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Author: Leslie Stevens-Huffman

Posted on July 26, 2006July 10, 2018

Talent Retention Becomes a Recruiting Strategy

Talent retention has moved onto the radar screens of corporate executives. Nearly 70 percent of executives say that they view talent retention as important or extremely important, according to a survey of 391 companies conducted by TalentKeepers, a consulting firm specializing in employee retention based in Maitland, Florida.


    The study shows that there is justifiable reason for the executives’ ranking. In 2005, nearly 60 percent of the companies participating in the survey reported employee turnover rates of 11 percent to 40 percent. Most of the executives also said that they are not expecting turnover to improve soon.


    The financial impact of employee attrition was also included in the results, and the numbers associated with those costs create additional fodder for executive agendas.


    More than 40 percent of the responding companies reported direct costs of $5,000 to $20,000 to replace a single employee, and 33 percent responded that the indirect costs–those business costs associated with the impact of turnover–were more than $10,000 per employee.


    Turnover was 44 percent in the first year of employment, according to the survey. One of the first steps to reducing quick turnover rates is to “know your tipping point,” according to Dick Finnegan, chief client services officer for TalentKeepers. Finnegan defines the tipping point as the length of employment where turnover most frequently occurs. He says employers should discover the reasons for the resignations and focus on changing those because extending the average tenure of employees by even a few months can reduce recruitment costs.


    “Looking at the problem as not just an HR problem but a business problem is one of the ways to solve it,” TalentKeepers COO Chris Mulligan says.


Leaders are the key
   Most companies have traditionally relied on pay and benefits as the primary drivers of retention. But pay and benefits alone are not effective, according to Mulligan.


    “People will join companies for organizational factors such as pay, benefits, reputation, then the job itself. Lastly they join for leaders, especially in entry-level positions,” Mulligan says.


    “In as few as 90 days, the order of importance flip-flops, and now trust in their leaders is the single biggest reason that people stay,” Mulligan says.


    Mulligan says that training first-line managers on trust-building skills such as keeping commitments, apologizing for mistakes and accepting responsibility for company policies are the first steps to create a culture of trust and employee engagement.


    “Hold the first-line managers accountable for turnover and empower them to make a difference as a systematic means to increase retention,” he says.


    Training, empowerment and accountability are vital, as most line managers in the survey said that they did not feel they had the necessary empowerment to positively affect turnover rates.


    GE Healthcare Integrated IT Solutions, a technology solutions provider for the health care industry headquartered in Barrington, Illinois, employs a leadership philosophy that “encourages leaders to feel empowered and to take ownership,” says Dan Goitein, HR leader for the firm.


    He says that the leadership development program focuses on creating employee engagement through trust-building training, providing mentors, toolkits and a systematic approach to regular feedback sessions to help leaders connect with their employees.


    With businesses continually scrutinizing their ROI, Mulligan says that companies should continue to invest in their leaders because their skills can directly affect retention and the bottom line.

Posted on April 25, 2006July 10, 2018

College Internship Programs Graduate to a Higher Level

Many college students used to spend lazy summer afternoons at the beach or working at amusement parks. Now, it is more likely that undergraduate college students will spend the summer working in an experiential education program, receiving performance reviews along the way and a job offer when they finish.

   College internships make up the largest segment of these types of programs, and they have become increasingly popular as a strategic method for recruiting students prior to their graduation. Managers favor internships for building pipelines of talent and like the opportunity to “audition” the students for a period of time prior to extending offers, according to Steve Pollock, president of Wet Feet, a recruitment solutions provider and research company based in San Francisco.

   “More companies are de-emphasizing full-time hiring and emphasizing the internship program and the subsequent conversion rates of students to full-time hires at the end of the summer,” Pollock says.

   The desired conversion rate from internships to full-time hires is 50 percent, according to the National Association of Colleges and Employers, a Bethlehem, Pennsylvania-based information resource organization on the employment of the college-educated. In 2004, NACE members reported a 45 percent conversion rate and a 35 percent rate in 2005.

