1 / 19

Recruiting

Recruiting. The Purpose of Recruiting. Recruiting as a marketing function Product Price Place Promotion. Employer. Prospective Employee. Employer. Prospective Employee. Approaching Recruiting. Two functions Attracting applicants Screening applicants An alternate perspective:

kass
Download Presentation

Recruiting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Recruiting

  2. The Purpose of Recruiting • Recruiting as a marketing function • Product • Price • Place • Promotion MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  3. Employer Prospective Employee Employer Prospective Employee Approaching Recruiting • Two functions • Attracting applicants • Screening applicants • An alternate perspective: • Prospecting • Mating MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  4. Also…. • It’s important to remember…..are the desirable applicants looking for a job? • So, make sure you can access passive job seekers • The recruitment process is the first step in the selection process – recruit the kind of people you want to hire ! MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  5. Some Examples • Jobs at UPS: Recruiting the part-time worker • Registered Nurse: This ad emphasizes patient care and professional development • Registered Pharmacist: The writers here didn’t overlook anything! MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  6. Recruiting Issues • In-house vs. external agency • Cost • Expertise and knowledge of sources • Control • Image • Centralized vs. decentralized recruiting • Centralized recruiting often more efficient • Don’t want different areas to be in competition • However, operating managers have better knowledge of their needs and possible sources Source: Martinez, 2002 MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  7. Your Labor Market • That is, what is your pool of potential applicants? • Geography • Can be as narrow as walking distance or national / global • Skills, licensing, certification • Return to an earlier issue – hire for skills or for attitude? • Industry • Union membership (not too often, any more) MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  8. General Principles of Recruiting • You are the most important factor in filling the job • Company image, location, hours, etc. -- just an excuse • Stay in control • Be flexible, but you are in charge of the process • Put the company and job on a pedestal • Make it appear to be desirable and hard to get • Perceptions are everything…but can be changed • Control the negatives • Turn into positives….is a firefighter’s job dangerousor exciting? • Fulfill applicant’s needs…first, you have to find out what they want • Set standards high…and keep them high Source: Doverspike & Tuel, 2000 MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  9. Spreading the Message • Basically a marketing problem • Who are you trying to reach? • Message placement • Message content • Message format • What can you afford ? • But, it’s important to evaluate cost / benefit ratio of recruitment methods • Cost per applicant / cost per hire / cost per successful employee • Time to fill position (from standpoint of organization and prospective employee) MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  10. Recruiting Costs • Advertising • Agency / search firm fees • Referral bonuses to current employees • Travel costs (recruiter, recruitee or both) • Relocation costs • Recruiter cost • Miscellaneous costs • Testing • Reference checking • Medical exams, drug tests Exempt = $12K Non-Exempt = $1K MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  11. Some Inexpensive Methods • Unsolicited applicants • No screening • May be time-consuming to deal with • Many organizations will accept applications only for open positions • Employee referrals • Some screening by current employee • Recruits will be similar to current employees (this may be good or bad) • Applicants are somewhat familiar with organization • Cash bonuses for successful new hires (there are arguments for paying up-front or after employee hired) MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  12. Advertising • Price will vary • Can be very closely targeted (response coding) • Possibilities: • Local newspapers (not just Help Wanted pages) • Multiple local newspapers • National publications (Wall Street Journal, USA Today) • Student newspapers • Professional / trade journals and magazines MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  13. School Placement • Best for entry-level jobs • Alumni associations may be a source for experienced applicants • Selecting the right schools to recruit at • Location • Programs offered • Quality of school MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  14. Employment Agencies and Executive Search Firms • Public • Private: • Higher level / specialty positions where there is little inside expertise • Confidentiality often a key issue • Fee may be contingent or up-front • Select a reputable agency or headhunter • Feedback to agency very important MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  15. Miscellaneous Sources • Professional association meetings • Labor unions • Job fairs • Centralized location • Practical when there are many jobs to fill • Often involves cooperation among area employers • Community agencies and organizations • Individuals with disabilities • Welfare-to-work programs • Church programs • Youth service organizations (esp. for seasonal employees) • Immigrants (high-tech, entry-level) • Telephone hot lines MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  16. High-Tech Recruiting • Locations • Your own web site • Job boards (i.e., Monster.com) • E-mail lists • In-facility kiosks (retail) • The focus can be very general or closely targeted • Applicants probably computer-literate (though internet recruiting no longer limited to high-tech jobs) • There’s a downside, though….. MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  17. Internal Recruiting • How does it work? • Job opening posted (once paper, more often now now on-line) • Individuals express interest • Candidates assessed • Position filled MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  18. Internal Selection: Pro & Con Pro • Opportunities for employees / reward loyalty • Employee perceptions of fairness • Hidden talent may emerge • Can fill jobs quickly Con • Managers’ reluctance to let good employees go • “Passing the trash” • Inbreeding • Competition among employees • Employee distrust of perceived rigged system MGMT 412 | Recruitment

  19. Making It Work • Employee development essential • Feedback • If employee not chosen, needs to know why and how to prepare • Not something done with external hires MGMT 412 | Recruitment

More Related