Sourcing adds to Employer Branding!?

I was asked to comment on the new wave of recruitment and the rise of talent sourcing in response to highly skilled being spammed on LinkedIn etc – how are recruiters changing their tactics to get people’s attention who are already inundated with (sometimes) unwanted/irrelevant job offers? How are recruiters cutting through the noise to get the best talent?

Here is what I see over the past 15 years in Talent Sourcing:

In the beginning Sourcing was for the nerdy recruiters, the techie ones. Looking for alternatives to find their highly demanded people. After the bubble there came a rapid growth in Tech. But in a different and more collaborative way. Social Media began to rise. The recruiters started to recognise Social Media as database where names + skills/interest and a way to connect were combined. Mostly the techies were the early adopters. Once it became a trusted platform other people in the workforce started using Social media, starting with the highly educated, nowadays all working classes are online. 

Now back to Sourcing. Sourcing is one of the recruitment channels next to advertising and referral and an employer brand .

The art of Sourcing and being able to cut through the noise and get the best talent, is to find in the way Sourcing is being done. 

High end Sourcers are capable of finding the purple squirrels using different techniques and tools on different platforms thinking of alternative approaches and will never start before they fully understand what the role is about and with whom the candidate will drink coffee inside or outside the office. The first contact will be personal, mentioning triggers read from the profiles that came up in the search on the targeted candidate.

The other Sourcers usually take the job title as what they should go after, run their query in Linkedin and send out mass emails without looking at the profile at all.

The good thing is, over the years, Sourcing was for the smart people, than it became mainstream, Linkedin + junior recruiter = sourcer. Now companies are spending money on training and are hiring experts on sourcing or outsource the sourcing to the experts.

One of the main trends: Sourcers are doing most of the work to get the right people on the doorstep. The recruiter is taking care of the inhouse process, of what is happening in the inbox,  getting hiring managers aligned and the interviews go well in order to get the job offer out. 

Great sourcing is valuable in the way you want to brand yourself as employer. You only reach out to the people that could help the company now or in the near future.

The feature will also look at employer brand and how that is increasingly playing a vital role in the war for talent – if that’s something you could enlighten me on then I would be over the moon! 

What we see is that there is a complete hype regarding Employer Branding. For me you cannot see this separate from your overall brand. 

I would advise companies to first look at their corporate brand and implement that in your recruitment and HR cycle. 

When your corporate brand is good, this will drip down into your company and will be part of your company values. When that does happen, you don’t need to spend a lot of time nor money on Employer Branding. 

It should be part of your overall brand.

Design Recruitment…

Screenshot 2017-10-30 at 14.50.06

Currently I am working for Idella, former Piramide groep, in the Netherlands.

They have rebranded their 30 yrs old Fintech company today. Also they have outlayed their development process: Design Thinking.

Being their Recruiter, looking to recruit a lot of .NET Developers in the greater Amsterdam Area, I love to translate the Idella way of working into my way of working to hire the .NET Developers.

And renamed the recruitment process.

They, the Developers empathize, define, ideate, prototype, test, implement….

What should the recruiter be doing:

  1. understand with whom they have their coffee – empathize
  2. create a skillset to work with, to evaluate them on – define
  3. campaign in the right area – ideate
  4. find people that are interested – prototype
  5. evaluate their hard and soft skills – test
  6. offer them the job – implement

Idella logo <<< the new logo!!!

What if: No more recruitment

A Management Team today asked me in reaction on what is happening in the world of filling jobs, where they throw more money, increase the volume on the “we are hiring -song” on all platforms out there, etc… “our world”

The world of recruiting is going crazy…

What if we stop all the recruitment spend, no more sourcing, no more persuasion, no more adds, no more tap into the community, no more job fairs and yes no more agencies…

What will happen?

What do you think?

Will people still be able to find their next challenging job?

Would the company still be able to grow?

avatar-manga @gordonlokenberg

Social Engineering at #Sosueu 2106

Glen Cathy opened Sosueu 2016 with a great deck on Social Engineering. Social Engineering is as old as people started to communicate. Funny about the hacks he gave on Social Engineering is, that lots of these hacks seem to be normal, but being aware of the techniques makes it a great asset to your daily tasks .

As always Sourcing Summit is about sourcing, but also about inspiring Sourcers to crawl out of there tunnel vision. New this year was the Pre Conference event: #SosuHacks… Even more reasons to join next year 🙂

In preparation of my presentation this year, I have been thinking, why it takes that long in most of the companies before Sourcing gets its spot in the recruitment marketing mix.

Most of the time, the biggest hurdle to take is to convince the Hiring manager.

If you were not at Sosueu 2016:

http://www.slideshare.net/gordonlokenberg/slideshelf