   Wet Feet recently surveyed students who had completed internships to gather their opinions as to what constituted the best program. While the priority goal of employers is gaining new hires, students said that their No. 1 internship objective was gaining experience and knowledge, and that receiving a job offer was a lesser priority.

   The survey reported that less than half of all undergraduate students had accepted their end-of-summer offers as of November. The data also showed that programs that are designed around student objectives had a better than average conversion rate.

“Real” Work Wanted
   The students defined their optimal learning experience as one that provided actual tasks or work that was suitable for exempt personnel. They wanted to be exposed to the real work environment and wanted to know how their work related to the overall success of the business. Pollock says that best-practice companies have a program management team that helps to shape the projects and uses a pre-approval process for the selection of valid assignments.

   Kaiser Permanente, based in Oakland, California, runs multiple internship programs. Each program is targeted toward a different group of students based upon their academic major and the company’s demographic hiring goals. The diversity program targets high-potential students early in their college careers with the assistance of Inroads, a St. Louis-based training and development firm for minority youth.

   Kaiser hires the students for consecutive summers during a two- to six-year period, according to Carolyn Dallas, manager of youth programs for the Southern California region.

   “Our interns receive exposure to real work and to work outside of their internship area via rotational programs, ‘lunch and learn’ sessions and job shadowing,” Dallas says.

   She says that the firm’s project approval process requires the supervisor to complete a profile each year describing the function and the project prior to the student commencing the work. The managers are also required to sequentially increase the complexity of the project each summer that the student returns for an internship.

   Dallas says that they extend the real work experience by conducting performance reviews with each intern twice during the summer and requiring graduating interns to present a summary of their projects to a panel of company executives.

   “The quality of the educational experience has been a major factor in our results,” Dallas says. “We have had a 72 percent conversion rate in Southern California and an 80 percent conversion rate in Northern California from this program.”

   Deutsche Bank has an internal staff of 18 to support domestic internship programs for both undergraduate and MBA students. Last year the bank hired 350 U.S. interns, which was 30 percent more than the prior year, according to Kristina Peters, director and head of regional recruiting for the Americas, who is based in the firm’s U.S. headquarters in New York. Her team is measured by the number of offers that are extended at the end of every summer.

   In order to bring more of a “real work” experience to students interning in areas that require licensing, Peters says that the curriculum includes simulated trading competitions in which the students are scored on their results as if they were working with real money and accounts.

Social Responsibility
   IBM, headquartered in Armonk, New York, hires 1,500 to 1,800 students each year into business-unit-focused internship programs. The “Extreme Blue” program, which is composed of teams of computer science and computer engineering majors, undertakes actual research and development projects each year under the guidance of an IBM team lead.

   “Those projects have actually produced new products and solutions, and several have produced patents,” said Marilyn Mayo, IBM’s program manager for university relations and recruiting. She adds that the goal is to “wow” interns and that her team’s target is to achieve 70 percent of the firm’s college graduate hiring requirements through internships and co-op programs.

   IBM’s program also includes a curriculum covering social responsibility and employs a webcast format with guest speakers who discuss community support and volunteerism. Deutsche Bank’s curriculum includes involving the company’s interns in a community service project such as building homes for Habitat for Humanity.

Crucial Relationships
   Students participating in the Wet Feet survey said that their impressions of people within the company were a critical factor in terms of their decision to accept offers following an internship. They listed both their relationships with their managers and exposure to senior management in the company as important elements of great internship programs.

   “The best programs all provide mentors to the interns who coach them independently of their manager and opportunities to interface with senior management,” Steve Pollock says.

   IBM provides management training for those supervisors with interns. Some companies involve a blend of networking functions and social events to give the interns exposure to people within the organization on different levels.

   Mayo says that there is an expression at IBM that reflects the increased competition to acquire the best interns and convert them to full time hires: “Recruit them once, but hire them twice.”

