Въпроси, които затрудняват кандидатите при интервю

Filed in: Bulgaria — CeeVee on January 25, 2012, at 12:44 pm

В процеса на търсене и намиране на работа, интервюто е стъпка, която притеснява голяма част от кандидатите, независимо колко подготвени са те. Сред стандартните въпроси, които работодателите задават, има няколко, които затрудняват търсещите работа.

Последното проучване направено от CeeVee имаше за цел да идентифицира тези въпроси. Над 300 потребителя гласуваха, за това, кой въпрос намират за най-труден по време на интервю.

  • 16% Кои са вашите слаби страни?
  • 16% Разкажете нещо повече за себе си?
  • 6% Защо напуснахте последното си работно място?
  • 23% Какви са очакванията ви за заплащане?
  • 10% Какви са вашите цели в дългосрочен план?
  • 29% Нито един от посочените.

Нашият съвет, е че дори да ви е трудно да назовете три силни / слаби страни и с това да постигнете оптимален отговор, този въпрос не трябва да се избягва. Отговорите ви трябва да бъдат формулирани така, че да подчертаят силните ви страни, като намалят тежестта на слабостите, и ги превърнат в силни, мотивирани от примери, ситуации, които са от значение за въпросната работа.

Ето как са отговорили потребителите за техните силни и слаби страни.

Какви са вашите слабости?

  • 26% Липса на самочувствие
  • 7% Настойчивост
  • 9% Прекален инат
  • 13% Липса на опит
  • 5% Не бих сменил населеното място
  • 17% Липса на подходящо образование
  • 15% Годините
  • 8% Никое от изброените

Какви са силните ви страни?

  • 7% Годините
  • 13% Постоянство
  • 17% Амбиция
  • 13% Точност
  • 5% Образование
  • 37% Опит
  • 4% Космополитност
  • 4% Никое от изброените

“Липсата на самочувствие” (69%) и “Опит” (62%) са характерни за анкетираните жени. А преобладаващите отговори при мъжете са “Амбиция” (55%) и “Възраст” (70%).

За съжаление повечето кандидати не дават отговор, които покрива очакванията на работодателя. Причините за това са разнообразни и всеки кандидат трябва да знае, че е важно да подготви част от своите отговори, преди интервюто, за да може да постигне своята цел: да получи работата.

Проучването е проведено в национален мащаб на страницата на CeeVee, между 15 декември 2011 – 10 януари 2012. Това е част от серия анкети, които CeeVee публикува и иска мнението на потребителите върху тях. Темите са разнообразни и са както икономически, така и свързани с вашата работата и кариера. Тези анкети не са научни и отразява единствено мненията на потребителите.

Pitanja koja dovode kandidate u neprijatan položaj u toku intervjua

Filed in: Serbia — CeeVee on , at 12:06 pm

Intervju za posao nije lak korak u procesu zapošljavanja, bez obzira na to koliko se kandidat pripremao za njega. U pitanju je klasični set pitanja koja mogu dovesti do neprijatnosti na sastanku s poslodavcem.

Poslednje istraživanje provedeno na sajtu CeeVee je imalo za cilj da utvrdi koja su najteža pitanja sa kojima se kandidati susreću u toku intervjua. Više od 856 ispitanika odgovorilo je koje pitanje smatraju za veoma teško:

  • 11% Koje su vaše slabosti?
  • 21% Možete li mi reći nešto više o sebi?
  • 13% Zašto ste ostavili svoj poslednji posao?
  • 14% Koja su vaša očekivanja u vezi plate?
  • 15% Koji su vaši dugoročni ciljevi?
  • 26% Niti jedan od gore navedenih.

Iako je teško navesti tri prednosti/mane u optimalnom odgovoru, to ne treba izbegavati. Odgovori treba da budu formulisani tako da naglase prednosti, a mane budu pretočene u prednosti, potkrepljeni primerima i situacijama koje su relevantne za posao o kome je reč.

Ovo su slabosti/prednosti karakteristične za 1015 ispitanika.

Koja je vaša najveća slabost?

