Friday, 25 July 2014

How Recruiters Can Create Successful Partnerships With Hiring Managers


Recruiters and hiring managers’ shared goal is to fill positions with top talent. So why do they often end up frustrated with each other? Most often, it’s because hiring managers and recruiters have different perspectives and approaches when it comes to hiring.

The only person you can change is you. Take on the responsibility to be a guide, to provide value by serving to help the hiring manager succeed, and in doing so, create a spirit of partnership. Here is some guidance to help you forge a successful working relationship with hiring managers.

Related Conference Sessions

Apply Lean Manufacturing Principles to Talent Acquisition
Elevating the Conversation Beyond the Requisition
Tie Results Back to Business Metrics: How to Increase the Influence of Your Department to Senior Management
ERE Recruiting Conference & Expo 2014 Fall is in Chicago, IL, on September 16–18, 2014. Learn more »

See through the hiring manager’s lens. Hiring managers want to hire the best person to join their team, who will help them achieve their business goals. Unlike you, talent acquisition is not the entire focus of their day. They are busy managing their existing team and projects and fit in hiring around their workload. Hiring managers see through the lens of what went wrong (if anything) with the last person in the role, and what the new person can do better (and they can always do better). They look at their team and evaluate how the new hire will improve workflow and propel them toward greater success. As such, hiring managers start with a “if you could have your ideal candidate, what would that person exemplify?” mindset when they consider who the “right” person should be.

Nothing’s really wrong with this. What happens, though, is that these ideals often get translated into the job description, and before you know it the requisition requires experience and competencies in a candidate that far outweigh the salary budget. It’s a recruiter’s nightmare. How do you recruit rock star talent (already earning top salary) and expect them to take a pay cut to work at your company? What do you have to sell them that would convince them to do so?

Do some compensation research and talk through what the hiring manager truly needs. If she believes she needs a rock star with top salary, then she has two choices: 1) reevaluate the position to see if it could be reworked to require less experience, or 2) offer to take your research with her to her boss and present a case for why the position is worth the extra salary. In either case, you are there to help her succeed and help her navigate the current realities of the talent market.

Educate hiring managers on the state of the talent acquisition process. Just because someone is nominated as the hiring manager doesn’t mean he has experience interviewing or making a selection decision. Hiring managers don’t keep tabs on external talent. Many hiring managers simply do not realize that, unlike in 2010 when people were counting their lucky stars just to get an interview, the market has changed so that companies are the ones counting their lucky stars just to be able to interview top talent. Few hiring managers truly understand that if they approach an interview with the attitude that the candidate is desperate for a job, they’ll lose that candidate to a more in-tune competitor.

Meet with hiring managers to get to know their experience and comfort level with the hiring process. Build a relationship with them. Educate them as a peer on the state of the talent market, what the market competition is, and what they can do to shift their mindset to one where they sell the candidate on the great opportunity to work for the company and more specifically, for them. Help them think through questions like: Why should the candidate want them as a boss? Why would the candidate want to be part of their team? What does the company offer that is better than Company XYZ?

Set them up for hiring success. As I’ve said, hiring is not the only thing on the mind of hiring managers. They don’t always realize that time is of essence. Hiring managers who still believe that candidates are just lining up at the door, crossing their fingers that they’ll get to interview, see time as something to manage to their convenience. They also don’t always know how to refine interviewing to create a great first impression with candidates. Hiring managers tend to use the same interview script, which ensures each candidate provides responses to the same questions, so they can compare apples to apples. But while there are some standard questions you want answered, this approach takes on too much of the “you-need-us-to-give-you-a-job” mentality. Mindset and time management are two things that have a huge impact on hiring success.

As we mentioned earlier, educate hiring managers on how the market has changed. Give them some tools and if necessary, training, to help them feel confident in selling the company and their personal brand as a potential boss. Ditching the interview script and having a conversation may be far more effective and also help differentiate the interviewing experience at your company. Along with the change in mindset, help them realize that time matters. Reviewing resumes, scheduling interviews, conducting interviews (without rescheduling them!), providing feedback to recruiters — all of this needs to be done as fast and as streamlined as possible. Top talent doesn’t have time to wait. They are fielding competitive offers and interviewing multiple companies at once. As hiring managers realize this, they can adjust their priorities accordingly.

