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Archive for the ‘Conferences’ Category

October 6, 2011

Candidate Experience Awards – Virtual Job Tryout Client Among Winners

2011 Candidate Experience Award Stamp

Some organizations take their candidate experience seriously.  This year, after considerable thought, some survey data and insightful collaborative writing, The Candidate Experience Awards were conceived.

Gerry Crispin and a team nurtured the idea and a process for application and evaluation was born.  The industry is fortunate to have forward thinking individuals willing to get out in front and take some pull-forward actions.

Dwight and Jean Accept CEA


The candidate experience is complex with many touch-points.  Doing it all well is no small feat.  SunTrust, one of our Virtual Job Tryout clients was honored with a Candidate Experience Award at the HR Technology Conference in Las Vegas.

Our Kudos and Congratulations go out to the entire talent team at SunTrust.  Way to Go!

September 5, 2011

Virtual Job Tryout Demonstrations at Taleo World

Shaker Consulting Group will be conducting demonstrations of the Virtual Job Tryout for participants at Taleo World.  You will see how we create a candidate experience as unique as your brand, an evaluation experience as challenging as your job.

This is our sixth year as a sponsor/exhibitor at Taleo World.  It is a great opportunity for us to connect with our existing clients on the Taleo platform.  It also allows us to showcase our simulation for pre-employment testing to other Taleo clients.

If you are attending Taleo World, stop in and see us at Booth 23.

If you would like to read what some of our clients are saying about the Virtual Job Tryout, check out this sample of testimonials.  The decision support from candidate results enhances the recruiter experience.  Your recruiters identify best-fit candidates faster and build a workforce that delivers superior results.

We look forward to seeing your in San Francisco.

August 22, 2011

Recruiter Rights Vs. Candidate Experience

Rayanne Thorn of Broadbean sets out a call for recruiter rights over candidate experience in her blog post.

Recruiter Rights begin with recruiter responsibilities.  Sourcing that creates unnecessarily high applicant to hire ratios, candidate evaluation methods that rely on subjective word search and resume data review technology, and posting methods that present jobs to geographically distant populations are examples of recruiter self-inflicted wounds.

Resume spam is a function of technology looking for a solution versus recruiters designing a candidate experience that adds two-way value to the information exchange.  Most applicant technology interfaces are incapable of offering an assessment of candidates that differentiates job-fit capabilities in a meaningful and valuable way.  Beginning candidate evaluation with resume data is a GIGO proposition.

Gerry Crispin and I, plus a small, but growing list of people see a more candidate centric process as raising the rights and responsibilities of both parties in the business process called staffing.  Placing a more engaging and meaningful candidate experience into your process can reduce unwanted through a percentage who self-select out, and by providing data that compares candidates in a more useful manner.  Candidates and recruiters who have been through a meaningful experience offer testimonials that document the win-win.

The new Candidate Experience Award is about the entire, balanced approach to staffing process improvement.  Recruiter Experience AND Candidate Experience.

Come visit us in booth at 351 the HR Technology Conference.  Learn about the power of a Candidate Experience that improves the Recruiter Experience.

March 2, 2011

I Have A Question For You: Thoughtful People Speak Out at ERE Expo

I want to ask you a question.  A one question interview.  

In the past year, I have had the good fortune to conduct a one question interview with a number of thoughtful people involved in recruiting and staffing.  Thoughtful people can put a lot of information into a 60-90 second response.  The diversity of suggestions, ideas and insights about improving the candidate experience has been fantastic.  After listenting to what thoughtful people have said, you may think so too.  The interviews can be found on our blog here, or on our YouTube channel here.  These interviews are really a great collection of ideas for staffing process improvement.

While at ERE in San Diego, I want to hear from you, collect your views, opinions and suggestions.  Stop by our booth – #408 and set up a time to speak out.  Your point of view is important, and I will assist you in opening a dialogue with the recruiting and talent community.

I look forward to seeing you in San Diego

December 13, 2010

Linda Consideine on Improving the Candidate Experience

Linda Considine of Taleo spoke with me about the candidate experience at Taleo World in Chicago.  As the head of Global Alliances, she spends a good deal of time thinking about and speaking with others about how the recruiting experience impacts candidate reactions and perceptions.  When I asked her what we can do to improve the candidate experience, she had a few concise suggestions.  Click Play to hear what she has to say. Then scroll down to read more.

