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Don’t confuse quantity for quality, or biggest for best

Guest post by: Sue Barrett

Article Overview: Attracting and Searching for Candidates Just like sales, in today’s market you need a combination of ‘Push & Pull ‘ contact strategies for finding the right candidates for your business. Advertising alone is not likely to yield the candidates you seek. When you decide to recruit externally, the following methods are available to select from: * Advertising (On-line job boards (MyCareer, SEEK, CareerOne, etc.); Newspapers;Magazines;Radio and television) * Recruitment Agencies * Executive search firms * Viral Marketing email campaigns * University Job Boards * In-store Advertising (shop window) * Family & Friends * Your own website * Information Seminars * Search (direct contact) * Networks * On-line network groups (My space;Link Me;Linked in)

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Don’t confuse quantity for quality, or biggest for best

Attracting and Searching for Candidates

Just like sales, in today’s market you need a combination of ‘Push & Pull ‘ contact strategies for finding the right candidates for your business. Advertising alone is not likely to yield the candidates you seek. When you decide to recruit externally, the following methods are available to select from:

With the advent of online job boards, many people can DIY their own recruitment more easily and at much cheaper rates than ever before. Pretty much everyone realises nowadays that online job boards are part of our front line recruitment strategy and not just a nice-to-have. In fact they are very rapidly replacing the traditional newspaper advertising medium, if not already. But you have to know how to use them wisely and well. Putting up recruitment ads willy nilly isn’t going to work. You really need to think about who you are writing the ad for and where they are likely to look. Content, placement and maintaining visibility are some of the key things to consider when using online job boards.

Yet many people assess the credibility, usability and value of online job boards by the volume of candidates they receive without really assessing what those numbers mean. Getting a whole lot of international applicants who are not qualified to work here and no local candidates is tough. As an ex recruiter (pre the online job board days) it was quality that counted not volume. My clients wanted the right sales person for the job not a whole lot of bums on seats. I don’t know about you but I don’t have the time to wade through email after email of irrelevant resumes. If I am advertising I want to attract good quality people that can do the job even if it means I only get two or three to choose from. If I cannot find the right person I need to have other strategies in place.

My advice is don’t get caught up the hype in the about volume / traffic metrics or the brand of the job board alone without investigating the quality of candidates you get from it. Because quantity doesn’t always equal quality and the biggest doesn’t always mean the best.

I am speaking from experience, not just as an ex recruiter, but through my current experiences and observations of the recruitment market and, in particular, online jobs boards and their effectiveness.

Over the last year, as part of our work, we have been assisting a number of our clients with the recruitment of sales and service people and managers. Now we are not working as a traditional recruiter, more like a quasi HR team working along side advising our clients on what to do in this space. We have helped a number of clients in various ways from building and/or supplying them with end-to-end structured competency based recruitment kits, to assisting with candidate screening and interview support.

As part of our support we also advise them on how to write a candidate attractive ad and where to advertise on the main online job boards, which categories to place the ads under, etc. Some of our clients have placed their own ads on the big online job boards in the past and achieved very poor results. This was mainly due in part to the type of ad they wrote. Once ad quality was rectified we helped them place the new ads on the two main online job boards (you know which ones I mean). Here is what we have found so far:

1. With one large online job board we can only get one selection area to place our ads in and within a few minutes of getting posted each job ad was not on the front page any more. The ads had slipped down due to the huge volume of ads they competed with for space and visibility. Within a day each ad was so far down the list that most people couldn’t be bothered looking past the first few pages. (Just think Google searches and you know what I mean). Its almost as if we need SEO for job ads here. Then there are the responses; sadly the quality of applicants from this online job board has slipped markedly over the last year – too many people just sending out applications and not even bothering to read the ad. Don’t get me wrong there are occasionally a few good ones but only a few.

2. Now the other online job board is producing quite a different result. Admittedly we are paying a slightly higher fee per ad but only slightly and what we are getting is the following:

  • 3 job listing locations for the ad
  • the ad is refreshed every week over 4 weeks; which means that the ad goes back up to the top of the page and appears as a new ad again every week for the life of the ad
  • And the overall quality of the candidates has been vastly superior, resulting in hires coming from this job board 90% of the time to date
  • I know the candidates are local and/or qualified to work here.
In short, the second online job board out performed the first in every way with the exception of traffic volume. Now I know you can pay top dollar for big online display ads and get prime position but most SME’s do not have the volume of advertising to get the better ad rates that you get if you are a recruitment agency or big corporate. So as SME’s we have to use a range of tactics and that means using online job boards smarter too.

My advice, if you are speaking with the sales people from any online job board company ask them about how their job board really performs. Ask them about:

If all you get is ‘volume traffic talk’ with no real substance then make sure you have other options available to you.

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Home > Sales > Sue Barrett > Dont confuse quantity for quality or biggest for best >
Article Tags: advertising medium, advertising on line, advertising shop, business advertising, executive search firms, information seminars, international applicants, li family, li li, line recruitment, network groups, newspaper advertising, recruitment ads, recruitment agencies, recruitment strategy, s market, space link, store advertising, university job, viral marketing

About the Author: Sue Barrett
RSS for Sue's articles - Visit Sue's website

'Selling is everybody's business and everybody lives by selling something' so says Sue Barrett, sales expert, writer, business speaker and adviser, facilitator, sales coach, training provider and entrepreneur. Sue founded Barrett in 1995 to positively transform the culture, capability and continuous learning of leaders, teams and businesses by developing sales driven organisations that are equipped for the 21st Century. Since inception, Barrett has worked with hundreds of Australian companies challenging thinking to create compelling reasons and continuous learning pathways for people and organisations to develop their skills, knowledge and mindsets to create the shifts they want and ensure they are well informed and equipped for the sales journey ahead.

Sue is one of the leading voices commenting on sales today. Sue has a unique way of getting to the heart of the matter - she combines extensive knowledge, research, insight, and practical experience with a deep sense of compassion to bring forth a more enlightened way of thinking and participating in the world. This makes her stand out from the usual crowd of existing business commentators.

Her ability to distill complex ideas and relate them to life's everyday challenges and opportunities has audience members and readers leaving with a stronger understanding of "self" and how they can begin to achieve excellence through purposeful action. Presenting and writing on a wide range of topics about the world of 21st Century selling Sue's presentations and articles include sales philosophy and culture, sales leadership and coaching, sales training, selling skills, resilience, neuroscience in selling and more. Sue's articles are some of the most widely read in Australia and she is gaining a following overseas as well. Besides publishing on Barrett Sales Blog site, Sue has been the lead sales writer for www.smartcompany.com.au since 2007, and is also regularly published on other highly regarded publications such as Australian Anthill Magazine, Niche Magazine, Marketing Mag, Business Chicks, and Business Deals.



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More from Sue Barrett
Why you should stop trying to delight your customers
Is internal competition eating away at your sales results
Getting Sales Recruitment Right
How to run a Sales Meeting
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