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Calling Out Reactive Recruiting

A Case for Creating Proactive Recruitment Processes

Each year, I work with approximately 20-25 businesses on revolutionizing their Recruiting Departments.  Of course, only 20% of those start out with a call to proactively change the approach within their recruiting program.  It usually starts with a frantic push to hire 5 Salespeople, or 6 of something else…and a couple of new recruiters to keep up with the burgeoning workload of requisitions that go far beyond the acceptable time-to-fill metrics they’d set for the department.

It’s all behind the curve, so to speak; because it’s all reacting to something that’s already happened.

In the past, talent acquisition departments and recruitment agencies would focus on filling the needs that were already open.  If they were lucky, they’d start with a week or two advance notice.  But make no mistake, that’s still reactive recruiting because the need has already been identified and you’re still going to end up racing against a clock to find that ‘next right fit’ in time  to appease your hiring managers and keep work flowing smoothly.  But with the advantages of social recruiting and good ‘partnered planning’ … is that way of working really necessary in today’s world?


No …
 at least not entirely. 

Look, there will always be an element of reaction in recruiting; as candidates don’t move past the sourcing/prospect phase until there’s a slot to put them. The true ‘fail’ and call out for change comes the failure to chart out a proactive recruitment plan so that those prospective candidates are identified, familiar with your employment brand and receptive to hearing more when you need them. It’s a much more effective recruitment  model, too; studies have shown that there are nearly double the amount of qualified applicants for professional positions when recruited proactively vs when ‘reactively’ filled.

So where to start:  begin with a solid workforce planning document.  When your business units are working out their annual business plan; they should be planning out the people resources needed to make the objectives within those plans. If you’re reading this thinking, “Our business didn’t do that…”  – that’s okay, start where you are.  Spend some time with your managers going over things like:

 

 

 

This should help get you started with an idea of  what types and how  many of each positions you should plan to fill.  From there, you look at your hiring process.

 

 

 

 

Crystal Miller creates great Talent Marketing and Social Recruitment Programs at M3 Talent Consulting in Dallas. As an advocate for proactive social media in recruiting, she works as the Co-Host of #TalentNet weekly Radio Chat on Twitter/Focus w/ Talent Net Live. Crystal believes, “Candidate first.” 

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