Welcome to The Fordyce Letter:

The Fordyce Letter

Straight Talk for the Recruiting Profession


Articles tagged 'socialnetworking'

How-To, Social Media

How To Quickly Search for Candidates on Google+



google-plus-logo

Over on SourceCon.com, I’ve written a little dissertation on my journey through the nooks and crannies of Google+. I’m not going to bore all of you with a recount of what I found and my personal opinions on Google’s latest foray into the social networking world — I know none of you have time to read it.

What I do want to do, however, is show you a very easy way to search for prospects on Google+. My hope is that by the end of this article, even the most skeptical recruiter will see the value in using this new resource to unearth potential placements.

Business, Technology

The Simple Method of Working Smarter: Using Time, Tools, and Techniques to Get Your Life Back, Part 2



work desk by John Griffiths

Ten Technology Tools to Work Smarter

As world communication media quickly move toward faster communication methods, we all need to realize the impact technology is having, not only on society but on our profession as well. Adopting and using these changes can be a very daunting task. As recruiters, we need to ask ourselves, “How can I use these new technologies to achieve the greatest impact?” And, “Which ones do I use when there are so many options to choose from?” We all want to spend more time on the important things in our lives, and less time on the not so important. It is critical to assess the options based on what will give us the greatest return on our investment in the limited time that we have.

The good news is that technology provides the recruiter several options that can significantly improve daily output when used appropriately. Consider the following ways that technology can be used to work smarter rather than harder…

Industry News

RecruitingBlogs Is Up For Auction



recruitingblogslogo

RecruitingBlogs.com is up for auction and right now, the top bid is $6,500.

The eclectic recruitment social network with its rich potpourri of opinion, observation, social activities, and practices both best and otherwise, was put up for auction yesterday by founder Jason Davis.

“I have reached a point where it’s time for me to do something new and what I really want to do is to make placements,” Davis posted to his blog Monday. ” I am constantly having discussions with other recruiters and every time I do, I get this buzz and excitement.”

In a conversation today, Davis said he’s proud of the four-year-old site, believes it has the potential to grow beyond its 28,000 members and its 67,000 monthly visitors, but he wants to return to active participation in the industry where he launched his career 14 years ago.

Social Media

Social Media + Legal Reality & Perspective = Caution for Recruiters



social-media

As search professionals and recruiters, we are learning more about the benefits of leveraging social media and integrating it as a trusted recruiting tool in identifying talent for our clients. It should be a critical component to sourcing combined with other proven methods. After all, our clients and candidates use it and so should we. I see social networking becoming more of a key component to recruiting as we can reach out to more people using social networks. It is also critical that we understand the powerful opportunity it presents for corporations to engage in real-time dialogue with customers, stakeholders, and candidates, and use it similarly with our clients as well.

Using social networks can give us a competitive edge in identifying and engaging the best candidates available, however, these sourcing options also bring potential legal pitfalls that we need to be aware of. For example, what happens when a candidate has revealed protected information via their social profiles?

Uncategorized

Creating Your Own Brand: Increasing Your Online Presence



fordyce-default

As we balance the demands of several different roles — business partner, recruiter, consultant, human capital advisor, go-to-expert, and advocate — we don’t pay much attention to branding ourselves as a professional for our own future.

If you have created a background of accessible and transparent communication, then using corporate social networks to reinforce your brand impact should be a natural extension of the work that you have already done.

Establishing credibility in your field is essential in building meaningful relationships and elevating your online presence. Branding (how you package yourself internally and externally) should be the first step in developing your personal and professional career presence. It is not a new concept, however, with the advancement of Web 2.0 tools, it is more important to be clear about what your personal brand is and to consistently communicate that brand across all platforms.

Your compelling and unique brand is important and influential as you have authentically created it to be an integral part of your company’s culture. Now it is time to use the strength of the human resources, recruitment, or third-party sourcing brand that you have built to attract new talent to market your leadership abilities, establish yourself as a subject matter expert in your field, get your name out there within your area of interest, and capitalize on what you know.

What will fellow recruiters, candidates, clients, hiring decision-makers, or industry leaders uncover when they Google your name?

Some of the most important reasons you should build your personal brand includes:

Uncategorized

Twitter for Recruiters: Value Your Tweets, Part 2



fordyce-default

twitter
Yesterday in part 1 of this article, I discussed the best ways recruiters can immerse themselves in Twitter — from what to say, to how often, to what not to say, and beyond.

