
eLearning Center Demo


| Your Future: Embracing the Strategic Inflection Point |
| Assessment |
| Written by Lou Adler |
| Friday, 11 June 2004 04:00 |
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Andrew Grove (author of Only the Paranoid Survive) defines a strategic inflection point as a changing of the rules of the game resulting in a massive shift in the way business is conducted. As an example, consider the impact the PC and the Internet had on changing the way business is done in many different companies and industries. HR/recruiting is now going through its own strategic inflection point. Those who recognize the signs and respond accordingly will be able to make hiring top talent a business process within a few years. Those who ignore or minimize the evidence will continue to have difficulty finding enough top people, will have hiring managers who barely cooperate with their recruiting team, will still have frustrated recruiters who work too hard, and will continue to make unnecessary and costly hiring mistakes. We've seen some remarkable changes in the past ten years in the areas of recruiting and hiring processes. The Internet and the growth of job boards jump-started the process. The surge in candidates led to the need for an applicant tracking system. These early solutions were less effective than promised, but in their wake came the next iteration -- with a focus on metrics, employer branding, and the insourcing of the recruiting department. This established the idea that corporate recruiters could replace third-party recruiters. Collectively, these changes set in motion events leading to a strategic inflection point. But despite all of these changes, candidate quality did not change. Hiring managers continue their demand to see stronger and less active candidates, not just those who respond to online ads. Some corporate recruiting departments continue to seek the quick cure. The current buzz is using networks of friends and talent pools as the long-sought solution to the top candidate shortage. To me, these are just detours along the road to making hiring top talent a true business process. Despite some false starts, I believe that with the new generation of applicant tracking systems, more practical hiring manager and recruiter training, semi-sourcing techniques, and a stronger, more centralized HR/recruiting department, hiring top people can become a systematic business process. With the opportunity created by this strategic inflection point, HR/recruiting must overcome the following hurdles
Here are seven actions that HR/recruiting can take now to take advantage of the opportunity for making hiring top talent a systematic business process:
Every manager and executive will tell you that hiring top people is #1. Yet from what I've seen, this is more talk than walk. If hiring top people were really #1, it would be embedded in the culture. Managers would be judged on how well they do. Visual signs would sing its praise. Every employee would be able to tick off three or four reasons to prove it. Managers would be selected and trained to interview. Hiring quality would be discussed at every staff and board meeting. HR/Recruiting would even report to the CEO. If hiring were #1, resources would be provided to make it a business process. On these measures, the "Hiring is #1" mantra barely makes the top 10 list of important business initiatives. This is where HR/recruiting must place a stake in the ground and lead the effort to make hiring top people a business process. Only then can hiring be #1. Leadership is the key. Pulling it off requires vision, a detailed plan of action, buy-in from the executive team, and great execution. None of these steps is easy, but neither was initiating TQM, establishing the first budget, opening up the new plant, launching Six Sigma, implementing the ERP, or starting continuous process reengineering. In most companies HR/recruiting is not called upon to lead these efforts. The tools, technology, resources and systems are now available to make hiring top people a business process. The missing pieces are leadership and executive commitment. Seize the moment. This article originally was published in the Electronic Recruiters Exchange (www.erexchange.com). Check out the ER Exchange for more great recruiting information. |