Monday, March 24, 2008

Budgeting for a World-Class Employee Referral Program

Budgeting for a World-Class Employee Referral Program

Tips based on America's top 40 best-performing programs

Monday, March 24, 2008 | by Dr. John Sullivan


by Dr. John Sullivan & Master Burnett

It's no secret that employee referral programs are proving themselves around the world to be a highly effective and efficient channel for sourcing quality candidates. While many employers are drawn to the source based solely on attractive cost-per-hire predictions, those savvy enough to measure the impact post implementation are finding out that candidates sourced via referral are more apt to:

* Meet job requirement expectations.
* Accept offers more often.
* Meet minimum standards of productivity faster.
* Perform better long-term on the job.
* Turn-over less often.

While on average only 1:3 firms measure the economic impact of these factors, those that do can easily attest that employee referral programs produce one of the highest ROIs in the HR function and possibly even the enterprise.

Past experience with ERPs, success stories in the media, and unrelenting demand for top talent has led nearly every major company competing for talent on a global level to either initiate a new program or reinvigorate an existing program in 2008. One question that nearly everyone is asking is "How should we budget for a world-class employee referral program?" It's a great question.

World-class programs elevate program execution to an art form with scientific precision, and carry out a number of activities that average programs often overlook or discount.

Those activities have a cost associated with them, some of it fixed, some of it variable. Our research found that the average-performing program, one that produces approximately 26% of all hires, had a cost per hire (inclusive of bonus amounts paid) of $2,306. The top-40 performing programs invested more, paying out nearly $5,855 per hire on average, and that difference had nearly nothing to do with the reward.

In 2006, it took hiring 38% of all hires via employee referral to make the top-40. By 2007, that percentage had grown to 46%. If early statistics prove indicative, by year's end it will require hiring more than 62% of all hires via employee referral to rank among the best in 2008.
$3,549 Well Spent

Some people see the added cost-per-hire to run a world-class program and immediately think it would never work in their organization. Other, more strategic recruiting professionals, see the added cost-per-hire and start to wonder what return warrants the added investment.

In 2006, Booz Allen Hamilton surveyed 73 major employers, and 88% found that hires made via employee referral performed better on the job than candidates hired via other sources as measured by their companies' performance appraisal systems. If those systems were valid, that performance must be worth something, right?

Based on that statement, we looked at the companies with top-40 ranked employee referral programs and asked them to complete a statistical analysis of their programs' performance, looking in particular at the factors mentioned in the opening of this article. While not all 40 completed the analysis, those that did found some startling numbers.

The following chart presents the minimum and maximum observed data points between employee referral program hires and hires by all other sources combined with respect to each of the measures previously mentioned.

If you have ever spent time as a line recruiter, a few of these data points should have jumped out screaming at you! At the very least, applicants via the ERP were 13 times more likely to meet job requirements, and 17% more likely to accept an offer. Immediately that should register a recruiter time savings, but think of the time savings for all managers and employees involved in the assessment process!

Start tacking on the savings related to decreased turnover and increased productivity and you can easily see why companies with top-performing programs are not pinching pennies.
How Top-Performing Programs Spend the Extra Money

