SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  6
The Best Recruiting Strategy Is the "We Find You" Approach

Choosing between - We find You and You find Us

Not many people research or study recruiting strategies, but those who do realize quite quickly
that all recruiting strategies fit into two categories: you find us and we find you.

The you find us category is the most commonly used, where a firm essentially posts a notice
that it is looking for someone to hire and then sorts through those individuals who respond.

The more proactive category, however, is the we find you approach, where a firm instead
attempts to identify the names of top performers as individuals and then contact them directly.
The first approach almost by design attracts the masses, while the other is more targeted to
minimize the volume of applications and maximize the quality of the applicants.

If you were going to attempt to recruit Tiger Woods to play for your golf team, you would
realize early on that it would require the use of a different approach than most corporations
currently use. Tiger certainly wouldn't respond to the traditional approaches, like ads in
newspapers, or and he wouldn't put his resume on Monster.com. It is also unlikely that he
would attend golfing job fairs or respond to a now hiring banner. If by chance Tiger did
respond, it is unlikely that he would endure the hiring process at most firms, because he
wouldn't be treated as special or as a target individual.

The only way to hire top performers is to give up the notion that they are going to find you and
instead adopt a recruiting strategy that proactively finds them. Tiger, much like other top
performers, has so many choices that the only way you could possibly recruit him would be to
target him individually and then build a relationship with him over time in order to eventually
convince him to join your golf team.

This relationship-based recruiting strategy is called the we find you approach, and if you want
to hire the very best, it's the only approach to use.



Why You Find Us Generates a System Stressing Volume

Perhaps an analogy would best highlight the differences between the two categories of
recruiting.

In the media, there are two basic choices to attracting a target audience:
Broadcasting and Narrowcasting.
The broadcasting approach uses far-reaching tools to attract the widest possible audience. It is
the approach used by the major TV networks (e.g. ABC, CBS, NBC, CBC). Another approach,
called narrowcasting, is used by cable TV stations to attract a very narrow but targeted
audience, for example the Sci-Fi or the Golfing channels.

The first approach gets you a large volume of viewers, while the second gets you a smaller but
much more targeted viewership. If you wanted to recruit a golf fanatic, placing an ad on a
broadcast network will get you a huge volume of candidates, most of whom will be unqualified
or under qualified. If you wanted to attract only golf fanatics, you would place an ad on the Golf
channel, and you would certainly get only golf fanatics responding, because no one else would
ever watch a golf channel.
The same holds true for the commonly used you find us approach and the superior, but
unfortunately least used, we find you approach. If you're currently inundated with a high
volume of candidates whom you have little interest in, it's probably because you are using a
you find us approach.

The You Find Us Sourcing Strategy

The you find us sourcing strategy is used by 95% of firms, making it the most common — but,
unfortunately, least effective — of all sourcing strategies. Using this strategy, all attraction
efforts are general and are designed to find anyone who fits the broad category of your search.
It is a broad net strategy, where no proactive effort is made to find people or prospects as
individuals.

Here are the common you find us sourcing tools, listed in order from least effective

1. Job fairs
2. Ads in newspapers
3. Job boards
4. Billboards or we're hiring banners
5. College hires at on-campus career events
6. Walk in applications at physical locations
7. Corporate career sites (a passive approach where you hope that candidates surfing the
web will find your site and have the interest and patience to follow through and apply)
8. Employment branding (an excellent approach that causes everyone — the best as well
as the rest — to want to work at your firm, which results in your firm's getting on best
place to work lists or having best practices talked about in business, functional, and
industry publications)

As you can readily see, all of the tools that are used under the you find us
approach are aimed at a broad audience. Job boards, for example, are designed to attract a
wide range of candidates, from the barely qualified to the barely interested. Billboards or
we are hiring banners attract anyone who drives by, with no delineation or targeting toward a
specific skill set, performance, or interest level.

Of all of the tools in this category, the employment branding approach is the strongest. It is a
long-term approach designed to make candidates aware of why your company is an excellent
place to work. Although this is an excellent long-term recruiting strategy, since it builds the
interest and knowledge of applicants about your firm, it does, by design, also bring in a very
large volume of every type of candidate.

The next step in the you find us approach is the interview. Since candidates sourced using the
you find us strategy by definition found you, most firms do nothing more than put them
through the standard screening processes. Since they are essentially strangers, the best
candidates can easily get lost in the volume of applicants.