First, Linda suggests a shift of focus from the recruiter’s decision to the candidate’s decision. So much of the recruiting infrastructure is recruiter-centric, implying the recruiter is the primary decision maker in a career opportunity.  In fact the quality of the candidate’s decision is crucial. The candidate experience can be improved by providing clear, candid and balanced information about the job and the company. 

Realistic Job Preview (RJP) is an excellent process for education, engagement, and expectation setting. Candidates want help, not hype, when it comes to learning about a job. They have a lot at stake in a career choice as well. Thoughtfully scripted messages and images can go a long way to prepare candidates for the job-fit decision they must make. In an attempt to sell the benefits and value of a career, many companies have gone beyond RJP with their on-line messages, converting what should be objective disclosure to hyperbole. Marketing took precedence over objective disclosure.  This can mislead a job seeker and create the distaste from a bait and switch reaction in new hires as they confront elements of a job that were under-represented or not covered in the recruiting process.

A measure of the effectiveness of sound candidate education can be a simple post-application question to candidates – “As a result of applying, are you in a better position to decide if the job is right for you?”  When your candidate education and engagement provides as much, if not more information than it seeks, candidates feel their need for decision support is honored as well.  In fact, the principle of reciprocity might make it easier to get better candidate data.  Their willingness to give is improved when they feel they are getting sound information about the job, the company and the culture.  Read candidate testimonials from individuals who felt their application process was valuable and worthwhile.

Help the candidate choose you, eyes wide open and well informed.  Another useful suggestion for staffing process improvement.

October 29, 2010

Candidate Experience – If it’s broke, fix it

Jennifer May was interviewed by Todd Raphael at ERE Expo about the broken candidate experience.  She makes many excellent points.

1. Define you candidate experience standards. Set internal expectations and work toward them.

2. Begin to use what you have. No new $ investment, just get more out your technology – call your ATS/TMS rep and get another level of training

3. Attract fewer candidates – employer of choice and rampant attract them all sourcing models clog the pipes with resume spam.

What we need to hear more about is how decision support should be at the core of the candidate experience. The candidate and the recruiter must both be in a better position to make a career decision as a result of the experience. Making it FEEL better, while important, is not the issue, nor is it what in the end will create a differentiated workforce. A favorable candidate experience should be table stakes.

A candidate experience that collects better candidate data can make all the difference. A candidate experience that is grounded in research adds decision science and creates competitive advantage.

The two are not mutually exclusive either. I have been writing and interviewing people on improving the candidate experience since ERE in San Diego.  You can find many of those interviews on this blog here.

October 14, 2010

Lermusi on Helping Candidates Make a More Informed Decision

The founder of Checkster, Yves Lermusi and I had a chance to speak at TaleoWorld.  Yves has spent most of his career examining the talent space.   I asked him what we can do to help the candidate make a more informed decision.  He suggests we give the candidate feedback from the results of pre-employment assessments and background checks.  Click play to hear what he has to say, then continue reading below the video.

As general practice, companies shy away from providing candidates feedback.  The drawback seems to be fear of candidate reactions or challenges to the accuracy of the information, data, or insights gleaned from the candidate evaluation process.

There are many factors this point of view brings to light.

  1. If we are using that data to make our decisions, can we substantiate its accuracy, reliability and validity?
  2. If the candidate would deny or challenge the data, are we willing to provide an opportunity to refute it or at least dialogue around it?
  3. Does the candidate have accurate self-awareness and open-mindedness to give thoughtful consideration to feedback
  4. Is the candidate information in a format that lends itself to easy interpretation regarding matters of job-fit?

Yves has a good point about candidate’s self perception of their strengths and developmental needs.  There is evidence about levels of accurate self-awareness and success on the job.  Those with a more realistic and accurate picture of themselves tend to perform better and achieve higher level of success.  Candidates with poor assessment results or less glowing reference checks may be more likely to see a gap between their self-perception and their evaluation results.  Having a feedback conversation with individuals in this category may pose more of a challenge.

