Author Archives: jgjh151

  1. How to Talk about Salary in 2018: Everything a Recruiter needs to Know

    Money plays an interesting role in the recruiting process, we know it’s one of the main motivations as to why we all get up and go to work each day, but it’s also a topic that we tiptoe around and are hesitant to bring up whenever we’re interviewing a new candidate. For the most part, talks regarding salary expectations don’t even begin until you’ve reached the final rounds of the hiring process.

    But why is it that recruiters and hiring leaders have to treat these talks as a faux de pas that we all try to avoid until it is absolutely necessary?

    In 2018, we should be working to make candidates comfortable bringing up and speaking about the subject without having them feel like they breached a social boundary.

    Why we need to break the awkwardness

    Why we need to break the awkwardness

    To the majority of workers, salary is one of the most important topics when searching for a new job. They have their own obligations that they need to be concerned about so it only makes sense that the amount of money they’ll be bringing in will be one of their top concerns.

    With that said, this DOES NOT mean that you initiate the conversation by asking about their current or past salary. It puts many candidates into an uncomfortable spot where they may not want to divulge the information but feel as though they have to in order to show that they’re a “team-player”.

    It’s also worth noting that California, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Delaware have recently passed laws that forbid employers, third-party recruiters, and reference checkers from asking applicants about their salary at past jobs.

    To add to that, even if an applicant willingly chooses to divulge that information, the information cannot be used to determine their new salary. Even if you’re not located in any of these states, it’s still advised that you avoid the “How much are/did you make?” question to keep your applicants comfortable and to be prepared for when these laws do inevitably come to your state.

    How do I respond if the candidate initiates the salary conversation?

    How do I respond if the candidate initiates the salary conversation?

    With the power shifting to the candidate in these conversations, it only makes sense that you inevitably come across the candidate that immediately brings up the salary topic. When this happens, you should be prepared to handle the conversation that both answers their question while also leaving your company protected.

    A good way to respond is by giving them a range that you feel comfortable giving, for example: “The position pays between $40K and $60K”.

    Although the candidate may assume that they’ll be able to get the job at $60K, keep in mind that you don’t have to worry about finalized salary talks until much later into the recruiting process.

    Another avenue is by responding with, “What is your target salary for your current job search?”

    This way, you can get a good idea of what the candidate is looking for and if their range is too high, you can let them know that it won’t be a good fit or at least ask if they’re open to negotiation.

    How should I go about changing the way we talk about salary?

    How should I go about changing the way we talk about salary?

    For starters, you may want to consider putting the salary range somewhere in your job description so that applicants are well aware of what you’re willing to pay from the start. This way, those with higher salary expectations can self-select themselves out and you don’t have to waste time with candidates that won’t be interested.

    To add to that, you can let applicants know that salaries are completely non-negotiable and that once a salary offer is made, that is what your company is sticking with.

    Another rule is to make sure that you never base your salary offer on the applicant’s salary history. In fact, you should be going out of your way to speak with your team about the new laws regarding asking about salary history and making sure that no part of your process details asking about an applicant’s past salary.

    Having the information on hand ready to discuss is also a great way to stay prepared for the situation, make sure to do your homework and pull up multiple sources of salary data so that you have plenty of information handy to support your stance.

    One option that is often overlooked is to be proactive with the salary talk yourself to avoid any misunderstandings later on. Start by asking what type of salary range they’re looking for, then let them know what the company is willing to offer based on their experience and expertise.

    Closing thoughts

    It’s a different time to be a recruiter, people are cutting through the smoke and want to get straight to the point of what they’re expecting to get paid for a job.

    Although times are changing, it’s still important that you do what you can to ensure that your company is safeguarded from any unsavory salary conversations by ensuring that you and your team are up to date on state laws as well as how to steer the salary conversation in your favor.

     

  2. Why Video Interviewing Matters More Than Ever

    Video interviewing has been a hot topic in the field of recruiting for some time. So much so, that according to a recent LinkedIn study, video interviewing is part of a slew of new trends shaping the future of recruiting and hiring.

    But what aspect of video interviewing is causing so many companies to go out of their way to completely alter the hiring strategies that they’ve been using for years on end?

    It’s clear now more than ever that video interviewing is the answer that many organizations didn’t even know they were looking for.

