New year. New you. New recruitment trends.
And with this, you need to tweak your ongoing strategies to find the best tech talent. Some trends will continue to stay the same while others will want you to multiply your ongoing efforts with a new approach. But to ensure you do all of this the right way, you need to know the recruitment trends that are being forecasted to turn talent acquisition on its head in 2023!.
Let’s dive in.
Social media has been the north star for recruiters and hiring managers. It’s not restricted to building a personal brand and influencer marketing anymore; also finding quality and targeted candidates. With more and more people joining the social squad, social recruiting will continue to be one of the primary channels for recruiters to source candidates.
Clearly: recruiting via social media is an effective recruiting strategy. Recruiters are seeing the results and this will become more effective with social channels like LinkedIn.
If you are a recruiter leveraging LinkedIn, here’s how you can amplify your efforts:
💡Pro tip: To reach out to super-targeted candidates, make a list of ideal candidates. Engage with their content first or connect with them on LinkedIn and introduce yourself and your company first.
An ATS or applicant tracking system remains to be a savior in the recruitment industry and takes off the load of the hefty manual hiring process. Whether you want to create stronger job descriptions or automate tedious workflows—an ATS can do it all for you; however, recruiters will rely on the ATS only to an extent. They’ll leverage automation and manual efforts to get the best results. When hiring for super-targeted and niche job profiles, recruiters will still have to do a deep dive into their target candidate personas by reaching out to select candidates and scanning their profiles.
Recruiters will need to carry out several recruiting tasks manually if they are hiring for a laser-focused senior or niche role. On the flip side, an ATS works in favor when hiring for junior-level roles.
A simple workflow for carrying out your recruitment process via ATS looks like this:
Created a job posting for a junior-level role → candidate applies for the role → an ATS emailer is sent to the candidate asking for the online assessment → candidate takes the test → invited for the interview process (if the test gets approved).
When this recruitment workflow is conducted by recruiters manually for senior roles, each task remains the same but the workload of screening every profile for different roles lessens which makes the ATS a winner.
After the layoffs by big tech giants like Twitter and Meta, it is obvious employees can be laid off at any time, at any stage of employment. However, before laying off the employees, companies follow a layoff plan and a multi-step approach on who to select for the layoff. They look at tenure, certifications, performance reviews, and promotability. Based on these factors, they create a scale and measure the employees on this scale, and then lay them off.
External hires are 61% more likely to be laid off or fired in their first year of service and 21% more likely to leave.
And the common point for these layoffs is performance. If the employees are not learning and upskilling, there will always be a lag in their performance. That’s why you need to regulate programs for your employees to help them upskill and reskill themselves to stay ahead of such situations.
And how, you may ask, do you encourage them to upskill? Offer stipends for certifications or conduct in-house training—from educational programs to personal development programs—all of them help in the growth of the employee.
Leaders can invest in programs that teach people tools and approaches for self-development. At my own company, it is ingrained in our values to respect boundaries and the needs of our employers, creating the space for honest communication, and reshaping the mindset from what this employee can do for the company to instead, what can our company do for this employee? We work with our employees to invest in their self-discovery to uncover how they can create meaning in their work through the Pathways Work at Meaning Program. Otherwise, the cycle of quitting will persist, whether quietly or out loud.
74% of Millennial and Gen Z workers plan to quit in 2023 due to a lack of upskilling and career advancement opportunities. I always advise prospective employees to look for what the company is offering: upskilling, mental health coverage like compensation for therapy if needed, education programs, and even testimonies from the leaders of the companies they are interested in working at to gather those invaluable specifics.
—Danny Gutknecht, Co-founder and CEO, Pathways.io
The key is to keep the employees in the learning loop—which will help you to fill open job roles internally and prepare them for any adverse situations ahead.
Also read: How HackerEarth Made it Through 2 Recessions Without Relying on Layoffs?
