Recruiting in good times and bad
In this age of hiring freezes and inflation angst, what lessons can we learn from the recent past? This week we dust off the history books to help you refactor and improve your hiring processes for the rocky road ahead.
Lessons from the 2008 crash (and others)
Now that we’re facing the first once-in-a-lifetime recession since… the last once-in-a-lifetime recession… we thought we’d explore how hiring teams successfully (and unsuccessfully) dealt with the ups and downs of economic turbulence in the noughties.
It’s worth revisiting this Harvard Business Review article written in the wake of the 2008-09 crash, titled ‘The definitive guide to recruiting in good times and bad’. While today’s challenges may seem unprecedented, in many ways we’ve been here before.
Those with long memories with remember the dotcom bubble crash of 2000, and as the article reminds us, there were many significant crises at the start of the millennium:
“The economy was in recession, and struggling firms retained only their strongest people,” the article explains. “But even before things turned a corner in 2003, the smarter and abler companies – having cleaned house and discovered what was missing from their talent pools – took advantage of the buyer’s market and began staffing for the future. By June 2003, the war for talent was on again in full force, and companies hired aggressively until the economy went into a tailspin in 2008. History will again repeat itself.”
The piece makes the case against “haphazard” hiring methods that could be lifted straight out of this decade: “Most companies react to hiring situations as emergencies; that might explain why so many do it so poorly.”?
So what does a proactive approach to hiring look like? The article outlines an “end-to-end set of best practices” (see visual below) which demonstrates “the relationship between recruiting and long-term corporate performance”.
While every recession has its own particular facts on the ground, the closer you look at the lessons from history, the more familiar the story feels. Or as a certain Edmund Burke (possibly) said: “Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.”
New DigitalOcean Currents report
So, what’s the state of play in today’s hiring market for tech companies? The 2022 Currents report from DigitalOcean has landed, and gives a snapshot of the challenges faced by developers, and those looking to recruit them.
One of the main themes is the “developer talent shortage, motivated largely by compensation and a desire for remote work”. The graph below illuminates some of the main motivations of job switchers:
Here is how the report describes some of the findings:
Over a quarter of developers who have been in the workforce for over a year started a new job in the past year, with developers at enterprises and startups changing jobs in roughly equal numbers. Additionally, 42% of those who haven’t left their jobs yet are considering or may consider leaving their current jobs this year. Both those who have already left and those considering leaving jobs are motivated by two main factors: Compensation and fully remote or flexible work environments. With an ongoing rise in inflation and the continuing COVID-19 pandemic, it’s clear companies need to offer high pay and work flexibility to retain developers.
And if you needed any further convincing:
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Latest U.S. jobs report
The latest U.S. jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicates a hiring market that’s tighter than a spandex catsuit.
On the one hand, the 528,000 jobs added to the market in July was more than double the expected 250,000, which Sam Ro in his blog update describes as “almost unbelievable”.
But while rising employment is of course a positive, the report also shed light on stretched supply chains and inflationary pressures. As Sam Ro writes:
“The tight labor market has also made recruiting and retaining workers an incredible challenge for employers, which are responding by rapidly raising wages.”
At this stage, what can we say other than buckle up and enjoy the ride?
Tesla builds its own recruiting software
Finally, The Information reports that Tesla has developed its own “proprietary software” and “internal talent-related technology” to transform its recruiting ambitions. Back in June, CEO Elon Musk announced that the electric vehicle maker could cut salaried jobs by 10%, so it will be fascinating to see whether Tesla’s pivot to internal recruiting catches on. For that matter, check out our new blog on internal hiring.
Recruiting fail
There’s nothing wrong with hard work, but writing a job ad that makes a role sound like 24 hours on a hamster wheel isn’t the way to turn heads in a competitive market.
P.S. The candidate’s suspicions were confirmed on Glassdoor:
Goodbye for now
That’s all, folks. We’ll be back next week with more recruiting tips galore. Share the love and see you next time!
AI Solution Architect & Founder at Softblues/Recomengine | Building AI Ecommerce Solutions | Multi-Agent AI Architecture
2 年Nasser, thanks for sharing!