This isn’t another article stating, as Monty Python once so eloquently did, “the bleeding obvious."
Yes, people are resigning.
Yes, it's “unprecedented.”
Yes, people disagree on what is causing such fiscal irresponsibility.
Yes, it’s a virtual finger to "the man" and the established norms.
Yes, you need to be doing something about it now.
Yes, you have the tools to do something already.
No, no one has been sharing that helpful information with you – until now.
Let’s get straight to the point and discuss a strategic solution to The Great Resignation problem that can also be a solution for your ongoing recruitment needs.
Ok, so this has always been the case but why now more than ever? Under normal circumstances, a professional changes jobs every two years, on average. Now, apparently, every individual in the country is looking to leave or change jobs. If that is the case, you already have potentially thousands of names in these candidate housing tools. These individuals are part of this Great Resignation phenomenon and should be part of the strategy to replace those in your company that are considering leaving.
Now you just need to craft a strategy carefully and successfully to effectively engage, influence and motivate them to apply.
There are numerous things wrong with these approaches and number one is that there is no wooing. All relationships need wooing, and the above is not wooing.
This is fantastic news for those companies that want to seize upon the opportunity to differentiate themselves from all other companies that put no strategic thought into their outreach.
Within these tools you have thousands of names that have raised their hand and said I’m interested and that are in various stages of qualification. Are you qualifying and using them the way you should be?
As a marketer who uses email to promote a service, the five most important characteristics of a list are:
Very few email lists have this kind of information.
To reiterate. These names are gold. What are you doing with them?
Sure, you are emailing people. Sure, you may get a few opens. Sure, you get a few clicks. But are you driving engagement? Are they wanting to see what jobs you have open? Are they wanting to learn more? Are they wanting to speak to you?
This goes back to wooing. Most companies go straight for the kill and try to close on the first email: “I have a job. Apply! Apply now! If not, I’ll send you this same email again and again and again!!”
When I put it like that the error seems obvious, doesn’t it? We do not want to bore them, have them ignore us, delete the email. We want them to engage. We want to influence and motivate the recipient of the email to apply. If they do it today or tomorrow, it’s ok, but we do not want to scare them off with our frantic blunt force instrument attempts to make them DO IT NOW!
The foundation of your strategy should provide your target audience with a well-rounded view of your company. But to an extent – not to where it is company-centric. This means you must provide information on several levels. Topics to cover are:
Some of this you will have to create but a lot of it marketing already has.
A good data point is knowing what your competitors are doing. This is an opportunity to differentiate yourself. Remember most companies don’t have a strategic approach to candidate outreach. I cannot emphasize enough that the failure of others is the door opening you need to stand out in the crowd.
A combination of text, voice and video is excellent. Although the immediate intent is to use these assets for outreach to a candidate pipeline through email, you can also repurpose all this information for your social media, career website, position-specific landing pages and/or events.
Wooing should be used across the board, especially in today’s candidate climate. You need to be able to woo across all mediums.
Sending emails for the sake of it is not what we are trying to do. With any strategy, you need to track impact. Within the emails, have a call to action that is being tracked. Download a white paper, play a video, follow your social media, attend an event. And because of the wooing, you can be so bold as to have them search jobs or apply. Why? Because you’ve tried to build a relationship through the provision of relevant information not just spamming them with a job posting.
Looking at your candidate pipeline as a marketing tool rather than a place to just house candidates so you can email blast them on an ad hoc basis adds value to the expensive and time-consuming effort of compiling it.
This re-think can change the dynamic of your entire recruitment process and reduce dependency on your recruiters and on traditional media.
If you say it’s a nice idea but don’t have the time - that’s what your competitor said and is exactly why you should do it. You can even enlist us, we have a tool that specifically does this for our clients. Either way, invest the time and effort to get this 24/7, 365 tool working smoothly.
The Great Resignation is not good.
So, it is a good time to change your strategy for the better.
It is time to re-evaluate how you use your candidate pipeline.