    In this piece, we’ll be explaining how (and why) video interviews have been able to make the impact that they have, along with what makes companies choose them in the first place.

    How do video interviews save time? 

    Let’s be honest, we’re all extremely busy nowadays. With the “always plugged in” mentality that smartphones have brought us, everyone is always multitasking and very rarely know when they’d be available for a meeting.

    Along with that, recruiters and hiring managers are very well-aware of the phone tag that commences whenever you’re trying to schedule a time to speak with your candidates.

    With video interviews, you can simply record a video with all of the questions that you’d like answered by the candidates and send them all out at once. Not only that, but the candidates can then record their responses at their convenience. Eliminating the need to schedule a time for both parties.

    Companies have come to find out just how valuable this quality is and it has proven to be one of the main reasons as to why they choose to utilize video interviews as a staple of their recruiting.

    How do you use video interviews with a global workforce? 

    How do you use video interviews with a global workforce?

    Another big reason why video interviews have grown to be what they are today is the growing interconnectivity of the global economy thanks to the rise of the internet.

    More and more positions are being relocated to remote positions, which means that the person that ends up taking the job may very well be located in a different state or on the other side of the world.

    With this interconnectivity comes the concern for how employers plan to interview these candidates from all over. While their positions are remote, hiring managers still need to be assured that they’re the right fit for the company as they do with every other position.

    And the best way of going about interviewing these candidates without having to spend a lot of money on travel costs is by sending them a video interview.

    It’s a much cheaper option and gives them the ability to gauge their skills as they do with every other candidate.

    How can you recruit quality candidates faster?

    How can you recruit quality candidates faster?

    Let’s be honest, the more experienced and qualified a candidate is, the more recruiters are going to be hounding them.

    So much so, that the all-star candidate that you’ve just interviewed yesterday most likely already got an offer elsewhere (sorry!). So it’s imperative that your recruiting process is optimized to move along as fast as possible.

    In comes video interviews! They allow you to cut your recruiting time in half due to not having to waste time scheduling interviews, interviewing each candidate individually, etc.

    Candidates will be impressed by how fast you move the process along and you will have a much higher chance of getting that top candidate you’ve been eyeing!

    How do you know if video interviews are a good idea for your company? 

    How do you know if video interviews are a good idea for your company?

    If you’re still on the fence about whether or not video interviewing is a good idea for your organization, take a look below to see if any of these reasons are also relevant to your company.

    High-Growth Plans

    If you’re planning on growing your organization this year, you may want to consider utilizing video interviews. The bigger your hiring needs, the bigger the challenge and the more critical efficiency & speed will become.

    Imagine this, an average position typically receives about 141 applicants, so an organization that wants to fill 50 positions will have to sort through over 7,000 applicants!

    Needless to say, you ought to consider video interviews.

    Another situation is if you are planning on expanding across multiple regions or countries. To maintain your quality of hires across states, countries, etc. it’s important for your hiring team to be able to review candidates from your headquarters or regional management. Having a bad hire has a lot of hidden costs, so quality and consistency are very important.

    Frustrated Recruiters

    A frustrated recruiter that isn’t performing to the best of their abilities is a recipe for disaster at any company. One of the main reasons that recruiters are put into these situations is because scheduling interviews are such time-consuming activities that it ends up being a large halt on their productivity.

    In fact, many say that it actually takes more time to schedule a phone-interview than it takes to actually conduct one!

    Competitive Hiring

    Don’t get confused and assume that you’re always the one in the position of power at every interview. Keep in mind that the candidate is evaluating your company just as much as you’re evaluating them.

    Video interviews are a new, innovative, and convenient form of communication that is sure to elevate your brand in their eyes.

    You also need to consider all of the passive candidates that are more likely to give an interview as long as they don’t have to sneak away during work hours.

    4 Questions to ask

    4 Questions to ask

    If you’re still on the fence about employing video interviews as part of your recruiting process, take a look at these 4 questions that will help assess if your company is ready for video interviewing.

    1. Are you already using video in some capacity?

    If you’re already using some form of video as part of your hiring process, you may want to consider using a platform that is specifically designed from the ground up for recruiters and hiring managers.

    1. Do you know your cost to hire? What else are you measuring?

    The ability to measure results will help you to get a better handle on your costs and to understand other key metrics. Do you currently have the means to measure? What story does your output tell?

