The number of Americans relocating peaked in……….ready for this………1985.  Last year only 10% of people in the US moved.

The problem with this is that people are not getting to where the jobs are.  It’s not just that companies don’t want to pay for relo.  That is certainly true and is a factor, but candidates don’t want to move.  The average time spent in a given job has been getting shorter and candidates know this.  So uprooting the family and moving away from the place that you’ve made home is not worth it to many people.

Even if you are open to relocating candidates, the fact that many of them don’t want to move still limits the candidate pool.

Todd Kmiec

Recruiting Perspective

Views: 258

Comment by Chris Russell on September 6, 2017 at 11:41am

I looked at indeed trends and "relocation assistance" is a term that is on the rise with job seeker searches. The question is with such a tight employment market should Relocation be on the table for every hard to fill role?

Comment by Keith D. Halperin on September 23, 2017 at 12:46pm

It's not that just many don't want to, it's that they can't AFFORD to. (Often two wage-earners are involved, not just one.)Try relocating an engineer and her family from the Research Triangle to the Bay Area.

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