Tag Archive for tribepad

Social Recruiting, its more than you think.

So you think you are utilising Social Media for your recruitment efforts. Well to a degree you probably are. You have a Twitter account, you search LinkedIn when you can, and you are about to jump in to Facebook to see if you have any new fans, and maybe just maybe you have plans for a video of some sort promoting your wonderful work environment.

This is great, you have started. but is that really everything? The term that we use is Social Recruiting, for most people it covers the facets of engaging and interacting with talent communities and hopefully they will find us interesting enough to apply for a job and accept an offer, cheap recruitment right? The employee starts and you move on to the next line of engagement and try to do it all over again. Your Social Recruiting efforts for that position is now complete.

WRONG

That poor employee that you as a business worked so hard to befriend, listen and talk to, share information with and get them interested enough in your business is now left to the masses of employees and corporate structure that you as a business encompass. Ok, so you don’t have to be a huge company, but the communication methods and styles that you implemented to get them here, where are they now? Does this new employee feel as loved as they did when they didn’t work for you?

Probably not. You have put more value on someone that is not in your business then someone who is already there. A little bit of chicken before the egg argument but I’m sure you get my drift.

Social Recruiting, should and does extend in to your business. It may be just the use of Social Media tools and not called Social Recruiting, but it is vital that the engagement and consistency of communication continues.

If you are going to head in to the Social Recruiting world, be sure that your internal communication methods are consistent with what you portray externally, the last thing you want is to find that same employee you just hired all over again.

Use "The Force" Luke

Social Recruiting Use-The-Force

Social Recruiting Use-The-Force

Ah Star Wars, how I love thee. Three amazing films, well ahead of their time with ideas and special effects, and then 3 movies that left a little bit to be desired, but I’m not going to go into that today. The Star Wars story, the original 3, centered around Luke Skywalker and his father Darth Vader, Jedi Knights with abilities that mere mortals can only dream of.

They can convince people to do what they wish, move items at will, fight with a light sabre like its a chopstick and essentially are the keepers of peace, and the instigator of evil. One wants to rule the Universe, while the other is there to keep things in harmony. “The Force” which gives these Jedi Knights their powers is EVERYTHING. It is the living organisms, the buildings, people, anything you can imagine has some element of The Force surrounding it. The Jediss use this to their advantage (or for Evil for Mr Vadar) and extract what they can out of every situation.

The most famous line for me, and one that we all use on a regular basis is “Use the Force”. When I want something done, or someone else to do something, “Use The Force” is always thrown in there. Maybe I haven’t grown up, but that’s not the point and I have to eventually relate this to Social Recruiting.

So what is “The Force” for recruiters and companies trying to find the best talent in the market? Your Network!

Call it a community, a tribe, a bunch of people, call it what you will, but a recruiters “Force” is the breadth and extensiveness of your professional network. You see the more you are networking, be it via Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Blogs, Events (yes something offline, it still exists) the list goes on, the better access you have to finding what you are looking for. If you are not using Social Media to assist with this, I have nothing to say other then YOU ARE MAD!!!!! Never before have you been able to network so EASILY…..

It may not always be a candidate for that open position, you could need some specific industry information, a recommendation on your work or help with just about anything and your network will be there for you, Use the “Force”.

So next time as a recruiter you are sitting there wondering where your next candidate or client is going to come from, or you need that specific piece of information that will win you a deal, or best yet you are seeking a new position, double check how much time and effort you have spent building your network of contacts across the various social media channels and how you can leverage “Your Force”…..or are you mad?

PS. George Lucas has no copyright on this blog post at all.

Should companies look at their own community platforms?

Having recently launched our new social/community platform, Tribepad, I was excited to spread the word of the benefits of a white labeled in house community zone that allowed employees to engage with each other and collaborate on projects, news and views or what ever tickled their fancy.  With social media being the craze at the moment, I figured this conversation would be one that almost every large corporation at least utilizing social media would be interested in having.

Well I was a little surprised last week to get feedback from one prospect that they are happy with their current social media strategy of using Facebook and Twitter and didn’t wish to do anything further at this stage.  This didn’t shock me entirely as I was expecting a 100%  strike rate and knew that the product wasn’t going to be for everyone right now.  What did shock me though was that the company that provided these retort was thinking from one angle, that of attraction of candidates, and not the most important aspect from a business perspective/asset, their own employees.

There is no doubting the power that Twitter and the like, have of attracting and reaching a broad audience but that is exactly where usefulness ends.  140 characters will not be a meaningful conversation or provide you with the traction that you are seeking.  Twitter and Facebook are great for “seeking” out an audience and having them directed to your site, but what then?  Is your site compatible with these social media, engagement, information hungry candidates, who want nothing more then to speak to someone directly about what it is they want and then move on.

What though, I felt was the bigger issue, is that of this companies own backyard.  Their employees.  Whilst HR and recruitment teams are making every effort to not only understand and use social media sites to attract candidates, their most important asset is being forgotten about.  If I was an employee in a company pushing forward with social media strategies I would be wondering what is so important about all of these people who don’t even work here yet, what about me?

Whilst retention rates right now are relatively flat (redundancy aside and who is game to leave their job with the market still how it is) engaging your employees and allowing them to be more involved within the business is crucial.  Any company with a large employee base that is separated by time, distance or many other factors can interact efficiently and easily via an in-house community platform.

Knowledge is power, and if there are other people within a business that can assist me with what it is I am doing, without the need of leaving my desk, then fantastic.  Knowledge sharing, learning, engaging and collaboration all from your desk. An employee who also feel that they contribute to a positive outcome is also more likely to feel inspired and seek more of this type of input.  I just read about a company who utilizes a similar platform launching a new product and needed a tag line.  Instead of employing an ad agency, they requested the input of their 12,000 strong global workforce.  Result, an enormous amount of responses, and a new tag line, free of charge.  People power, and the want to be involved proved are such powerful things.

So when thinking about your next social media strategy for recruitment, take a second and think internally first.  Not of yourself, but of your own company.  After all, having lots of people coming through the front door, doesn’t mean just as many won’t leave through the back.