    1. Do you struggle to coordinate time between recruiters, hiring managers, and candidates?

    Video interviewing eliminates the need to try and schedule everyone for the same day. Once the candidate has recorded the interview, all of the stakeholders can view the recording at their convenience, as well as review and make additional feedback.

    1. Do you have positions for which you receive a high volume of resumes?

    Some positions generate a large number of resumes that are typically pretty similar (recent college grads) and trying to distinguish one candidate from another can be a daunting task as they are all using the same keywords and usually have the similar work experience.

    Video interviewing helps the most qualified candidates stand out from the rest while alleviating having to go through hundreds of similar resumes.

    Conclusion

    Video interviews are growing in popularity and for good reason, they cut down on time and give you the ability to interview anyone in the world at their convenience. So take a long hard look at your recruiting process to discover if video interviews are the answer that you’ve been looking for!

  3. New Interviewing Tools: How Reinventing the Interview Process is giving you the Ability to Better Understand your Candidates

    This is part two of a four-part series analyzing LinkedIn’s recently released 2018 Global Recruiting Trends report.

     

    If you haven’t seen it already. LinkedIn surveyed 9,000 talent leaders and hiring managers across the globe to discover what they felt are the top trends shaping the way they hire. The top four global trends are:

    • Diversity – he new global mindset
    • New Interviewing Tools – newest ways to identify top performers
    • Data – the new corporate superpower
    • Artificial Intelligence – your secret workhorse

     

    Today, we are going to focus on New Interviewing Tools.

     

    Job interviews have, for the most part, followed a similar structure over the past years. A recruiter reaches out to a candidate inviting them to schedule a phone interview. The candidate and recruiter proceed to have an oftentimes unstructured conversation about the candidate’s past experiences and knowledge of the position. After this, the candidate is passed on to the in-person interview phase.  The candidate sits in a room as the hiring manager proceeds to ask questions designed to put them on the spot and to get a better sense of the candidates’ professional experience as well as their character.

     

    In recent years, employers have figured that this unstructured interview style, often leads to poor results. There is a ton of research out there showing that interviewers often make their initial assessment about the candidate in the first five minutes and then spend the rest of the interview working to confirm those decisions. In the world of psychology, this is called Confirmation Bias.

    This has led to the emergence of interviewing software tools that are looking to reinvent how companies handle their interviews with the use of new technology that works to ensure that whoever ends up getting picked is the right candidate for the position.

    Where do Traditional Interviews fall short?

    Where do Traditional Interviews fall short?

    Despite their popularity, traditional interviews still fall short in many areas.

    The recent report found that there were five crucial areas where typical interviews fall short in measuring:

    • Assessing candidate soft skills
    • Understanding candidate weaknesses
    • Bias of Interviewers
    • Too Long of a Process
    • Not Knowing the Best Questions to ask

    This is why employers are looking towards new interviewing tools to help make up for where traditional interviews fall short.

    The Five Techniques that are leading the Way

    The new wave of interviewing tools can be broken down into 5 leading innovations:

    1. Video Interviewing

    Video Interviewing solutions are incredibly useful to employers and the candidates they interview for a number of reasons.

    The first being that it tackles the issue of the interview process lasting too long for certain candidates. Instead of wasting time playing phone tag with candidates in the effort to find a time that works for both of you, video interviewing allows you to send one pre-recorded interview to every candidate. Not only that, but the candidate is then able to record their response whenever it is most convenient for them.

    Hiring managers all over the country have stories of going through the troubles of finding the perfect candidate, only to find out that they already took up a different position whenever they pick up the phone to share the good news.

     

    Video interviews also have the capability to assess pools of talent that are located too far to come in for a tradition interview. For example, imagine if there was a great university that you think would do great for providing a pipeline of talent for your organization. The only problem is that they’re located a couple of states over and most of the students aren’t able to make the drive.

    Never fear!

    Just send out video interviews to eliminate the need for them to have to physically show up to your offices.

    Let’s not forget one of the best things about pre-recorded video interviews, they’re structured. Every candidate gets the same questions. Your hiring team is then able to compare and evaluate candidates on an apples-to-apples basis using the same consistent criteria. This structure and transparency help to reduce individual interviewer bias.

    Video interviews give the hiring team a complete view of candidates prior to bringing them in for in-person interviews.