  • 16% Nedostatak samopouzdanja
  • 8% Upornost
  • 8% Tvrdoglavost
  • 32% Nedostatak iskustva
  • 8% Nedostatak obrazovanja
  • 22% Godine
  • 6% Ništa od navedenog

Koja je vaša najveća prednost?

  • 4% Godine
  • 24% Istrajnost
  • 13% Ambicioznost
  • 13% Tačnost
  • 15% Obrazovanje
  • 26% Iskustvo
  • 5% Ništa od navedenog

Ambicioznost (80%), `Tačnost (80%) i` Godine `(61%) su karakteristične za žene ispitanike. Umesto toga, muški kandidati su većinom izabrali Upornost `(57%) i Iskustvo (57%).

Većina kandidata je zatečena, bilo zbog emocija ili nedovoljne pripremljenosti i ne daju odgovore koji zadovoljavaju očekivanja regrutera. Kandidati bi trebali pripremiti najbolje odgovore pre intervjua kako bi dostigli svoj cilj: dobijanje posla.

Istraživanje je sprovedeno širom zemlje na CeeVee strani za kandidate, u periodu između 15-31. decembra 2011. godine. Ovo je deo niza anketa koje prikazuju mišljenje CeeVee korisnika na različite teme vezane uz posao, ekonomiju i karijeru. Ove ankete nisu naučne i odražavaju samo mišljenje korisnika.

46% dintre angajati nu se informeaza inainte de un interviu

Filed in: Moldavia — CeeVee on January 24, 2012, at 6:51 pm

Cel mai recent sondaj CeeVee a urmarit sa afle cu ce situatii incomode s-au confruntat angajatii in timpul unui interviu. Dintre cei 830 de respondenti:

  • 44% nu s-au informat cu privire la compania angajatoare
  • 11% au uitat numele recrutorului
  • 9% au mintit
  • 5% au fost mahmuri
  • 3% au flirtat
  • 28% alta situatie

Sunt gafe care nu se fac in mod intentionat, dar care pot interveni in momentul interviului. Exista, de asemenea, nenumarate recomandari in ceea ce priveste atitudinea in fata recrutorului, insa iata o selectie de situatii ce trebuie evitate pentru a nu rata interviul, cea mai importanta fiind neinformarea.

Chiar si in cazul in care se trimit aplicatii la mai multe joburi, situatie in care nu se pot retine informatii despre fiecare job in parte, o documentare inainte de interviu va creste considerabil sansa de angajare.

Cea mai mare parte a respondentilor au fost persoane cu varsta cuprinsa intre 25-35 de ani, cu studii postuniversitare. Surpriza sondajului a aparut in cazul variantele `am fost mahmur` si `am flirtat`. Astfel, cei care au ales aceste raspunsuri sunt in majoritate barbati: 80%, respectiv 73%, fata de femei, care au declarat ca au uitat numele angajatorului sau ca nu au cautat informatii suplimentare despre companie.

Sondajul a fost efectuat la nivel national pe pagina de candidati CeeVee. Acesta face parte dintr-o serie de sondaje CeeVee ce masoara opinia utilizatorilor intr-o varietate de subiecte legate de locul de munca, economie si cariera. Acest sondaj nu este stiintific si reflecta doar opiniile utilizatorilor.

Cum ii cucerim pe cei din jurul nostru?

Filed in: Moldavia — CeeVee on , at 10:10 am

Majoritatea covarsitoare a oamenilor traiesc cu impresia ca daca le arata celor din jur cat sunt ei de destepti, de priceputi, de „smecheri” sau de grozavi, impresioneaza placut! GREsIT! Gandeste-te la ce simti tu: daca vine la tine cineva care tinde cu tot dinadinsul sa iti demonstreze ca este mai destept ca tine, dupa ce pleaca ce gandesti? Ce mi-a placut de asta! A stiut cum sa ma umileasca!” sauFigurant! Nu mi-a placut de el!”

Aseara am cunoscut doi oameni.

Unul mi s-a parut cel mai destept om din lume

iar celalalt m-a facut sa ma simt

cel mai destept om din lume!

Cu care credeti ca am ales sa lucrez?”