There is no real selling or relationship building, because it is assumed (wrongfully so) that a
candidate's interest is strong, since they found you and they took the time to apply.


The Best Recruiting Strategy Is the "We Find You" Approach
Only 5% of firms focus on this advanced but vastly superior approach as a name identification
strategy. The we find you strategy is targeted toward currently employed top performers.

These individuals are generally not looking for a job and they may not be interested
in (or even aware of) your firm.
(Note: Some many of us call these individuals passive candidates, but that's a misleading label
because these people are generally not passive at all).

This superior sourcing approach is not designed to attract the masses. Instead, it uses a
narrow net approach to identify the very best people and then recruit them. This is
the approach that has been successfully used by executive search firms for decades. It is also
used by recruiting powerhouse FirstMerit and other top firms like EA, GE, and Microsoft, as well
as almost all sports teams and entertainment firms.

The we find you approach is based on the premise that if you start recruiting before need (i.e.,
before you need to fill an open req), you have the time to identify the very best individuals by
name and then build the relationship, so that you can, over time, better assess and sell them on
your firm and the opportunities you can offer them.

The key we find you sourcing tools are listed below, from least effective to most
effective:
1. Cold calls. Recruiters identify the best through periodic calls.
2. Mystery shopping. Recruiters identify the best by buying products or asking questions of
other firm's employees (which works best in public-facing jobs).
3. Credit lists. Recruiters find people who precisely fit your target demographics based on
their job title, income, location, and diversity.
4. Public records. Similar to credit lists, public records searches can identify specific
individuals who fit a very narrowly defined demographic.
5. Mentor recruiting. With this method, your recruiters seek out top performers and ask
whether they have mentored others at your targeted firms. You then use the mentor
relationship to recruit the mentees. (A variation tries to get top performing
mentees at your firm to draw away their mentors from other firms.)
6. Intern to hire or temp to hire. Although interns or temps may have been initially
recruited using a broad net approach, converting them to permanent hires requires
a we find you relationship building process to assess them and eventually sell
them on a permanent position.
7. Technical contests. Skills and problem-solving contests, generally online (e.g.
TopCoder), attract and identify those with the best solutions.
8. Scholarship awards. Top prospects are identified based on their scholarship
9. Professional association lists. Recruiters mine these lists to identify potential
candidates based on where they work and their seniority in the field.
10. Internet name generation. Using this approach, recruiters find individuals who write
and speak by using Google type Internet searches based what they write and say.
11. Hire to learn or hurt. Target the best employees working at competitors based on their
ability to bring a targeted skill to your firm.
12. Name generation firms. Pay researchers at vendor firms to identify the names of target
candidates based on titles and firms they work at.
13. Boomerangs. Using this approach, recruiters proactively seek out top former
employees in an effort to get them to return to your firm.
14. Event recruiting. Send employees to identify speakers (as well as those who ask
questions and make comments) at seminars and professional events.
15. Benchmark recruiting. Find the best people while researching best practices at
competitor firms.
16. Magnet strategy. Hire the well-known in order to attract other top people,
even in other job families. (Hire Tiger Woods and the rest will come...)
17. Referrals. Proactively ask top employees, former employees, and friends of the firm to
find and refer others like themselves.
18. Most wanted lists. Senior managers identify the best in the industry at the beginning of
the year. Recruiters and managers then sell them on switching firms throughout the year.
The next step in the we find you approach is relationship recruiting.
Unlike the you find us approach, this strategy adds a relationship-building step
where trust building, assessment, and selling occur over a several month period.
After finding prospects, recruiters, managers and employees must build a relationship with
each
of them in order to increase their interest and trust. Once the recruiter qualifies them, the next
step is to then identify the job switch criteria of the very best and then use that information to
sell them.
Weaknesses in the Two Different Approaches

A newspaper ad is a good example of the you find us approach. Your firm places an ad in a
newspaper that attracts a broad audience, and people who are looking for a job will find you by
sorting through a number of want ads.
Initially, many recruiters think that the people that find you are superior candidates.
Because they took the time to find you, recruiters assume that these candidates are the ones
who are the most interested in your firm and job. Unfortunately, relying on that assumption
might doom your firm to a endless stream of mediocre candidates and hires. Why?

