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Do think company executives really care what the cost of hire is? Really..I am curious
I agree with "fill time" and "cost per hire" as meaningful metrics, but not "quality of hire". The recruiter is not accountable for how well someone is doing on the job. The hiring manager is, and after all they are the ones making the hiring decision based on the interview assessments.
I think a meaningful metric is quality of "recruiting", or "customer service" ratings. That typically relates back to fill time and cost per hire, but even an in-house recruiting function should work just the same as a TPR or agency in order to add value. Recruiters drive a process, but if they are driving it wrong, or staying at a red light too long and not pushing the button to turn it to green, then a customer service rating by the hiring manager/team will indicate where the fix might be.
Lastly, source code is meaningful. Where are your hires coming from in relationship to where are you spending your time/money to find candidates.
Peter my friend, I'm so glad you brought up the "recruiters aren't accountable" defense. With respect, I would argue that quality of hire is a must-have on the global dashboard, precisely because it measures the results of decisions made by every contributor to the hiring process ("Did we get what we expected? Did we get value for our investment?"). Everyone owns it, and no other metric more strongly indicates the collective commitment to, or disconnect from, the hiring health of the organization.
When Finance reports on the dashboard, they don't report just those things under their control; they report revenue and expenses, the very things that every stakeholder in the business is responsible for. When business silos present only the information that makes their own turf look good, the business is crippled; on the other hand, best-in-class businesses are interested in the metrics that drive discussion and alignment with global goals and objectives.
Quality of Hire is a global metric that every stakeholder (read: recruiter, hiring manager, interviewer, and upline manager) has some responsibility for, and should have a healthy interest in. Research released earlier this year from the Aberdeen Group showed that QoH was the preferred human capital management metric assigned by executives in best-in-class organizations.
My opinion: Corporate Recruiting is a more strategic contributor when it steps out of the territorial "that's not my responsibility" mode and demonstrates a commitment to speaking the truth - even when it is uncomfortable. The business has to win - not just the recruiting or HR department. If the business fails, recruiting fails too (even if it looks marvelous on the dashboard).
And TPRs, although vendors, are more trusted partners when their vetting processes include consideration and discussion of a candidate's potential for performance and retention throughout the first year. Do they own it? Of course not. But as consultants, do they have an obligation to watch for signs of potential mismatch that may lead to turnover in the first year? To the best of their ability, in my opinion, you bet they do.
Peter Ceccarelli said:I agree with "fill time" and "cost per hire" as meaningful metrics, but not "quality of hire". The recruiter is not accountable for how well someone is doing on the job. The hiring manager is, and after all they are the ones making the hiring decision based on the interview assessments.
I think a meaningful metric is quality of "recruiting", or "customer service" ratings. That typically relates back to fill time and cost per hire, but even an in-house recruiting function should work just the same as a TPR or agency in order to add value. Recruiters drive a process, but if they are driving it wrong, or staying at a red light too long and not pushing the button to turn it to green, then a customer service rating by the hiring manager/team will indicate where the fix might be.
Lastly, source code is meaningful. Where are your hires coming from in relationship to where are you spending your time/money to find candidates.
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