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Now, when Danny starts talking about technology this is where I differ from him. About a year ago he was pontificating that everyone would eventually have access to all information, ergo, great recruiting skills will be the only differentiator in the competitive landscape for recruiters. (this is great propaganda for a recruitment trainer). I missed his talk at Bullhorn Live, so I am not sure if he is still toeing that line. From someone who knows technology, that statement shows a total lack of understanding of technology as it relates to the growth of information vs. the capabilities to index and store it. Information growth is occurring logarithmically whereas the ability to store and index is it not. Many people would say that disagreeing with Danny on this point because it furthers Broadlook's interests. Absolutely correct, but you cannot escape the basic math that I am right and he is wrong ;) Sorry Danny.
DD with the self-interest ! Good for you ;-)
Heck even if the technology were way better than it is today, there would always be information asymetry because this is a human business. We lie. We misunderstand. We over-react. We under-react. We act with too much self-interest. We act with too little self-interest. We gamble. We stand pat. We spin. We live in a world of in group amnity and out group emnity, and our groups shift by the hour. We over-value perfection. We under-value the good but not the great. We over respond to our senses. We mistake correlation for causation.
Find me some software to handle all that !
Donato, I think your products and services are awesome. I wish I could afford all of them . . . or at least be able to extract enough value from them to justify consumption (considering I had the volume).
Let me ask you something, and I ask from a position of respecting you: My thought is that vendors and technology trailblazers like you are creating amazing ways to locate candidates, or profiles, or bits of intel that lead us to the ideal candidate, etc. But even with these amazing technologies, someone still has to be recruited. Would you agree? In the words of Tom Watson (Founder of IBM), "nothing happens until a sale is made." Thoughts?
I recall a military mindset that a good troop is well trained in the art of field craft and marksmanship before learning to leverage technologies. Therefore, the foundation is strong. For example, you need to learn the art of camoflague before learning to operate a laser range-finder. In that sense, I believe your pioneering tools will marry exceptionally well with a foundationally solid Recruiter. Thoughts?
Donato Diorio said:Now, when Danny starts talking about technology this is where I differ from him. About a year ago he was pontificating that everyone would eventually have access to all information, ergo, great recruiting skills will be the only differentiator in the competitive landscape for recruiters. (this is great propaganda for a recruitment trainer). I missed his talk at Bullhorn Live, so I am not sure if he is still toeing that line. From someone who knows technology, that statement shows a total lack of understanding of technology as it relates to the growth of information vs. the capabilities to index and store it. Information growth is occurring logarithmically whereas the ability to store and index is it not. Many people would say that disagreeing with Danny on this point because it furthers Broadlook's interests. Absolutely correct, but you cannot escape the basic math that I am right and he is wrong ;) Sorry Danny.
DD I've been at this for almost 11 years. (when I say "I", I always mean "we" because I do so little of the real work ).
We have customers from global household names down to any number of one-man-bands. What I have learned is that there are as many approaches to just about every aspect of staffing and recruiting as there are people doing it. What we support is something as broad as "sales" or "manufacutring" or "housing"- in other words, functions that are so basic that the variations are endless. Sometimes the technology is a critical part, other times less than an afterthought.
Cahill is obvioulsy wrong to think that technology will somehow level the whole field and leave only selling, leading, or dealmaking skills as differentiators, but he is right in thinking that those skills are harder to develop and apply than technology to a given problem, and at least for the forseeable future, they will have far greater value in our field.
It's a source of amusement for me to read press releases and listen to tech execs (in many industries) spouting off about how life changing and Earth shattering their vision or their products are or are about to be- no doubt a few of them are, but even then its the human power behind them that creates the awesome value.
Google woud not be Google without the vast human knowledge that it amplifies, an MRI machine is nothing without the minds of the MD's who use it, Facebook is not even very much technology at all; but the bonds between the people who use it are certainly amazing. That's why the world's best recruiting software is nothing without the people who use it, making Cahill's point in its way.
The human equation is the most important and most complex to master. Great technology and process will allow those skills to be focused in the areas of highest impact. I guess to sum up my point: Let the humans focus on the revenue producing activities, let the machines remove as much as of the mundane tasks as possible.
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