On the Trail for “Qualified” Candidates ...!

You just got off the phone from a Client who has not had the need to call you in 8 months as they only call you if, and only if they really need your help. Your Client has just won a huge 3 year implementation project where they are going to need an army of technical resources to include: Project Managers, Developers, Business and Systems Analysts, QAs and System Admin folks with specialized skills.


You scramble back to your Recruitment Team jumping over desks and chairs (like Vin Diesel in the Movie Boiler Room this is a must watch movie for Recruiters) to call a job requirement meeting with your Recruitment Team of 12 Recruiters which are divided into 3 Teams: the (A) Team- your hardcore real old school – back in the day ``give me a phone and a list of companies to go pull from`` types. Your (B) team – great dependable web (and, Boolean search) surfers who will post the Jobs on the Job Boards and wait for the avalanche of unqualified resumes to come crashing through their mail boxes- they troll the job boards like crab and shrimp fishermen day in and day out. And, Your (C) team – a modern bunch, they utilize Social Media tools liked LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, they join specialized technical groups more importantly they combine the techniques and skills of teams A and B.


This is a pretty powerful group - with a strong Recruitment Strategy in place they could put together a solid pool of candidates. The trail to qualified candidates for each of these teams will be different.


If we dig a little further, Team (A)’s strategy is really simple and direct: Identify the skills, identify where those skills are being utilized, usually at the Client’s competition, devise a plan of entry -break in to target Companies, find that core team, pitch them, bring them in. Will they get “Qualified Candidates” ...? This team should get their man (or Woman) atleast 80% of the time...


The (B) team after job board posting they arrive the next day with truck loads of unqualified resumes to sift through and sort out – they also have to check their existing databases to see if they don’t already have qualified candidates ... So after spending 20 years (my expression for a long time) sorting through all the resumes they come up with a few good men that are close to the mark but not dead on – ofcourse, this team knows that everyone knows atleast 10 other people in their professional circle so on to the phones to get these folks in, get references and ask for referrals smart digging leads to “qualified candidates” eventually ...

Now for the (C) team ... They have also identified from a prepared search strategy where these candidates exist –they hop on to LinkedIn ferociously, to see if any of these profiles fit the description, and hoping these potential candidates also find it necessary to be publicly exposed ... They discover, the companies their potential candidates are currently employed at; lots of professionals to their surprise, Project Managers, System and Business Analysts, QAs, Hooo Rayyyyy ....

Celebrations it seems, need to be delayed, the Project Managers don’t exactly have the Six Sigma experience needed, or the QA ‘s don’t have large enterprise implementation testing experience. They hit the technical specialized groups, they re- drive web traffic back to their job site descriptions and comb through facebook. They have a few streams to pool from, -now it's over to the phones to qualify these candidates. This is the quest...

The direct approach, Job board Surfing, and plugging into Social Media Networks – this describes the trails we take. An intelligent combination of these methods is where this industry’s future is heading.

Our Clients are watching ...

Views: 148

Comment by Timothy Yandel on December 1, 2010 at 10:28pm
I actually pictured my office divided into three teams and it got me thinking, not a bad idea...

Like always, talking with someone is always the best avenue - use the rest of the tools to get you in that conversation but don't let the tools replace the conversation that needs to take place.

Do you know what's interesting though? I've recently noticed that if I call someone and leave a message they get back to me much later than if I text them the quick question I needed to ask. I'm noticing the same trend in recruiting as well. Just find a way to get on the phone or even better, a face to face meeting with these candidates.
Comment by Paul Alfred on December 2, 2010 at 6:22am
Thanks for the the feedback Timothy .... Its amazing things we thought we'd never do a few years ago becomes part of everyday behavior now ... Every restaurant or place of business I visit finds me pulling out my Iphone to check in to Foursquare to share with other folks who might be interested in that venue in the same vicinity - that gets sent back to Facebook or to Twitter. The World has Changed ...
Comment by Timothy Yandel on December 2, 2010 at 8:20am
Agreed Paul - whether change was necessary in the first place (most likely not) we need to change with it. Although I can't thank the iPhone enough for Angry Birds. That made the iPhone necessary in my opinion.
Comment by Sandra McCartt on December 2, 2010 at 12:03pm
Just for the record. I think this is one of the best blogs i have read all year.
Comment by Paul Alfred on December 2, 2010 at 6:35pm
You are too kind Sandra ... and to think I almost scraped it ... For another blog I am working on ..,

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