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Tag: CandidateExperience

Who Thanks Whom

Who Thanks Whom

A recent article penned for Inc by Suzzane Lucas made the bold statement: “Dear Hiring Manager, Perhaps You Should Write the Thank You Note”. She continues: “The traditional thank you note is from candidate to hiring manager. That’s wrong… Just what are you exactly thanking the manager for? Taking the time to talk with you and consider your application for the job, right? But, what were you really doing? You were taking your time out of your day (and often using vacation time from your current job to do so) to try and solve a problem for the hiring manager.”

At first glance, most would read statements and think “thank goodness this wasn’t a candidate I interviewed; seems quite entitled.” However, inverted of a perspective this author seems to hold from standard interviewing protocol, there is an underlying message communicated by her article.

It may be time to evaluate your hiring process through a new lens.

If we assume it is the candidate’s responsibility to pen the thank you note, doesn’t that inherently mean that we also assume it’s the candidate’s responsibility to be thankful for being granted an interview to begin with?

You may have this mindset and not even realize you have it. A few questions to consider:

  • How much time do you expect a candidate to prepare for the interview with you How much time do you spend preparing for the same interview?
  • You likely have asked the question “So why should we hire you” without batting an eye – how receptive are you when a candidate questions “Why should I come to work here?”
  • Checking candidate references from past employers is a probable interviewing step; candidates volunteer these regularly. What would your reaction be if a candidate asked to check references from those who had worked under your supervision in the past but were no longer with the firm?

These are just a few scenarios to help challenge your paradigm. Lucas ultimately summarized this mental shift: “When we think of all the things we demand of job candidates, we should realize that they are the ones doing the hiring managers big favors. You need that position filled, and these people are graciously helping you to do so.”

Start with Motivation

Secure more insights than exist on paper. Schedule time with your recruiter to go beyond more than “the individual is looking to take that next step in his career” and instead have a solid understanding of what the candidate does not have currently yet is looking to have within your organization. Know what is most important for this candidate to learn from your initial meeting as it relates to what he is looking to accomplish in this career move. Additionally, make sure you know “why you firm” – why this candidate wants to talk with your firm as opposed to others. What is it that initially sparked their interest, and how you can expand on that to have the candidate walk away with their own motivating factors addressed? Finally, know “why not” – any concerns this candidate has in areas such as the cost of living (if relocation is involved), or stability, or any other detail no matter how large or small. This is the opportunity to address them, either openly or candidly, throughout the interview.

It’s the Little Things

Small things stand out, specifically when candidates are in a thriving economy and may have the opportunity to interview with multiple organizations. Take a moment and look at your physical office space through a new lens. Is your boardroom, interviewing space, or personal office dated and could use some modernization? Do you have anything on the walls that showcase your organization’s accomplishments, or highlight your culture? Think through the impression you make as it relates to your physical office space.

When the candidate arrives, give them bottled water without them having to ask for or accept it. When the candidate leaves, consider an exit gift of some sort – a small item with your logo on it or something personalized based on what you know about their interests or background.

The Sell

Take some time to craft concrete answers or success stories around questions such as the following:

  • What are the primary reasons someone would join your organization instead of another firm?
  • What is the specific and measurable career path?
  • What in-house resources do you have that give people a competitive advantage? What external resources?
  • How does your company differentiate itself from other competitors in your niche, and what would this mean to someone joining your firm?
  • What is the tenure of your senior staff? What benefit does that provide a new associate?
  • What future growth plans do you have for your firm? What opportunity does that create for someone?

Even if the candidate does not ask the direct question, you want to remain confident that you are articulating “why you” just as much as you are trying to determine “why them.” If, during the interview, a light bulb switches on and you have the revelation that this is the exact person you need to hire, the better you can articulate your true value proposition the higher the chance that candidate will want you as much as you want them.

Building Great Leadership Teams with Reneris

At Reneris, we specialize in building great leadership teams by unlocking the potential of high-performing professionals. Our mission is to partner with best-in-class developers of housing (multifamily, affordable, senior), hotels, and non-profit organizations across the country to place the right talent in the right positions, driving growth and success.

