Article Link: https://www.thebalancecareers.com/top-tips-for-successful-employee-recruiting-1918953
By: Susan M. Heathfield
Finding the best possible people who can fit within your culture and contribute to your organization is a challenge and an opportunity. Keeping the best people, once you find them, is easy if you do the right things right. The ideas provided will help you with successful employee recruitment.
These specific actions will help you with recruiting and retaining all of the employee talents that you need. These ten practices will serve you well when recruiting employees.
Companies that select new employees from the candidates who walk in their door or answer an ad in the paper or online are missing the best candidates. They’re usually working for someone else and they may not even be looking for a new position. Here are the steps to take to improve your candidate pool.
The key is to build your candidate pool before you need it. These ten practices will serve you well when recruiting employees.
The authors of “The Human Capital Edge,” Bruce N. Pfau and Ira T. Kay, are convinced that you should hire a person who has done this “exact job, in this exact industry, in this particular business climate, from a company with a very similar culture.”
They believe that “past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior” and suggest that this is the strategy that will enable you to hire winners. They say that you must hire the candidates whom you believe can hit the ground running in your company. You can’t afford the time to train a possibly successful candidate.
Providing promotional and lateral opportunities for current employees positively boosts morale and makes your current staff members feel their talents, capabilities, and accomplishments are appreciated. Always post positions internally first.
Give potential candidates an interview. It’s a chance for you to know them better. They learn more about the goals and needs of the organization. Sometimes, a good fit is found between your needs and theirs.
Pfau and Kay make a strong case for not just being a great employer but letting people know that you are a great employer. This is how you build your reputation and your company brand. You’ll want the best prospects seeking you out because they respect and want to work for your brand. Google, who frequently tops “Fortune’s Best Companies” list, for example, receives over 2,000,000 applications a year according to sources in the popular business press.
Take a look at your employee practices for retention, motivation, accountability, reward, recognition, flexibility in work-life balance, promotion, and involvement. These are your key areas for becoming an employer of choice.
You want your employees bragging that your organization is a great place to work. People will believe your employees before they believe what you write in the corporate literature or on your recruiting website.
You have three opportunities to involve your employees in the hiring process
Organizations that fail to use employees to assess potential employees are underutilizing one of their most important assets. People who participate in the selection process are committed to helping the new employee succeed. It can’t get any better than that for you and the new employee.
Yes, you do get what you pay for in the job market. Survey your local job market and take a hard look at the compensation people in your industry attract. You want to pay better than average to attract and keep the best candidates. Seems obvious, doesn’t it?
It’s not. You can listen to employers every day who talk about how to get employees cheaply. It’s a bad practice. Did you hear, “You do get what you pay for in the job market?” Sure, you can luck out and attract a person who has golden handcuffs because they are following their spouse to a new community or need your benefits.
But, they will resent their pay scale, feel unappreciated, and leave you for their first good job offer. Employee replacement costs can range from two to three times the person’s annual salary. You do get what you are willing to pay for in the job market.
Keep your benefits above industry standard and add new benefits as you can afford to add them. You also need to educate employees about the cost and value of their benefits so they appreciate how well you are looking out for their needs.
Employees treasure flexibility and the opportunity to balance work with other life responsibilities, interests, and issues. You can’t be an employer of choice without a good benefits package that includes standard benefits such as medical insurance, retirement, and dental insurance.
Employees are increasingly looking for cafeteria-style benefits plans in which they can balance their choices with those of a working spouse or partner. Pfau and Kay recommend stock and ownership opportunities for every level of employees in your organization. Consider profit-sharing plans and bonuses that pay the employee for measurable achievements and contributions.
In their book, “First Break All the Rules: What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently,” Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman recommend that great managers hire for talent. They believe that successful managers believe:
“People don’t change that much. Don’t waste time trying to put in what was left out. Try to draw out what was left in. That is hard enough.”
If you’re looking for someone who will work well with people, you need to hire an individual who has the talent of working well with people. You’re unlikely to train missing talents into the person later. You can try, but then, you are not building on the employee’s strengths which 80,000 managers, via Gallup’s research, highly recommended.
The recommendation? Hire for strengths; don’t expect to develop weak areas of performance, habits, and talents. Build on what is great about your new employee in the first place.
Your website portrays your vision, mission, values, goals, and products. It is also effective for recruiting employees who experience a resonance with what you state on your site. Your website should provide insight into the culture and work environment that you offer for employees.
You do want to create an employment section which describes your available positions and contains information about you and why an interested person might want to contact your company. A recruiting website is your opportunity to shine and a highly effective way to attract candidates.
The purpose of this section is to keep you out of trouble with the candidates you are seeking and selecting and the employees you currently employ. You really need to check references carefully and do background checks.
In the litigious society in which we live (don’t even ask what percentage of the world’s lawyers reside in the United States), you need to pursue every avenue to assure that the people you hire can do the job, contribute to your growth and development, and have no past transgressions which might endanger your current workforce.
In fact, you might be liable if you failed to do a background check on a person who then attacked another employee in your workplace.
Warning: Each organization has to start somewhere to improve recruiting, hiring, and retention of valued employees. The tactics and opportunities detailed here are your best bets for recruiting the best employees. These ideas can help your organization succeed and grow, they create a workplace that will meet both your needs and the needs of your potential and current superior employees.
Professional Recruiter Associates