1. Loyalty and interest. First you need to understand that just because a candidate found
you, that doesn't mean that they haven't simultaneously found a dozen other firms and jobs.
You can not assume any degree of loyalty to, or even knowledge of, your firm.
2. High volume. A second problem with the you find us approach is that it
almost guarantees you will get a large volume of candidates, some of whom will fit your needs
but the majority of whom will not. As almost any recruiter can tell you, want ads will get you a
large percentage of unqualified people and a handful of qualified ones at best.
3. High error probability. Because all broad approaches bring in a large number of barely
qualified candidates, there is a high chance that a few barely qualified candidates
will slip through and a number of highly qualified candidates will be passed over, unless your
screening process is very accurate.
4. Low acceptance rate. Because most applicants know little about your firm other than the
fact that you have job openings, you are likely to get a low offer-acceptance rate. This problem
is further exacerbated by the fact that hiring managers often assume a high degree of interest
and there is little attempt to sell the candidate until the job offer is made. This last-minute
selling effort often fails, because these individuals are essentially strangers, meaning that you
only know them and they only know your firm for the two- or three-week period of the
interview process. Because the candidate was not identified and courted prior to the job
opening, the firm has no long-term relationship, no reservoir of trust, nor even any vital
information about the candidate's job switch or job acceptance criteria.
5. Low quality. The final, and perhaps most significant, difficulty with the you find
us approach is that it cannot excite and thus attract people who are not actively looking
for a job. Because most of the best candidates are top performers who are currently employed,
they seldom have the time or even the interest to respond to you find us approaches. In
addition, broad approaches like newspaper ads, job boards, and job fairs just don't provide
enough targeted information to fit the interests and the specific criteria that top performers
have for switching jobs.

The list of weaknesses inherent in the you find us approach is long, but that doesn't mean the
we find you approach isn't without its own set of weaknesses and challenges. The we find you
approach requires some advanced knowledge of the habits of the target candidates. As a result,
recruiters with no background in marketing, sales, or executive search often shy away from it.
In addition, the we find you approach requires that relationships be built between the firm and
the target candidates, which is a long-term process. Still the most common sourcing strategy by
far is the you find us approach. Firms use it because it's easy and it's traditional. But if you want
a competitive advantage, and also don't want to handle a large number of under qualified and
mildly interested candidates, I recommend you at least partially shift to the we find
you model.

This approach does require higher quality recruiters and, because the targeted candidates get
individual attention, more time and resources. Most firms that use this approach also develop a
customer relationship management (CRM) model for the critical step of building and
maintaining .

If you are reluctant to adopt this model, I recommend that you look at how executive search
firms approach their business. They utilize the we find you model almost exclusively, because it
results in higher quality candidates and in higher offer acceptance rates.

If you don't have the courage or resources to apply the model to all positions, I suggest you at
least try it for your mission critical positions, where hiring top performers is essential. Once you
shift to this model, you will wonder why you ever considered any other approach.

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Different and effective ways of Recruitment
Different and effective ways of RecruitmentDifferent and effective ways of Recruitment
Different and effective ways of RecruitmentGarimaNautiyal2
 
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and Marketing
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and MarketingTalent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and Marketing
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and MarketingLinkedIn Talent Solutions
 
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...LinkedIn Talent Solutions
 
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium business
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium businessThe ultimate hiring tool box for small medium business
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium businessDaorong Lin
 
Talent acquisition strategy
Talent acquisition strategyTalent acquisition strategy
Talent acquisition strategyRototecPvtLtd
 
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIA
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIARECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIA
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIASakshiMaithil
 
6 strategies for_recruiting
6 strategies for_recruiting6 strategies for_recruiting
6 strategies for_recruitingNaveen Prabhakar
 
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...LinkedIn Talent Solutions
 
How to Create a Winning Recruitment Strategy
How to Create a Winning Recruitment StrategyHow to Create a Winning Recruitment Strategy
How to Create a Winning Recruitment StrategyCareerBuilder
 
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...Recruitment Innovation Summit
 
Focus your Recruitment Strategy
Focus your Recruitment StrategyFocus your Recruitment Strategy
Focus your Recruitment StrategyHireSmart LLC
 
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment plan
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment planTalent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment plan
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment planResearchEurope
 