In the UK, it is a requirement to provide candidates with feedback from results of pre-employment assessments.  This approach demands transparency and accuracy.  In the USA, this is not a common practice.   HR practitioners in the UK are more prone to complete rigorous training on the use of pre-employment tests.  The UK has a more rigorous approach to training and certification of assessment users than in the USA.  A number of our Virtual Job Tryout clients are using the candidate competency profile to provide feedback.  In addition, a growing number of our clients are developing a Virtual Job Tryout as a comprephensive needs analysis for existing employees.  Watch for a post about that in the near future.

Career management can be bolstered with developmental insights.  Creating a process that supports providing candidates with feedback is not a simple undertaking.  I would however enjoy a dialogue on the matter.  What do you have to say about it?

October 5, 2010

General Powell on Promote from Within: Assess for Potential

General Colin Powell  spoke about growing talent in the Army at TaleoWorld 2010.  He asserts that the Army may be doing more than most companies when it comes to grooming and advancing leaders.  Listen to what he has to say, then click here to review a client case study and learn about CVS Caremark and their approach to growing leaders from within for their pharmacy operations.  Great minds think alike.

Assessing potential is essential for both internal promotions and external hires.  General Powell is quite clear in his observations that success in a current position is not a predictor of success in another position.  CVS Caremark set out to achieve staffing process improvement for promotions with the use of realistic job preview, assessment and assessment-based development.

Internal candidates for the role of pharmacy supervisor are able to access a four part overview of the job, its demands, rewards and required competencies.  Through a career interest prioritizing exercise, candidates receive immediate feedback about how their aspirations and interests align with the supervisor role. 

Initiative to come forward after the feedback is left to the individual.  A tailored development plan is created and the individual is invited to complete the Pharmacy Supervisor Virtual Job Tryout to further educate the candidate and evaluate job-fit.  This multi-method assessment lets the candidate take the job for a test drive, completing a series of day-in-the-life exercises.  While in-house validation of the assessment was a critical performance requirement, it was considered table stakes.  The differentiator CVS Caremark was looking for was an assessment that delivered a candidate experience as unique as their brand and as challenging as the job.  They wanted to make better decisions using better data.

Just like General Powell and the Army, the Leadership Development Team at CVS Caremark acknowledges the challenge of making well considered promotion decisions. The combined use of interactive realistic job preview and Virtual Job Tryout has elevated the quality of hire into leadership roles.

September 29, 2010

Intuition or Intelligence: How Do You Hire?

Talent Intelligence was a big theme at TaleoWorld 2010.  Taleo CEO Michael Gregoire, in his opening remarks stated 47% of new placements into management positions fail.  I am not sure where that statistic came from, but it does not speak well about how companies are making decisions to hire or promote individuals.  It makes me ask:  Is the hiring decision based upon intuition or intelligence?

Where else in business would a 47% failure rate be tolerated?  What Mr. Gregoire is referring to here is one form of staffing waste.  This abysmal success rate seems to indicate a strong need for talent intelligence.  Better candidate data for making more accurate hiring decisions.

Getting useful, meaningful data is the central challenge.  Hiring managers and recruiters, while well intended, often place disproportionally high value on candidate data that is either not related to job performance or even worse, negatively related to job performance.  And, one of the more common areas where we see this is the value placed on specific job experiences that while intuitively seemed to make sense, the evidence from HR analytics proved othewise.  Here are a few examples. Previous cash handling experience negatively related to cash drawer accuracy, prior food service and hospitality experience negatively related to success in a food and beverage management position, previous sales experience with a competitor negatively related to sales success.

Thoughtful people in successful companies establish these screening criteria.  However, in the majority of cases these criteria are assumptions.  Assumptions that are never tested or proven.  By not conducting the appropriate HR analytics, decisions get made based upon ego, not evidence.  This is allowed because of the common and accepted assertion from recruiters and hiring managers: “I am a good judge of talent.”  With a 47% failure rate, it would seem prudent to do some analysis.  Just better than a coin toss does not seem like good odds for a critical and expensive business decision.

Employee selection is a process.  The yield of the process can be measured and improved. Candidate evaluation with pre-employment assessments can be conducted in a manner that produces evidence in the form of data. This data can support HR analytics which in turn provides guidance to improve the objectivity and effectiveness of the hiring decision.  If you are a Taleo user and want to make your ACE work better, we can help.