Tom Peters

Oamenii nu se simt bine cand sunt „luati de sus” sau cand li se demonstreaza, chiar si indirect, ca sunt mai slabi sau mai urati.Marele truc ca sa fii placut de oameni este sa ii faci pe ei sa se simta bine! Sa ii faci sa se creada mai buni sau mai frumosi in prezenta ta!

Sunt 6 trucuri simple pentru a-i face pe oameni sa te placa foarte tare: azi vom dicuta de primul dintre ele!


Sa arati „ca o veste buna”! sau prima impresie

Oamenii sunt satui de fete incruntate, preocupate, „interesante” sau suferinde. Vad destule astfel de fete pe strada, la televizor si, multi dintre ei, chiar si in oglinda! J

Din punct de vedere al primei impresii pe care o faci celorlalti, trucurile stau la nivel de perceptie. Cele mai bune rezultate se obtin prin gesturi care sunt percepute ca fiind „prietenoase” in mod involuntar de privitor (la nivel de subconstient „animalic”).

Deci, ca sa fii perceput ca „o veste buna”, cand interactionezi cu oamenii:

1. Ridica sprancenele – Sprancenele ridicate dau senzatia de sinceritate. in plus il lasa pe celalalt sa iti vada ochii.

2. Zambeste – Zambetul este perceput de codul nostru genetic ca cel mai simplu semn de non-agresiune. Pana si noii nascuti reactioneaza pozitiv la zambet si sprancene ridicate. Ai observat?

3. tine capul usor inclinat catre dreapta – expunerea gatului (zona sensibila) este perceputa in subconstient ca fiind cel mai clar gest de non-agresiune.

4. Deplaseaza-te tu catre el – Asta ii da un sentiment suplimentar de siguranta si confort in relatia cu tine.

5. Fii energic – Energia este ingredientul de baza al carismei. Oamenii energici sunt perceputi ca fiind mult mai placuti decat oamenii „consumati ca bateria”.

6. Priveste-l in ochi – Privirea in ochi este perceputa ca sinceritate. Nu-ti fie teama! Nu vede el ce este in sufletul tau!

7. Vorbeste tare – Vorbitul tare este semn de energie si ii da celuilalt un grad suplimentar de siguranta.

Ai observat toate aceste gesturi la politicieni (la cei buni) sau la personajele din filme  (atunci cand regizorul vrea sa ne faca sa le percepem ca fiind simpatice)?

Cand vorbesc despre aceste lucruri Leaderilor sau Vanzatorilor, de obicei, primesc o serie de intrebari de genul:

- si daca nu imi place individul?
R1: Cred ca obiectivele tale de viata sunt mai importante decat daca iti place sau nu un individ. Crezi ca lui Obama ii plac toti oamenii cu care se intalneste? Deci:
Fake it until you make it!” zice americanul. Cu alte cuvinte, exerseaza! si
R2: Nu uita ca scopul este sa te placa el pe tine, nu tu pe el!


si daca nu ma simt bine in ziua aia?
R: Mintea crede corpul si corpul crede mintea! Forteaza-te sa zambesti si sa te comporti energic si vei vedea ca se va intampla o minune: te vei simti mai bine! Daca iti doresti o cariera trebuie sa faci un efort. Crezi ca politicienii sau actorii se simt bine in fiecare zi?

sau

- si daca celalalt este foarte priceput si isi da seama?
R: Cel putin i-ai castigat respectul si iti va aprecia efortul de a face o prima impresie foarte buna!

Vor urma celelalte trucuri pentru a fi o persoana „cuceritoare”!

Bogdan COMaNESCU
Director General Accelera®

- 22 de ani de experienta nationala si internationala in Vanzari, Marketing, Managementul Vanzarilor si Dezvoltare Comerciala

- 1990 – 2005 Agent de Vanzari, AM, Director de Vanzari, Director de Marketing si Vanzari in companii nationale si internationale

-  2005 – 2012 Director General Academy Accor Services  Romania

- Proiecte de dezvoltare comerciala in India, Bulgaria, Cehia, Moldova, Ungaria, Polonia, Germania, Austria, Franta si Maroc

- Autor a peste 30 de articole de publicate in reviste de specialitate si co-autor al cartii: MAXIM – Psihologia Motivarii Fortei de Vanzari

- Fondator al CNDV Romania

Articol preluat de pe: cariereonline.ro

Why I Won’t Hire You

Filed in: Europe — CeeVee on January 20, 2012, at 9:50 am

If you’ve ever hired anyone for a job, you understand a whole new perspective on what makes an applicant stand out—and what makes you toss an application to the bin. Fair or not, blogger, consultant, and hirer Charlie Balmer discusses honestly the mistakes that can ruin your chances with a potential employer.