1. Applies dedicated resources. Every one of the companies with a program in the top-40 had a dedicated program manager in place to drive the strategy and execution of the employee referral program by the end of 2007. The smallest company in the top-40, employing just over 3,000 employees, has a dedicated team comprised of a program manager, communication specialist, and full-time recruiter. The average number of dedicated ERP staff per employee in top-performing programs is 1:1,390.
2. Has a documented strategy. Most employee referral programs are managed in an ad-hoc employee opt-in manner. Such approaches limit the strategic value of the program by failing to incorporate program drivers that create activity when needed most in the most needed areas. World-class programs coordinate program execution with the overall staffing strategy and workforce plan to drive the volume necessary into the process to create the output volume of hires needed based on traditional yield model analytics. Our research demonstrates that programs that lack the proactive management element are more apt to fill the ERP pipeline with candidates who approach employees asking to be referred versus employee sourcing and selection of top talent.
3. Has specific goals and objectives. Because most programs lack formal management, it is not uncommon for the average program to have no specific goals. The absence of such goals leave program communications, reward structure, and program evaluation baseless. World-class programs determine probable participation rates by various demographic strata; set targets for program performance; establish tracking metrics; and leverage the data to drive decision-making around participant experience.
4. Places emphasis/priority on mission-critical jobs using differentiated communications and rewards. It's great when an employee refers a friend who they would like to work alongside, but that doesn't mean the company has a need for that person at that time. Truly strategic referral programs attempt to drive traffic into the program by leveraging demographically targeted custom communications and differentiated rewards. While they may still leverage companywide communications from time to time, the bulk of ERP-authored communications in top-performing programs is directed at the team/department level and frequent in nature. Most top-performing programs deliver targeted messages weekly regarding hot jobs, tips for identifying talent, sharing success stories, etc.
5. Prioritizes referrals. This is based on three elements: quality of the referral source; the position being referred for; and competitive intelligence drivers. Remember: Homer Simpson knows people, too! World-class programs prioritize response to referrals based on what is needed most by the company. If Employee A has a phenomenal track record for referring candidates the org hires, then his referrals should be fast-tracked. Likewise, if Employee B has referred 100 candidates, none of which the org has ever hired, he/she should be banned from the program! However, at times the org may also want to prioritize response based on competitive intelligence needs. Candidates often give up lots of info during interviews, info which when aggregated can have significant strategic value to senior leaders.
6. Periodically adjusts communication strategy based on employer brand and positioning strategy. Most programs communicate stale, generic messaging and do it for long periods. The human mind is insanely powerful at filtering out patterns. How long after a new billboard is installed along the freeway do you continue to notice it? Communication approaches should last no longer than 90 days and be tied to the audience. A few messages can be organization-wide, but most should be department/function/location centric.
7. Uses a viral marketing engine to drive engagement and disseminate selling stories. You could pretty much take messaging from Company A and put Company B's name on it and no one would know the difference. Messaging that originates in HR is often so generic that it is immediately ignored by the educated masses we seek to influence in recruiting. World-class ERPs coordinate their efforts with the employment branding program to develop an inventory of "Wow!" stories that are so compelling they spread virally. Such stories truly differentiate an organization in such a way most competitors cannot compete. These stories provide an arsenal of things for employees to share in social settings and to leverage when approaching a potential recruit. (If you can't think of any such stories for your organization, you should quit!)
8. Uses a combination of push/pull techniques to manage flow of inbound referrals. Some percentage (between 12% and 23%) of employees will voluntarily refer someone at some point during their tenure with the organization even if the organization doesn't have an ERP. The secret is to manage the process such that at least 25% of the organization is participating annually.
9. Provides extreme customer service. Employees are special people, we already know them and can evaluate their performance, yet we treat their friends and colleagues like crap, often just like we treat applicants walking in off the street. All referrals should receive a custom response within 72 hours of submittal. The referring employee and the referral should receive status communications at every step in the process, including a communication upfront to establish the process and likely timeline so as to set expectations. Our research shows that more than 72% of employees who have participated in their companies' ERP program found the experience unpleasant. More than 68% were not likely to participate again.
10. Uses existing information to minimize assessment steps. ERPs are all about the perception of special treatment. World-class programs leverage any and every piece of existing information about a candidate to minimize the assessment steps needed, making it look like the organization is skipping steps in their otherwise tedious process.
11. Uses technology wherever possible to provide 24/7 service. While a few of the top-40 programs are purely human-powered, many are leveraging home-grown technology systems and customized ATS systems to enable customer-service 24/7. If you have turned off the module that allows employees to track referral status in your ATS, turn it back on and start populating it with real feedback. The one caveat to using technology: DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES FORCE EMPLOYEES TO USE THE REFER-A-FRIEND FUNCTIONALITY IN MOST ATS SYSTEMS THAT DOES NOTHING MORE THAN SEND A URL ASKING A REFERRAL TO TORTURE THEMSELVES BY COMPLETING THE SAME GENERIC APPLICATION AS EVERYONE ELSE! Instead, make it easy. Use a simple form asking for contact info, how the employee knows the candidate, what makes them think the candidate would be a good fit for the role/company, and whether they would be willing to vouch for the candidate as a quality hire. (Nothing will reduce the amount of chaff in the referral system more than asking that last question!)
12. Has extensive metrics to monitor/diagnose the process and program. Self explanatory!
13. Rewards all activity. Most programs send a generic, automatically generated thank-you note upon submission. Unless a hire is generated, that is often the only communication a referring employee will ever get. World-class programs seek to drive program participation and that translates into rewarding all activity in such a way that employees are not motivated to refer for reward sake, but feel valued by the process.
14. Has open participation to all stakeholders. Lots of stakeholders related to the organization can source top talent, but most organizations limit participation to existing employees. World-class programs allow former ee's, consultants, contractors, shareholders, etc. to refer.