    1. Soft Skills Assessments

    As we all know, you have to be able to work well with people in order to be successful in any field. That’s why employers have become increasingly interested in soft skills assessments that help to figure out skills that exist outside of a typical resume.

    One company, Citi, took it a step further and developed a survey that helps to gauge soft skills like rigor and persistence.

    This has led to Citi having a better understanding of their pool of candidates and being able to give them very personalized feedback on their top skills with the vast majority rating it as a positive experience.

    1. Meeting in Casual Settings

    Meeting in Casual Settings

    As nice as your offices may be, your candidate may still be intimidated about being interviewed in one of your company offices. Scheduling to meet in a more casual setting will ease their nerves a bit so they can better explain their background and qualifications.

    Casual settings also offer the benefit of giving you a better sense of their character and personality type. Just make sure to pick a place that doesn’t get too noisy whenever you’re having your interview!

    1. Job Auditions

    Why ask what a candidate is capable of when you can just watch them work in real time!

    Job auditions entail having a trial period of sorts with potential candidates to test their abilities in real-world scenarios.

    Some companies even go as far as to make it a competition among candidates and offer cash prizes.

    1. Virtual Reality Assignments

    Virtual reality just keeps getting bigger and has now made its way into the world of recruiting.

    So much so, companies are testing out candidates by immersing them in simulated 3-D environments to test their skills.

    A great example can be seen in how Lloyd Banking Group chooses members for its Emerging Leadership Program each year. They work by asking all of the applicants that make it to the final round to using a virtual reality platform where they can freely move within a 360-degree virtual world and can manipulate objects using a tracked motion control. An evaluator then judges how they approach and solve tasks.

     

    Other great examples of companies using technology to change recruiting are:

    Wepow

    Wepow

    Wepow is an established video interviewing platform that gives companies the ability to put together their own video interviews.

    One unique benefit is being able to build your own informational videos that are included with the video interviews that provide an idea of your workplace culture, along with who the candidates will be working with if they get the position.

    Pymetrics

    Pymetrics

    Pymetrics uses games based on neuroscience and bias-free AI to predictively match candidates with jobs that would be a good fit for them, offering a large advantage to candidates that may otherwise be affected by biases in typical recruiting.

    Shaker

    Shaker

    Shaker offers companies the opportunity to use technology that puts applicants in a simulated job environment where they are able to test their skills out in real time and get a better sense of the job while hiring managers can get a more accurate sense of how they perform in real-world environments.

    Outmatch

    Outmatch

    In addition to a robust library of assessments, Outmatch offers automated reference checks among its offerings, saving recruiters time by not having to contact each and every reference for all of their applicants.

    Codility

    Codility

    Codility helps businesses automate and accelerate the hiring of technical talent. Using the Codility software platform, businesses can dynamically source candidates, test and rank participants and, ultimately, interview the most promising candidates online.

    Closing thoughts

    In the past couple of years, there have been a number of new software tools that have both expedited & improved the typical recruiting process for countries around the world.

    Spearheaded by tools like video interviewing and virtual reality, a job interview ten years from now may be completely unrecognizable among today’s workforce.

  4. Insourcing vs Outsourcing Recruitment: Which is Best for You?

    Everyone always loves to look at companies like Facebook, Google, & Apple to see what new techniques or tools they’ve put in play that we don’t know about yet.

    Problem is, you can’t always look at the other guys because no matter how similar your fields may be, they are still a completely different organization with different expectations.

    So when it comes to handling your recruiting, don’t feel like you have to go barking to the same agency that everyone else is using or even feel like you have to use an outside agency in the first place.

    There are pros and cons to using an outside firm just as there is for building your own in-house team.

    But how do you decide which is the best fit for you?

    Read on to discover why you should (or shouldn’t) outsource your recruiting.

    Insourcing Recruitment

    Insourcing Recruitment

    Keeping your recruiting in-house has a number of benefits for your organization. The most obvious is that you will have direct control over the process and have the confidence of knowing that every step is being handled to company standards.

    Don’t get me wrong, professional headhunters are talented in what they do, but sometimes the strain of having to fill multiple spots with an incoming deadline may result in rushed emails, interviews, reference checks, etc.

    You also have the benefit of performing your own performance tests to make sure that candidates are really able to do what they say they can.

