5 Recruiting Trends for 2010

December 1, 2009 by robin  
Filed under Recruiting

If you’ve been paying any attention to recruiting news lately, then you’ve likely noticed huge changes in the industry and the methodologies being used by top producers. Recruiters are becoming smarter, more connected, more mobile and more interested in relationships. Recruiters sometimes get a bad rap but let’s face it: all we’ve ever been trying to do is more, faster and better. We are repeatedly faced with the justification of our salaries and commissions to our employers and clients. It’s a tough job but somebody’s gotta do it, right?

These are the reasons we continue to push for ways to make our recruiting efforts more streamlined and effective. How can we create solid pipelines of talent while still remaining on task and sane? The fundamental core of recruiting is forever changing, evolving with the development of technology. Some of this technology is proving useful and others are not. So without further adieu, let’s review 5 Recruiting Trends for 2010:

1. Social Media

Twitter is clearly leading the path in this trend. While sites like LinkedIn have fostered stronger and more prevalent professional connections, we all know that connections require some kind of prior relationship (in most cases, with the exception of LION). However, Twitter has allowed recruiters (and job seekers alike) to find potential connections they may not know. Twitter removes some of the formality of making crucial hiring connections and allows a bit more of our personality to shine through. Ultimately, recruiters are interested in who is going to make the best impression for their client and a standard resume doesn’t always reflect it.

Social media – including Facebook and MySpace – are platforms which allow us to be found by others. Friends, family, potential employers and potential employees. If you aren’t using these mediums yet, then you will quickly be left in the dust by your counterparts. This is the #1 Recruiting Trend for 2010. Candidates and clients will be judging your use of social media as a gauge of your abilities to be resourceful.

2. Relationship building

This sort of goes hand in hand with social media, as that is what created this trend of relationship building to begin with. However, even outside of social media – more recruiters are taking an interest in building long term relationships with not only their candidate pool but also with their industry peers. Gone are the days of the “mine, mine!” mentality where agency recruiters protected information with a death grip to prevent anyone “stealing” their information or clients. We are a more open society of gentiles now, respecting boundaries and sharing knowledge that is helpful to others. I attribute this to the “open source” and social media movements. Information sharing has become a huge party of our societal status. Not to mention that it just feels better to have real relationships built on trust and respect.  If you are interested in building pipelines of talent, you will pay attention to this trend.

3. Mobile recruiting

I’m not sure where this fits into corporate environments just yet but from an agency perspective, this is genius. There are also many definitions of “mobile recruiting” but the trend I’m going to define here is specifically targeted to agency recruiters in the temp and contract areas of placement. Whether you are placing clerical, light industrial, technical or healthcare personnel, mobile recruiting is something you should be looking into.  This is possibly one of the fastest growing sectors of recruiting technology. Picture it like this: you have an “available” list of candidates in your database for placement. A job comes in from a client and it matches 50 of those profiles. You send a notification through the database to all matching candidates, which in turn sends an SMS text alerting them of the job and instructing them to call into the office for more details. Rather than spending all afternoon calling all of your available candidates, you notify all of them in one swift motion – they come to you. This sounds like good technology to me. I’m not sure which ATS systems are using this yet, but I’d love to hear of some!

4. ATS Evolution

Speaking of ATS – Applicant Tracking Systems – I sense from my recruiting peers that an overhaul is needed in this area.  Traditional, large scale ATS systems like Taleo make social media recruiting extremely difficult. In fact, most applicant tracking systems are as far away from social as possible. They leave most job seekers feeling like pawns at the gate of the kingdom, begging to be let in. While ATS systems have their place, helping to automate the applicant process and store critical data, they have yet to truly integrate the relationship aspect of recruiting. Most successful recruiting is not done through an ATS. It is done through relationship building and referrals. There is a revolution bubbling under the surface – recruiters want more flexibility in how they identify great candidates while still remaining OFCCP compliant. I suspect that most ATS companies that are paying attention will be finding ways to make these necessary systems more effective for social media recruiting and relationship building.

5. Job Board Revolution

Many of you know that I run a job board, that’s no secret. One of the reasons that I started JobShouts was to create a cost effective and useful job board that was focused on creating relationships and bringing better matches to both candidates and employers. As a recruiter, I got tired of using the big job boards like Monster or Dice. The job postings were way too expensive for the volume of jobs that I had – not to mention the responses I got were often large in volume but small in qualifications. It was very frustrating, to say the least.