Putting a Final Figure Down on Paper

As consultants, we learned a long time ago that what one company can do with $100,000 would take another organization five times as much (think government). The secret to budgeting for a world-class ERP is working backwards. Ask yourself the following:

* How many hires are projected for the next budget cycle (growth + attrition)?
* What percentage of hires would we like to generate via the ERP: 35%, 46%, 70%, or more?
* To realistically be capable of delivering the experience outlined in the section about what top-performing programs do differently, what resources would be required in your organization?
* Estimate the cost for each resource identified and total them up.
* Now add about 20% to cover things you might have overlooked and you'll have a decent budget for year one.

Final Thoughts

Most organizations really miss the mark when it comes to managing their employee referral program. The biggest mistake they make is trying to do it cheap and thinking that employees will understand when they never hear anything back.

Managed correctly, ERPs can have significant impact on an organization's capacity and capability to achieve their strategic objectives, two things anyone who has ever spent time in operations will tell you are key. Sure, it may seem like managing the program well will make recruiters less necessary, but in reality, it proves that recruiters can work smarter and demonstrate strategic-level contributions.

Dr. John Sullivan (JohnS@sfsu.edu) is a well-known thought leader in HR. He is a frequent speaker and advisor to Fortune 500 and Silicon Valley firms. Formerly the chief talent officer for Agilent Technologies (the 43,000-employee HP spin-off), he is now a professor of management at San Francisco State University. He was called the "Michael Jordan of Hiring" by Fast Company magazine. More recruiting articles by Dr. Sullivan can be found in the ER Daily archives. Information about his numerous other articles, books and manuals about recruiting and HR can be found at www.drjohnsullivan.com. Dr. Sullivan is also the editor of VP of HR, an e-newsletter providing "out of the box" solutions for senior HR managers. Free subscriptions can be obtained on his website.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Web 2.0 Recruiting

I recently read this on ERE.Net and found it to be very insightful about a direction passive job seekers are using to find new opportunities.

Web 2.0 Recruiting is Here

Advice for using Web 2.0 to gain a competitive advantage

Thursday, February 14, 2008 | by Kevin Wheeler

My friend Sue, a project manager and an expert in the biomedical arena, was looking for a job change. Her husband had taken a new position with a firm several hundred miles away from where they lived, and she was in pursuit of her next gig. As she surfed around the Web looking at various corporate recruiting websites, she was very frustrated. Mostly what she found were online brochures, nice, boring, and uninformative sites filled with corporate-speak. Clearly, these sites had been designed by a committee, written by PR departments, and massaged by lawyers until nothing of much interest was left.

I advised her to leverage her network and use the emerging Web 2.0 world to help get a more realistic picture of prospective employers, the corporate culture, and the kinds of people with whom she might be working. In the end, she used her Facebook network and a number of blogs to narrow down the firms she was interested in. She found a new position a couple of weeks ago, after a series of experiences that I will document in later articles.