Check out a few of our case studies to see how HR analytics and pre-employment testing validation analysis have made a measurable difference in the yield of a business process called staffing.  We can help you make the transition from ego to evidence, from talent intuition to talent intelligence.

September 17, 2010

Pre-employment Testing in the Experience Economy

Charles Handler wrote about the movement from test to experience in his ERE article.  It was a great invitation to consider the candidate experience.  John Sullivan wrote a few years ago about how career web sites are boring candidates. It may actually be worse.  Applying may have total disregard or abuse in the candidate experience. While some corporate careers pages have added a touch of pizzazz with videos and testimonials, the actual application and pre-employment assessment components continue to be ignored by many, but not all.

I spoke on Pre-employment Testing in the Experience Economy at the SHRM Staffing Management Conference in Orlando this year.  The premise was that candidates expect more.  More information, more engagement, more use of multi-media, more insight into the job and culture.  More support to their decision making process.  Simulations offer the candidate a lot more of what they seek in learning about and applying for a job, or even better yet, a career.

 At Taleo World this week, I had a conversation with an individual who’s firm just implemented a long standing, yet very traditional assessment.  She recently completed the assessment herself and without all the emotional embellishments, this is how she described it: “The questions were stupid!”  “There did not seem to be any relevance to the questions.”    I asked her:  “How do you think your candidates will feel about completing the assessment?  It made her eyes pop out.  It was as if this was the first time anyone had invited her to consider the candidate experience.

Pine and Gilmore have been writing about the experience economy since 1999.   There is a lot business in general and recruiting in particular can learn from their research and point of view.  They suggest we consider and evaluate an experience with two continuum variables: interface and immersion.

Interface is the type of interaction the candidate is offered.  At one end of the continuum is read and watch, the other end comprise choices and interactions.  Examples would be reading a job description to typing, clicking radio buttons, dropping, dragging among options.

Immersion addresses degrees of cognitive, emotional, and physical engagement.

At one end is attending to, studying, absorbing information, at the other end is active processing, raised emotional and physical participation.   Examples would be examining a puzzle to racing to complete a timed exercise.

Creating a matrix that overlays these to continuum provides an evaluation framework to determine the nature of an experience.  The diagram below sets out four types of experiences: Educated, Entertained, Enthused and Engaged.

Candidate Experience Evaluation Matrix

Educated – Traditional media, Web 1.0

Entertained – Video games and cut and paste, drop and drag

Enthused – Movies and Videos with a compelling message, realistic job previews (RJP)

Engaged – Challenging mental and physical tasks, Wii and other dynamic games

Simulations as pre-employment assessment draw the candidate immediately into a high interface, high immersion experience, thus delivering a cognitive, physical and most importantly, an emotionally charged experience.  

  • Selection assessment exercises that can be deployed in simulations include activities such as:
  • Situational judgment – listen and choose what to say next in a challenging conversation
  • Problem solving – information look-up task from an interactive information source
  • Diagnosis – use rule-based logic to determine fault or errors
  • Business acumen – reasoning with financial statements under time pressure
  • Keyboarding – data entry and accuracy, under time pressure
  • Visual estimation – quick calculation of quantities from pictures or illustrations
  • Productive thinking – idea generation capacity in finite time frames
  • Prioritization – compare and differentiate among competing resources

And the list goes on.  Web 2.0 and emerging interactive technologies affords companies the opportunity to deliver a candidate evaluation experience that engages, informs and satisfies their desire for more from the application process. Simulations make it easy to deliver a multi-measure evaluation. Therefore the power and accuracy of selection science available from simulation based pre-employment testing cannot be achieved with conventional assessments. The return-in-investment (ROI) from implementing a simuation can be huge.  Some approaches to project the impact can be explored with these ROI calculators.

Very few organizations evaluate the candidate experience. Candidates are not given a chance to describe their reaction to the application process.  However, they do think about it, they do have opinions about it and it does impact how they think and feel about your company.  Candidates who experience a simulation as part of the application process have a lot to say.  Read some of their feedback here.

Virtual Job Tryout is a simulation for pre-employment assessment.  Each is custom built and validated for a specific job. Candidates find this type of experience highly rewarding, very job relevant and are willing to talk about it in a positive manner.

If you would like to deliver a more engaging candidate experience and deliver a more results oriented recruiter experience, give me a call  216.292.0202

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