    Software tools like HackerRank are great for diagnosing skills, especially if you’re in the search for software programmers or developers.

    Another huge benefit is that having your own team gives you the ability to better establish and build your own company culture. It also gives the candidate a clear idea of what they are getting into and will let them know early on if they’ll be a good fit.

    You’ll also have a first-hand understanding of the types of personalities that mesh well with your company and can better evaluate whether or not the candidate would be a good fit.

    Outsourcing Recruitment

    Outsourcing Recruitment

    With all of the advantages that come with having your own team, you may be wondering why anyone would go to an outside firm in the first place.

    But let’s not forget what makes these agencies so popular.

    Hiring a headhunter means reduced labor costs since you don’t have to hire any extra HR help. If you’re just starting out and don’t really have as much capital as the other guys, this can be crucial.

    Also, certain agencies have the benefit of specializing in specific fields (IT, Creative, etc.) so they can bring in experience and extensive networks that can prove to be invaluable to your organization.

    Recruiters usually have an entire catalog of talent that can be called upon whenever the right position opens up, so if you find an agency that specializes in your field, don’t hesitate to contact them to see what can be done for you.

    This is especially true if you are in a highly specialized field where it’s hard to come across the right talent or experience levels that you’re looking for.

    The time-saving capabilities are also huge for those that choose to outsource their recruitment. Recruiting is a very tiresome job that takes up a lot of man-hours, so giving your HR team some free time to focus on other important tasks is invaluable.

    Lastly, an outside firm can use strategies or tools that you may not be aware of that could lead to a candidate that you wouldn’t have found on your own.

    Which is Best for you?

    Which is Best for you

    Now that you understand what both of these can do for your organization, it’s time to make a choice on which would be best for you.

    Small-and-medium-sized businesses (this includes start-ups and companies just starting out) should not shy away from hiring an outside firm for a number of reasons. The first being the obvious saved labor costs which are crucial for small organizations that are already stretched thin with expenses.

    The networks that an outside firm can provide are also priceless for new companies that don’t yet have the name recognition to attract certain candidates. This is especially important when searching for C-suite level executives that are hard to attract. A firm that specializes in recruiting higher-level executives would be able to do some heavy lifting in areas most others can’t.

    For larger, more established firms, staying with an in-house team may be the better choice in order to enforce your work culture and to ensure that the recruiting cycle is living up to company expectations.

    Final Thoughts

    Recruiting is one of the most important roles for any company, with weak recruiting, you won’t be able to attract the candidates that can take your organization to the next level.

    Make sure to thoroughly review the points above in order to make a decision on how you plan on bringing in new employees.

    At the end of the day, your bottom line starts and ends with the talent you’re able to bring in.

    If you’re interested in software that gives you a better understanding of your candidate’s abilities, visit HackerRank to see what they can do for you!

     

  5. Grinches and Whos: How HR Practices Impact Organizational Culture

    As an HR leader, you’re not out there on the front lines boosting morale or infusing company culture into the workplace. Not directly, at least. But you play a huge role in shaping a harmonious (or hostile) workforce.

    Here’s an example: Let’s say Suess & Co. has a reputation for poor customer service. They’re known for hiring Grinches. Now, unless that’s an intentional hiring strategy, these Grinches will sully the Suess & Co. name, and create negative associations with everything the company sells.

    Every Who down in Whoville liked Christmas a lot…
    But the Grinch, who lived just north of Whoville, did NOT!

    Grinches aren’t good for business, especially during the holiday season. And while Suess & Co. may claim they’re a Who-company, and profess Who-values, this vision won’t match reality until they change their Culture DNA.

    So how does Suess & Co. shift their customer service from folly to jolly? It’s starts at the top. Suess & Co. executives will set a goal for improving customer satisfaction, then it’s HR’s job to put that goal into action. Performance evaluations and benchmarking reveal a few Whos at Suess & Co. that generate exceptional customer service reviews. A job analysis then identifies the job-specific traits and competencies unique to these top-performing Whos.

    Knowing what makes a Who successful at Suess & Co. empowers HR to build a Who hiring profile and bolster Who culture across the workforce. By screening out Grinches and hiring more Whos, Suess & Co. will see a positive shift in culture that has a direct impact on customer service ratings and net promoter scores—just in time for the holidays!