Posted on February 22, 2006July 10, 2018

Solving Specialized Recruiting Problems With Niche Staffing

Specialized positions requiring unique expertise in engineering, pharmacies and even corporate day care facilities can be hard to fill. With few internal resources to meet challenging recruiting demands, many companies are finding that partnerships with niche staffing suppliers are the solution for specialized recruiting problems.


    Engineering is a prime example of a situation where companies call upon niche staffing firms. The job market for engineers has always fluctuated between periods of high demand and low demand. Underneath the overall engineering umbrella are a number of specialty skill subsets, and the markets for some have varied to greater extremes than for others.


    For example, in the 1960s to 1970s the United States was investing in construction of new energy infrastructure and refineries. In response, colleges and universities were turning out engineering graduates who quickly entered five-year in-house petrochemical training programs at most of the nation’s largest engineering firms. In the early 1980s investment stopped, layoffs ensued and most engineering schools began funneling students into information technology.


    Now the tables have turned, with several key worldwide events driving the need for energy engineering professionals. The current demand for engineers is being fueled by a resurgence of energy infrastructure rebuilding in the United States, simultaneous construction activity in the Middle East and along the Gulf of Mexico and increased oil-processing activity in Alberta, Canada.


    “Given the learning curve of the position, the lack of recent activity and the fact that it’s a 100-year-old industry means the workforce is generally older, and so, the recruiting is totally relationship driven,” says Ron Stein, vice president of business development for Principal Technical Services, an engineering recruitment firm in Irvine, California. “It’s a good old boys’ network.”


    Stein, who is also an engineer, says that the most successful recruiting strategy is peer-to-peer contact. PTS contacts all of its candidates monthly to build relationships. It took the firm seven years to build its current database of 20,000 engineers. That may seem like quite an investment, but an engineer can stay on a single contract for as long as 10 years.


    However, it is “the commitment of time in relationship building that makes the greatest difference in whether the contractor accepts the position,” says Stein, who adds that he usually has 200 open positions in California at any given time.


    One of the firm’s clients with an extreme need for energy infrastructure engineers is Technip USA. Jeroen Snijder, Technip’s vice president of operations, says that because of business efficiency pressures, his company has a staff of just two human resource professionals servicing 400 employees. Snijder says that most industry training programs have been modified from five years to only two to three months in length and are strictly on-the-job.


    As a result, Snijder doesn’t have the resources to frequently contact prospective candidates or to filter through résumés that he estimates produce one qualified candidate for every 200 submissions.


    “I must have people with three to 10 years’ experience in order to meet the business need,” Snijder says. “Given all of the variables, it just makes sense for us to outsource the recruitment.”


    Although Technip is doing some direct hiring, contract workers are a better way to go in the long term because the domestic market for production engineering will contract as jobs travel abroad and the natural peaks and valleys of engineering change labor demands, Snijder says.


Recruiting Mature Workers
    Mature Staffing Systems does exactly what its name implies-assisting workers ages 40 and older with finding new jobs and acquiring new skills. Mature Staffing, based Akron, Ohio, is also unique in that it is a nonprofit firm that is publicly funded.


    It helps supply the region’s manufacturing companies with critical human capital that is becoming increasingly rare–older workers with experience in manufacturing.


    Mature Staffing provides experienced older workers and also facilitates what Paul Magnus, vice president of workforce development for the firm, calls “step-down programs.”


    “The older workers can ease down to part time and help transfer institutional knowledge to the new workers entering manufacturing,” he says. “We help to stabilize the workforce.”


    Jim Burns, president of Summit Machine Ltd. in Mogadore, Ohio, says that more than one-third of his workforce is 60 to 70 years old. One employee is 74. He says that younger workers do not want a career in manufacturing.


    “I have truly come to appreciate the older worker,” Burns says. “Most of them want to work longer and have a tremendous work ethic. The future worker in manufacturing is the first-generation American.”