As part of our commitment to excellence, we are proud to be affiliated with Sanford Rose Associates®, a search firm recognized as one of the top 10 in North America by Executive Search Review. This partnership enables us to leverage SRA’s extensive network and industry expertise, enhancing our ability to find the right leaders for your organization. Connect with Reneris today to learn more about how we can support your professional and organizational growth.

Reneris is a specialized executive search and management consulting firm that provides professional services to clients seeking a high-caliber consultative partner. We have successfully placed candidates in leadership positions in the Real Estate (Hospitality, Multi-Family Housing, Senior Living) and Non-Profit sectors.

Please contact us to learn how Reneris can help you attract executive-level talent for your leadership team.

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The Electric Slide – AI’s Already Big Impact on Recruiting (And How It’s Not Replacing Us Anytime Soon)

The Electric Slide – AI’s Already Big Impact on Recruiting (And How It’s Not Replacing Us Anytime Soon)

By Nick Swetye

Machine learning and AI-driven data analysis aren’t new, but since ChatGPT went live to the public in late November of 2022, chatbots have certainly captured the collective imagination. Its creators and advocates promise it will open countless undiscovered doors and revolutionize not only the workplace but all of human civilization – an invention as big as language itself! And as an early adopter, I have often felt as though I have been handling the fires of Prometheus.
In our industry, Executive Search firms and HR departments across the globe have been hungry to make extensive use of chatbots and AI tools, streamline workflows, increase volume, reduce costs, and drive profits. New candidate and prospective client sourcing tools, automated outreach, even promises of the Holy Grail of chatbot-driven-prescreening of candidates – all are already developed and in use, and all in just the last 12 months.

The catch – quality is not necessarily guaranteed. Daily workshops on your choice of platform can be joined by video conference where you can hear the prophecies of the coming Age of Aquarius where none of us will have to do the things in the workplace that are hard, the things that are time-consuming, the things that are messy – if only you’ll subscribe to our new service.

The idea of candidates using AI to write cover letters while recruiters use AI to screen them isn’t new mirrors the horrors in education, where students are using AI to write research papers while overworked teachers are pressured to turn to it for grading. Terrifying enough, and now coupled with the very real possibility of candidates using AI voicebots to respond to initial job interview calls conducted themselves by AI – it’s all simply the stuff of nightmares.

At Reneris, I feel fortunate enough to be working with passionate, dedicated, and mission-focused leaders across the country for whom the personal touch is central to the experience they expect and the outcomes they need. While every Executive Search firm prides itself on building relationships, Reneris feels ahead of the curve, and the clients and candidates I speak with remind me daily that we aren’t like other recruiters they’ve met. It’s a badge of honor in many ways and the primary driver of our success.

In the end, our clients don’t care how we use AI, just as long as it doesn’t impact their experience. They want the best possible candidate for a critical and complex role. This is likely to be someone not on the job market, someone who doesn’t hop from job to job, someone in the midst of making a lasting impact on the organization where they are currently working but also motivated by something to make a change. The clients don’t care if or how we use AI as long as they get the right person in the end.
Who does care? Our candidates.

The number of times a candidate has ended a conversation with us and remarked how good it felt to be really heard, not just spoken to or asked to start by filling out an online form, is a metric we should probably track because it is painfully frequent. Building trust and transparency is the key to good recruiting and that takes time, intention, and a solid dose of humanity. It takes frequent friendly contact, subtle vetting for the proper motivations for change, a lot of active listening and thoughtful preparation, some left-brained analysis weighed against right-brained instinct and no small amount of persistence.

AI is definitely going to replace a lot of recruiters, but thankfully, not the good ones. And I hope you’ll tune in again in future newsletters where we explore what it takes to attract great candidates, how to prepare for a difficult search, and much, much more.

Reneris is a specialized executive search and management consulting firm that provides professional services to clients seeking a high-caliber consultative partner. We have successfully placed candidates in leadership positions in the Real Estate (Hospitality, Multi-Family Housing, Senior Living) and Non-Profit sectors.

Please contact us to learn how Reneris can help you attract executive-level talent for your leadership team.

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