Show Your Value, Grow Your Business
Show Your Value, Grow Your BusinessShow Your Value, Grow Your Business
Show Your Value, Grow Your BusinessKelly Services
 
Attract Top Candidates with Employer Branding
Attract Top Candidates with Employer BrandingAttract Top Candidates with Employer Branding
Attract Top Candidates with Employer BrandingLeah Burdick
 
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value proposition
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value propositionWTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value proposition
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value propositioniebanl
 
Employee Value Proposition
Employee Value Proposition Employee Value Proposition
Employee Value Proposition Domenico Fama
 
Hiring Mistakes to Avoid
Hiring Mistakes to AvoidHiring Mistakes to Avoid
Hiring Mistakes to AvoidLinda Descano
 

Tendances (20)

Talent acquisition training
Talent acquisition trainingTalent acquisition training
Talent acquisition training
 
Different and effective ways of Recruitment
Different and effective ways of RecruitmentDifferent and effective ways of Recruitment
Different and effective ways of Recruitment
 
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and Marketing
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and MarketingTalent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and Marketing
Talent Brand: The Intersection of Talent Acquisition and Marketing
 
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...
Modern Marketing & Recruitment: Best Practices for Talent Acquisition Leaders...
 
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium business
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium businessThe ultimate hiring tool box for small medium business
The ultimate hiring tool box for small medium business
 
Talent acquisition strategy
Talent acquisition strategyTalent acquisition strategy
Talent acquisition strategy
 
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIA
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIARECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIA
RECRUITING ON SOCIAL MEDIA
 
6 strategies for_recruiting
6 strategies for_recruiting6 strategies for_recruiting
6 strategies for_recruiting
 
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...
360 Sourcing: How to Find the Best Internal & External Talent | Talent Connec...
 
How to Create a Winning Recruitment Strategy
How to Create a Winning Recruitment StrategyHow to Create a Winning Recruitment Strategy
How to Create a Winning Recruitment Strategy
 
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...
Getting to “Yes” and Beyond: Engaging Candidates Before- and After- The Point...
 
Creating Employer Brand Value
Creating Employer Brand ValueCreating Employer Brand Value
Creating Employer Brand Value
 
Shaping Your Internal Hiring Recruitment Strategy
Shaping Your Internal Hiring Recruitment StrategyShaping Your Internal Hiring Recruitment Strategy
Shaping Your Internal Hiring Recruitment Strategy
 
Focus your Recruitment Strategy
Focus your Recruitment StrategyFocus your Recruitment Strategy
Focus your Recruitment Strategy
 
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment plan
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment planTalent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment plan
Talent Mapping - Intelligence Supporting your recruitment plan
 
Show Your Value, Grow Your Business
Show Your Value, Grow Your BusinessShow Your Value, Grow Your Business
Show Your Value, Grow Your Business
 
Attract Top Candidates with Employer Branding
Attract Top Candidates with Employer BrandingAttract Top Candidates with Employer Branding
Attract Top Candidates with Employer Branding
 
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value proposition
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value propositionWTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value proposition
WTW: Employers look to modernize the employee value proposition
 
Employee Value Proposition
Employee Value Proposition Employee Value Proposition
Employee Value Proposition
 
Hiring Mistakes to Avoid
Hiring Mistakes to AvoidHiring Mistakes to Avoid
Hiring Mistakes to Avoid
 

Similaire à Recruiting strategy

The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1
The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1
The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1Sayam Kumar
 
Best practices in recruitment that every company should follow
Best practices in recruitment that every company should followBest practices in recruitment that every company should follow
Best practices in recruitment that every company should followKannan G S
 
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not)
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not) Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not)
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not) Acacia HR Solutions
 
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talentInterview Mocha
 
The Thornton Group - Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...
The Thornton Group -  Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...The Thornton Group -  Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...
The Thornton Group - Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...Neil Thornton HBA, MA
 
Recruitment Policy and Procedure
Recruitment Policy and ProcedureRecruitment Policy and Procedure
Recruitment Policy and ProcedureManage Train Learn
 
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right CandidatesExela HR Solutions
 
Alan Current Resume
Alan Current ResumeAlan Current Resume
Alan Current ResumeAlan Miller
 
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptx
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptxThe Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptx
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptxAnanyaSrivastava867493
 
8 Steps to creating a talent pool
8 Steps to creating a talent pool8 Steps to creating a talent pool
8 Steps to creating a talent poolHudson
 
