|
Click here if your email displays in plain-text format
|
Messina
Management
Systems
|
|
Messina
Staffing
|
Good News
The
Best Way to Find Top People Is Still Networking
By:
Lou Adler
If
everybody knows that one thing is true, why do so many people try something
else?
Most
companies will tell you that their employee referral program is the best way to
find top talent. Most recruiters, including me, will tell you that networking
with former and current candidates is the best way to find top talent.
So
if we all know that networking in some form is the best way to find top talent,
why do we waste so much time on things like advertising and Internet data
mining?
The
hard truth is that advertising works well only if you can move quickly and you
have compelling and highly visible ads, and that Internet data mining is too
time intensive — unless you can network exclusively with a targeted group
of well-connected people you find online.
We
were promised that the Internet would solve our problems. All we had to do was
post ads, search through resume databases, or cleverly find some names in other
electronic ways. For a wide variety of reasons, it didn't work out quite this
way. And in the process we seem to have lost the real art of recruiting.
For
those who have forgotten, here are some basic networking rules:
-
A
few good names are all you need to get started.
-
You
need to create instant interest when you first connect on the phone. So
don't describe the job first, or ask how the person is doing. Instead ask,
"Would you be open to exploring a situation that's clearly superior to
what you're doing today?" If the answer is yes, tell the candidate
you'd like to first review their background before you get into any details
about the job. This prevents the person from saying they’re not
interested. This is a very critical step. Getting the candidate to respond
first establishes credibility and leaves the recruiter in the driver's seat.
Don’t ever discuss the job first, other than in vague terms. Something
like, "We’re looking for a senior project position in
marketing," is okay. Even if the candidate is unqualified or
uninterested, the initial five to ten minute dialogue increases the
likelihood of obtaining a good referral.
-
Whether
you’re networking with a current employee, a candidate or some other
contact, the objective is to get a few names of some top people from each
person. Never ask the person who she knows who’s looking. You won’t
get anybody good this way. You don’t want people who are looking; you want
great people who are open to exploring a better situation. Instead, get the
names of previous best coworkers in the same department, or a previous boss
or subordinate who the person thought was great. Try to get three names from
each person. Ask for names of people who might know someone else. Once you
have the name, ask the candidate to describe the person. Find out why she
considers the person highly qualified. Asking questions this way allows you
to pre-qualify the candidate before you even make the call. You can save
lots of time when you’re only calling top people to begin with.
-
Backtracking
is a creative way to find more good candidates. It's based on the
concept of one degree of separation. To start, ask yourself who would know
the person you need. Then network with this person. This type of networking
is quite effective, because people will more openly refer a good person to
you if they're not working in the same company, or if they know of the
person in a non-work related way. To obtain lots of ideas on where to
network, conduct a brainstorming session with all members of the hiring
team. Start with this target list of categories:
-
Competitive
and source companies
-
Customers
-
Vendors
-
Trade
and professional associations
-
Academic
relationships
-
Potential
social connections including hobbies
-
Online
discussion groups
-
Conference
presenters
-
When
you first contact a person to network, make sure the job is compelling. No
one will refer a person to a boring job, unless it’s someone they don’t
like.
-
Don’t
forget to include your suppliers, professional service providers, and even
your customer in your network. Suppliers know experts in their field. A
lot of companies ask their accounting firms for leads when they want to hire
financial people. Expand this to include your bankers, legal advisors,
consultants and business associates. One of our clients, a large chain of
furniture stores, asked their customers to refer their children. We got the
names of good medical device sales people by calling local clinics and
asking for the best sales reps who visited them. We found some top marketing
people by calling ad agencies.
-
Call
or join the trade associations of people you want to attract. Material
control people belong to APICS. For electrical engineers, it's the IEEE.
Financial managers belong to the Financial Executives Institute and the CPA
Society. Property Managers belong to IREM. Get in touch with the local
chapters and start spreading the word. Send letters to the officers of these
groups. We’ve discovered that these are some of the best people. One way
to narrow down the list quickly is by targeting industry-specific trade
conferences as a source of names. These people are already recognized as
experts in their field, so it’s a terrific way to network with top people.
The Encyclopedia of Associations is a great place to start to get the names
of appropriate trade groups and professional societies. You can also get
these names from the resumes you receive from your ads.
Networking
with the best people is the best way to find top people. Employee referral
programs should be formalized and expanded. Recruiters should start calling
their best candidates and rebuilding their networks of top talent.
The
recovery will soon be here. Don’t get seduced by the latest new Internet
solution. Instead, go back to old-fashioned networking. All you need is a phone.
Lou Adler (lou@adlerconcepts.com)
is the president of The Adler Group, a training and consulting firm that
develops leading-edge recruiting strategies. Adler is a veteran recruiter and
founder of CJA Executive Search. He's also the creator and founder of POWER
Hiring and "Zero-based Hiring -- The Six Sigma Process for Hiring Top
Talent." His industry career included general management positions with the
Allen Group, as well as senior-level financial management positions with
Rockwell International's Automotive and Consumer Electronics groups. Lou is the
author of the bestselling, Hire With Your Head - Using POWER Hiring to Build
Great Companies (John Wiley & Sons, 2002), and the award-winning
Nightingale Conant audio tape program, POWER Hiring: How to Find, Assess,
Hire and Keep Great Talent (1999). Adler holds an MBA from UCLA and a B.S.
in Engineering from Clarkson University, New York.
To
learn more about what Messina Management Systems & Messina Staffing can do
for you please visit our web site at:
www.wefilljobs.com
To Unsubscribe:
You are receiving this newsletter because you have been in contact with Messina Management Systems or Messina Staffing. If you would like to be removed from future mailings, please reply to this message and change the subject line to OPT-OUT, or
send a message to Unsubscribe@wefilljobs.com
with a subject line of unsubscribe.
|