Finding A Player Candidates: Part 3
A Players Hiring Methods Aug 18, 2014 12:00:00 AM Topgrading Team %
Summary: We sent a Topgrading Tips article on recruiting best practices in January (“Six Tips for Recruiting A Players”) and got so many good suggestions that I sent another one in June (“I Just Can’t Find Enough Good Candidates.”) You can read these articles at www.Topgrading.com, click on Resources and then Topgrading Tips). It’s such a hot topic that in this third article I present two more options: hire for potential (not just current ability), and ask all managers to develop a Virtual Bench (non-stop recruiting).
Background: Despite declining unemployment rates, companies everywhere are complaining that their recruitment methods are just not producing enough A Player candidates. Powerful influences that deplete A Player pools include:
- Under-employment – millions of potential workers have given up looking for work
- Disability fraud – record high numbers of “disabled” workers are showing many are not disabled but unable to find work; when they get income from Social Security disability funds they no longer look for work
- Demographics – baby boomers are retiring
- Millennials – traditional companies haven’t figured out how to recruit, select, train, and retain the “me generation.”
Additional Topgrading Solutions to “Not Enough Candidates”
1. Create “Virtual Benches” of Candidates. In other words, recruit all day, every day, and have plenty of A Player candidates ready to join you when the need arises. Don’t wait for someone to quit to begin looking. Many Topgrading companies, such as Benco Dental, have institutionalized the virtual bench concept, so that Human Resources generally stays ahead of the game. When an opening occurs, they go to their files with candidates who have gone through most of the Topgrading hiring steps, except the tandem Topgrading Interview and reference checks. The ideal virtual bench candidate is passive – they are A Players who are not looking for a job. They most often are in the Networks of your current employees. To motivate busy employees to stay in touch (using social media or old fashioned phone calls) with A Players they have worked with:- Offer financial incentives, such as $1000 if the person they recommended is still an employee after 6 months.
- Ask newly hired managers to take an hour and provide profiles on A Player co-workers. The Topgrading Interview Guide has sections in which candidates are asked to name A Player subordinates in their most recent two jobs, making it easy to pick that low hanging fruit. If you hire a person with A players in her virtual bench, her A players become yours, too.
- How do you invite input from your team?
- What do you do to broaden your thinking, experience, or personal development?
- How do you foster learning in your organization?