How Your Brand Affects Your Recruiting
How Your Brand Affects Your RecruitingHow Your Brand Affects Your Recruiting
How Your Brand Affects Your RecruitingInsperity
 
Employee Recruitment Slidedoc
Employee Recruitment SlidedocEmployee Recruitment Slidedoc
Employee Recruitment SlidedocCynthia_Fisher
 
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdf
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdfHow to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdf
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdfMaintec Technologies Pvt Ltd
 
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptx
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptxEffective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptx
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptxKalyanNemani1
 
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and Posts
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and PostsTASK-1 -Recruitment Article and Posts
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and PostsSiddiNShah
 
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Knowjanviverma11
 
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiter
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiterThe Difference between a headhunter and a recruiter
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiterThe Pathway Group
 

Similaire à Recruiting strategy (20)

The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1
The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1
The Sparks Foundation HR Task 1
 
Best practices in recruitment that every company should follow
Best practices in recruitment that every company should followBest practices in recruitment that every company should follow
Best practices in recruitment that every company should follow
 
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not)
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not) Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not)
Recruit Like Google....(even when you're not)
 
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent
6 Unconventional Hiring Strategies to attract and hire top talent
 
The Thornton Group - Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...
The Thornton Group -  Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...The Thornton Group -  Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...
The Thornton Group - Finding and Keeping the Best Talent - An 8 Step Hiring ...
 
Recruitment Policy and Procedure
Recruitment Policy and ProcedureRecruitment Policy and Procedure
Recruitment Policy and Procedure
 
The Sourcer's Toolkit
The Sourcer's Toolkit The Sourcer's Toolkit
The Sourcer's Toolkit
 
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates
9 Passive Recruiting Strategies To Help Employers Land The Right Candidates
 
Alan Current Resume
Alan Current ResumeAlan Current Resume
Alan Current Resume
 
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptx
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptxThe Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptx
The Sparks Foundation Campus Ambassador.pptx
 
8 Steps to creating a talent pool
8 Steps to creating a talent pool8 Steps to creating a talent pool
8 Steps to creating a talent pool
 
How Your Brand Affects Your Recruiting
How Your Brand Affects Your RecruitingHow Your Brand Affects Your Recruiting
How Your Brand Affects Your Recruiting
 
Employee Recruitment Slidedoc
Employee Recruitment SlidedocEmployee Recruitment Slidedoc
Employee Recruitment Slidedoc
 
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdf
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdfHow to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdf
How to Recruit for Startups - A Guid for Employers- Maintec.pdf
 
Recruitment Articles and Posts
Recruitment Articles and PostsRecruitment Articles and Posts
Recruitment Articles and Posts
 
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptx
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptxEffective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptx
Effective Ways of Recruiting, GRIP TASK - 1- Kalyan Nemani.pptx
 
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and Posts
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and PostsTASK-1 -Recruitment Article and Posts
TASK-1 -Recruitment Article and Posts
 
Social Media Presentation
Social Media PresentationSocial Media Presentation
Social Media Presentation
 
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know
5 Effective Candidate Sourcing Strategies that Every Recruiter Should Know
 
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiter
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiterThe Difference between a headhunter and a recruiter
The Difference between a headhunter and a recruiter
 

Plus de Gaurav Gaur

Tangible to intangible
Tangible to intangibleTangible to intangible
Tangible to intangibleGaurav Gaur
 
Recruiting for Drupal #Hiring
Recruiting for Drupal #HiringRecruiting for Drupal #Hiring
Recruiting for Drupal #HiringGaurav Gaur
 
Social recruiting
Social recruitingSocial recruiting
Social recruitingGaurav Gaur
 
Story Testimonial Pitch
Story Testimonial PitchStory Testimonial Pitch
Story Testimonial PitchGaurav Gaur
 
Art of Interviewing !!!
Art of Interviewing !!!Art of Interviewing !!!
Art of Interviewing !!!Gaurav Gaur
 
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!Gaurav Gaur
 

Plus de Gaurav Gaur (6)

Tangible to intangible
Tangible to intangibleTangible to intangible
Tangible to intangible
 
Recruiting for Drupal #Hiring
Recruiting for Drupal #HiringRecruiting for Drupal #Hiring
Recruiting for Drupal #Hiring
 
Social recruiting
Social recruitingSocial recruiting
Social recruiting
 
Story Testimonial Pitch
Story Testimonial PitchStory Testimonial Pitch
Story Testimonial Pitch
 
Art of Interviewing !!!
Art of Interviewing !!!Art of Interviewing !!!
Art of Interviewing !!!
 
