
Millennials and their Gen Z successors have little time for thoughtfully crafted emails or telephone pleasantries.
These digital natives grew up texting and often consider other formats to be cumbersome and outdated. So it should come as no surprise that they think text messages are a completely appropriate way to communicate with recruiters and their future workplace peers.
A recent survey from Yello, the talent acquisition software company, shows 86 percent of millennials âfeel positively about text messages being used during the interview period,â and a similar HeyWire Inc. survey shows 67 percent of employees are using text messaging for business-related communications.
While it may seem like an overly casual environment to connect with potential hires, texts offer a lot of benefits â especially in a recruiting setting, said Jason Weingarten, co-founder of the Chicago-based Yello. âText is faster, itâs easier and itâs more personal,â he said. It can also solve many of problems that create a negative candidate experience, including delays in communication, lack of follow-up and overly generic form letters.
âThere are many points in the recruiting process that are very stressful for candidates,â he said. âGetting a quick response or update can ease some of that anxiety.â
It can also be handy for recruits who have another job and donât want to communicate via their company email or phone, said JoAnne Kruse, chief human resources officer at American Express Global Business Travel. âThey are lot more responsive via text, and itâs an easy way to move the process forward.â
A Strange Bunch
Besides convenience, texting is a great way to get a sense of a candidateâs personality, said Jack Barmby, CEO of Gnatta, a customer service software company based in the U.K. His developers and support staff use text messaging to talk to each other and to potential new hires. âIt is the underpinning of how we communicate,â he said.
The company uses Slack, a cloud-based team collaboration tool for its text platform, creating different conversations for different projects, teams and topics. Participants post project updates, questions and comments that others in the group can see and respond to.
âItâs more efficient than email because users can quickly scroll through posts, find those that are relevant, without getting bogged down in a bunch of âreply-allâ email chains,â he said. There are no formal rules for use, beyond the basics â donât be a jerk, and donât post comments that are not relevant to the topic. âOtherwise itâs very organic, and we encourage people to let their personalities flourish.â
Gnatta also uses it as a vetting tool for new hires. When a candidate makes the hiring short list, they are invited to join one of the casual Slack channels, where Gnatta employees talk about whatâs going on in their lives. The recruits get a chance to see how the team communicates, and the team gets a sense of their personality, Barmby said. âThe âshineâ of the interview comes off, and they have a chance to be themselves.â
Inviting candidates to engage via text helps his team determine who will be the best cultural fit for the organization, and it ultimately becomes an extension of the onboarding process. He admitted that some candidates are turned off by the process because it adds a week to the decision, but others love the opportunities to connect with potential peers. âDevelopers can be a strange bunch, and not everyone is a good fit,â he said. Spending a week chatting with the team is a great way to decide who will fit in.
For all its conveniences there also are risks to using texts in recruiting. Companies need to be thoughtful about the information they share via text and how those communications can be tracked, Weingarten said. âIf you get audited, you need to be able to show the source of the texts, how they were sent, and what messaging you used.â
Recruiters shouldnât put too many rules around how texting is used. Where recruiters are looking for better, faster and more personal ways to engage with talent, texting is a cheap and familiar solution that can add real value to the process.
âText is the next iteration of how we communicate,â Kruse said. âIt can be a hugely helpful way to quickly connect with people, is a style that they prefer, so why wouldnât you take advantage of that?â
Sarah Fister Gale is a writer in the Chicago area. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.
This brings up some interesting questions about how email will be used for the future of hiring and workforce management. Slack has become a popular tool for a lot of businesses, but I’ve also heard a lot of critiques of the software. What will be the new workforce communication norm in the next 5, 10, 20 years?
Another take on how work communication is changing: https://www.orbitalshift.com/blog/email-is-changing-and-the-way-you-use-it-should-too