The Goal of Talent Acquisition:
Whether you’re looking for live chat agents, hospitality workers, seasonal workers, or call center agents, the goal of your talent acquisition process is always the same. Specifically, your goal is to find the right person at the right time who is qualified for the job, and who will stay on the job long enough to be an effective employee to help you achieve your financial targets.
Taking a New Approach to the Talent Selection Process with an Old Concept…
For years, the undisputed holy grails of supply chain management were speed and low cost. Though these are certainly necessary, they are not enough to give businesses the edge over their competitors in the long term (CBS Money Watch).
In his Harvard Business Review article, Hau L. Lee discusses three practices that provide sustainable competitive advantage in terms of supply chains: agility, adaptability, and alignment.
Since the high-volume talent selection process presents its own unique set of challenges, there are a few additional considerations that need to be taken into account. Harver’s scientifically validated assessments and automated solutions have added efficiency and effectiveness to the list of practices to create a comprehensive approach to sustainable and competitive hiring.
5 Best Practices of a Supply Chain Talent Acquisition Process
Where the supply chain analysis method pinpoints weak links in the talent acquisition process, these five critical capabilities can provide significant financial value. How? By increasing the quality of hire and reducing attrition and cost per hire.
#1 Agility: Respond to Short-Term Changes in the Hiring Process
The objective of agility is to respond to short-term changes in demand or supply quickly. In terms of recruiting organizations, there are a few ways this can happen.
One way is to continuously provide updated hiring demand data and provide workforce planning with updated data on supply changes. Additionally, a small, qualified candidate pool should be maintained in preparation for sudden changes in demand.
Example: Schedule weekly meetings with hiring teams to review hiring needs. Establish an “always-on” hiring and recruiting approach to maintain an active hiring pool. The Zappos Insider Program is a great example of this.
#2 Adaptability: Adjust Seamlessly to Market Changes
In the hiring process, adaptability enables organizations to adjust the staffing process design to accommodate market changes.
To achieve adaptability, track the market condition changes. For example, if you’re hiring for a contact center, track changes such as new call center openings, other hourly employers, and overall labor market conditions. Other measures your business can take to increase adaptability include:
- Using intermediaries to find reliable sourcing supplies by market
- Creating flexibility in the staffing process to accommodate local market changes
- Using different staffing procedures for different positions
- Monitoring recruiting staff-to-hire ratio to enable teams — and the organization as a whole — to be responsive
Example: Using call centers as an illustration, create a team whose core responsibility is to research community call center happenings, and network with call centers in the area through professional organizations.
#3 Alignment: Get All Stakeholders Involved
Unless hiring efforts have the buy-in from all involved parties, the process will not function optimally. Alignment involves establishing incentives for the entire staffing chain to improve performance of the staffing process.
To achieve alignment in the talent acquisition process, businesses can take a few different approaches. First, clarify each party’s incentives in the process to avoid competing incentives. For example, do human resource teams, operations, and training all have the same incentives when it comes to retention?
Additionally, all groups should be given equal access to demand and supply forecasts and data, and the communications process should be carefully defined among all involved groups.
Example: Establish communication frequency and agendas with all groups (i.e., operations, HR, training). Put financial incentives in place to align across recruiting, training, and operations.
#4 Efficiency: Do Things Right
Efficiency allows organizations to determine where time and money are best spent in the recruiting process. Implementing hiring assessment tools can speed the process along considerably by narrowing candidate pools down. With objective assessment results, hiring managers have the data-driven decision support to know which candidates have the right set of competencies to succeed.
Additionally, using technology to automate processes opens a door allowing analytics tools to be used to track the hiring process funnels. As a result, metrics can be used to track process efficiency and staffing utilization.
Example: Use an automated process with “high touch” customer service throughout the assessments. Review daily throughput statistics and compare those statistics against the company’s goals. By doing this, the company can then make the necessary adjustments.
#5 Effectiveness: Do the Right Things
Determining effectiveness involves determining how staffing programs and processes impact each phase of the staffing cycle. In other words, is the new talent selection process working? There are a few different ways you can go about determining this:
- Measure effectiveness of communications at achieving alignment goal
- Measure effectiveness of staffing programs to increase average length of service and retention
- Measure effectiveness of staffing programs to improve the quality of hire
Example: Take the time to conduct a quarterly formal review of hiring results. Additionally, perform a quarterly formal review of performance and retention results to determine if, in fact, staffing efforts are meeting desired goals and output.
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