Category Archives: Job Boards

Digging Into RecruitingBlogs.com v1.28

(December 05, 2008) How many times can you say “Please keep the job postings on the job board.” Maybe this would be clearer: “When you put your jobs in the blogs or the forums, you make the place less useful to the people who inhabit it”.

I suppose you could say that “posting jobs anywhere but on the job board is rude and inconsiderate”. You might frame it as “Anyone who doesn’t take the time to understand RBC before posting risks looking like the morons who post their jobs in the blogs and forums”.

How about “Not using the job board for your jobs is like not using the toilet to pee.”

One might opine “The fastest way to ruin your credibility on RBC is by posting jobs in the Forum or Blogs’” You could imagine a geek saying, “You can tell the defectives by the way that they post jobs in the blogs and forums”. (Maybe that means we should have a new membership category:Private Defective”.)

Marketing consultants note: “Want to destroy your personal brand? Post your jobs in the blogs and forums on RBC.” Control freaks and parental types would assert, “Don’t post jobs in the forums and blogs of RBC.”

A small sign reading “Post No Jobs” may communicate the notion more clearly. Or, some high minded citizen could take the time to explain this principle in a variety of ways.

It’s really pretty simple. There’s a job board. That’s where you post “jobs and opportunities”.

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There is “catch 50 50″ where you are caught between a “rock and a high place”.

No one wants RBC to become one of those dysfunctional social settings buried in laminated signs that proclaim “Your mommy doesn’t work here’” or repeated enjoinders to “Flush Twice.” Obsessive labeling of cabinets, walls, doors and other surfaces with harsh directives always shows that an organization is in decline. We really don’t need additional rule makers, and hall monitors in our neighborhood.

Anyone who wants the job of manners police is immediately disqualified.

There’s a bigger question, I think: How do we articulate the RBC norms and customs without seeming preachy or unfriendly. Being inclusive is a great idea, how do you do it when you’re irritated by bad behavior? What do you think is the best way to convey the effective use of our community?

Also posted in All, Social Recruiting | Leave a comment

The Sourcing Hierarchy: Rational Recruiting Expenditure

As budgets tighten, companies are beginning to wrestle with standard cost-effectiveness questions. Advertising and advertising-like functions are one of the first places that budget shaving takes root. Since much of Recruiting and Talent acquisition uses an advertising business model (upfront expense, limited quantification of returns), the cost cutter’s eyes are inevitably drawn towards expenses in our operations. 

The partial truth is that “I know I waste 50% of my advertising spend. I just don’t know which 50%”.  Sadly, that sort of 20th Century thinking doesn’t fly well in the face of performance monitoring advertising like Google’s Adsense. So, Recruiting leaders are facing and asdking key questions about the value they receive.

There are many ways of finding, attracting and hiring candidates. None of them work perfectly well. All of them are better at some things than others. What works and doesn’t work is industry, region and company specific.

There is almost no company of any significant complexity (say, over 100 people) that can proceduralize a Recruiting approach across all of the positions that have to be filled. You simply can’t find a CFO the way that you find a technical writer. You can’t find Software design Engineers in Cleveland the same way that you do in Silicon Valley or Seattle. You can’t fill auto industry slots in the South the way that you do in Detroit.

There is no one way that is best.

Instead, each job class in each region in each industry has a set of approaches that are optimal today. Not for always. Just for now. Approaches with longer time horizons tend to have better ROIs. That may not matter if the position is time-critical.

Here are the ways that you can find, attract or develop talent pools. They are organized from cheapest and fastest to slowest and most expensive. The first four, Employment Branding, Talent Pool Development, Employment Site and Job Specific Microsite are the cheapest and fastest after the initial investment in time and money are complete. (If you think I missed something or think the order is wrong, please let me know)

  • Employment Branding
  • Talent Pool Development
  • Company Employment Web Site
  • Job Specific Microsite
  • Internal HR Databases
  • ATS Databases
  • Referral Programs
  • Proactive Internet Sourcing
  • Phone Sourcing
  • Free Job Boards
  • Major Job Boards
  • Specialty Job Boards
  • Company SEO/SEM
  • Job Specific SEO/SEM
  • Temporary Help
  • Long Term Contract
  • Contingency Placement
  • Specialty Search Firm
  • Boutique Executive Search Firm

The idea of a sourcing hierarchy is simple. For every class of openings ina company, there is an optimal place to start in the hierarchy. For example, you probably won’t find a CEO in using the first seventeen approaches. That measn that when you are filling the C-level slot, you should jump down the hierarchy to Boutique search Firms.

Similarly, great low level professionals are easily identified and processed using tools that are much faster and cheaper than a retained executive search firm.

It’s the sort of common sense that’s hard to see when you are in the middle of a reactive process.

Recruiting Strategy is the essential element in cost control and containment. As long as Recruiting remains a reactive sport, costs will be controlled by circumstances. A well thought out Recruiting Strategy will provide guidance for where to start on the list for each job class that will be filled. A well defined data collection process will help refine the decision with experience.

Also posted in Employment Branding | Leave a comment

080926 Great Job Board 3

(Sep 25, 2008) To wrap this up, let’s explore the idea that a great job board is all in the eye of the beholder. If it gives me more value, of a kind that I want, than I invest, it’s a good thing. If it gives me less value than I invest in it, it’s a waste of my time and energy.

The reality is just that simple. While execution can range in complexity, it all boils down to "do I get back more than I give?" for each and every one of the stake holders.

Hmmm, that looks like a nice dead horse. Let’s beat it a bit more.

Free is not enough (on the candidate side). A job board has to return more than I invest in time AND money. Most of the cost of using a job board is not the expense of paying for an ad. The majority of the cost is my time and my
opportunity costs (the value of the other things I could be doing when I waste my time on your free job board).

There is a non-subtle point here:

What you give away for free has to be worth getting. There is not a shortage of free stuff anymore.

So, free requires the construction of real value. It also requires that you figure out how to develop a constant stream of attention. Over and over, time after time, day after day, the creation of attention is a relentless chore in the evolution of any online enterprise.

In a recent article on the attention economy, Kevin Kelly said:

"this tight coupling between attention  and money is dependable, bankable. Google made its billions because in addition to having a service that people wanted (the assumed minimum) it knew that sooner or later (and probably sooner than later) where attention flowed, money would follow. They won constant attention by providing slightly better performance and vastly better design. In the beginning they did not know exactly how the money would flow, only that it would. Facebook, Myspace, Netflix, Amazon, iTunes, and thousands of other startups are working on the same principle. Right now the attention of readers has shifted from newspapers and magazines to blogs. We can say with certainty that money will follow this shift. Fortunes have already begun to flight from print to the screen, and the world of media will continue to tilt towards the flow of attention."
- Kevin Kelly, The Technium

A great job board (or for that matter, a great anything online) involves a balncing act. Attention and value for both sides of the deal are at the heart of the matter.

 

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