Our motto is
"Doing What Is Right
In Hiring"
Part of that is to help our
clients and contacts in what
you do best everyday, ..recruit, hire, and retain top professionals!
Additional Information:
- search candidates
- post jobs
- salary comparisons
- employer of record
Do you have comments,
questions regarding hiring,
or topics you would like us to address?
Contact
Terri@IntegrityPersonnelinc.com
www.IntegrityPersonnelinc.com
|
A
monthly online publication designed to help employers recruit, recognize,
reward, and retain their workforce.
Welcome to the
inaugural issue of Vital Signs, a publication focused on the hiring
and employment needs of forward-thinking, innovative companies. Each
month in Vital Signs, we’ll strive to bring you relevant
and timely content designed to help shape your company’s
vision for the future. Our first series of articles, beginning
with this issue, focuses on how companies can secure the quality
talent they’ll need to not only survive, but thrive in the
market of tomorrow.
Planning—The Key to Quality Talent Acquisition
Quality candidates—where
are they, how can you get them, and how can you keep them?
These are all questions that will be asked with more frequency and
with more urgency during the next few years and beyond. This statistic
isn’t going to make anyone feel better: the U.S. Department of
Labor predicts that by the year 2010—just 4 short years away—there
will be 10.3 million more jobs than people available to fill them in
this country. Do we have your attention?
The upcoming candidate
shortage, fueled by the imminent retirement of the Baby Boomer Generation,
has been a well-documented fact. There is virtually no end
to the amount of statistical data regarding this phenomenon. By
2010, over 70% of the worldwide workforce will be 65 years old. That’s
staggering when you consider that there are more industries and more
jobs than ever before.
So if there’s
going to be a worker shortage overall, it stands to reason that there’s
also going to be a corresponding shortage of the best and brightest
workers. It’s not an exaggeration to say that the
companies that have those workers will be the ones that are able
to succeed the most—and in some cases, simply able to survive.
However, there is
still plenty of time to take the appropriate action to ensure that
you’re prepared for this monumental shift in the job market.
- First, face
the truth. This is going to happen; it’s a
demographic fact, not just political rhetoric or savvy statistical
spin. With that in mind, the most important thing you
can do is take a close look at your succession planning. That
means you should be thinking about what would happen if your
best employee gave you their two-week notice today.
- Look at
your overall recruiting strategy. Consider internships,
cooperatives with universities, and campus recruiting. Plan
to hire more people with two or three years of experience.
Overstaffing with top performers at the entry level now will save
many mid-sized companies by the end of the decade.
- Be creative
and flexible with your benefits/comp plans.
Did you know that one of the hottest benefits will be flex
schedules and day care? Because of conflicts between the
typical 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. work schedule and when school begins/ends
for your employees’ children, flexibility for these working
parents will be key. In addition, companies who provide corporate-sponsored
day care or offer some sort of discount toward dependable day care
will go a long way towards good will with their current employees
and in attracting future employees.
- Examine
possible ways to transfer knowledge from your most experienced
employees, the ones who may leave in the next one to five years,
to those employees who are going to remain. This could
take the form of job shadowing, a mentoring program, or perhaps
in-house training seminars.
- Implement
a cross-training program. In other words, strive
to spread critical knowledge among your employees. That
way, if somebody leaves, there’s not a dead vacuum. Someone
else can pitch in for a while until a replacement is hired.
- Strive to
create a mentoring environment. This is different
than a specific mentoring program. A mentoring environment
is one in which continuous teaching and learning is initiated
and encouraged, both by the management and by the employees.
- Study your
compensation structure. Is it competitive enough
to hold the people you want to keep and to attract the people
you’re going to need? If not, it’s imperative
to upgrade and improve your compensation to put you in a better
position to deal with the worker shortage.
This is a complex
issue, but adjustments can be made to your overall strategic staffing
plan. Preparation is an important part of success, regardless
of the endeavor, and never has that been truer than with the impending
candidate and worker shortage. The steps you take now could
have long-lasting and beneficial consequences for the rest of the
decade and beyond.
Need more information?
Integrity Personnel, Inc. has additional action steps that will help
you succeed as you review your plan.
(Be sure to read
next month’s issue of Vital Signs, when
we’ll
examine other ways in which to maximize your opportunities for
securing and retaining the top talent in the industry, including
increasing referrals and streamlining the interview process.) |