In addition to these three key areas, open communication, establishing a mutual understanding of expectations, regular check-ins, and above all, valuing hiring managers as human beings who are under a ton of stress and who appreciate support and respect go a long way to developing a positive and successful partnership.

Rejected Candidate Referrals and the Candidate Experience


What are your RCR ratios?

If you are not familiar with RCR, it stands for Rejected Candidate Referral.  The metrics are simply the ratio of RCRs in your candidate pool against other sources.

I love this metric for two reasons.

First, just because someone doesn’t get the job doesn’t mean they can’t be a source of referrals. Second, it is a bellwether metric for your overall candidate experience. Simply put, candidates who had a great experience, regardless of the result, will be more likely to refer others than those that did not have a good experience.

See, simple. Recruiting is not rocket science. I know there have been volumes written discussing candidate experience. Companies can and do invest significant time, money, and effort in creating highly curated candidate experiences. I can appreciate that work, and I have seen the value in having an experience that sets a company apart. The thing that bothers me is that like so many things we as humans touch, there is a bias towards over-complicating things.

Candidate experience can be summed up in one word: Dignity.

Related Conference Sessions

The Hard Dollar Impact of a Better Candidate Experience
ERE Recruiting Conference & Expo 2014 Fall is in Chicago, IL, on September 16–18, 2014. Learn more »

As long as you have a recruiting and hiring process that treats candidates with dignity, you have a world-class candidate experience. Respect their time, answer their questions, and most importantly exit them respectfully.

Aside from over engineering the candidate experience, the other common flaw is to design a candidate experience that favors only the final candidate. For most positions in America today, a vast number of  candidates will apply. I know for my organization and based on our volume that if you apply for one of our openings you have less than a 1 percent likelihood of achieving the outcome you desire. In other words, on average, over 100 candidates are rejected for each of our openings. Therefore we would do ourselves a tremendous disservice by only focusing our experience on the 1 percent; obviously, it would be huge missed opportunity.

I am not going to bore you with a primer on how to build your candidate experience. There are smarter folks out there than me that can do that, and in all honesty you most likely already know what, if anything, you need to do to improve yours. I am going to suggest that if you do not have visibility around your RCR, you truly don’t have your head around your candidate experience.

The key to the success or failure of this strategy is whether or not you ask for the referral. Aside from having a good experience, you and/or your recruiters have to ask the rejected candidates for their referrals. Otherwise the ratio will be zero, and more importantly, you will never be able to articulate the value of your candidate experience. Remember, every candidate who applies is either a current, or potential future, customer/partner/member/advocate etc. of your organization.

Join me at the ERE Expo in September as I demonstrate how Spectrum Health has confronted these issues and transformed to a successful recruiting model based on core skills, metrics, efficiency, and effort alignment.

How to setup Voice mail in VoIP phone




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Bill Rate vs Pay Rate


Bill Rate
what we get from client for a project on a consultant.


Pay Rate
what we give to consultant for a project.

OPT & CPT


EAD - Employee Autorization Document

OPT EAD
Optional Practical Training
(One who has STEM/ masters degree)
They can work any where for 28 months (Initially 11 months + 17 months=28 months)
After Masters


CPT EAD
Curricular Practical Training
They can only work part time - during masters

Implementation Partner vs Prime Vendor


Implementation Partner
Is a mediator between client and 3rd party companies.
It takes full responsibility of the client project.

Prime Vendor
Is also a mediator between client and 3rd party companies.
It doesn't take any responsibility of the client project.

Important Websites

US Staffing Terminology

EOD - End of Day
COB - Close of Business
NDA - Non-Disclosure Agreement
MSA - Master Service Agreement
RFE - Request for Evidence
PO/SOW - Purchase Order / State of Work
ATS - Applicant tracking system
FID/TaxID/ W9 Form - Federal ID (company tax ID)
I797 - H1B visa Approved
I129 - Applied H1B Visa
I797 A - OPT ->H1B
I797 B - Migrated from India
I797 C - CAP exempt h1b

I-9 form - The Employment Eligibility Verification Form I-9 is a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services form. It is used by an employer to verify an employee's identity and to establish that the worker is eligible to accept employment in the United States

E-Verification - The E-Verify program is a web-based system operated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in partnership with the Social Security Administration that allows participating employers to electronically verify the employment authorization of newly hired employees.