But, her search underlines the differences between the world of Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. There has been a lot of talk about Web 2.0 and recruiting, but not a lot of clarity about what it means. Simply put, Web 2.0 is the evolution from text-based, online brochure-like websites to websites that are interactive, allow control and input from the candidate, and provide information in a variety of formats, including video, audio, graphics, and text. Web 2.0 sites tend to focus on blogs, wikis, and chat and they keep the boilerplate to a minimum.

The advent of YouTube, cheap video cameras, ubiquitous broadband connections, and a sophisticated video-savvy worker means that video tours of corporate campuses as well as interview clips from employees, management, and the CEO are all becoming requisite to a positive website experience. Good recruiting sites are reducing the number of words and adding more graphics, pictures, videos, and live interviews.

But, another aspect of Web 2.0 is giving the candidate control over the experience and allowing choices. Social networking sites give a clue as to what will emerge over the next couple of years for recruiting sites.

Imagine a recruiting site in the year 2012: Sue searches for a product manager position in the biomedical field. She is taken to a variety of links, but the most outstanding one supplies her with a spectrum of information about the company in myriad ways. She can watch several videos that provide her with a good understanding of the corporate background, products, and history. She views a number of interviews with current employees, and she can even send them an e-mail. One or two of them are online and she has a 10-minute instant message (IM) conversation with a young biologist who has been at the company for six months. He gives her a lot of insight into the recruitment process and the on-boarding practices.

She is given the opportunity to participate in a simulation that will help her find the position that she is most likely to be happy in. She spends 20 minutes in the simulation and finds it fun and informative. At the end of the simulation, she is shown information about three positions that she might enjoy. She is also linked to some of the incumbents in those positions and can send them e-mails to get in-depth information.

She is invited to complete an online profile, much like the profiles she has in Facebook. In fact, she can even link to that if she prefers. She could also link to her profiles on LinkedIn or MySpace, or she can create another one just for this organization. She is invited to submit a video of her own and is provided with some guidelines on how to do that easily and quickly.

From the moment she completed the simulation, she has received a few e-mails from recruiters who would like to talk with her using Skype or the phone, whichever is easier for her. She ends up Skyping the recruiter for the position she is most excited about and has a 20-minute interview. The recruiter refers her to a password-protected portion of the site where she completes some formal documentation and officially applies for the position. She also is directed to the online scheduling system and sets up a series of interviews for the following week, and she gets a link to the profiles of the folks who will be interviewing her. These are surprisingly useful as they contain short videos of each person and provide insight into their personalities and interests.

After about 90 minutes of interactive, informative, and mostly fun online activity, she has learned a great deal about the company, positions, corporate culture, and daily activities, and she has had a telephone screen and set up interviews.

Everything I have written here is possible today, and pieces and parts of this solution are available from a dozen vendors or more. The building blocks are interactivity and candidate involvement. Here are three ingredients to get started with.

Use Multimedia

Incorporate short videos into your website as soon as you can. These can be simple productions and, in fact, the best ones are not professionally produced. Short, candid interviews and simple tours are best. Limit each video to less than 3 minutes and make them fun. Get your CEO to record a greeting. A good example of a corporate campus tour is one made by Tivo and available on YouTube.

Incorporate Interactivity

In order to keep candidates on your site longer and get them more involved with your organization, build short polls for them to take or ask them to get involved in a chat room discussion. Provide ways for them to send e-mails to selected employees and, if you are ready for it, open up some IM capabilities to let them instantly get information from willing employees. Provide many ways to get information, from text to video.

Keep It Real

Make sure the tone of your website is real and practical. No one wants to read PR language and no one wants to hear over and over how wonderful you are. Provide facts, candid information, and links to third-party discussions about your company or products. The younger your candidate base is, the more you have to follow this advice. Young folks will not believe or pay attention to the usual corporate language used in the recruiting sites I see. While your PR folks and lawyers may balk, you need to be as committed as you can be to ensuring that your site is perceived as honest and open.

Web 2.0 is here to stay and the world of interactivity is one that recruiters should be embracing as quickly as they can. Right now, it offers a tremendous edge to those who put it into practice.

