The Missing Step in Hiring
It's often easy to be a critic. That presentation uses three different fonts and looks wonky. This candidate is missing the required experience on their resume. This sales email comes off pushy.
Put another way, we can often see clearly what's wrong with what we're doing. If hindsight is 20/20, our vision of what's in front of us is still pretty good. It's much harder to see what we're NOT doing - what's missing from a process.
This week, I was intrigued by a post by Marcus Edwardes of Recruiting Trailblazers, who hosted a great discussion with our own Stephanie Benesh, head of Recruiter.com's Talent Effectiveness group. Marcus suggested in his post that may be an entire step missing in the hiring process.
Maybe there's a step missing - one which could in fact serve both sides. (which btw, more and more great companies are starting to implement). A peer to peer conversation during which the Hiring Manager presents the role, the opportunity, the culture (mission, values, leadership style etc.), and the candidate gets to ask questions and really explore whether they would like to continue to the interview stage.
- Marcus Edwardes
Case in point - we are currently recruiting for a VP of Finance for my own company. We will likely receive hundreds of applicants for the position. We will also reach out to candidates proactively that look promising. This means that we will have one group that may have read a job description quickly and decided it looked good, and the other group may not know anything about our company at all.
Unless you are Google, most candidates aren't going to know much about you. And even if you are Google, people still don't know much about the practical realities of working at that particular job, because each team and manager have very different qualities.
Throughout the hiring process, candidates are working with an extremely limited set of data about jobs. This is hurting not only their own prospects but also the company's ability to recruit top talent.
Now fast forward to the interview. Imagine asking the candidate that very normal interview question - why do you want to work here? No matter what the candidate tells you, they are perhaps thinking - "I don't know, maybe I don't want to work here!" When candidates don't have the right information, you're going to get, at best, a series of white lies instead of an authentic dialog during the interview.
The candidate may just be thinking - "I don't know, maybe I don't want to work here!"
Now imagine an alternate process where you have true buy-in from the candidate prior to actual interviews - where the candidate has practical insights into the role and - gasp - is actually excited about jumping into the tasks and projects associated with the job. This would be a game-changer. It's a fantastic idea.
领英推荐
Adding to the need, we're going through a "Great Reevaluation" of sorts, where in-demand candidates have multiple opportunities available and are closely weighing everything from work-life balance to remote flexibility and career trajectory. Companies that value talent are finding creative ways to differentiate themselves to land exceptional applicants.
Getting buy-from the candidate early in the process is essential to attracting high-caliber talent. A pre-interview where the candidate learns about the role and company would be ideal. But the business objections to this added process are very real, such as:
Suffice to say, most companies just won't be implementing this pre-interview exploratory process, at least as a policy. So I asked myself the ways that we can achieve this buy-in without scheduling in-person discussions with every candidate prior to interview. Here are some ideas to get better job information into the hands of candidates earlier in the hiring process:
Getting candidates specific and robust information earlier in the hiring process can help companies land top talent. I'm listing seven ideas here. What are some ways you can think of to get better information to candidates faster?
Miles Jennings is the Founder and President of Recruiter.com, an on-demand recruiting platform solving hiring challenges for employers from startups to the Fortune 100. Learn more our hiring solutions today.
I reflect on my thoughts on a daily basis!
3 年With recruiting, one must be mindful of how to enhance the recruitment process, at the same time cut costs and save energy. I came across a website namely?www.hirevire.com, which not only optimises your recruitment process but also ensures most of your time is saved which can be used for other projects. It helps candidates record their introductory videos, while explaining themselves at a more deeper level than a traditional resume would ever could. You guys must try it, it works. I found the right talent from the pool of candidates.
IT Talent Acquisition
3 年Very much used information. Thanks for sharing
Dedicated to connecting businesses with the top 5% of IT and SWE talent.
3 年Great article, Miles!
bodacious brand communication | email nurture campaigns for recruitment, HR and service-based business folk | brand voice & writing guide
3 年Grrreat ideas!
Host of the Biz Podcast "Recruiting Trailblazers", Uncovering the Mindset, Methods, Magic of Top Recruiters.
3 年Very interesting and timely article Miles - and thanks for the mention. Really like your idea of recorded in-take calls and candidate pitch decks as a possible solution.