Recruitment
Recruitment refers to the
process of attracting, screening, selecting, and onboarding a qualified person
for a job.
At the strategic level it may involve the development of an employer
brand which includes an "employee offering".
The stages of
the recruitment process include: job analysis and developing some person
specification; the sourcing of candidates by networking,
advertising,
or other search methods; matching candidates to job requirements and screening
individuals using testing (skills or personality assessment); assessment of
candidates' motivations and their fit with organizational requirements by
interviewing and other assessment techniques. The recruitment process also
includes the making and finalizing of job offers and the induction and onboarding
of new employees.[1]
Depending on
the size and culture of the organization, recruitment may be undertaken
in-house by managers, human resource generalists and/or recruitment
specialists. Alternatively, parts of the process may be undertaken by either
public-sector employment agencies, commercial recruitment agencies, or
specialist search consultancies.
Contents
[hide]
- 1 Internal
recruitment
- 2 Recruitment
process
- 3 Recruitment
approaches
- 3.1 In-house
recruitment
- 3.2 Outsourcing
- 3.3 On-Campus
Recruiting
- 3.4 Employment
agencies
- 3.5
Executive search firms or headhunters
- 3.6
Internet recruitment services
- 4
Strategic Talent Acquisition
- 5 See also
- 6 Recruiting
Companies
- 7 References
Internal
recruitment[edit]
Internal
Recruitment refers to the process of a candidate being recruited within their
current workplace, from another team or division of the same organization. An
advantage of this can be that the organization already knows the employee,
their competencies (insofar as they are
revealed in their current job) and their trustworthiness. It can also be
quicker and lower cost to hire someone from another part of the same
organization.[2]
A temporary
internal recruitment for a period of a few months, after which the employee
would normally be expected to return to their previous job, is known as a secondment;
someone on a secondment is said to be seconded to the new team.
Secondments may also take place between related organizations.
Recruitment
process[edit]
Job analysis[edit]
In situations
where one or more new jobs are to be created and recruited to for the first
time, a job
analysis and/or in some cases a task
analysis might be undertaken to document the actual and intended
requirements of the job. From these the relevant information is captured in
such documents as job descriptions and job specifications. Often a
company will already have job descriptions that represent a historical
collection of tasks performed. Where already drawn up, these documents need to
be reviewed or updated to reflect present day requirements. Prior to initiating
the recruitment stages a person specification should be finalized to
provide the recruiters commissioned with the requirements and objectives of the
project.[1]
Sourcing[edit]
Sourcing is the use of one or more strategies
to attract or identify candidates to fill job vacancies. It may involve
internal and/or external advertising, using appropriate media, such as local or
national newspapers, specialist recruitment media, professional publications,
window advertisements, job centers, or in a variety of ways via the internet.
Alternatively, employers may use recruitment consultancies or agencies to find otherwise scarce candidates who
may be content in their current positions and are not actively looking to move
companies. This initial research for so-called passive candidates, also called
name generation, results in a contact information of potential candidates who
can then be contacted discreetly to be screened and approached.[1]
Screening and
selection[edit]
Suitability for
a job
is typically assessed by looking for relevant skills, knowledge, aptitude, qualifications and educational
or job related experience. These can be determined via: screening
résumés
(also known as CVs); job applications; interviews.
More proactive identification methods include performance assessments, psychological, aptitude, numeracy, physical
and literacy
testing. Many recruiters and agencies use applicant tracking systems to perform the
filtering process, along with software tools for psychometric testing and performance based
assessment.[3]
Performance based assessment is a process to find out if job applicants perform
the responsibilities for which they are applying. [4] In
many countries, employers are legally mandated to ensure their screening and
selection processes meet equal
opportunity and ethical standards.[1]
In addition to
the above selection assessment criteria, employers are likely to recognize the
value of candidates who encompass "soft skills" such as interpersonal
or team leadership, and have the ability to reinforce the company brand through
behavior and attitude portrayal to customers and suppliers. Multinational
organizations and those that recruit from a range of nationalities are also
concerned candidates will fit into the prevailing company culture.[5]
A British Armed Forces recruitment centre in Oxford.
Lateral hiring[edit]
"Lateral
hiring" refers to a form of recruiting; the term is used with two
different, almost opposite meanings. In one meaning, the hiring organization
targets employees of another, similar organization, possibly luring them with a
better salary and the promise of better career opportunities. An example is the
recruiting of a partner of a law firm by another law firm. The new lateral hire then
has specific applicable expertise and can make a running start in the new job.