    Interested in hiring fewer Grinches and more top-performing Whos? Whether you’re undergoing a culture shift, or you’re looking to more closely align your recruitment and hiring efforts to your existing culture, we can help.

    See how we’ve helped American Airlines create a hospitality culture, or schedule your demo today.

  6. 8 Tips for Attracting More Diverse Candidates

    When looking at a picture of your entire team, do you all seem a bit Homogenous?

    The term is defined as “being of the same kind” and unfortunately, a number of companies fall victim to hiring and building a workforce filled with people that all virtually look and act the same.

    Why is Diversity so Important and what does it do for me?

    Having a more diverse workplace means having people with different talents, skills, and experiences needed to help solve your organization’s problems.

    An example would be having someone who is great at creative problem solving on the same team as someone who is good at taking those creative ideas and building them into a concrete plan.

    Also, having different types of personalities and backgrounds in the office helps foster a culture of innovation in your office that can only be brought from these types bouncing ideas and concepts off one another.

    I’m Sold! But how exactly do I go about finding and recruiting more Diverse Candidates? 

    Sit tight because I’m about to give you 8 tips for Attracting More Diverse Candidates.

    1. Use Social Media to Its Fullest to find Diverse Talent

    Use Social Media to Its Fullest to find Diverse Talent

    I know that you’ve already been using LinkedIn to source candidates for some time now, but have you been using it to its full potential?

    There are many professional groups on LinkedIn around for the sole reason of promoting diversity and having a place for diverse professionals to congregate.

    An example of which is The Society of Woman Engineers group on LinkedIn which would be a great avenue for sourcing female engineers.

    It doesn’t stop there, there are plenty of groups for African-Americans, Latinos, Veterans, etc.

    Similar to the structure of LinkedIn groups, Facebook also offers groups for professionals of similar backgrounds.

    LinkedIn and Facebook Groups

    It also gives you an avenue of showing off your company’s Facebook page which should be filled with pictures detailing the positive aspects of your company’s culture.

    1. Attend more Diverse Networking Events and Career Fairs

    Networking is always best done in person, so do some research on events happening in your area that are likely to attract diverse talent to its meetings.

    Along with being able to find a promising candidate, attending these events shows everyone in the area that your employer brand truly is all-inclusive and that you all are putting real effort into sourcing these candidates.

    This message goes a long way and leaves a lasting impression on those that may be able to help you in the future.

    1. Have an Attractive Company Culture

    Have an Attractive Company Culture

    In order to attract diverse candidates, you first need to have a company that people want to work for.

    This means going into detail describing all of the perks that the position provides its employees.

    This includes but is not limited to: work outings, vacation time, work from home days, insurance plans, free coffee, gym memberships, etc.

    You should also make sure to have plenty of pictures on your company website and on your social media pages of your employees having a good time as well as what the office looks like.

    Before you’re able to attract more diverse candidates, you first need to make sure that you’re building a company culture that people actually want to be a part of.

    1. Specify in Job Description that you all are all-inclusive and promote diversity in the workplace

    This doesn’t mean that you put “all-inclusive” in your title.

    It just means that you should stray from using terminology that could alienate entire groups of candidates.

    For example, many women may deem a sales job as unappealing due to masculine terminology being used throughout the job description.

    Make yourself aware of these terms that could scare away perfectly able candidates.

    1. Showoff Diverse Client Base

    Showoff Diverse Client Base

    When a candidate visits your company site with the intent of researching your brand, you can bet that they’ll be clicking on your “companies we’ve worked with” button and will be judging your company by your clientele.

    Make sure to do your best in providing a varied representation of the companies you work with so that potential employees know that diversity isn’t only practiced to strengthen their employer brand but is also woven into your business practices.

    1. Use Software Tools that Tackle bias in Recruiting

    Thankfully we’re in 2017, which means that there is software out there that helps facilitate diversity in the workplace by using AI to replace manual resume screening with a system that objectively applies screening criteria to all candidates.

    Taking human biases out of the recruitment process goes a long way when you’re trying to increase diversity, do some research on software that you think will come in handy then give it a shot!

    1. Be more Open With Your Interview Avenues

    Be more Open With Your Interview Avenues

    By this, I mean you should consider using strategies other than the typical in-person interview where some candidates may not be able to accurately convey their strengths.

    An example would be utilizing video interviews to help make candidates more comfortable by giving them the ability to record the interview anywhere and at any time.