I will be very honest with you in this post. Most interview articles only show obvious mistakes, as if most people don’t know showing up late is bad form. I will tell you the things I didn’t really know about until I was the one interviewing, and interviewing for a variety of positions and person-types. No interview prep article ever prepared me in the right way for how interviewers really think. That is what I will be sharing with you today.

When you first walk in to my office, I am expecting you to be one of the 99%+ people who I know I won’t hire in the first 5 minutes. I am hoping I will be proven wrong, because I really want to hire you and be done interviewing. Unfortunately, most people looking for jobs don’t deserve them. Here are the most common ways I know you don’t deserve any job I have to offer.

You send me a stupidly long resume

If I have to spend more than 30 seconds finding out what you have accomplished, forget it. You have annoyed me. Somehow, since resumes went digital, people feel like they can cram in 10 pages of boring essays talking about this achievement or that role, and expect me to read every juicy word. More likely, I will ignore the whole thing, write down in my notes “poor communicator”, and move on. If you have a good set of skills or something catches my eye, you might still get an interview, but I’ll still never read the resume. And you had better be a better communicator on the phone or in person.

Think about it this way – the resume items communicate to me your past successes in a (supposedly) succinct manner. If you can’t nail it in one sentence, do I really want to look forward to your rambling emails every day? If I can’t read your resume, it doesn’t bode well for your emails, and I get enough of those in my inbox as it is.

To craft a great resume, tailor it to my job posting. If I have a skill set in there like “Windows Administration”, make sure you have at least one bullet point talking about success in a project where you used that skill. Make the bullet no longer than three sentences. One is better. I am likely to read one sentence. I might read three. More than that and I won’t even know what you wrote there. You wasted my time and your own.

You can’t tell me why you like your current job

I always ask people what they like most about their current job before I get into any details about a role. Why? I want to see if you’ll be happy working in this new job. If you can’t tell me anything you like, or you tell me something you like but it sounds really generic? Then forget it, I have no idea what you want to do in life and you probably don’t either. Come see me when you know what you want to do. I would even be happy with something like “Well, this job doesn’t enliven me, but my last job, I loved doing XXX every day, and man, I miss that. It looks like this role will let me get back to that.” Let me know you’re passionate or don’t waste my time.

The worst answers? “Well I like the challenge” or some other BS. Don’t BS me. I have a super BS detector, and most other interviewers do too. The worst BS is the kind where more than 50% of candidates say the same thing. If you can’t be original about what you like about your unique job how can I expect you to be creative working for me?

If you have a generic answer like you enjoy learning, the challenge, helping customers, that can be alright. Just sound excited when you talk about it. Give me an example of a time when you got really fired up about it. I don’t mind if it doesn’t relate to the job I am interviewing you for, though that helps. Just expect me to ask why you think this job will give you the same passion – and have a good answer ready. Really, why else are you applying if you don’t know this?

No career plans or vision

When I ask you what your next role is going to be after the one you’re interviewing for, you had better have a good answer. Everyone should have a story about why you want to come work for me, in this specific role. If you can tell me how this role helps you accomplish your long term goals, I’m much more likely to think you’ll be happy here and work hard in the job. If you just want a job, why should I care? Someone else will come to me with their vision. Eventually.

A good answer is a well thought out vision. You should have that anyway. Here is a good example: “I am looking to move away from working in my current small company to a bigger company with more career growth and opportunities. I want to rise to an executive level in the next 10 years, but my current company is too small to allow me to stretch effectively in that way. [This role] builds on my strengths in communication and project management, and will help me grow as a leader and improve my influencing skills. In a few years, I would look to becoming a senior manager…” and on with how this role fits into your life vision.

