Tag: Recruiting

The HR Recruiter’s Thin Line: Balancing Perspectives for HR Wins

(The following is a guest post from Kristi Daeda)

demean The HR Recruiter’s Thin Line: Balancing Perspectives for HR WinsOne of HR’s many hats is liaison. Between the company and the employees. Between the hiring manager and job candidates. The challenge is that each group has their own expectations. If you’re an HR pro with recruiting responsibilities, you’re charged with using the highest level of problem solving and tact to keep everyone happy. Here’s some ideas to help you walk the thin line of HR diplomacy.

Issue: How HR should respond to each job candidate that applies

The candidate says: You can’t just pretend you didn’t get my resume. I’d like an email thanking me, and providing next steps. Maybe a nice phone call.

The company says: Your priority is finding top notch talent. Everything else must go by the wayside.

Your best line: Try to add personal touches to the automation in your process. Warm, personal-looking email automatic email responses at least help people see that their info has landed, and take little time to set up. Leave personal responses for high-value contacts, like executives and top performers that might be good organizational fits in the future.

Issue: How much you should tell a job candidate about their prospects within the organization

The candidate’s view: Tell me everything. Now. Who else are you interviewing? How many? How do I rank? What am I not saying that I should be? What’s the magic bullet?

The company’s view: Tell them nothing! Any slip might lead to a lawsuit. Oh, you say we can’t just leave people in the dark? That they’ll lose interest and we won’t be able to hire them? Okay. But be vague. No, we don’t yet have a timeline for next steps. You know this hiring stuff isn’t my top priority, right?

Your best line: When you have a good candidate, keep them apprised of progress. Be honest if you don’t know the timeline. Give them context as to why (busy season, need to finish budgeting, etc.). Return phone calls and emails within one business day. Real businesspeople understand how hiring fits into the larger picture.

Issue: How honest you should be about the organization’s expectations and culture

The candidate’s view: If the last three people who had the job quit in less than six months, please tell me. Please help me to know whether I should put my entire career in your hands.

The company’s view: You’re an agent of the company. Please share your obvious overload of rainbows and sunshine about the organization with others.

Your best line: If your goals are set against successful candidates — those that stick around for a while and perform well in the organization — then you may need to bring a little transparency to the process. If a candidate knows nothing about the challenges of the role, you have no idea if they’re absolute can’t-get-my-hiney-out-of-this-ergonomic-chair-fast-enough deal-breakers. Do you really want to find that out post hire?

Bottom line: Find the sweet spot at the intersection of what everyone wants from you — it’s probably the closest you’ll get to “best for everyone.”

moz screenshot The HR Recruiter’s Thin Line: Balancing Perspectives for HR Winsmepicnewsletter The HR Recruiter’s Thin Line: Balancing Perspectives for HR WinsKristi Daeda is a career coach, blogger and personal marketing strategist helping professionals nationwide create their own career opportunities. She is the founder of LaunchSummit, a free web-based educational event for job seekers, and blogs on job search, management, leadership, networking and more at Career Adventure.


HR Researcher (Inaugural Post)

hello vps5ym7r HR Researcher (Inaugural Post)

Hello

I am a researcher. I like to dig and learn about anything and everything that pertains to my interest as well as my current insanity. In my research and my profession, I have come across articles and blogs that hold a wealth of information. Anything from big name consultants and practitioners within the industry of Human Resources, to the no-name candidates that scribble words on their online papers to express their feelings and thoughts on anything from employment, recruiting, talent and corporate structure to the personal ethics, personal hygiene, personal likes and dislikes of the workplace.

In all this research and surfing the wild, wild world of the web, I very seldom come across anything within the highway of the web for HR, training, organizational development,  talent management, etc from a non-research, non-academic view. Not even when I do searches on Google do I find anything of the sort. Can you believe that, GOOGLE? Not to say there aren’t any other blogs out there and I am not saying that studies, statistics and the legal aspect are approaches that are not needed, but many times we forget to truly put the HUMAN back in Human resources. Stating facts and canned approaches can, at times, be lacking in how we actually practice as professionals. Oh well, so in this blog lie’s my purpose; to discuss issues, personal thoughts, misgivings, celebrations and unorthodox approaches in and around the world of HR and Talent Management. Taking anything from personal to common stories – even some general situations – and possibly connect to heart of how we, as professionals, need to better practice within the workplace and in life.

hr now logo HR Researcher (Inaugural Post)

In my thoughts in order to be malleable and fluid for the times, HR will need to change its approach. Please enjoy this cyberspace journey and don’t plan for anything. Just plan to be surprised.


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