    1. Don’t Look at Names

    I know that this one isn’t as fancy as the others but hear me out for a second.

    It’s pretty easy to guess someone’s gender and often times their race just by looking at their names.

    Which means that the second you see a name on a resume, you already made a mental image of what you think the candidate looks like.

    By blanking out the names, you are going completely by what matters most…the candidate’s credentials.

    Closing Thoughts

    Having a diverse team doesn’t just make your company look good, it goes a long way in promoting an environment of innovation and out of the box thinking among your workplace.

    Although building a diverse team may be difficult at first, stick to the tips above and you’ll be on your way to a room filled with valuable perspectives in no time! 

  7. The Turnover Scorecard: How Do You Measure Up?

    You can’t control the job market, but there are things you can do to move the needle on turnover—and it starts by measuring turnover health. Learn what compels people to stay and leave your organization, and get to the root of your turnover problem.

  8. 4 Tips for Onboarding Interns

    Successful internship programs bring tremendous value to companies. For starters, a robust internship program helps build a strong pipeline for entry-level positions. When both the company and the students are familiar with each other, this makes for a smoother and potentially quicker hiring process. And in the end, don’t you want your recruiters to spend less time and money on entry-level positions, and have more focus on harder-to-fill positions?

    Why a Positive Internship Experience is Critical

    Ensuring that interns have a positive experience in their internship will determine the likelihood of both sides pursuing a full-time employment relationship once they move on. A negative experience could mean they walk away from your company after their internship period is up, or even worse, they may choose to leave before the end of the agreement. News of a negative experience travels quickly on campus, putting a serious dent in your ability to hire from a specific program or an entire school.  It’s also important to consider the cost of time in locating and training a new set of interns. Full-time employment relationship once they move on. A negative experience could mean they walk away from your company after their internship period is up, or even worse, they may choose to leave before the end of the agreement. News of a negative experience travels quickly on campus, putting a serious dent in your ability to hire from a specific program or an entire school.  It’s also important to consider the cost of time in locating and training a new set of interns.

    4 Tips for Onboarding Interns

    Companies are missing the boat when treating interns as only a temporary, less experienced member of their team. Interns should experience an organized onboarding plan, increasing chances for a positive internship experience and a successful internship program.  Here are 4 tips to get you started:

    1.    Include Interns in the Same Orientation as Full-Time Employees

    What do the first few days look like for your new hires? Is there a day filled with videos, meetings, paperwork, etc?  Are there any trips to company offices in other locations?

    Make a list of everything in an orientation that interns can be included in. Let interns sit through as much as possible with new hires and they’ll learn much more about the company and feel part of the company culture from the beginning.

    1.    Assign Interns a Buddy

    Starting an internship can be overwhelming and intimidating. It takes time to get assimilated into the culture, but having a “buddy” to help with the transition could help make it much smoother.

    The buddy or mentor shouldn’t be their internship supervisor. Instead, pick another employee who works within their department or function. The responsibility shouldn’t be too much of a burden for whoever is assigned to mentor the intern. One hour focus meetings over lunch or elsewhere give the intern a chance to learn, ask questions, and gain a friend.

    1.    Have a Clear Vision of the Internship

    What do you want interns to be able to do in the first 30, 60, 90, and even 180 days after their internship starts? Granted, most internships don’t last 180 days, but mapping out how they’ll grow and how the job would expand if they stayed on that long just might keep them around.

    With each goal, map out items they need to learn and experience to meet those goals. Explain to your intern how these goals and experiences will help their career in the long run and they’ll be more likely to buy in.

    1.    Conduct Monthly Performance Reviews

    While your full-time employees will come to expect performance reviews either every 6 months or annually, interns need feedback, praise, and constructive criticism much more often. Plan their monthly objectives and goals and then meet to discuss progress every month.

    When possible, praise your interns on their work and progress. We all like hearing positive sentiments about ourselves and interns are no different. People tend to gravitate and spend energy on what they’re good at and you want your college talent to start to think of your company as an ideal landing spot after graduation.

    Is your talent acquisition team ready for the Fall College Recruitment Season? Our blog has covered multiple articles on college hiring and internships, so make sure to stop by and read through!  Let us know what you think about this blog and others by tweeting us at @goWepow.

     

    Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

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