RSS RSS

 

  • Links

  • Categories

  • Meta

  • Archives

  • SHOW/HIDE NAVIGATION
    Jan
    10

    Recruiting Best Practices

    Several Human Resource professionals grouped together on Thursday, January 7th, to attend the Recruiting Best Practices Workshop that was held at the Greenspun Media Group/Recruiting Nevada office located in Henderson. The topic of discussion was Employer Branding. Companies shared information collectively to find employment branding areas that are successful for their company during this rough economy. Overall the general consensus was that positive and negative employer branding can have an impact on how companies are represented in the Las Vegas job market when Las Vegas starts to rebound from the recession.

    Throughout the year Greenspun Media Group/Recruiting Nevada will continue to host workshops to develop and share ideas that are considered best practices in the Human Resource industry for 2010.

    If you are interested in attending the next workshop please register for the next Recruiting Best Workshop: Social Networking, The Ins and Outs of Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. The workshop will develop the basic skills needed to create a presence on social networking websites.

    Jan
    6

    In the good ‘ole days, it was easy. Call your advertising agency (or internal marketing department), have a two – three hour meeting discussing your existing employer brand and internal communications, have upper management approve the cost estimate for such a new campaign, and then roll it out to your employees (look at those beautiful new posters in the employment office!).

    Now, with social media networks, emailing, texting, twittering, etc., internal communications are co-created between employees and management. A great article published by HR Management magazine and written by Jonathan Willard, Global Director of Organizational Communications, JWT INSIDE addresses these issues and discusses how your company can benefit from rethinking how you create and manage your employer brand and internal communications.

    Some great points in the article:

    •    What involvement do employees have in the internal communications process, how they perceive this process, and how the communications channels make the employees feel.
    •    Go beyond asking what the employer brand intends to tell employees, and ask what employees do with the employer brand? Are your employees inspired to join in creating, celebrating, and protecting your employer brand?
    •    A company’s culture is essentially the organization’s soul, shaped collectively through success and setback. Employer branding is an opportunity to breathe new life into that soul.

    If you missed our FREE Workshop Series on Employer Branding, we’d like to invite you to our next event:

    March 11, 2010
    Recruiting Best Practices
    “Social Networking: The Ins and Outs of Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn”
    Greenspun Media Group 2360 Corporate Circle, 4th Floor
    3pm – 5pm
    Call 948-2064 to register or register online here.

    Aug
    7

    “How Employment Branding can increase the ROI of recruitment and retention”

    This will be the topic of the September 15 meeting of the Nevada Recruiters Association.  The meeting will be held here in the offices of the Greenspun Media Group, in “The Strip” conference room.  If you have not seen our facilities, it is well worth attending the meeting just for the view.  Our main conference room delivers one of the most breathtaking views of the Las Vegas Strip.

    Enough about the conference room…..here is what is important:

    Workshop Seminar Topic:
    Talent Management Collaboratory “How Employment Branding can increase the ROI of recruitment and retention.” Here’s your chance to be the session rather than just attend one! Lizz Pellet, author and globally recognized expert in organizational culture, EVP and employment branding will select participants throughout the program to deploy employment branding diagnostic services – live.

    This session is not for the shy, but rather for HR, talent management professionals and recruiters who want to share and learn about corporate culture, employment branding best-practices and quantitative diagnostic tools available. Lizz will share simple and effective ways to understand what a company is saying about their culture and more importantly – what they are not saying and how to leverage that in the recruiting process. Be chosen as one of the individuals who will be featured in this program and participate in a live “Brand Scan” of your website and corporate career site.

    Speaker Bio:
    Lizz Pellet, CEO of EMERGE International and Fellow from Johns Hopkins University is the author of Getting Your Shift Together Making Sense of Organizational Culture and Change – Introducing Cultural Due Diligence. Her second book, The Cultural Fit Factor – Creating an Employment Brand to Attract, Retain and Repel the right employee is being published by SHRM in July 2009.

    Lizz is a recognized national conference speaker and has presented over 60 professional learning sessions in the past three years. EMERGE International is a California based consultancy firm dedicated to improving the ROI of organizational culture, employment branding and transformational change efforts. In 1998, Lizz developed the Cultural Health Indicator™ (CHI), a validated organizational culture diagnostic instrument. In 2007, she introduced the Brand Enhancer, a comprehensive solution that combines culture and employment branding. The Brand Enhancer supports organizations attract and retain the “right” employees and repel those that just won’t fit. Lizz is currently working on supporting organizations to create a Sustainable Human Resource function that saves money and saves the planet.

    Seating is limited to 50.  RSVP here.

    Sep
    11

    Here at Recruiting Nevada, we kind of ‘pool’ applicants for many of our clients.  The applicants we ‘pool’ have not yet moved to Nevada, but are strongly considering making the move and want our assistance.  The applicants are typically for hard-to-fill positions where there is a workforce shortage caused by a supply-demand issue.  And we view our ‘pooling’ efforts as a way to correct the shortage at a regional level.

    A new effort has surfaced where applicants are being pooled by top employers.  AllianceQ is a consortium of many of the top Fortune 500 companies such as Starbucks, Best Buy, ADP, Baxter, Wachovia, FPL Group and Entergy.

    This is a bold and confident move for these folks.  They obviously have faith in their employment brands and do not view each other as deep, deep competition.  They are even soliciting new members.  I don’t expect the consortium to grow too large.  It would take away the prestige. 