Today, I’ll discuss the second way to find value with Twitter. As a recruiter, Twitter is a must-have tool to find clients and candidates.

How, you ask? This isn’t easy, but if you’re the kind of recruiter who prides yourself on delivering distinct candidates to your client base, I would highly recommend taking the time and figuring it out.

Now that job boards have proved themselves virtually worthless and LinkedIn is well on its way to becoming the job board of a new generation, recruiters need to stay ahead of the curve. Twitter is actually a goldmine of information that can absolutely be tapped to find clients and candidates.

The Art

As far as finding candidates, they’re all on Twitter (or they will be). It’s just a matter of finding them.

I employ a researcher who I asked to spend an entire day on Twitter looking for candidates. As I expected, he came back to me 15 minutes later passionately confirming that Twitter sucks and that it’s worthless for finding candidates.

I responded by saying:

“I totally hear what you are saying and I don’t care. You have the entire day, so get comfortable and figure it out.”

I told him to imagine every single candidate and client to be on Twitter. They’re just masking their candidacy in the form of 140-character thoughts. Just like I don’t use the word recruiter in my thoughts, even though I’m clearly a recruiter, a software engineer might not use the word software engineer in her tweets. But she might tweet about her employer, upcoming conferences, and useful technologies.

The goal is to figure out what they’re tweeting and to search accordingly. That’s the art!!

The Science

The science is to use the appropriate Boolean search strings to conduct the search. For that, I recommend going to Shally or one of the other Internet sourcing gurus. They have tips and ideas for days!!

Once you find a candidate you are interested in, here is what to do:

  • Follow them, of course.
  • Read their Tweetstream and you’ll very quickly get a sense of their passions and interests.
  • If you can figure out where they work, you can proceed to traditional headhunting methods and contact them. In the meantime, engage them in conversation on Twitter; do not be as direct as you might be on LinkedIn, but give time for the relationship to develop.
  • Retweet one of their posts (people like that).
  • Comment on some of their posts (they’ll definitely get read).

The goal here would be to get followed back. That way, the next time you send out a note about a hot job or an MPC, this person will be sure to hear about it. And so the ball begins to roll.

In my year or so using Twitter, I have found it to be one of the most profound services in existence. The best way I’ve found to explain Twitter is to compare it to that Mel Gibson movie, “What Women Want,” where he gets to hear the thoughts of all women around him.

Of course, nobody wants to hear everybody’s thoughts about everything, but if you could figure out a way to slice-and-dice those thoughts and take advantage of the streams relevant to you and your marketplace, I think you will find Twitter to have a positive influence on your recruiting practice and life in general.

Good luck, and “May the Tworce be with you!!”

Uncategorized

Twitter for Recruiters: Value Your Tweets, Part 1



twitter

twitter
I was having a conversation the other day with a recruiter colleague of mine and he was asking me about Twitter. He hasn’t used the service yet, but after hearing all the recent hype from Oprah, Larry King, and Ashton Kutcher, he felt like it was time to jump on the Twitter bandwagon.

I spent some time on the phone with him and basically explained that in my year or so using Twitter, I have found two distinct avenues in which a recruiter can benefit. Neither offers a quick fix, but following both can net significant value.

Immerse Yourself

The first way to gain value from Twitter is to literally immerse yourself in the service and do exactly what the service asks of you. Tell Twitter what you are doing in 140 characters or less. This needs to be done often. You can’t allow yourself to stop no matter how little immediate impact you are getting out of it.

Robert Scoble, a major Twitter user, once tweeted that it takes a solid three to four months of Twitter use to finally see the light and actually get it. In hindsight, I 100% agree, because building up your profile by following others and having them follow you allows you to:

  • Grow your personal and professional brand.
  • Firmly plant yourself in the hearts and minds of your customer base.
  • Keep a pulse on the daily happenings of your marketplace.

From a long-term perspective, I can’t think of another single service that can deliver this caliber of value.

Tweet, Tweet — What to Say

Ok, onto the actual content — nothing is out of bounds, although the world is listening. Anything posted can and might be used against you at some point in the future. With that said, I talk about all sorts of things on Twitter.

Personal Perspective

  • What I’m eating.
  • What I’m thinking.
  • I like to talk about my Crossfit and other such workouts.
  • What I’m watching.
  • What I’m reading.
  • What I just noticed about the world and anything else that might pop into my head.