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!
Sourcei | New Age Sourcing Model !!
 

Dernier

Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdf
Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdfVirtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdf
Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdfErwinPantujan2
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationRosabel UA
 
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONTHEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONHumphrey A Beña
 
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxINTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxHumphrey A Beña
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptxmary850239
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxCarlos105
 
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.ppt
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.pptIntegumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.ppt
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.pptshraddhaparab530
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxAshokKarra1
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfPatidar M
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...JojoEDelaCruz
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatYousafMalik24
 
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...Postal Advocate Inc.
 
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptxmary850239
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxiammrhaywood
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Mark Reed
 
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfGrade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfJemuel Francisco
 
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSGRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSJoshuaGantuangco2
 
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptx
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptxMusic 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptx
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptxleah joy valeriano
 

Dernier (20)

Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdf
Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdfVirtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdf
Virtual-Orientation-on-the-Administration-of-NATG12-NATG6-and-ELLNA.pdf
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
 
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONTHEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
 
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxINTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
 
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.ppt
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.pptIntegumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.ppt
Integumentary System SMP B. Pharm Sem I.ppt
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
 
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...
USPS® Forced Meter Migration - How to Know if Your Postage Meter Will Soon be...
 
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
 
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptxLEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
 
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfGrade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
 
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSGRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
 
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptx
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptxMusic 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptx
Music 9 - 4th quarter - Vocal Music of the Romantic Period.pptx
 