Kevin Wheeler (kwheeler@glresources.com), the President and Founder of Global Learning Resources, Inc., is a globally-known speaker, author, columnist, and consultant in human capital acquisition and development. His extensive career, global client base, and research affiliations make GLR a leading provider of both strategy and process. GLR focuses on assisting firms architect human capital strategies. GLR guides firms thorough comprehensive talent acquisition processes and procedures as well as the development of talent within organizations of all sizes. GLR can be explored at http://www.glresources.com.


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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Stepping Into a Good Job Market

Abridged: JobWeb.com (by The Career News)

BETHLEHEM, PA -- Your chances of getting a job - maybe even the perfect entry-level job - are great! According to many of the employers who are currently recruiting, this is the healthiest job market in three years. Overall, according to Job Outlook 2008, employers plan to hire 16% more graduates in 2007-08 than they did in 2006-07.

The growing demand for entry-level employees and new graduates is a result of an increased demand for employers' products and services. It's also important to note that many employees are retiring, and other employees are leaving organizations for new opportunities. Employers expect the good job market to continue - or perhaps get better!

Employers plan to target business, engineering, and computer-related degrees in 2007-2008. The Top 10 degrees in demand are: Accounting, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Business Administration and Management, Economics/Finance, Information Sciences & Systems, Marketing/Marketing Management, Computer Engineering, Management Information Systems/ Business Data Processing.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Demand for IT Jobs Will Soar Through 2016


Five IT specialties are among the 25 fastest-growing jobs anticipated by 2016, according to a new forecast from the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Positions in network systems and data communications analysis will increase 53 percent between 2006 and 2016, the highest rate of growth of any occupation. Computer software application engineers will see the fourth-highest growth, with an increase of 44 percent.

Computer systems analysts (29%), database administrators (29%) and computer systems software engineers (28%) also rank in the top 25 jobs in terms of job growth.

Other IT occupations expected to see increase growth include network and computer systems administrators, computer and information research scientists, computer information systems managers and computer support specialist.

The downside for IT? Computer programming positions are expected to decline by 4 percent, the 22nd biggest loss overall.

Overall, job growth in the next 10 years is expected to increase slightly less than it did between 1996 and 2006. The Bureau attributes the small drop-off in growth to the aging and retiring of the Baby Boomer generation. "As a result, the need to replace workers who retire or leave the labor force for other reasons—called replacement needs—is projected to create a significant number of additional job openings," the report states.

For more on the Bureau of Labor Statistics' workforce projections, click here.

Copyright (c) 2007Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Simple Rules for an Effective Resume

The goal of a resume is to solicit enough interest for an employer to want to talk with you further about a career opportunity. Below, you will find some simple, straight forward guidelines for putting together a good resume. There are some clear Do's & Don'ts to abide by!

Resume Do's
  • Be truthful, clear and concise
  • Sell yourself
  • Use accomplishment-oriented language such as "Saved company 25K within Q1..."
  • Avoid job description language such as "Responsible for..."
  • Provide as much contact information as possible and best time to contact (especially during business hours)
  • Keep your resume to 2 pages or less (it is not a book!)
  • If printing, use standard 8.5" X 11" paper size and use high quality bright white color
  • Use Spell Check
  • Use good grammar
  • Use Bullets when appropriate
  • Explain gaps in employment
  • List work history in reverse chronological order
  • Include city & state for each job
  • Focus on accomplishments
  • "Accentuate the Positive" & "Eliminate the Negative"
  • Always follow up with a phone call or email to ensure that the employers has received your resume.
Resume Don'ts
  • List more than about 15 years of experience
  • Provide skills of activities that you are not interested in doing even if you excel in these areas
  • Include Upfront Reference information (simply mention that "References are available upon request")
  • Include picture of yourself
  • Forget to use spell check!!!
  • Provide a laundry list of every tool, language, software that you've ever looked at. Keep it to a list of skills, etc. which are pertinent to the opportunity you are seeking.
  • Include high school or irrelevant experience unless you don't have any industry experience
  • Include salary history (this should be left for telephone or face to face)