If you need to gain a competitive advantage in recruiting, consider proactively revealing detailed information covering the attraction factors that applicants care the most about, including pay, development opportunities and promotion, and employee retention rates.
Now before you prematurely reject the idea of revealing previously strictly kept information, realize that with a little work this information is, in fact, findable on the Internet. Yes, individual potential applicants can already find most of this information about your firm and job on the Internet (e.g., Glassdoor).
And rather than being a crazy idea, if you talk to your own marketing team, you will find that it is a foundation principle of marketing that you must sell your targets on the specific factors that they care the most about. Unfortunately, those in recruiting and HR routinely violate this marketing principle by purposely withholding information on these attraction factors … presumably, out of some unproven fear that honesty and transparency will somehow raise their employee costs or that it will open the firm up to raiding by other firms.
In contrast, I encourage recruiting leaders who need to be disruptive to realize that the competitive recruiting landscape, third-party information availability, and applicant expectations have all changed dramatically. Recruiting leaders should also learn from the product side of their own business, where firms that try to sell products to consumers on Internet sites like Amazon have now discovered that failing to provide a broad range of information covering each of the key “purchase decision factors” will simply drive customers to buy elsewhere. So, if your current recruiting approach isn’t working, why not add transparency and provide applicants with specific information covering each of their top “job attraction factors.”
A dozen years ago research by the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas revealed that it was losing early career management and professional staff to the much higher starting salaries offered by hotels in New York City. However, things changed when research revealed that due to their rapid growth, the new-hire promotion rates in Vegas were so high that entry-level professionals could reach management levels nearly three times faster than if they started working in New York.
The positive results from publicizing its “speed of promotion” advantage were breathtaking. MGM Grand even posted a billboard on the Las Vegas strip trumpeting its extremely high promotion rates in order to gain a competitive recruiting advantage. Prior to this research, no one knew that rapid promotion rates were so important to applicants and that much higher eventual salaries after five years would overcome any initial resistance as a result of low starting salaries. The lesson to be learned is that an attraction factor like promotion rates for a job (i.e., the average number of years between promotions) that isn’t even calculated at most firms can, if it’s publicized, turn into a competitive recruiting advantage.
Rather than an intuitive approach, conduct candidate research surveys to identify which attraction factors have the highest impact on getting top prospects to apply. These high-impact attraction factors will be different between job families, and their priority ranking will vary between top performers and average applicants in the same job family. The key job attraction factors that most firms should consider providing upfront information on are listed below. The attraction factors that are likely to have the most significant impact on new applications are listed first.
Even though providing information that potential applicants care about makes logical sense, you still need to be prepared for a great deal of resistance from hiring managers and those in HR who resist any major change. Reduce that resistance by running a pilot test, where you provide additional information in just one job family. Assess the impact of the added information by measuring the increase in the number and the quality of applications in the targeted job family. Once you succeed, continue surveying potential and actual applicants to identify additional areas where provided information would increase their likelihood of applying. And finally, continually track the recruiting materials and the corporate career site of your talent competitors, in order to identify additional areas where they are already providing detailed information.
To thrive in the highly competitive world of effective recruitment marketing and employer branding, firms must learn to boast or brag about their best attraction features openly. And of course, revealing detailed information is even more important if your firm leads the industry on any of the highly ranked attraction factors. The first step is for recruiting leaders to realize that there is nothing unethical or illegal about publishing this formerly withheld information. It simply requires the courage to disrupt the status quo.
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