Recruiting strategy

  • 1. The Best Recruiting Strategy Is the "We Find You" Approach Choosing between - We find You and You find Us Not many people research or study recruiting strategies, but those who do realize quite quickly that all recruiting strategies fit into two categories: you find us and we find you. The you find us category is the most commonly used, where a firm essentially posts a notice that it is looking for someone to hire and then sorts through those individuals who respond. The more proactive category, however, is the we find you approach, where a firm instead attempts to identify the names of top performers as individuals and then contact them directly. The first approach almost by design attracts the masses, while the other is more targeted to minimize the volume of applications and maximize the quality of the applicants. If you were going to attempt to recruit Tiger Woods to play for your golf team, you would realize early on that it would require the use of a different approach than most corporations currently use. Tiger certainly wouldn't respond to the traditional approaches, like ads in newspapers, or and he wouldn't put his resume on Monster.com. It is also unlikely that he would attend golfing job fairs or respond to a now hiring banner. If by chance Tiger did respond, it is unlikely that he would endure the hiring process at most firms, because he wouldn't be treated as special or as a target individual. The only way to hire top performers is to give up the notion that they are going to find you and instead adopt a recruiting strategy that proactively finds them. Tiger, much like other top performers, has so many choices that the only way you could possibly recruit him would be to target him individually and then build a relationship with him over time in order to eventually convince him to join your golf team. This relationship-based recruiting strategy is called the we find you approach, and if you want to hire the very best, it's the only approach to use. Why You Find Us Generates a System Stressing Volume Perhaps an analogy would best highlight the differences between the two categories of recruiting. In the media, there are two basic choices to attracting a target audience: Broadcasting and Narrowcasting.
  • 2. The broadcasting approach uses far-reaching tools to attract the widest possible audience. It is the approach used by the major TV networks (e.g. ABC, CBS, NBC, CBC). Another approach, called narrowcasting, is used by cable TV stations to attract a very narrow but targeted audience, for example the Sci-Fi or the Golfing channels. The first approach gets you a large volume of viewers, while the second gets you a smaller but much more targeted viewership. If you wanted to recruit a golf fanatic, placing an ad on a broadcast network will get you a huge volume of candidates, most of whom will be unqualified or under qualified. If you wanted to attract only golf fanatics, you would place an ad on the Golf channel, and you would certainly get only golf fanatics responding, because no one else would ever watch a golf channel. The same holds true for the commonly used you find us approach and the superior, but unfortunately least used, we find you approach. If you're currently inundated with a high volume of candidates whom you have little interest in, it's probably because you are using a you find us approach. The You Find Us Sourcing Strategy The you find us sourcing strategy is used by 95% of firms, making it the most common — but, unfortunately, least effective — of all sourcing strategies. Using this strategy, all attraction efforts are general and are designed to find anyone who fits the broad category of your search. It is a broad net strategy, where no proactive effort is made to find people or prospects as individuals. Here are the common you find us sourcing tools, listed in order from least effective 1. Job fairs 2. Ads in newspapers 3. Job boards 4. Billboards or we're hiring banners 5. College hires at on-campus career events 6. Walk in applications at physical locations 7. Corporate career sites (a passive approach where you hope that candidates surfing the web will find your site and have the interest and patience to follow through and apply) 8. Employment branding (an excellent approach that causes everyone — the best as well as the rest — to want to work at your firm, which results in your firm's getting on best place to work lists or having best practices talked about in business, functional, and industry publications) As you can readily see, all of the tools that are used under the you find us approach are aimed at a broad audience. Job boards, for example, are designed to attract a wide range of candidates, from the barely qualified to the barely interested. Billboards or
  • 3. we are hiring banners attract anyone who drives by, with no delineation or targeting toward a specific skill set, performance, or interest level. Of all of the tools in this category, the employment branding approach is the strongest. It is a long-term approach designed to make candidates aware of why your company is an excellent place to work. Although this is an excellent long-term recruiting strategy, since it builds the interest and knowledge of applicants about your firm, it does, by design, also bring in a very large volume of every type of candidate. The next step in the you find us approach is the interview. Since candidates sourced using the you find us strategy by definition found you, most firms do nothing more than put them through the standard screening processes. Since they are essentially strangers, the best candidates can easily get lost in the volume of applicants. There is no real selling or relationship building, because it is assumed (wrongfully so) that a candidate's interest is strong, since they found you and they took the time to apply. The Best Recruiting Strategy Is the "We Find You" Approach Only 5% of firms focus on this advanced but vastly superior approach as a name identification strategy. The we find you strategy is targeted toward currently employed top performers. These individuals are generally not looking for a job and they may not be interested in (or even aware of) your firm. (Note: Some many of us call these individuals passive candidates, but that's a misleading label because these people are generally not passive at all). This superior sourcing approach is not designed to attract the masses. Instead, it uses a narrow net approach to identify the very best people and then recruit them. This is the approach that has been successfully used by executive search firms for decades. It is also used by recruiting powerhouse FirstMerit and other top firms like EA, GE, and Microsoft, as well as almost all sports teams and entertainment firms. The we find you approach is based on the premise that if you start recruiting before need (i.e., before you need to fill an open req), you have the time to identify the very best individuals by name and then build the relationship, so that you can, over time, better assess and sell them on your firm and the opportunities you can offer them. The key we find you sourcing tools are listed below, from least effective to most effective: 1. Cold calls. Recruiters identify the best through periodic calls. 2. Mystery shopping. Recruiters identify the best by buying products or asking questions of other firm's employees (which works best in public-facing jobs).