Employee well-being and engagement have been the highlight for better workplace functioning ever since the pandemic. Candidates are now selective about the companies they want to work with. They even create a checklist of the kind of companies they want to work with. Here’s how a candidate’s basic filter checklist looks like:
Candidates are as laser-focused on their choice of companies as are the recruiters on finding the right tech talent. They have switched from *just* focusing on paychecks to companies that:
One of the best ways to build a safe and supportive community is to communicate regularly with your employees. Make sure they feel comfortable approaching you with any personal or work-related issues they may be having. We have weekly meetings with our employees where we discuss the week’s highlights and achievements. We also discuss issues the employees may have experienced during the week and how we can work together as a team to solve them. The meeting also aims at strengthening the bond between the employees and the management. Your employees will appreciate knowing that you care about them as people, not just as workers.
—Matthew Ramirez, Founder, Rephrasely
Here’s the thing: offering employees an annual comp off to give themselves a break from the mental exhaustion of burnout won’t help. It needs to be ingrained in the company’s culture on how to create an employee-first ecosystem.
Employer branding will continue to stay to be a crucial factor in attracting candidates and filling up the roles at your organization with quality candidates. With a solid employer brand, you will be able to showcase your company values and aspirations and drive candidates who don’t want to stay with you for the annual package but for what you are building. However, building such an employer brand needs effort and you need to stay authentic.
“When it comes to the employer brand, organizations are looking to ensure that it best aligns with the values of the talent they seek and that it is genuine,” she says. “The talent audience today is highly skeptical and cynical about corporate messaging. If you tell them that you are committed to diversity and sustainability, for example, you better be able to demonstrate it.”
—Amy Bush, President, Sevenstep
To demonstrate your company values to the candidates and attract the best talent, do this:
Also watch: Creating an Employer Brand That Sticks
Work diversification doesn’t just mean what, where, and how people work but also the type of work. Simply put, organizations don’t just rely just on a geographically distributed team but a distributed team with different employment types—full-time employees and freelancers.
We are especially proud of our commitment to belonging which is one of our core cultural values. We live it in so many ways. We’ve created a diverse team across geographies, genders, sexual orientations, races, ethnicity, ages, etc. We wanted to build a team that looked representative of our country and of our customers because doing so allows us to better serve them. It also makes for a healthier company culture where we aren’t all stereotypical “tech bros” building a platform that isn’t inclusive.
—Amy Spurling, Founder, Compt
With workforce diversification, companies are successful in doing two things: bringing employees from different backgrounds and having employees with specialized skills together.
A good way to amplify workforce diversification is by having a mix of full-time and independent employees, ideally, by following Pareto’s principle of 70:30.
Companies will use predictive analysis to audit the skills of existing employees, shortlist them for difficult-to-fill roles, provide them with learning opportunities based on their skills and help them build personalized career pathways for their employees.
Workforce churn is a reality today. Companies in the software industry use analytics to predict customer churn. Similarly, they can use their employee’s data such as data from employee surveys, 1:1 meetings, and productivity data from sprint burn-down charts to determine/predict the possibilities for their employee’s churn. Such analysis, help manager design innovative campaigns to re-engage with employees before the existing skills of the employees
—Dr. Soudip Roy Chowdhary, CEO, Eugenie.ai
Some questions that predictive analysis provides insights to you on include:
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is playing an increasingly significant role in modern Talent Acquisition strategies. This section explores the impact of AI on recruitment processes and its growing importance in staying competitive in the job market.
AI-powered tools can efficiently scan through a vast pool of resumes and job applications, swiftly identifying top talent. These tools analyze not only skills and qualifications but also consider factors like cultural fit, improving the accuracy of candidate sourcing.
AI enables objective and consistent candidate assessments. Through natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning algorithms, it evaluates resumes and even conducts initial interviews. This not only saves time but also helps reduce unconscious biases, ensuring fair evaluation.
AI-driven predictive analytics models can forecast a candidate’s potential success and tenure within an organization. This empowers recruiters to make informed decisions and optimize long-term hiring strategies.
While AI offers numerous advantages, it also raises ethical concerns. Transparency in AI decision-making processes and addressing algorithmic biases are crucial aspects of responsible AI adoption in Talent Acquisition.
Incorporating AI in Talent Acquisition is no longer an option but a necessity for businesses aiming to attract and retain the best talent efficiently and objectively.
So now you have been through all the 7 recruitment trends that you need to leverage in 2023. Some of these are the trends you have already been implementing while some will require you to analyze and reanalyze your ongoing strategy, see what the other organizations are doing, and take inspiration.
What are you waiting for? Ship your efforts the right way!
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