LCA - Labor condition application (LCA), Form ETA 9035/9035E is a document that a prospective H-1B employer files with ETA when it seeks to employ nonimmigrant workers at a specific job occupation in an area of intended employment for not more than three years.

USCIS - United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is a component of the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS). It performs many administrative functions formerly carried out by the former United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), which was part of the Department of Justice.


Saturday, 19 July 2014

US Staffing Process


INTERNATIONAL ALPHABET INC-Codes


US States


How a Voice Mail Should be?

VOICE MAIL
•         Short and crispy
•         Detailed \Brief information
•         30 seconds -1 minute max (depends on conversation)
•         Good volume\voice
•         Call back request\ closing message ( thank you. )

US States

US States – Abbreviations, Capitals & Nicknames
State
Abbrv.
Capital
Nickname
Alabama
AL
Montgomery
Yellowhammer State, Heart of Dixie, Camellia State
Alaska
AK
Juneau
The Last Frontier
Arizona
AZ
Phoenix
Grand Canyon State, Copper State
Arkansas
AR
Little Rock
The Natural State, Land of Opportunity, The Razorback State
California
CA
Sacramento
Golden State
Colorado
CO
Denver
Centennial State, Colorful Colorado
Connecticut
CT
Hartford
Constitution State, Nutmeg State
Delaware
DE
Dover
First State, Diamond State, Blue Hen State, Small Wonder
Florida
FL
Tallahassee
Sunshine State
Georgia
GA
Atlanta
Peach State, Empire of the South, Goober State
Hawaii
HI
Honolulu
Aloha State, Pineapple State
Idaho
ID
Boise
Gem State, Spud State
Illinois
IL
Springfield
Prairie State, Land of Lincoln
Indiana
IN
Indianapolis
Hoosier State
Iowa
IA
Des Moines
Hawkeye State
Kansas
KS
Topeka
Sunflower State, Salt of the Earth
Kentucky
KY
Frankfort
Bluegrass State
Louisiana
LA
Baton Rouge
Pelican State, Sugar State
Maine
ME
Augusta
Pine Tree State
Maryland
MD
Annapolis
Old Line State, Free State
Massachusetts
MA
Boston
Bay State, Old Colony State
Michigan
MI
Lansing
Great Lakes State, Wolverine State
Minnesota
MN
St. Paul
North Star State, Gopher State, Land of 10,000 Lakes, Bread and Butter State
Mississippi
MS
Jackson
Magnolia State
Missouri
MO
Jefferson City
Show Me State
Montana
MT
Helena
Treasure State, Big Sky State
Nebraska
NE
Lincoln
Cornhusker State
Nevada
NV
Carson City
Silver State, Battle Born State, Sagebrush State
New Hampshire
NH
Concord
Granite State
New Jersey
NJ
Trenton
Garden State
New Mexico
NM
Santa Fe
Land of Enchantment
New York
NY
Albany
Empire State
North Carolina
NC
Raleigh
Tar Heel State, Old North State
North Dakota
ND
Bismarck
Peace Garden State, Flickertail State, Roughrider State
Ohio
OH
Columbus
Buckeye State, Modern Mother of Presidents
Oklahoma
OK
Oklahoma City
Sooner State
Oregon
OR
Salem
Beaver State
Pennsylvania
PA
Harrisburg
Keystone State, Quaker State
Rhode Island
RI
Providence
Ocean State, Little Rhody
South Carolina
SC
Columbia
Palmetto State
South Dakota
SD
Pierre
Coyote State, Mount Rushmore State
Tennessee
TN
Nashville
Volunteer State, Big Bend State
Texas
TX
Austin
Lone Star State
Utah
UT
Salt Lake City
Beehive State
Vermont
VT
Montpelier
Green Mountain State
Virginia
VA
Richmond
Old Dominion
Washington
WA
Olympia
Evergreen State, Chinook State
West Virginia
WV
Charleston
Mountain State
Wisconsin
WI
Madison
Badger State
Wyoming
WY
Cheyenne
Equality State, Cowboy State