One Side Order of Talent Please!

While the conversation in the Talent community has definitely shifted from the notion of “Transactional  Recruiting” to “Strategic Talent Acquisition,” many companies still don’t know what that means or how to shift beyond the title change.

Gone are the days of “Personnel” departments, but how do we behave in a way that makes us true strategic partners? It goes beyond shifting the notion of being strategic and shifting the competencies of our talent teams and subsequently, the perception of our hiring partners.

Several years ago when I was leading a Talent Acquisition Team at Starbucks, the Corporate Leadership Council presented us with a great study on which steps in the recruiting process most impacted Quality of Hire. While recruiters claimed the interviewing step, the study showed that these two steps had the greatest impact:

1.  The strategic discussion at the very beginning of the process when you’re assessing the hiring need, and

2.  The time between offer and start

If you truly want to impact your Quality of Hire, your talent team needs to possess competencies beyond interview skills.

I break it down into three key areas with a foundational golden thread of Communication:

 

Consider your team today. How would they rank when it comes to these competencies? How will you develop them to get to the level you need to meet your strategic growth goals? Who needs to move over to the ticket counter?

More next on communicating effectively. Until then, enjoy this last beautiful weekend in April. I’ll let you know how the Listen to Your Mother show goes!


Got Customer?

I just spent two days in the Windy City coaching talent leaders on Strategic Talent Acquisition. We were on the 20th floor of the NBC Tower overlooking the lake… an office I could get used to in a second! It was a great diverse group from global pharma to high tech to national advertising. Despite the industry, one theme resonated across all… how do I lead strategically and shift the hiring team to do the same?

They all wanted to know… What are the hottest sourcing trends? To what level do I dig into workforce planning? What are the best interview questions?

To shift from the transactional to the strategic, we started at the very beginning with a targeted exercise defining exactly who the customers are and their true priority. With a heavy background in marketing, and a self-confessed process geek, I wholeheartedly believe that this is the best place to start.

I find that a lot of people jump right into the solution or the “how” without fully considering whom the customer really is; particularly when there is the distraction of the newest, shiniest recruiting app. As you know, whenever you work within an organization and are providing a service internally, the term “customer” can get thrown around in a pretty loosy, goosy way. The loudest and the squeakiest determine who is most important.

While at Starbucks, I had several critical and key stakeholders for all of our Talent programs and processes. While all these stakeholders or “customers” were all very important, they each had a different level of priority. Without clearly delineating priority, we would have ended up with solutions that were mediocre at best, only partially serving all of the customers.

To be clear about your top priority and really meet the customer’s needs, I encourage you to take the following steps:

1)    List any and all potential customers by the following type:

  1. Those who receive your product or service directly or frequently are your Primary Customers. They represent the largest revenue.
  2. Those who receive your product or service indirectly or infrequently are your Secondary Customers.
  3. Those who don’t receive the product or service, but largely influence the way it should be designed are your Influencers. For example, for recruiting, and Influencer is the OFCCP (Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs).

2)    Of all of your customers, check the ones that could leverage extreme consequences if their needs are not meant. These in concert with your Primary Customers get top consideration.

3)    Once you have finished the steps, do them all over with your team to gain alignment. Does everyone agree? Use the final, prioritized customer list to really drive your design and decision-making.

It was a fascinating exercise to see how even like-minded talent leaders had some healthy discussion and disagreement around who the customer is when it comes to Talent Acquisition and Management. When I asked how this exercise would work in their own organizations, they said they couldn’t wait to find out.

Let me know how it goes for you!


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