Applicant Woes
A personal acquaintance of mine recently applied for the same job with four different competing companies. All four companies have these jobs listed as accepting applications on their website. The results over the first week were: Company 1) Phone call requesting an in-person interview. Company 2) Radio silence. Company 3) Electronic notification that the resume is in the system, and you will need to log in for ongoing status updates. Company 4) Radio silence.
After the second week the results were: Company 1) In-person interview completed and possibly two branches are interested to move forward. Company 2) After using a direct email follow up tactic (to someone they haven’t met but research indicated was involved with hiring), they received a reply email indicating they are not moving forward due to being short staffed. Company 3) No status change. Company 4) After using a LinkedIn connect + note tactic to a hiring manager to point out a broken hyperlink on the company’s website, they received a reply in LinkedIn acknowledging the broken link but nothing about the part of their message that they recently applied for an open job.
I’ve had multiple conversations with this person over the past two weeks. Here’s what I’ve heard, with strong opinion.
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I postulate Company 1 has a culture of accountability and follows policy & procedure to maximize first impression and brand consistency. If Company 1 hires this person, they will be elated and most likely refer people they know to apply too. If Company 1 decides not to move forward, the residual mindshare will be positive. It will resonate with something like, “I almost got hired and hope they consider me down the road”. The ripple affect effect anytime the company comes up in future conversation will be brand endorsement. The other three companies will receive varying degrees of poor impression with something like, “I wouldn’t work there. Don’t waste your time applying. You should apply to Company 1 instead.”
My latest recollection on how many people share negative experiences with others compared to positive experiences is double. On average someone shares the positive event six times and the negative event 13 times. Finding high-performing talent is already difficult. If you are not behaving like Company 1, review your hiring process and find opportunities to bridge the communication gaps that lead to an excellent candidate experience.
Retained Executive Search
8 个月This article reveals information about fake job postings. https://www.dhirubhai.net/posts/ondeck-recruiting_39-of-hiring-managers-report-fake-job-listings-activity-7211506443479392256-DKpd?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop
Customer Support Manager-South Region | Masters Degree in Leadership and Organizational Development
9 个月Well said! The negative impressions will last and be retold. As well as the positive impressions.