Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn’t. — Mark Twain
See if you can place this current staffing model without skipping to the end.
You are responsible for an organization that has thousands of openings to fill.
For you, big data is an everyday part of your operational initiative. Everyone (and we do mean everyone) who could possibly join your organization is known to you. Access to the details about them has been cost effective (about $.35 per) for some time.
More than just a qualified lead with the necessary skills, knowledge, and experience, you also have access to other demographic characteristics (biodata) about each and every lead that relates to your organization’s “fit” and it all can be uploaded into your tracking system.
In fact not only are all (100 percent) of the potential pool of candidates known but your analysis of the factors that predict success for any one of these individuals can be calculated. So, without you ever meeting them, without their having ever heard of you, selection and assessment is moot for most. It is like finding a mine with the entire world’s supply of a given metal in a ready-to-use state … as long as you can acquire it.
And therein lies the rub.
The bad news is that this universe of prospects that pre-qualified without their having to have applied has been getting smaller for some time (and, in fact, industry-wide is 4.5% smaller than just four years ago). There aren’t enough to go around, and your competitors’ prospects, having worked out similar algorithms for success, overlap your prospects and in some cases are even more desperate to engage them and get them to join their organization than you.
After all, we can calculate their value to the organization’s future performance.
You know, and your leaders tell you often, that organizations like yours that are not competing successfully for this diminishing pool are already going out of business … either quickly, because they are not compromising their standards and thus failing to get enough prospects to convert, or more slowly, as they attempt to make do with lesser quality candidates and are outperformed by those who get more than their share of quality candidates to choose them.
Engaging the most qualified prospects who are wanted by so many organizations into this industry’s supply chain is a serious business. To compete, successful organizations realized some time ago that there is only a small grey area where you need to spend additional time assessing a candidate. Most prospects that you’ve been able to convert to candidates — getting them to apply, that is — are essentially all capable of succeeding. Selection (by the candidate) is now the key to recruiting and your strategy focuses on combining sourcing, branding, and measurement to influence the qualified candidates’ choice at every step from making them aware to giving them reasons to apply and, of course, closing the deal.
A few successful strategies that you have evolved in this climate include:
One unintended (but inevitable) consequence of your recruiting model is that your methods and especially your success are transparent to the entire world. Since your organization’s long-term performance is so clearly and directly dependent on the number of quality candidates you can interest in joining you, independent agencies have emerged to evaluate your recruiting function as one measure of the health of your organization. These organizations examine:
The ratio of the total number of qualified candidates (those who have applied and are fully qualified) to the number of openings you are projected to fill based on your business plan needs. The agency publishes a list of the top 100 organizations in several categories, in part, based on this ratio. (For example if you have 45,000 (fully)qualified applicants for 5,000 openings you are ranked higher (9/1 versus 2/1) than an organization with only 10,000 (fully) qualified candidates for the same # of openings).
Their “rankings” for you and your competitors are published periodically and impact your firms’ “investors” as well as future prospects.
Your leadership reads and reacts to these rankings … big time.
(Note: While in the past, it was common to have 100 applicants for every job, someone forgot to point out that two-thirds of those (estimated) were not qualified. Today we can easily show the total available pool, the number of times that prospects in the pool have been touched, the number of qualified and vetted prospects who have applied, and the ratio of qualified applicants to hires necessary to meet plan. Now assume you are pressured to share it publicly as a predictive measure of your future success … or face stockholders pulling out.)
Oh, welcome to the world of college admissions! This article in the Wall Street Journal December 26, Colleges Rise as They Reject, essentially describes everything detailed above.