Employer Newsletter - May 2008

In this Issue:

Topic of the Month: "Desired or Required
Scholarship Deadline Nears ... Send in Your Application Today!
Features That Give Your Firm a Competitive Edge
This Issue's Cartoon!

Topic of the Month: Desired or Required

Think of your perfect mate.  Are you done?  How many requirements go into the creation of this perfect mate: five?  Ten?  Twenty?  (Really … twenty?)  Think about your list again.  Are each of those things you dreamed up (bright smile, sense of humor, blonde hair …) really required attributes your ideal mate must have?  Or, are those merely desired attributes? On which items are you willing to be flexible?  Does he really have to be a Lutheran, or does she really have to be 5’7”?

People make decisions every day based on these distinctions: what they desire … and what they require. There are some points on which people can compromise when making choices, and others on which they cannot.

This dichotomy hinders employers when they are trying to attract talent to apply for their open positions. I see smart companies trying to attract great candidates all the time, but instead of creating ads on job boards that invite these professionals to apply, they discourage them by listing a smothering roster of required talents.  Yet, when I speak to client companies, I often discover that many of the items on their job description should fall in the desired category.

In other words, companies hold themselves back by trying to attract talent through job boards, yet they impair that campaign with what they put in their advertisements.

This disconnect is a problem that can be solved.  A more measured approach when creating a job posting can make the distinctions more clear and not close off a source of great candidates that want to apply. 

One candidate to whom I recently spoke talked about his perception of jobs he wanted that listed many requirements: “I look at the list of requirements in the posting, and if I don't have 100% of the background, I don't submit my resume.”

In a notoriously candidate-poor environment, this professional represents a resource that a client company wants, but, instead of enticing candidates to apply, these poorly created job postings are convincing them that they won't be considered.

When a hiring authority laments that “it just seems that we place an ad on a job board and we get few candidates to respond," it is clear that a great tool is being used improperly and blocking the union of strong company with eager candidate.

Here, then, is an example of the “requirements” section from one recent job board advertisement:
The successful candidate must have:

  • BA/BS with a focus on business or life science
  • An MBA from a well-respected institution
  • 10 years sales management experience/
  • 10+ years business to business sales experience to the Fortune 1000
  • Broad knowledge of principles and methods in a recognized professional field, or working knowledge of multiple fields
  • Well-versed in using CRM tools
  • Experience selling in disciplined, formal sales methodology is essential
  • Must be good at developing and articulating ROI to C-Level Executives
  • Telecommunications experience is a must

How many people meet this list of criteria? Very, very few.  Would this company really not consider a candidate that met the most critical elements, but was missing this achievement or that certificate?  By publishing an ad that is so restrictive, the company misses out on potential superstars.

Of course a company should formulate a profile of its ideal candidate. Yet, if that profile is so restrictive that only one person in the world matches it, how will this company ever hire anyone?  Companies should not let the perfect become the enemy of the good.

I'm not suggesting that companies reduce their standards or that they hire subpar performers.  No one wins in those instances. However, there are two follow-on steps of the process.

Let's say you have come up with twenty items for your ideal candidate profile. The next thing to do is to rank them in importance so that each item is ranked one through twenty: prioritize the importance of the criteria, just as a suitor does, subconsciously, when searching for a mate.

Once that is done, the next step is to categorize each as either required or desired.  In the real world, the lion’s share of these items become desired while the finite few at the top become required.  It is the few items that are deemed critical to one's success in the job that should be listed as required in an ad.

This is a challenging set of exercises, no doubt. That's the whole point.  ConstructionJobs.com can be a great means to meeting strong professionals for your company, but you need to encourage contact with these men and women rather than inhibit it.  Look once more at the bullet points in the job requirements above: would a company really not hire a bright individual who lacks the MBA component of the profile?  If the answer is no, they shouldn't list that in their ad as it discourages potentially strong candidates from applying.  A smart job posting will ask that same question of every “requirement” – and that job posting may emerge as a much more welcoming conduit to meeting eager, talented professionals.

Attracting great talent is very difficult to do, so don’t deter the talents who are in the market and want to meet you.  Make sure your effort to attract talent is formulated to truly represent what was intended.  If you can make a potential employee feel desired, then his move to your company might become something that he feels is required.

Lee B. Salz
Regional Account Executive

Client Testimonial
“I have really enjoyed being a member of Constructionjobs.com. The website is great and easy to use. I would definitely recommend Constructionjobs.com, over any other hiring service, to any company who is looking to hire quality people who want to succeed in this business. Thank you so much for your support through this process; you've made it very simple and convenient!”
~ Yessika Sanchez, VMS Builders, Inc ~

scholarshipScholarship Deadline Nears … Send in Your Application Today!

ConstructionJobs.com wants to give you $1000.  That is, if you are a student studying a course that will lead you to the construction field.  Apply for the ConstructionJobs.com Scholarship for Students in Construction before June 1, 2008, and you may receive $1000 toward your enrollment fees for the Fall 2008 semester. 

ConstructionJobs.com has watched and assisted the careers of professional builders and has seen trends in construction come and go. We know that a deep concern held by leading builders in the United States is the decline in enrollment at colleges and universities in construction programs and the sense among those builders that they may fall behind in finding the next generation of young people who will build the structures where we live, work, and gather. The ConstructionJobs.com Scholarship for Students in Construction intends to encourage men and women to consider construction as a career and offers financial assistance toward that noble end.

We at ConstructionJobs, Inc. wish to help ensure the growth of the industry by providing financial support to those who are committed to a course of studies in construction management or engineering. 
In 2006, we began offering the $1000 Scholarship and have been pleased to assist the college careers of young women and men at 15 different universities and to students with majors such as construction management, civil engineering, carpentry technology and mechanical engineering. 

If you are pursuing studies that will lead you into construction, please come to our website at ConstructionJobs.com, read the complete rules and eligibility qualifications, download our application – and turn it in by June 10, 2008.

If you are selected as a recipient, we will deposit $1000 in your college account in time for the Fall 2008 semester.  Further, if you read this and know of a student who may be deserving of consideration for the ConstructionJobs.com Scholarship for Students in Construction, please pass this article along!

We’re going to give $1000 away to the best and brightest students who apply.  We can’t wait to meet them!

Features That Give Your Firm a Competitive Edge

Advanced Candidate Searching
From entry-level, mid and upper-level management, search thousands of candidates by job title, A/E/C industry, geographical region and relocation.

National Reach for Job Postings
In addition to our ConstructionJobs Career Network of industry-specific job boards, we have cross-posting alliances with 500+ career sites, job boards and newsgroups, so you can be confident that thousands of construction professionals are viewing your open positions. #1 search engine rankings on Google, Yahoo, MSN and AOL makes finding ConstructionJobs.com easy!

Candidate Management System
Set 'alerts' to automatically search our extensive resume database for targeted candidates and receive email notification when a match is found. Our intelligent candidate management system lets you rank applicants, tracking different stages of development, and store candidate profiles and resume search results.

Alternative to Using Recruiters
Why pay executive search firm fees when the annual subscription to ConstructionJobs.com is only one-third of the price of a typical mid-level placement fee?

The Right Choice
ConstructionJobs.com was voted the Internet's #1 construction job board overall in the Weddle's User Choice Award—chosen by people like you—real hiring managers. ConstructionJobs.com is the exclusive preferred partner of 9 industry associations. See Partners.

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Happy Recruiting,
The ConstructionJobs Team

 
 

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