You may rest assured that this situation will not last.
The web is best when it tears down the friction that separates information from the people who need it. The folks who work hard mining data manually today will be flipping burgers in the near future. The skills required to move forward are unlike the ones being taught. Contemporary sourcing is a dead-end occupation with little in the way of transferrable skills.
Next generation recruiting is about relating intimately, not about mutual discovery. It's about fidelity and long term value exchange, not one night stands. It's about data that updates itself because the relationship is constantly working. Finding each other? Easy. Building an enduring relationship? Hard.
For a while, sourcing will be a high dollar, easy pickings income source. But, in the relatively short term, the need for the expertise will evaporate. Former sourcing luminaries will be familiarizing themselves with the alarm on the French fry machine and the relative difference between Rare, Medium and Well done.
Evaporate, as in "What air freshener scent would you like with your car wash?"
So, what do you do if you're a sourcer (or any kind of Recruiter, for that matter)?
Tags:
@Vin Dieselevey Let's make this the longest never ending recruiting dialogue in existence.
Glen Cathey's piece is really interesting and well argued. Thank goodness Michael had the presence of mind to book him on the next RA Show. More or Less, Cathey's view is "Finding People = Easy —– Finding the Right People = Hard".
(That should probably be a part of good manners in these things...summarize the view of the other side before you take it apart.)
He's right. Finding the right people will always be hard. Jeez, most recruiters only get it right some of the time. Finding the right people is very hard work.
At 230 calls from nothing to filled position (that's the statistic that Danny Cahill uses), it's unlikely that "the right" person is being found. It's almost always someone who is 'good enough'.
That part of recruiting is permanent. What is less permanent is the time and energy invested in getting to know complex early stage tools. There is nothing about finding the right person that inherently requires Boolean search strings. Conflating the two just confuses the question.
Boolean tools and search strings are artifacts of an overly difficult search process. As it gets less mysterious and magical, more people will do it. As more people do it (it becomes a part of the recruiter's job again), fewer people will be employed to do it.
72, 72, 72, is stagnant no?
You know that I am looking at job boards? now that is total B.S - I don't A) look at job boards, nor do I have a job board membership - ask your friends at CareerBuilder or Monster, and they will tell you that i have even turned Down free access.. Thanks... so, your question is not applicable
and again, my comments is based upon the Percentage of growth - which demonstrates that No, the comments based upon the fact that EVERYONE can be found on the internet is fallible and inconclusive
and that one day EVERYONE will be on the internet, or found in regards to Recruiting/Sourcing..
Because my comments isn't just based Upon the NUMBERS, but ALSO based upon the Numbers AND demographics AND what individuals are doing on the internet.
You take them each apart and separate, you will obtain the Information What you want to find and dissect Steve, but if you look at them ALL with Logical COMMON SENSE you will see a trend.. the internet will soon Not be the save all for sourcing and recruiting and good old fashioned recruiting will be the saving grace for tpr's -- Individuals are demanding Privacy, respect for their privacy, and they are also shutting down with regards to having information out for the world to see
Soon the interenet will be Only a resource for information, as more and more privacy is respected.. A perfect example of this can be found here Advertiser tracking (Behavioral advertising) of Web surfing brings suits based upon Privacy concerns http://twurl.nl/xmjbwq
Again, please look at the Message not the LITERAL Context -- that the Interenet Will Not be the Recruiting Tool of the future as it is today!
I guarantee this.. and mark my words this 3/2/2009 - that you will see this occur w/in the next 5 years
Steve Levy said:"...even with your numbers, the numbers became stagnant within the last couple of years - we saw tremendous growth as would be anticipated in the beginning, then it slowed considerably, till the last couple of years, to which it has been in Single digits each year."
From the Pew data - and I'm reading from the spreadsheet I posted earlier, "Used Internet Yesterday" 60% - 55% - 52% - 50% - 56% - 59% - 56% - 51% - 61% - 60% - 59% - 57% - 53% - 58% - 57% - 57% - 56% - 59% - 55% - 52% - 54% - 55% - 53% - 58% - 57% - 60% - 65% - 63% - 66% - 66% - 64% - 65% - 69% - 68% - 72% - 70% - 72% - 72% - 72% If we had looked at earlier periods, we also see stagnation - quite a few years when it was single digit growth - but as more data was collected, we saw the trends. Your statement makes no sense when looking at the data.
John,
my concern is that one is limiting the define talent of recruiting to "boolean strings" and the internet. True Recruiting, the Lost Art to many who have recently come into this industry is really not just going to services like LinkedIn, or finding talent from Myspace, facebook or Twitter.. That in the sense of sourcing is cherry picking.. (MHO) that is what My clients can do easily and effectively..
What my clients want me to do, to earn the BIG bucks, is to go where No Man dares to go.. the Secret passes, where are the Road Less Traveled.. the candidates that are NOT on the internet, the Millions that are Lost.. in the Ozone.. not to be found by the Masses..
THAT is how a RECRUITER brands themselves by RECRUITING through Networking.. defining the Where do I find and locate these individuals, the ones who are not spending their Work hours online, but instead are actually Knocking on Doors, or taking the time to Work, and earn their $$ for the companies.. and when they come home, are spending quality time with friends, family, or brushing up their skills...
Interesting fact.. the Majority of the candidates I find are NOT on the internet - and due to this, the candidates placed also Generally have a longer Tenure, and lower turnover than those who are from the internet... Reason -- there are hundreds of recruiters always calling them to move them to a "better" position -- ERE mentioned a survey that Sumser You had blogged about about 2 years ago, about internet / job board candidates versus Passive candidates.. Do you remember that.. was too lazy to look for the string, maybe someone else can remember it? - it was done by a survey by Taleo or Bullhorn, can't remember exactly who at this time.. it was a while back.. anyone.. bueller.. bueller???
Karen
John Sumser said:Glen Cathey's piece is really interesting and well argued. Thank goodness Michael had the presence of mind to book him on the next RA Show. More or Less, Cathey's view is "Finding People = Easy —– Finding the Right People = Hard".
(That should probably be a part of good manners in these things...summarize the view of the other side before you take it apart.) He's right. Finding the right people will always be hard. Jeez, most recruiters only get it right some of the time. Finding the right people is very hard work.
At 230 calls from nothing to filled position (that's the statistic that Danny Cahill uses), it's unlikely that "the right" person is being found. It's almost always someone who is 'good enough'.
That part of recruiting is permanent. What is less permanent is the time and energy invested in getting to know complex early stage tools. There is nothing about finding the right person that inherently requires Boolean search strings. Conflating the two just confuses the question.
Boolean tools and search strings are artifacts of an overly difficult search process. As it gets less mysterious and magical, more people will do it. As more people do it (it becomes a part of the recruiter's job again), fewer people will be employed to do it.
Glen, do you think this will ever happen? I do.
Until people can plug their brains into information systems and think about what they want to get it, people will have to query systems for data/information.
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