    Aug
    21

    Written By Peter Weddle, Weddles   

    Marketers call it “brand equity.” Although entire books have been written about it, the idea is simple enough. People establish an image of a product or service in their mind, and that image, once set, will cause them to remember the product or service rather than its competitors. That’s why companies spend so much time and money endlessly repeating an advertising slogan. They want you humming that ditty in the shower and seeing it in your dreams. They want you to hear it at work, at play, and-most importantly-when you’re shopping.

    Take the case of a brand of coffee called Brim. Thanks to an ubiquitous advertising campaign from 1961 to the mid-1990s, 92% of the U.S. population are now familiar the phrase, “Fill it to the rim-with Brim!”. It’s a crummy branding statement-the tag line says nothing about the distinctive characteristics of the product or the benefits it conveys-but hey, who cares if better than nine-out-of-ten Americans know that Brim will be there for them in the morning (and any other time of day). The Pavlovian repetition of a simple jingle creates the necessary familiarity and positive association-the memory- that sell a lot of coffee.

    And that’s the point. Our colleagues in product and service branding know that people buy what they remember … as long as the memories are positive. The inverse of that truism is also true, however. Your product or service is what your prospective (as well as your current and past) customers remember. In other words, if people have no memory of a product or service or the memory they have is negative or (almost as bad) dull, there is almost no chance of a sale.

    What does that have to do with recruiting? As you think about your organization’s employment brand, your goal should be to create a statement that people will remember and recall positively. To do that, you have only two options:

    • You can craft a branding statement that will positively differentiate your organization and then invest the money necessary to advertise that imaging phrase so pervasively that people will remember it whenever they decide to make an employment move. Achieving such a level of familiarity was hard enough in the 20th Century when there weren’t a lot of competing information distribution channels. It’s even more difficult (and far more expensive) today as distribution channels have multiplied both online and off. As with Brim, you must not only advertise continuously, but now, you must also do so in a wide array of media and outlets.
    • You can create an experience in your recruiting process that is so positively compelling and differentiating that it actually acts as an advertising message. To do that, you must move your entire organization (that means your hiring managers, employees and senior leaders as well as your fellow recruiters) from the transactional, supply chain mentality that dominates recruiting today to a relationship-based community development perspective. If you then trigger viral behavior on the part of candidates-if you formally and respectfully ask them to pass the memory along to their friends and colleagues-you can probably reach as many prospective candidates as you would with more traditional brand advertising.

    The largest employers will often exercise both of these options. Even good memories can fade so these organizations will continuously reinforce their brand equity so that the best talent never forgets them or their value proposition as a place to work. For the vast majority of employers, however, such an ongoing and robust branding initiative is beyond both their budget and the capacity of their staff. If that’s the reality facing your organization, the best option is the second: take the steps necessary to create a startlingly memorable impression of your organization in its recruiting process and then get those who have that experience to tell others about it for you.

    How can you do that? Here are a number of suggestions that will get you started:

    Preparation

    • Redefine internal participation in your recruiting process as an organization-wide campaign. Create a theme for the campaign-for example, “Building Memories to Last With the XYZ Construction Company” or “Creating Healthy Memories at the XYZ Hospital System” and get everyone-from the CEO to the receptionist-involved. Make participation in the campaign a priority in your culture and reward those who best exemplify the positively memorable behaviors you want to convey to candidates.
    • Train everyone in the organization on how impressions are created among candidates. Sensitize them to the importance of both saying and doing the right things and saying and doing those things in the right way. An interviewer’s tone of voice and facial expression and the caliber of a receptionist’s greeting often have as great an impact (or greater) on a candidate’s image of an employer as a spiffy four color recruitment brochure or artfully framed mission statement.

    Implementation

    • Differentiate what happens in your recruiting process by tailoring it to your organization’s values and culture. Most processes look and feel the same-in other words, they create the same impression-because they’ve been designed to accomplish a generic set of tasks-receive resumes, distribute and evaluate resumes, set up and conduct interviews, coordinate the results of interviews and make employment offers. The way these activities are performed, however, can and should illustrate how work gets done in your organization and the way employees interact with one another. For example, if teamwork is a core value of your employer, find a way to engage an interviewee in a teamwork experience as a part of their evaluation. That exercise will tell you whether or not they will fit in with your culture, and it will leave the candidate with an indelible impression of what to expect if they are hired by your employer.
    • Strut your champions. Average candidates join organizations; the best candidates go to work with peers. They look for coworkers who are as good as or better than they in their field so they can be assured that employment will deliver continued development and success as well as a better paycheck. To achieve that kind of impression, however, you can’t simply go through the motions during candidate interviews. Instead of having a candidate meet with every member of the group where they will work, organize the process so they spend an extended period of time with the group’s two or three top performers. Similarly, instead of giving candidates generic recruitment collateral, offer them white papers or conference presentations from your leading employees in their field.
    • Be straight and humble with candidates. Acknowledge that your organization may not be right for them or may not be right for them right now. Then, remind them of how you’ve tried to give them a special experience in your recruiting process and ask for their help. Encourage them to pass their impression of your employer along to others they know in the workplace. If your sourcing efforts have been successful in attracting high caliber candidates, then the people they know are likely to be just as well qualified. In effect, you’re expanding your employee referral program to include your candidate population, and the image of your organization they use in their referral is the positive memory you’ve given them while they were in your recruitment process.

    Brands and brand advertising remain important weapons in the War for the Best Talent. The memories you create among the candidates in your recruitment process, however, can be just as powerful sources of brand equity, and for many organizations they are a far more realistic goal to pursue, especially in a difficult economic environment.

    Thanks for reading,
    Peter