Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Lets Play the Recruiting Hiring Manager Blame Game - Workology
Lets Play the Recruiting Hiring Manager Blame Game - Workology Whos to Blame for Bad Hires? The use of recruiting and HR as your employee performance scapegoats is no more. Im tired of being thrown under the bus. The blame game lies with the misunderstanding of HR, Recruiting, and the expectations that are set. Yes, there are crappy recruiters out there, but there are good ones as well. If I dont have the right technology to do my job or a good relationship with a hiring manager, I cant recruit for them effectively. No amount of powerpoint presentations, excel spreadsheets and strongly worded conference calls is going to help me recruit effectively. The solution starts with a conversation between the hiring manager and recruiting. HR, recruiters, business leaders and hiring manager are all on the same team, your company. Whos to Blame for Bad Hires? In my experience, hiring managers like to pass the buck on to the recruiters who are responsible for delivering the message to the candidate and often times have to piece mill together a targeted candidate list when the hiring manager has no information at all. The hiring manager doesnt even know what their team member exactly does but they want that position filled immediately. Even before I get a candidate list in front of them, expectations have already not been met. Add in juggling trying to find the time to actually work time in for the manager to meet with your best candidates for the job. Company low balls an offer because they are a best place to work, and I get the blame. Im sick and tired of being the scape goat for subpar managers who cant meet productivity and production expectations for my company. Bad Recruiters Dont Use HR Metrics On the other hand, recruiters dont solicit feedback or consider turnover as an human capital and HR metrics worth measuring or even monitoring. The belief is that once that offer is accepted, the new employee is no longer the concern of recruiting. For years, recruiters have been used as the scape goat for hiring managers when a job isnt filled. Increased use of technology and innovation holds the recruiter accountable yes, but more importantly it holds the hiring manager accountable for their actions. Recruiting and HR teams can also use human resource metrics like quality of hire, time to fill and turnover percentages based on tenure mapped onto of the new employees own productivity and survey data outlining their satisfaction and preparedness with orientation, training and on boarding. Business leaders who should not be so quick to blame HR for bad hiring. I recommend a multi-facted approach that involves evaluating exit interviews, focus group data and looking at how your front line managers are motivating and developing their own teams. It might be time to invest in some actually manager and development leadership training. When Good Hiring and Recruiting Happens Good hiring and recruiting happens when teams work together. They communicate and work towards a goal seamlessly. If hiring managers are having problems with your recruiting or HR team, sit down with them and learn what they do. Ask questions, develop a relationship, and work to help them to their job better. Same goes for recruiting. It might mean spending more time with the recruiter before the job is posted so they can effectively qualify the candidate you want and need. Ive sat with regional sales reps for 3 days and learned everything I could about the business so I could find the best talent at the lowest cost for them. That solution wasnt enough. In order to achieve results, it required a combined effort that included the development of a new interview guide and new recruitment messaging to reach the job seeker that was the best fit for our team. Determining that fit starts with a relationship, a conversation and an understanding between hiring managers, business leaders and recruiting.
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