No Skills

Please, don’t bother applying if you don’t have the required skills. I will know. If you’ll be programming, expect to program in the interview. And program well. If you’ll be project managing, you had better be able to tell me about the right way to build a project plan and project vision. I’ll probably even describe a project and ask you to build a plan right there, with me. Just because the title has something in it you vaguely think you can do, if you don’t meet the requirements, please don’t waste my time. I might be ok if you are up front with me and tell me you want a career change and are willing to take a more junior position to learn. I might take a chance on you if everything else is solid. But tell me that in your resume so we don’t waste time. Yes, telling me that in your resume improves your chances of getting hired, even if not necessarily for this job or winning an interview. I won’t claim this is true for all interviewers, but it is true for me.

It’s about setting expectations. If you come in, and my expectation is, for instance, that you know Unix administration, and then you tell me “Well, I read a book and I really want to learn it”, no, I won’t like that. If instead you put in your resume an objective line “Looking to grow skills in Unix administration from a project background”, now we are on the same page. If I don’t need an expert right now, maybe I will invest in training you since you have the vision and self-motivation. Oh, and describing what you are doing to prepare is also good, even if you don’t have on the job experience. See how the expectation can change my perspective? Give me happy surprises, not unhappy surprises.

Answer my questions with conjecture

I will test you in a lot of ways. I will ask you to describe a lot of situations – where you failed, where you succeeded, what you would change, what you hate and what you love. Don’t sit there and tell me what you would do in the future. I didn’t ask what you would do, I asked what you did. If I have to wait for you to finish talking, then say “Could you give me a specific example where you did something like that?” Then you have failed to answer my question. If I ask for an example, please give me one. If you don’t have one, that’s ok, tell me you have never been in that situation, but you have some ideas if I would like to hear them. Yes, I probably would like to hear them, but I might also have another question with different examples I would rather know about.

If you don’t think well on your feet, spend some time reading through and practicing situational interview questions. I won’t ever use one I see online, but it will help train your mind to answer, and give you fresh memories to draw from. I also don’t mind when a candidate pauses to think. I will wait. I know everyone has different styles of thinking and responding.

How to Win the interview

I think it’s pretty simple. I look for a few traits in people I am going to hire. If you are missing even one, I’m probably going to pass you up for someone who doesn’t. Do your best to show off these traits and you’ll win. This is true in every case, from hiring a janitor to an executive.

  • Show me you can get things done. This means you can accomplish challenging tasks quickly, come up to speed when necessary, go the extra mile if you have to, influence peers. You must be self-motivated.
  • Show me you are intelligent. I will ask you questions that are designed to make you think. Show me you can. Don’t confuse intelligence with education. I don’t care what kind of schooling you had, if you can’t think, no job. If you can think, and aren’t educated, no problem in my book, though I’ll probably look for more experience instead.
  • Show me how I fit into your vision. Truthfully, we’ll work best together if you think this job is the best place for you to be right now. I want to help you succeed in your career, let me.
  • Be highly skilled. Unfortunately, I don’t hire awesome people who don’t have the right skill mix. But I do keep their information around for when I need their skill mix. I also tend to recommend these people to others who are hiring as strong candidates. The skill level required to be hired depends on the job and expectations. Entry level can get away with rough skill sets or classwork. Senior needs to be top of the field, regardless of years in the workforce.
  • Be Passionate. If you are bored working in a similar job somewhere else, you’ll be bored with me. Period. I don’t want any of that.
  • The End

    Most of the stuff I am talking about here has nothing to do with Golem Technologies, but more about what it is like to hire in the first place. There are so many articles out there with bad advice for both those hiring and those trying to be hired, I wanted to inject some raw honesty into the equation. If you are looking to hire people, then I would recommend you use my 5 points above to screen people. As for me hiring, no, I am not currently hiring, so please don’t ask me. When I am hiring though, and if you happen to apply, the above is the criteria I will use to decide.

    This is true across business functions and across companies. The people who have the stuff I listed to win the interview will get jobs they want consistently. If you are lacking something, then figure out a way to get there. Just having a plan puts you ahead of 99% of job candidates. I also like giving people a chance whenever they let me, as long as I have the flexibility to do so. So far, I haven’t been disappointed.