In some professional branches such lateral hiring was traditionally frowned
upon, but the practice has become increasingly more common. An employee's
contract may have a non-compete clause preventing such lateral
hiring.
In another
meaning, a lateral hire is a newly hired employee with no prior specific
applicable expertise for the new job, and for whom a job move is a radical
change of career. An example is the recruiting of a university professor to become chairman of the
board of a company.
Onboarding[edit]
For more details on this topic, see onboarding.
"Onboarding"
is a term which describes the process of helping new employees become
productive members of an organization. A well-planned introduction helps new
employees become fully operational quickly and is often integrated with a new
company and environment. On-boarding is included in the recruitment process for
retention purposes. Various companies have on-boarding campaigns in hopes to
retain top talent that are new to the company; campaigns may last anywhere from
1 week to 6 months.
Recruitment
approaches[edit]
There are a
variety of recruitment approaches and most organizations will utilize a
combination of two or more of these as part of a recruitment exercise or to
deliver their overall recruitment strategy. There are five common models:
- A in-house or human resources
personnel may in some case still conduct all stages of the recruitment
process. In smaller organizations, recruitment may be done by individual
managers or recruiters. More frequently, whilst managing the overall
recruitment exercise and the decision-making at the final stages of the
selection process, external service providers may undertake the more
specialized aspects of the recruitment process.
- Social Media Recruitment is the
new trend which can implement in the current recruitment process. Social
media helps to drive passive candidates and indirectly helps to create
brand awareness about the company. A few tools commonly used by social
media recruiters are LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, Google+, etc.
- Outsourcing of recruitment to an
external provider may be the solution for some small businesses and at times
for large organizations.
- Employment agencies are established as both
publicly funded services and as commercial private sector operations.
Services may support permanent, temporary, or casual worker recruitment.
They may be generic agencies that deal with providing unskilled workers
through to highly skilled managerial or technical staff or so-called niche
agencies that specialize in a particular industrial sector or professional
group.
- Executive search firms recruit for executive
and professional positions. These firms operate across a range of models
such as contingency or retained approaches, and also hybrid models where
advertising is also used to ensure a flow of candidates alongside relying
on networking as their main source of candidates.
- Internet recruitment services
include recruitment websites and job search engines used to gather as many
candidates as possible by advertising a position over a wide geographic
area. In addition, social network sourced recruitment has emerged as a
major method of sourcing candidates.
In-house
recruitment[edit]
Many employers
undertake at least some if not most of their own in-house recruitment, using
their human resources department, front-line hiring
managers and recruitment personnel who handle targeted functions and
populations. In addition to coordinating with the agencies mentioned above,
in-house recruiters may advertise job vacancies on their own website and other
job boards, coordinate internal employee referrals, target and headhunt
external candidates (much like an external agency or search firm), work with
external associations, trade groups and/or focus on campus graduate recruitment. Some large employers choose
to outsource all or some of their recruitment process (recruitment process outsourcing),
however a more common approach is for employers to introduce referral schemes
where employees are encouraged to source new staff from within their own
network.
Internal
recruiters[edit]
An internal
recruiter (alternatively in-house recruiter or corporate
recruiter) is member of a company or organization and typically works in the human
resources department. Internal recruiters may be multifunctional, serving
in an HR generalist role or in a specific role focusing all their time on
recruiting. Activities vary from firm to firm but may include, screening CVs
or résumés,
conducting aptitude or psychological testing, interviewing,
undertaking reference
and background checks, hiring;
administering contracts,
advising candidates on benefits, on boarding new recruits and
conducting exit interviews with employees leaving the organization. They can be
permanent employees or hired as contractors
for this purpose. Contract recruiters tend to move around between multiple
companies, working at each one for a short stint as needed for specific hiring
purposes. The responsibility is to filter candidates as per the requirements of
each client.
Employee
referral[edit]
For more details on this topic, see employee
referral.
An employee
referral program is a system where existing employees recommend prospective
candidates for the job offered, and if the suggested candidate is hired, the
employee who referred receives a cash bonus.[6]
Job seekers may also be referred or recommended by a third-party affiliate
within a particular field based on certain criteria resulting in a lead
or interview with a potential future employer.
In some cases
the organization provides the employee referral bonus only if the referred
employee stays with the organization for stipulated time duration (most cases
3–6 months). Referral bonus depends on the grade of the referred employee,
higher the grade then higher the bonus however, this method is not used for
senior level hiring.