  • 4. 3. Credit lists. Recruiters find people who precisely fit your target demographics based on their job title, income, location, and diversity. 4. Public records. Similar to credit lists, public records searches can identify specific individuals who fit a very narrowly defined demographic. 5. Mentor recruiting. With this method, your recruiters seek out top performers and ask whether they have mentored others at your targeted firms. You then use the mentor relationship to recruit the mentees. (A variation tries to get top performing mentees at your firm to draw away their mentors from other firms.) 6. Intern to hire or temp to hire. Although interns or temps may have been initially recruited using a broad net approach, converting them to permanent hires requires a we find you relationship building process to assess them and eventually sell them on a permanent position. 7. Technical contests. Skills and problem-solving contests, generally online (e.g. TopCoder), attract and identify those with the best solutions. 8. Scholarship awards. Top prospects are identified based on their scholarship 9. Professional association lists. Recruiters mine these lists to identify potential candidates based on where they work and their seniority in the field. 10. Internet name generation. Using this approach, recruiters find individuals who write and speak by using Google type Internet searches based what they write and say. 11. Hire to learn or hurt. Target the best employees working at competitors based on their ability to bring a targeted skill to your firm. 12. Name generation firms. Pay researchers at vendor firms to identify the names of target candidates based on titles and firms they work at. 13. Boomerangs. Using this approach, recruiters proactively seek out top former employees in an effort to get them to return to your firm. 14. Event recruiting. Send employees to identify speakers (as well as those who ask questions and make comments) at seminars and professional events. 15. Benchmark recruiting. Find the best people while researching best practices at competitor firms. 16. Magnet strategy. Hire the well-known in order to attract other top people, even in other job families. (Hire Tiger Woods and the rest will come...) 17. Referrals. Proactively ask top employees, former employees, and friends of the firm to find and refer others like themselves. 18. Most wanted lists. Senior managers identify the best in the industry at the beginning of the year. Recruiters and managers then sell them on switching firms throughout the year. The next step in the we find you approach is relationship recruiting. Unlike the you find us approach, this strategy adds a relationship-building step where trust building, assessment, and selling occur over a several month period. After finding prospects, recruiters, managers and employees must build a relationship with each of them in order to increase their interest and trust. Once the recruiter qualifies them, the next step is to then identify the job switch criteria of the very best and then use that information to sell them.
  • 5. Weaknesses in the Two Different Approaches A newspaper ad is a good example of the you find us approach. Your firm places an ad in a newspaper that attracts a broad audience, and people who are looking for a job will find you by sorting through a number of want ads. Initially, many recruiters think that the people that find you are superior candidates. Because they took the time to find you, recruiters assume that these candidates are the ones who are the most interested in your firm and job. Unfortunately, relying on that assumption might doom your firm to a endless stream of mediocre candidates and hires. Why? 1. Loyalty and interest. First you need to understand that just because a candidate found you, that doesn't mean that they haven't simultaneously found a dozen other firms and jobs. You can not assume any degree of loyalty to, or even knowledge of, your firm. 2. High volume. A second problem with the you find us approach is that it almost guarantees you will get a large volume of candidates, some of whom will fit your needs but the majority of whom will not. As almost any recruiter can tell you, want ads will get you a large percentage of unqualified people and a handful of qualified ones at best. 3. High error probability. Because all broad approaches bring in a large number of barely qualified candidates, there is a high chance that a few barely qualified candidates will slip through and a number of highly qualified candidates will be passed over, unless your screening process is very accurate. 4. Low acceptance rate. Because most applicants know little about your firm other than the fact that you have job openings, you are likely to get a low offer-acceptance rate. This problem is further exacerbated by the fact that hiring managers often assume a high degree of interest and there is little attempt to sell the candidate until the job offer is made. This last-minute selling effort often fails, because these individuals are essentially strangers, meaning that you only know them and they only know your firm for the two- or three-week period of the interview process. Because the candidate was not identified and courted prior to the job opening, the firm has no long-term relationship, no reservoir of trust, nor even any vital information about the candidate's job switch or job acceptance criteria. 5. Low quality. The final, and perhaps most significant, difficulty with the you find us approach is that it cannot excite and thus attract people who are not actively looking for a job. Because most of the best candidates are top performers who are currently employed, they seldom have the time or even the interest to respond to you find us approaches. In addition, broad approaches like newspaper ads, job boards, and job fairs just don't provide enough targeted information to fit the interests and the specific criteria that top performers have for switching jobs. The list of weaknesses inherent in the you find us approach is long, but that doesn't mean the we find you approach isn't without its own set of weaknesses and challenges. The we find you approach requires some advanced knowledge of the habits of the target candidates. As a result, recruiters with no background in marketing, sales, or executive search often shy away from it. In addition, the we find you approach requires that relationships be built between the firm and
  • 6. the target candidates, which is a long-term process. Still the most common sourcing strategy by far is the you find us approach. Firms use it because it's easy and it's traditional. But if you want a competitive advantage, and also don't want to handle a large number of under qualified and mildly interested candidates, I recommend you at least partially shift to the we find you model. This approach does require higher quality recruiters and, because the targeted candidates get individual attention, more time and resources. Most firms that use this approach also develop a customer relationship management (CRM) model for the critical step of building and maintaining . If you are reluctant to adopt this model, I recommend that you look at how executive search firms approach their business. They utilize the we find you model almost exclusively, because it results in higher quality candidates and in higher offer acceptance rates. If you don't have the courage or resources to apply the model to all positions, I suggest you at least try it for your mission critical positions, where hiring top performers is essential. Once you shift to this model, you will wonder why you ever considered any other approach.