Sunday, May 24, 2020
Five Ways to Help Your Clients in the Lead up to Brexit
Five Ways to Help Your Clients in the Lead up to Brexit With Brexitâs March 29 deadline quickly approaching, and no sign of a clear solution from the government, the recruitment market continues to be incredibly volatile. As employment experts, recruiters have unique insight into the market and are therefore well placed to inform their clients of movements and any hiring trends that arise during this period. Remaining educated and taking the time to understand the developments arising from Brexit will not only be good for your clientsâ business but good for yours. One key message is the continual lack of eligible candidates. It continues to have a huge influence on recruitment processes and is having a flow-on effect for clients. How are you countering this to help your clients? 1. Think outside the box If a client is struggling to fill a role based on the supplied brief, consider advising them to expand their search, or alter their requirements. Often, there are candidates who donât fit the brief to a T, but you know they will have the transferable skills, or personality fit, to thrive within a role. Make it clear as to why youâve chosen your candidates, focusing on why you think theyâd be a good match. What may appear like a left-of-center CV could end up being the perfect fit! Should there be some room for movement on necessary skills or salary, suggest splitting requirements into âessentialâ and âdesiredâ to open up the candidate pool. 2. Embrace inclusivity 2019 is set to be the year of diversity, with more and more employers realizing the importance of hiring people from a variety of backgrounds â" after all, the McGregor-Smith Review found that increasing workplace diversity could contribute £24 billion to the UK economy. At the briefing stage, raise the subject with your contact to understand their diversity targets, if any. By presenting a candidate shortlist of varying sexes, races and gender, abilities and ages, you may well demonstrate a deeper understanding of your client compared to your competitors. Itâs important to remember that the most successful companies look for employees that add to their culture, instead of those that fit into the existing model, so introducing people who can add something new is never a bad thing. 3. Invest in employer branding One of the first things any savvy candidate will do when applying for a role is to research the company. Therefore, itâs worth advising your clients on the importance of employer branding, investing in enticing career pages and ensuring consistency across brand messaging and visuals. Itâs also worth advising on the connection between marketing and HR â" if the hiring manager is communicating the same messages as the career website, then the candidate is likely to feel confident in the offering. However, if the website says âfamily-friendly officeâ but the hiring manager says âovertime is common, weâre a work-hard-play-hard environmentâ, they may question the integrity of the business. 4. Free up the calendar Outstanding candidates are proving increasingly difficult to secure, and the longer this Brexit dilemma goes on, the harder itâs going to be. Therefore, when a great candidate comes back onto the market, or you find someone you havenât worked with before, you donât want to lose them because of scheduling issues! Thatâs why itâs so important to set expectations early, establishing how available the hiring manager is going to be for the interview, how many rounds there are, the scope of the interview process, the required compliance and how quickly they want to recruit. This allows you to manage expectations on both sides of the recruitment process, ensuring candidates donât drop out thanks to another offer and clients realize the urgency. 5. Advocate for the jumpy CV There was a time that any stint less than two years in a business was viewed as a slight, a negative to be explained. This is no longer the case for many candidates, especially in the millennial and Gen Z brackets, who are treating each working opportunity like a stepping stone that will get them to their next role. In fact, our 2019 Salary Review found that 62% of those surveyed were in their roles for less than two years, and 50% were planning on leaving within the next 12 months. This means, when coming onto the market, these candidates may have worked for a large range of companies, or not possess that longevity of old. Itâs up to recruiters to educate their clients on the positives of this, communicating the candidateâs motivations and what successes theyâve had in each role.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.