Outsourcing[edit]
An external
recruitment provider may suit small organizations without the facilities to
recruit. Typically in large organizations, a formal contract for services is
negotiated with a specialist recruitment consultancy. These are known in the
industry as Recruitment Process Outsourcing.
Recruitment process outsourcing may involve strategic consulting for talent
acquisition, sourcing for select departments or skills, or total outsourcing of
the recruiting function.
On-Campus
Recruiting[edit]
Job interview 0001
College
recruiting may not be living up to its potential:
- Companies may not be realizing
full value from their recruitment programs.
- Fewer than half of corporate
recruiters receive training in the proper techniques for interviewing
job applicants.
Recruiters tend
to form a positive or negative impression about an applicant's qualifications
in the first few minutes of an interview, which is hardly sufficient time to
collect information on which to base a recruiting decision. Recruiters also
tend to spend more time talking with applicants they consider to be qualified
and less time with applicants they dismiss on the basis of a superficial
judgement. Often, recruiters do not follow the corporate script about:
1.
The topics to be covered in an interview
2.
Sometimes they fail to discuss important issues with
applicants.
All these
points reflect a lack of interviewing skills.
Employment
agencies[edit]
For more details on this topic, see employment agencies.
Employment
agencies operate in both the public and private sectors. Publicly funded
services have a long history, often having been introduced to mitigate the
impact of unemployment in economic downturns, such as those which form part of
the New Deal
program in the United States, and the Job Center Plus service in
the UK.
The commercial
recruitment industry is based on the goal of providing a candidate to a client
for a price. At one end of the spectrum, there are agencies that are paid only
if they deliver a candidate that successfully stays with the client beyond the
agreed probationary period. On the other end. there are agencies that are paid
a retainer to focus on a client's needs and achieve milestones in the search
for the right candidate, and then again are paid a percentage of the
candidate's salary when a candidate is placed and stays with the organization
beyond the probationary period.
The agency
recruitment industry is highly competitive, therefore agencies have sought out
ways to differentiate themselves and add value by focusing on some area of the
recruitment life cycle. Though most agencies provide a broader range of service
offerings, at the two extremes are the traditional providers and the niche
operators.
Traditional
agency[edit]
Also known as employment
agencies, recruitment agencies have historically had a physical location. A
candidate visits a local branch for a short interview and an assessment before
being taken onto the agency’s books. Recruitment consultants then work to match
their pool of candidates to their clients' open positions. Suitable candidates
are short-listed and put forward for an interview with potential employers on a
contract or direct basis.
Niche
recruiters[edit]
'Specialized
recruiters' exist to seek staff with a very narrow specialty. Because of their
focus, these firms can very often produce superior results due to their ability
to channel all of their resources into networking for a very specific skill
set. This specialization in staffing allows them to offer more jobs for their
specific demographic which in turn attracts more specialized candidates from
that specific demographic over time building large proprietary databases. These
niche firms tend to be more focused on building ongoing relationships with
their candidates as is very common the same candidates are placed many times
throughout their careers. Online resources have developed to help find niche
recruiters.[7]
Niche firms also develop knowledge on specific employment trends within their
industry of focus (e.g., the energy industry) and are able to identify demographic
shifts such as aging and its impact on the industry.[8]
Financial
arrangements operated by agencies take several forms, the most popular are:
- A contingency fee paid by the company
when an agency introduced candidate accepts a job with the client company.
Typical fees range from 15% to 25% based on the candidates first-year base
salary (fees as low as 12.5% can be found online). This type of
recruitment usually has a rebate guarantee should the candidate fail to
perform or leave within a set period of time (often up to a three-month
period and as much as a 100% rebate).
- An advance
payment that serves as a retainer, also paid by the company, is
non-refundable and paid in full depending on outcome and success (e.g.,
40% up front, 30% in 90 days and the remainder once a search is
completed). This form of compensation is generally reserved for high level
executive search/headhunters
- Hourly charge for temporary
workers and projects. A negotiated hourly fee in which the agency is paid
and then pays the applicant as a consultant for services as a third party.
Many contracts allow a consultant to transition to a full-time status upon
completion of a certain number of hours with or without a conversion fee.
Executive
search firms or headhunters[edit]
For more details on this topic, see executive
search .
An executive
search firm or "headhunter" are industry terms for a third-party
recruiter who seeks out candidates often once normal recruitment efforts have
failed. Headhunters are generally considered more aggressive than in-house
recruiters or may have existing industry experience and contacts. They may use
advanced sales techniques. They may also purchase expensive
lists of names and job titles but more often will generate their own lists.