It’s comforting to know that other recruiters share my sentiment and are branching out to more niche job boards and spending their money more wisely on them. Gone are the days of $500 job postings and “the largest job board on the planet”. Who cares about volume if the content is crappy? Recruiters are getting smart and demanding more for their money. The job boards that remain fat, with their heads buried in the sand, will quickly fade into the mist. Monster, are you listening?

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Comments

View Comments to “5 Recruiting Trends for 2010”

  1. collinsd4 on December 3rd, 2009 7:43 am

    Enjoyed your article. I need to work on my use of these vehicles for social networking

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  3. kerrymullins on December 3rd, 2009 4:02 pm

    I am intrigued by the discussion of mobile recruiting. I am a corporate recruiter who works, as do many of my industry colleagues in federal contracting, with candidates who work in secure government facilities. This means they do not have access outside of the classfied network during business hours. Being able to send multiple candidates a job alert via a SMS text message to their phone that they may receive during a break, lunch or as soon as they leave the facility could expedite my sourcing.

  4. mattcharney on December 4th, 2009 8:05 am

    Yes, in fact, Monster is listening. And we absolutely agree with your point that there’s a job board revolution under way. The “post and pray” mentality you describe is an outdated model; that’s why we’ve developed cutting edge semantic search capabilities to allow employers to intuitively match top candidates with specific criteria, paring both cost per hire and time to fill. Of course, our millions of resumes do make us “the largest job board on the planet,” but to your second point, that’s not necessarily a bad thing when you’re building pipeline.

    This powerful new search technology is also available at a range of prices, with options tailored specifically for the needs of our customers; we get that small business and limited hiring situations demand the same search precision as big enterprises filling dozens of positions, and our products and pricing reflect these diverse needs.

    In terms of social media and relationship building, again, we agree. We’ve recently launched Monster Communities, 20 niche networks where professionals from accountants to firefighters can build profiles, interact and engage with other professionals and hiring decision makers, and stay on top of pertinent trends and best practices specific to the careers they're passionate about.

    So we understand that recruiters are demanding more for their money. That’s why this year we brought our clients the “Keep America Working Tour,” free of charge to all Monster customers, making nearly 100 stops nationwide in 2009. That’s why we provide a slew of free webinars, white papers, and thought leadership articles to the recruitment community through our Employer Resource Center. And that’s why we want to make sure we’re listening to ensure that every hiring professional walks away with a positive experience.

    Sorry if you’ve had a bad experience in the past; we’d like to invite you to give us another look, because it really sounds like we’re on the same page when it comes to the evolution of the business of hiring. If nothing else, follow us on Twitter (@monstercareers, @monster_works, @monsterww) or become a fan on Facebook. We agree, they’re pretty indispensable tools.

    Matt Charney
    Social Media Engagement Manager, Monster Worldwide
    @monster_works

  5. melissahess on December 10th, 2009 9:05 am

    I truly enjoyed this article. It is right on point with the direction and future of recruiting.

  6. sotxrecruiter on December 14th, 2009 2:58 pm

    Thank you for this blog. I am printing out a copy for everyone in our office.

  7. Marguerite Granat on December 18th, 2009 7:57 pm

    Robin, you are definitely right about everything on this post. Everyone involved in talent acquisition whether a solo practitioner to ATS systems providers need to adapt to the way that people are relating to each other. The process is what drives the use of technology and not the other way around. For instance, people are able to interface effectively on Twitter because we have become more collaborative and open. If we were not collaborative, we would not be able to operate on Twitter. Our culture is driving the changes in technology. Well done! Marguerite

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  9. Mischa on January 4th, 2010 7:25 am

    I agree that larger ATS are cumbersome and lack the social media element, but newer ones like Jobvite which do incorporate and push this are not better at the *tracking* and process part of applicant flow that is critical. At my former employer, we switched from iCims (too many forms/windows to get through) to Jobvite but it was not as intuitive as it seemed at first glance.

    My thought is you need to incorporate social media in your efforts, but you must be able to put a candidate through the hiring process easily as well. Otherwise a recruiter is spending way too much time on administrative functions and not on what they do best.

    Ana side, this is one of the better blogs on hiring I have seen out there. Thanks.

  10. Kristen Tom on March 1st, 2010 10:09 am

    Mobile recruiting is one the fastest growing trends? That’s a very interesting statement. It’s amazing to hear how technology has completely revolutionized the way we seek out potential candidates.

  11. Bruce on May 19th, 2010 7:47 am

    Mobile recruiting is one the fastest growing trends? That’s a very interesting statement. It’s amazing to hear how technology has completely revolutionized the way we seek out potential candidates.

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