    Do you have hiring war stories (interviewer or interviewee)? Share them in the comments!

    Why I Won’t Hire You | Golem Technologies

    Charlie Balmer is an entrepreneur, technology blogger, and website consultant. He has worked for multiple fortune 500 companies in IT management, marketing, and application design. His latest company, Golem Technologies, is a cloud based website security scanning application for IT departments and security professionals.

    Article source: http://lifehacker.com/5874647/why-i-wont-hire-you

How To Manage Your Boss Effectively

Filed in: Europe — CeeVee on January 19, 2012, at 10:00 am

Managing your boss is not as difficult as it may seem and ‘managing upwards’ has become an accepted term in today’s corporate workplace. No matter what your position in a company, you need to be able to communicate well with your superior and focus on the things that matter to him or her. This is essential to career development success, as well as ensuring that your working relationships are effective.

Whether your boss is easy or difficult to engage with, here are some tips that should help you to manage upwards:

  • Understand your boss’ objectives and how they fit into the company’s overall goals. Don’t be afraid to be inquisitive and ask questions about these.
  • If your boss isn’t in overall control of the company, but in turn has a superior, try to find out what this higher-up’s priorities are, so that you can understand what motivates your boss, what puts them under pressure, and what drives their objectives.
  • Keep your boss informed about details of day to day issues. He or she may not be close to these and could rely on you for crucial information but be conscious of how much information he or she actually needs.
  • Don’t ask your boss to give detailed guidance on absolutely everything. It’s a manager’s role to make decisions, but if you come up with options to choose between, it saves time and reflects well on you.
  • When presenting ideas, ask yourself how these will improve the company’s bottom line and how they fit in with your manager’s objectives. If they don’t match up, then reconsider and adjust them until they’re a good fit.
  • Suggest how being given various tasks may affect your overall workload, and then establish what the priorities are. Ask which projects need to be completed first and give an honest appraisal of expectations. For example: “We could definitely get this done by Friday, but that will mean that completing the other project slips to next week. Which one is most important to complete first?”
  • If you bring your boss a problem, bring a set of solutions too. Avoid consulting your boss about a problem if you haven’t spent time thinking of ways to resolve it.
  • Come up with solutions that you can implement yourself and ask for the authority to go ahead with one or more of them.
  • Co-operate with colleagues at the same level as you, or below, to work on solutions to problems or suggest ways to achieve the company’s and your boss’ goals.
  • It’s also a good idea to find out about their pet hates and what he or she considers unacceptable. Whether it’s being late, poor spelling in emails or bad language in the workplace, make an effort to avoid these.

The key to upward management is that it should be based on making sensible suggestions for ways to resolve issues, and understanding when it’s important for your boss to make decisions.

Adrian Treacy is Director of technology, finance and healthcare recruiter Arrows Group: www.arrowsgroup.com

10 Predictions for 2012: The Top Trends in Talent Management and Recruiting

Filed in: Europe — CeeVee on January 18, 2012, at 5:54 pm

It’s always better to be prepared than surprised.

By definition, being strategic requires that you look forward — identifying trends, opportunities, and threats. With the December lull looming, now is a great time to plan for the future. I’ve listed the “top 10 talent management trends” I foresee that require your attention.

But you should certainly do your own thinking. I recommend that you start by examining this past year…

by Dr. John Sullivan

2011 Was The Year of Social Media

2011 was a tough year for many in talent management, but despite compressed budgets, organizations continued to hire and develop talent. One factor that seemed to invade nearly every high-level functional discussion was social media. It’s clear that Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter will play a dominate role in recruiting and development best practices in years to come.

Not surprisingly, 2011 saw no fewer than 40 new vendors emerge to help organizations use social media to attract referrals. We also started to see early stage tools to use social media in talent assessment (pre/post hire) as well as applicant/candidate/employee experience management. New tools brought much enhanced visibility into talent issues, but most talent-management metrics continue not to resonate with key leaders outside of the HR function.