They may arrange a meeting or a formal interview between their client and the
candidate and will usually prepare the candidate for the interview, help
negotiate the salary and conduct closure of the search. They are frequently
members in good standing of industry trade groups and associations. Headhunters
will often attend trade shows and other meetings nationally or even
internationally that may be attended by potential candidates and hiring
managers.
Headhunters are
typically small operations that make high margins on candidate placements
(sometimes more than 30% of the candidate’s annual compensation). Due to their
higher costs, headhunters are usually employed to fill senior management and
executive level roles. Headhunters are also used to recruit very specialized
individuals; for example, in some fields, such as emerging scientific research
areas, there may only be a handful of top-level professionals who are active in
the field. In this case, since there are so few qualified candidates, it makes
more sense to directly recruit them one-by-one, rather than advertise
internationally for candidates. While in-house recruiters tend to attract candidates
for specific jobs, headhunters will attract both candidates and actively seek
them out as well. To do so, they may network, cultivate relationships with
various companies, maintain large databases, purchase company directories or
candidate lists and cold call prospective recruits.
Headhunters are
increasingly using social media to find and research candidates. This
approach is often called social
recruiting.
Executive
research & resourcing firms[edit]
These firms are
the new hybrid operators in the recruitment world, able to combine the research
aspects (discovering passive candidates) of recruiting and combine them with
the ability to make hires for their clients. These firms provide competitive
passive candidate intelligence to support companies' recruiting efforts.
Normally they will generate varying degrees of candidate information from those
people currently engaged in the position a company is looking to fill. These
firms usually charge a daily rate or fixed fee. Executive research can help
companies uncover names that cannot be found through traditional recruitment
methods and will allow internal recruitment and resourcing managers more time
to deal with face to face interviews.
Internet
recruitment services[edit]
Recruitment
websites[edit]
Such sites have
two main features: job boards and a résumé/curriculum
vitae (CV) database. Job boards allow member companies to post job vacancies.
Alternatively, candidates can upload a résumé to be included in searches by
member companies. Fees are charged for job postings and access to search
resumes. Since the late 1990s, the recruitment website has evolved to encompass
end-to-end recruitment. Websites capture candidate details and then pool them
in client accessed candidate management interfaces (also online). Key players
in this sector provide e-recruitment software and services to organizations of
all sizes and within numerous industry sectors, who want to e-enable entirely
or partly their recruitment process in order to improve business performance.
The online
software provided by those who specialize in online recruitment helps
organizations attract, test, recruit, employ and retain quality staff with a
minimal amount of administration. Online recruitment websites can be very
helpful to find candidates that are very actively looking for work and post
their resumes online, but they will not attract the "passive"
candidates who might respond favorably to an opportunity that is presented to
them through other means. Also, some candidates who are actively looking to
change jobs are hesitant to put their resumes on the job boards, for fear that
their companies, co-workers, customers or others might see their resumes.
Job search
engines[edit]
The emergence
of meta-search
engines allows job-seekers to search across multiple websites. Some of these
new search engines index and list the advertisements of traditional job boards.
These sites tend to aim for providing a "one-stop shop" for
job-seekers. However, there are many other job search engines which index
solely from employers' websites, choosing to bypass traditional job boards
entirely. These vertical search engines allow job-seekers to find
new positions that may not be advertised on traditional job boards, and online
recruitment websites.
Recruitment
Agency Directories[edit]
The emergence
of the Internet provided the functionality to provide recruitment agencies with
a low-cost alternative to advertising. Unlike a standard directory, these niche
directories have helped those searching for employment representation, a way to
narrow down their requirements based on their own job-searching requirements.
Recruitment agencies are then able to showcase their services directly to those
looking.[9][10]
Social
recruiting[edit]
For more details on this topic, see Social
recruiting.
Social
recruiting is the use of social media for recruiting including sites like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.[11][12]
Strategic
Talent Acquisition[edit]
Talent
acquisition is the targeted recruitment/acquisition of high performing teams
for example; in sales management or financial
traders into a company from a competitor or similar type of organization.
Organizations requiring external recruitment or head-hunting firms are now
employing "talent acquisition" specialists whose job it is to
identify, approach and recruit top performing teams from competitors. This role
is a highly specialized role akin to that of a traditional recruiter/headhunter
specialist but carrying greater visibility and strategic importance to a
business. In many cases the talent acquisition person is linked directly to a
company's executive management, given the potential positive impact a company
can benefit from by getting high-performance sales people into the business,
whilst removing the same performing sales people from competitors.
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