    Patricia Bellace was having difficulty filling part-time swing-shift customer service positions. She called Mature Staffing after reading about the company in a newspaper. Bellace says that it was a good solution because she needed workers with a great deal of patience to deal with customers over the phone and the mature staffers only wanted part-time work. Bellace says she also found that the workers appreciated the job.


    Although Bellace has since moved on from the firm where she was hiring customer service workers, she continues to use Mature Staffing in her current role as director of human resources for Health Design Plus in Hudson, Ohio.


    Bellace calls Mature Staffing when a position calls for exceptional soft skills and what she calls a gracious presence under stressful circumstances. She says that the more mature workers hit the ground running because of their previous experience, stay in their positions longer and are easier to manage.


Hiring for Differing Skill Sets
    Businesses sometimes need employees to fill jobs that differ greatly from their main business lines. For instance, instituting new employee benefits such as day care centers, which enhance the balance between work and life, can mean a company that provides high-technology services now needs to hire preschool teachers.


    CA Inc., formerly Computer Associates International, is a leading provider of information technology management solutions. Islandia, New York-based CA believes that achieving its financial objectives requires positioning itself as a preferred employer, allowing the company to attract and retain the best talent. In 1992, CA opened five on-site child development centers at several of its domestic and European locations.


    Operating in partnership with a Montessori organization, the centers care for more than 580 children ranging in age from 6 weeks to 6 years with a staff of 200 teachers and teaching assistants. The task of finding and hiring staff with degrees in early childhood education, psychology, nursing, speech pathology, art and music was unique for a firm that is skilled in finding and retaining IT talent.


    The educational staff requirements were so large that they required constant focus, a different sourcing base and alternate recruiting techniques that differed from the traditional IT worker. When the niche staffing firm Lloyd Staffing of Melville, New York, began offering educational staffing services, CA opted to outsource its day care positions to the firm. The move seemed like the best way to achieve results without increasing CA’s existing recruitment infrastructure and fixed costs, says Paul Buonaiuto, vice president of recruiting for CA


    “Building out this partnership helps us meet the need to have a continual flow of educational candidates and ensures that there is an established expertise reviewing our hiring manager’s needs,” Buonaiuto says. “For our working parents, the commitment to excellence begins with the assurance that their families are safe, happy and thriving.”


Matching Supply With Demand
    Achieving work/life balance for their staff is the reason that many clients turn to Rx Relief, a pharmacist staffing company in Fresno, California. Tom Maez, division vice president for the company, says that some clients see turning to a staffing supplier as a “failure” because they feel that they should be able to hire enough staff themselves.


    However, Maez says that the recruitment market for pharmacists produces geographic areas of high and low supply of candidates.


    “Generally, pharmacists want to reside in areas that they view as more desirable than others, and they have a tendency to return to their roots after pharmacy school,” Maez says.


    With shortages in some areas, the existing pharmaceutical staff is often required to work extra shifts or overtime, so Rx Relief facilitates a traveling per diem service to balance the workforce to the required work hours. The large drugstore chains have a tendency to dictate shifts and are less desirable as employers from pharmacists’ perspectives.


    “Using contract staffing can help reduce the number of less desirable shifts that a pharmacist has to work so that overall staff retention will be better,” Maez says.


    He says that the clients who benefit the most from what his firm offers really “get it” and then utilize the service strategically. Doing that requires looking at the bigger picture when performing a cost analysis. The daily per diem rate may appear to be higher than comparable in-house wages until all of the costs that are often absorbed by the staffing company are taken into consideration. Additionally, it is difficult to measure the costs associated with turnover of full-time staff or poor morale attributable to less than desirable working conditions.


    No matter how costs are measured, it is often hard to replicate the results of specialization with an in-house program. As businesses continue to do more with less, niche staffing suppliers continue to emerge and fill the gaps that are left behind.


 

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