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I talk to a lot of recruiters
and recruiting firm owners Monday through Friday. I have been on this
schedule for almost 20 years now. We talk a lot about
recruiting software. As I sit here
and reflect upon what I have heard over the years, I try to
make sense of all those conversations. I am looking for a
nugget of wisdom that I can write about that would be helpful
to recruiters.
I
am tired of all the sanctimoniousness sound bytes for selecting
recruiting software
:
- ‘I am the best because … and we have …’
- ‘We have on site
support …’
- ‘We are user friendly …’
- ‘We are state of the art ...’
- ‘Our software is totally automatic just turn
it on and watch the money roll…’
- ‘All our competitors
are stupid and have inferior products …’
- ‘We are easy to use
…’
Why not flip this analysis of recruitment
software to the other side? How is the
recruiting software firm planning to use and implement a
recruiting software system once they have made the agonizing
purchase? Out of
the mouths of customers and potential customers I have heard
incredulous strategies that still to this day make me
chuckle. I have
been told I have ‘dark humor’, along the lines of ‘The Far
Side’ material.
Perhaps that is just a polite way of saying I have no
humor at all. So
you won’t hurt my feelings if you think these strategies are
more sad than funny.
Here we go with my pick
of the 10 most stupid uses of recruiting software
tools.
- “We are going to buy the most expensive
recruiter software package available because we believe if
you pay top dollar you get the best product. But since we are paying
so much we are going to buy only one license and let all 20
recruiters take turns using it.”
- “We are going to buy some cheap contact
management software and install it on each recruiter’s
PC. Each recruiter will have
their own private database.”
- “We are going to make
a fresh start because the last three recruiter systems we
bought did not work out.”
- “We are going to buy
a recruiting system for the recruiters, but we are going to
let the sales people either buy something else or continue
with their present system.”
- “We are going to buy
recruiting software that we can customize to our own very
special way of recruiting.”
- “We just hired a
‘Super Star big biller’ recruiter who wants us to switch to
the recruiting software that he/she is used to using.”
- “We have purchased
some good recruiting software but we only use it for
searching resumes.” “We have purchased some good recruiting
software but we only use for finding phone numbers.” “We
have purchased some good recruiting software but we only use
for writing notes.”
- “We have purchased
recruiting software and we are making a lot of the
information private for each recruiter or for management
eyes only.”
- “We can’t find any
recruiting software that suits our needs so we are going to
write our own.”
- “We want our
recruiting software to be able to delete or purge out
undesirables.”
Taking turns
using the recruiting software.
This is by far the most ridiculous use of
recruiting software and is therefore number one on my
list. What do the
other recruiters do while the one recruiter has the
floor? I suppose
they are working off of printouts from when they had the
computer time.
Trust me when I say that recruiting software used like
this is more trouble than it is worth. Too much
administration and none of the recruiters have up to date
information when they are talking to clients and
applicants. If I say any more I run the risk of being put in the
same bucket as the owner by bothering to make a
comment.
Each recruiter
has their own recruiting software.
This is close to number one but at least the
recruiter’s own desk has access to organized information to
applicants and/or clients. It is still pretty bad
however because of the overlap, redundancy and the inability
of the firm to take advantage of collaboration. Collaboration
makes two and two more than four because of the shared
knowledge and experiences. The recruiting
firm who thinks that recruiters should be treated as
independent cells is dead wrong even if the firm is
successful.
Collaboration
would make them more successful
.
Making a fresh
start because the last recruiting system did not work
out.
This is like the tennis player blaming the
tennis racquet for losing. Do you remember Billie
Jean King playing Bobby Riggs? Maybe not, but Bobby
Riggs used to beat guys with a broom. I wouldn’t be
surprised if Federer could beat most amateurs with a ping pong
paddle.
I am always very hesitant when a recruiting
software prospect comes to us complaining that his current
recruiting software is no good. I will listen harder
if the maker of the software is out of business, quite common,
or if they complain about a lack of support. But if they start
complaining to the effect that they do not like the way it
works and it doesn’t do this and doesn’t do that, then I am
scared to death.
It is not the software, my dear recruiting friend, it
is you! Stop looking for someone to
blame and try to gain some introspection.
Separate but
equal systems for recruiters and sales.
There is no such thing as separate but
equal. History
has proved that over a million times. A corporation,
partnership or privately held recruiting firm has more than
one person for a reason.
As a group of recruiters and sales recruiters they are
more individually productive than they would be as
individuals.
It makes absolutely no sense to separate data between
clients and applicants and keep recruiters in the dark. It is also terribly redundant and makes it necessary to
do many things twice (redundancy, yes?).
Heavy
customization of commercial recruiting
software.
This locks you into a
point in time and you will soon have outdated software with no
easy way to take advantage of new technology.
We just hired a
‘Super Star Big Biller’ recruiter and we are going to follow
his/her lead on recruiting software.
This is a classic case of “the tail wagging the
dog”. If he or
she was such a super star why aren’t they out on their own or
building a company of their own? I really don’t believe
you can employ hired guns in the recruiting business as they
are too disruptive. It never works, they
leave and you end up worse than you were before, but with a
smaller savings account.
Sounds like a divorce,
doesn’t it?
We only use our
recruiting software to search resumes.
All good recruiting software is designed to be a
complete system for any recruiter. If a piece of it is
doing something you don’t like, then learn to like it! To circumvent what it
can do starts a chain of events that just begets more
confusion and work.
These people, I believe, give rise to the “we need a
fresh start syndrome”.
In my opinion, using
only a limited portion of recruiting software is like buying a
grand piano and then only learning how to play “Mary had a
little lamb”,
because you are too dumb or lazy or
both.
Private
information in recruiting software.
If you read the above you already know how I
feel about this.
This concept can only hurt the recruitment effort. If your recruiting firm succeeds with this policy in
place than it is succeeding in spite of privatization, not
because of it.
We are writing
our own recruiting software.
This way is the same as five, only worse. Now the recruiting
firm not only has to pay attention to recruiting but
recruiting software.
Their biggest issue is how they can keep up with
evolving technology.
How can they ever hope to keep the same programmers
working on the same code they created over the years? You cannot expect
programmers/software engineers to be loyal to a small
recruiting firm. It
is very similar to a doctor trying to be his own
physician.
Purge the
database of undesirables.
How can a recruiting
firm keep another recruiter at the same company from making
the same mistake if the database does not have road signs for
danger?
This is the end of my
nuggets of wisdom.
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