Business Perspective

  • Hot candidates (abbreviated MPC pitch).
  • Hot jobs.
  • Interesting happenings in my marketplace.
  • Funny candidate and client situations.
  • Sometimes, I use it as a place to vent and rant.

Other Things to Include

  • If at all possible, I like to include links in my tweets. Somebody once said that links are the currency of the web and respecting that philosophy I want to make sure my tweets serve as much value as possible.
  • I like to not only write original tweets, but reply to others and engage in the general flow of conversations. They say that the biggest difference between Facebook and Twitter is that Facebook lets you stay in touch with those you FOUND interesting; whereas Twitter helps you stay connected with those you FIND interesting. I buy that!!

For those of you who are looking for some kind of method to this madness, the following formula could be a good one to follow for your first few months of use:

Twitter Diet — Just What the Doctor Ordered

  • 10 tweets a day.
  • Make half personal, half professional.
  • Out of those 10, make half original and half responses to other tweeters.
  • Include links in as many tweets as possible

If you follow this prescribed formula, in no time you will be able to blast out an MPC or send out a hot job to thousands of directly related prospects. Within seconds you will get responses and referrals, be able to have your finger on the pulse of your market, and more important, your market will have a pulse on you.

Imagine candidates and clients coming to you for a change. Over the long-term, I can’t think of anything more valuable. Word of warning: this prescription is highly addictive and there is the possibility of becoming a “Twittaholic.”

Editor’s note: In Part 2 tomorrow, discover the art & science in finding value with Twitter as a tool to find clients and candidates.

Uncategorized

The Breakfast Club: How to Start a Face-to-Face Networking Group



fordyce-default

So much attention has been placed on social networking lately.

Everyone seems to be using sites like LinkedIn and Twitter to network. And while social networking provides some excellent opportunities to build your network, look for a job, and stay current with industry trends, let’s not forget the importance of traditional, face-to-face networking.

A Breakfast Club is Born

It was 2002, right at the boom of the dot-com era.

My desk was inundated with resumes, and I felt terrible because there was no way I could refer all these highly qualified CEO candidates to new CEO jobs.

That’s when it hit me that maybe these people could help each other. I emailed all of the CEO candidates and invited them to meet for breakfast. They all had different backgrounds yet shared a common bond — looking for that next big CEO gig.

Little did I know back then that I was on to something big.

Uncategorized

Sourcing Executive Candidates



recruitersmap1

ExecuNet’s “2009 Executive Job Market Intelligence Report” shows that search firms are using social networking/referrals for 37% of searches. Another 30% are using a firm’s database/personal contact list. Online job postings/advertising accounts for just 15%, while online search accounts for another 10%. Mining target companies scored the remaining 8%.

On the flip side, social networking accounts for almost three-in-four (73%) job opportunities uncovered by executives — trumping job websites and other forms of advertising.

recruitersmap1

Based on a survey of 5,060 executives and 476 search firm consultants and corporate HR professionals, the report also reveals that executive recruiters expect search assignments to decrease 14% in the first six months of 2009 before rebounding to close the year down just 4%.

While the worst recession in decades is taking its toll on the executive employment market, ExecuNet claims it is not affecting all industries or all companies equally. The report says new leadership roles continue to be created and found by those who remain visible and connected.

“Executives who are not building sustainable relationships in their network won’t be able to revive it in time for the turnaround,” says Dave Opton, CEO and founder of ExecuNet.

Uncategorized

Does Social Networking = LinkedIn for Most Recruiters?



fordyce-default

David Manaster is raising some interesting points about using social media effectively. In a recent webinar on recruiting technology trends, an overwhelming amount of recruiters (66.82%) indicated that LinkedIn is their preferred social networking tool. What methods do you use, and which work best? What are the trends you’re predicting for 2009? What fads will cool off in the new year, and of course, which are just getting warmed up? Or are you a “phone will remain king” type of recruiter?

What social networking application are you most likely to use in your recruiting efforts?
# of Respondents % of Respondents
LinkedIn 298 66.82%
Facebook 35 7.85%
MySpace 7 1.57%
YouTube 0 0.00%
Twitter 4 0.90%
Other 16 3.59%
None of the above 86 19.28%
Total Respondents 446 100.00%