed from senior managers as to why the process was taking so long. It quickly became clear that if this was how they ran their recruitment operation, this was not somewhere I would enjoy working.

Unfortunately, despite my hugely positive experience at one of the other firms, I decided to withdraw from their process. It became clear at the first interview that they wanted global mobility and this was not something I could commit to, so withdrawing seemed like the right thing to do. Although I am left with a very positive impression of the firm, having started from a neutral base. In fact, I was so impressed, I think this firm deserves recognition for running such a well managed process (albeit my research is from a sample of one) – hats off to EY!

Things did progress very positively with the third firm, though. They did a very good job of moving things along, keeping me updated and building my engagement with the firm and the role.

At the same time, I started in the selection process for my current role. The person managing this process also did a great job of keeping things moving and keeping me engaged. I got to the point of waiting on confirming final interviews for both opportunities at about the same time.

The consultancy firm took a few days longer to schedule the final interview – despite me pushing them along a bit because, ideally, I wanted to conclude this process before the other one.

In that few days the manager of my new opportunity conducted the final interview, came back with an offer and concluded negotiations before the consultancy firm could confirm a final interview date. That manager is now my boss!

One process started in January, the other one in February and it all came down to about 72 hours in April. My impression was that the Recruitment Manager and the Scheduling Team were chasing Partners for availability to book the final interview. If they chased a bit harder or the Partners had prioritised returning the call or responding to the email a bit higher, who knows if their investment in putting me through their selection process would have paid off for them?

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The point is that sometimes I think in-house recruiters lack an appreciation of the urgency with which you need to move to hire the best talent. I’m not saying I’m the world’s greatest to fill the role at the consultancy firm, but they’d invested a fair amount of resource in getting me round the course and then fell at the final hurdle – never giving themselves the chance to see if they could hook me at the final step.  All because someone couldn’t confirm an Outlook appointment within a few days of receiving it. If it was a request from a client would it have taken so long to respond?

If we have pivotal roles, that it’s hard to find talent to fill, we must impress – on everyone involved in the hiring process – that every hour counts. That person is probably pursuing more than just your vacancy – do you want the competition to nab them, or do you want to make sure that you’ve got first dibs on persuading them to come and join you?

 

Is your careers site responsive to mobile devices?

Responsive infographic

Mission critical – the case for an integrated EVP

Imagine your company is a planet, populated by your workforce. And I am one of billions of inter-planetary space travellers looking for a planet to settle on and work.

Your planet is broadcasting signals, sending people into space and establishing satellite outposts to try and persuade other travellers to trade with it, or come and settle.

I pick up some of your broadcasts, speak to some of your people – or other travellers who’ve visited or traded with your planet – and form a favourable impression of your planet (brand). I move into orbit and notice that some of your signals are appealing to me to come and work on your planet (talent brand).

I decide to enter your atmosphere. My journey to your planet could be quick and smooth (my recruitment experience); or it could be bumpy and take ages – to the point that I might have second thoughts, fire my rocket boosters and go to explore other planets instead.

If I do land on your planet, I am greeted by a welcoming committee (onboarding experience). Then I am sent to work on part of your planet. I might move around a bit to different areas and do different things with a variety of your citizens (work experience).

At some point you are either going to ask me to leave if you no longer need my skills and expertise, banish me for doing something wrong or failing to perform, or I’m going to pick up signals from another planet that seems more appealing and decide to blast off (leaving experience).

As I travel through space I will tell the people I meet about your planet, or I may even start broadcasting my own signals about my experience.

In short, my experience of your world has been coloured by everything from those first signals I picked up to how you dealt with me when I was leaving.

Now let’s consider who and what is responsible for my impression along each step of my journey:

Brand Marketing, advertising, PR, websites, branches, employees, former employees, customers and former customers
Talent Brand HR, recruiters, careers website, recruitment advertising, employees and former employees, social media, word of mouth, etc
Recruitment experience Careers website, HR, social media presence, job boards, employee referrals, recruitment agencies, outsourced providers, university careers offices, etc
Onboarding experience HR, L&D, line manager, colleagues, intranet, senior leaders, IT/facilities, etc
Work experience Line manager, colleagues, functional/department head, HR, L&D, senior leaders, Finance, IT/Facilities, internal communications,
Leaving experience Line manager, colleagues, HR, PR/news.social media

 

All of these elements contribute to the employee lifecycle experience, but there is no single owner of the experience who can manage it all. In fact, in my experience, different stakeholders in the employee lifecycle provide employees with very different – even contradictory – experiences. These range from the original promises made to candidates versus the actual work experience; to the official ‘corporate’ induction process versus the line manager’s induction process.

Therefore, to manage and control the process as effectively as possible – to stand the best chance of creating a long-lasting and positive experience for both the organisation and the employee – doesn’t it make sense for each stakeholder to draw on a common, underlying employment value proposition?

If such a thing were to exist in the organisation, and all the stakeholders attempted to create an experience for employees based on its principles, then greater alignment would exist between the promise makers (branding and recruitment efforts) and the promise keepers (HR, line managers and fellow employees).