2012 Will Be “The Year of the Mobile Platform”

By the end of next year, even the skeptics will have to admit that the mobile platform will have become the dominant communications and interaction platform by early-adopting best-practice organizations. The capabilities afforded users of smartphones and tablet devices grows immensely day by day. Long before unified inboxes existed for the desktop, smart device users could see all incoming e-mail, social messaging, text messaging, and voice and video messaging in a single place.

Tablets will become the virtual classroom, and an emerging class of tools will let employees manage almost every aspect of their professional life digitally. During the next year, talent management leaders need to invest heavily supporting execution of talent management initiatives across mobile.

The Additional Top Nine!

Intense hiring competition will return in selected areas — global economic issues will persist for years to come, but the global war for talent will continue spiking in key regions an industries. While growth has slowed somewhat in China, Australia and Southeast Asia — including India — continue to see dramatic demand for skilled talent. In the U.S. and Europe, demand is still largely limited to certain industries where skills shortages have been an issue for years.

In high tech inclusive of medical technologies, 2012 will see a significant escalation in the war for top talent. As innovators and game changers step out of established tech firms like Facebook, Apple, Google, Twitter, and Zynga, a whole new breed to tech startups will be born each vying for the best of the best. While recruiting will move forward at a breathtaking pace, so too will “rapid” leadership development.

Retention issues will increase dramatically — almost every survey shows that despite high engagement scores, more than a majority of employees are willing to quit their current job as soon as a better opportunity comes along. I am predicting that turnover rates in high-demand occupations will increase by 25% during the next year and because most corporate retention programs have been so severely degraded, retention could turn out to be the highest-economic-impact area in all of talent management.

Rather than the traditional “one-size-fits-all” retention strategy, a targeted personalized approach will be required if you expect to have a reasonable chance to retain your top talent.

Social media increases its impact by becoming more data-driven — most firms jumped on the social media bandwagon, but unfortunately the trial-and-error approach used by most has produced only mediocre results. Adapting social media tools from the business coupled with strong analytics will allow a more focused approach that harnesses and directs the effort of all employees on social media. Talent leaders will increasingly see the value of a combination of internal and external social media approaches for managing and developing talent.

Remote work changes everything in talent management — the continued growth of technology, social media, and easy communications now makes it possible for most knowledge work and team activities to occur remotely. Allowing top talent to work “wherever they want to work” improves retention and makes recruiting dramatically easier.

Unfortunately, even though it is now possible for as much as 50% of a firm’s jobs to be done remotely, manager and HR resistance has limited the trend. Fortunately, managers and talent management leaders have begun to realize that teamwork, learning, development, recruiting, and best-practice sharing can now successfully be accomplished using remote methods. Firms like IBM and Cisco have led the way in reducing and eliminating barriers to remote work.

The need for speed shifts the balance between development and recruiting — historically, best practice within corporations has been to build and develop primarily from within. However, as the speed of change in business continues to increase and the number of firms that copy the “Apple model” (where firm is continually crossing industry boundaries) increases, talent managers will need to rethink the “develop internally first” approach.

In many cases, recruiting becomes a more viable option because there simply isn’t time for current employees to develop completely new skills. As a result, the trend will be to continually shift the balance toward recruiting for immediate needs and the use of contingent labor for short-duration opportunities and problems.

Employee referrals are coupled with social media — the employee referral program in many organizations is operated in isolation as are the organizations’ social media efforts, but talent managers are beginning to realize that the real strength of social media is relationship-building by your employees.

With proper coordination, employee relationships can easily be turned into employee referrals. This realization will lead to a shift away from recruiters and toward relying on employees to build social media contacts and relationships. The net result will be that as many as 60% of all hires will come from the combined efforts. The strength of these relationships will lead to better assessment and the highest-quality hires from employee referrals.

Employer branding returns — Employer branding and building talent communities are the only long-term strategies in recruiting. True branding is rarely practiced (hint: it’s not recruitment marketing) especially in the cash-strapped function of today, but years of layoffs, cuts in compensation, and generally bad press for business in general may force firms to invest in true branding. The increased use of social media and frequent visits to employee criticism sites (like Glassdoor.com), make not managing employer brand perception a risky proposition. While corporations will never control their employer brand, they can monitor and influence in a direction that isn’t catastrophic to recruiting and retention.

The candidate experience is finally getting the attention it deserves — Organizations have never treated candidates as well as they did their customers, but the high jobless rate has allowed corporations to essentially abuse some applicants. As competition for talent increases and as more applicants visit employer criticism sites like Glassdoor.com, talent leaders will be forced to modify their approach.

At the very least, firms will more closely monitor candidate experience metrics as they realize that treating applicants poorly can not only drive away other high-quality applicants but it can also lose them sales and customers.

Forward-looking metrics begin to dominate — Almost all current talent management and recruiting metrics are backward looking, in that they tell you what happened in the past. Other business functions like supply chain, production, and finance have long championed the use of “forward-looking” or predictive metrics and the time is finally coming when talent management leaders will shift their metrics emphasis. Forward-looking metrics can not only improve decision-making but they can also help to prevent or mitigate future talent problems.

Other Things to Keep Your Eye On…

In addition to the major trends highlighted above, there are 12 additional “hot” topics to keep your eye on:

  • Risk identification — almost every other business function has already adopted a risk management strategy. So the time is coming when talent management will be forced to adopt a similar strategy and set of metrics. This program will not only cover HR legal issues but also the economic “risk” associated with weak hiring, the absence of developed leaders, and the cost of turnover of key talent.
  • Prioritization — continued budget and resource pressure will force talent management leaders to prioritize their services, business units, key jobs, and high-value managers/employees.
  • Integration — there will be increasing pressure for talent management functions to more closely integrate and work seamlessly.
  • Expedited leadership development — as more baby-boom leaders and managers actually begin to retire, there will be increased pressure for expedited leadership development — specifically solutions that develop talent remotely using social media tools and within months rather than years.
  • Competitive analysis — the increasingly competitive business world has forced almost every function to be more externally focused. Although HR has a long history of being internally focused and not being “highly competitive,” there is increasing pressure to become more business-like and to adopt an “us-versus-them” perspective. That means conducting competitive analysis and making sure that every key talent management function produces superior results to those at competitors.
  • Contingent workers — as continuous business volatility becomes the “new normal,” the increased use and the improved management of contingent workers will become essential for agility and flexibility.
  • Unionization — there is a reasonable chance that actions by the NLRB will increase union power and make it easier for unions to gain acceptance at private employers.
  • Recruiting at industry events — as industry events return to popularity, recruiting at them will again become an effective tool for recruiting top and diverse talent.
  • Location software — talent managers will begin to realize that software that allows you to check-in and see who is within close geographic proximity has great value and many still unidentified uses.
  • Hire before they do — most firms will restrict their hiring until the turnaround actually begins. However, your firm must have a talent pool or pipeline developed, so that you can hire immediately and capture the top talent right before your competitors realize the downturn is over.
  • Assessment continues to improve — vendors, software, and tools continue to improve in this area that will become increasingly important.
  • Increase your revenue impact — increased economic pressures will continue the trend of forcing all functions (including talent management) to convert their functional results into business impacts in dollars. Talent management will face increasing pressure to directly demonstrate how their hiring, retention, development, etc. is focused, so that it directly increases and maximizes corporate revenues.

Final Thoughts

A recent survey of CEOs rates talent management as the No. 1 area where CEOs expect dramatic change during the next year. Given this increased attention, it’s even more critical that talent management and recruiting leaders set aside time to conduct a SWOT assessment (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) to identify where they are and where they need to be.

The “new” talent management leader must be more strategic, more proactive, and more business-like, and that means getting your entire staff to begin thinking about and planning for the game-changing events, trends, and opportunities that will occur during the next year. It’s time to realize the “but-we-are-overwhelmed-and-too-busy” excuse for not forecasting and planning is wearing thin.

Preparing for a job interview

Filed in: All locations — CeeVee on January 12, 2012, at 1:45 pm

Retrospektiva 2011

Filed in: Serbia — CeeVee on January 10, 2012, at 2:15 pm

Retrospektiva 2011

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Filed in: Bulgaria — CeeVee on , at 2:09 pm

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