Recruitment

Recruitment

Can big company executives suceed in a start-up?

Identifying big company executives who can achieve success with a start-up can be tough. Many star players at big companies wilt in a small company where they have finite resources and little or no supporting infrastructure.

Why should I hire YOU?

A job interview can be an intimidating experience from beginning to end. While most of the questions you're likely to be asked are relatively straightforward, one that seems deceptively simple can be the hardest to answer. That question is "Why should I hire you?".

UK firms failing to recruit international leaders

In the global business world it makes sense to recruit internationally-focused executives. So why do only a fifth of British employers agree?

If they like the brand, they'll join you

Even for senior managers, a company's reputation is almost as important as the amount of money they are offering when it comes to deciding whether or not to accept a job.

Paying your staff to quit

Shoe manufacturer Zappos has a reputation for treating their employees well. They also have a unique policy for new hires. They pay them to quit.

American graduates facing jobs scramble

With the employment market looking tougher by the day, nearly half of American students graduating from college this summer expect to have to fight tooth and nail to land a job.

Management jobs harder to come by

Three quarters of execs looking for jobs in America are reporting a slowdown in the number of interviews coming their way - a clear sign the downturn is reaching right to the top.

Finance officers taking axe to budgets and jobs

Fewer than a fifth of American chief financial officers are optimistic the U.S will escape a recession, and the deepening downturn is prompting them to cut back on spending and hiring and start laying workers off.

When does talent trump experience?

Traditionally, experience and expertise have tended to trump talent. But in today's work environment, aptitude for a particular type of work may be more important. But how do you decide the balance between the two?

Smoke, mirrors and head-hunting

If you're serious about getting to the top of the corporate ladder, the chances are that somewhere along the way you're going to need the services of a head-hunter.

Executive jobs to ride out economic woes

Just because the pessimists are predicting the U.S. economy is all set to hit the buffers doesn't mean that senior level executive jobs are drying up. Far from it, in fact.

Talent shortages adding to recession fears

It is not only the dark clouds of global recession keeping senior managers awake at night. The chronic lack of talent coming through at the top is becoming an ever more pressing concern.

How to hire, train, and retain great employees

Accurate job descriptions are like stealth secret weapons for hiring, training, and retaining great employees. I guarantee whatever effort you put forth will save you hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars.

Attraction of flexible working ignored by HR

It's not rocket science. When employees are deciding whether or not to take a new job, being able to work flexibly or remotely will often swing the balance. But try telling that to HR.

Credit squeeze threatens jobs market

The credit crunch is beginning to cast its shadow over the jobs market, with the number of Britons placed in permanent jobs growing at its slowest rate for more than a year.

The rights and wrongs of cyber-vetting

As with most of life, there are two perspectives around employers tapping into social networking sites to check out current or potential employees.

Cyber-vetting managers face backlash

Firms that tap into Facebook to check out employees risk a backlash if they are found out, with nearly half of workers saying they would be outraged if they found they were being "cyber vetted".

Bad credit score can show you the interview door

It's not only Northern Rock investors in the UK who should be worried about the global crunch on credit. Defaulting on a loan, mortgage or credit card can also seriously harm your chances of landing a new job.

Stock still the Holy Grail of executive compensation

The granting of stock remains one of corporate America's most powerful financial thank-yous, with some executive teams now owning as much as eight per cent of the company.

Scientists predict management success

A new method of predicting who is likely to succeed in a managerial role and who is likely to fail could herald a revolution in the way that organizations recruit and groom the managers of the future.

CFOs ignoring finance talent crisis

Employers around the world are facing a talent crisis in their finance departments, yet many chief finance officers are too busy studying their spreadsheets to have worked out what to do about it.

Rise of the Oliver Twist worker

The days of being grateful for what you are offered by an employer are long gone. Today, talented workers are prepared to ask for big bucks to take up a job offer.

Poor interviewers driving away talent

Many organizations are fatally undermining their recruitment and retention efforts because inept or downright rude interviewers are making a negative first impression with job seekers.

Employers spending their way out of talent crisis

British firms are throwing more money than ever into recruitment as the struggle to find, recruit and retain talented workers gets tougher by the month.

U.S. in high-end hiring surge

With the number of people in employment in the U.S. surging after big declines earlier this year, new figures suggest that the top end of the jobs market is also booming.

Escalating war for talent drives changes in recruitment

Recruitment, rather than business strategy or management, is now the number one problem for half of UK companies.

Golden hellos double in scramble for managers

As efforts to find and hang on to suitable employees become increasingly desperate, a third of British businesses now offer "golden hellos" to new managers, double the number of 12 months ago.

Education - what education?

Three quarters of British firms are unable to fill key positions because there simply are not enough people with the right skills to go around, with employers in London feeling the squeeze the hardest.

Butt-ugly but brilliant?

Image and presentation are such important factors in business these days that it's becoming increasingly difficult to rationalise the trade off between the Butt-Ugly but Brilliant manger and those who are just Self-Absorbed Dimwits.

Employers need to do more social networking

Employers could save themselves a fortune in recruitment costs if they did more to encourage and reward their existing employees to exploit their social networks and refer people they know for jobs.

Four out of 10 employers face recruitment problems

Four out of 10 employers across the world are finding it more difficult to fill job vacancies this year, with sales people, skilled manual trades and technicians in particularly short supply.

War for talent steps up a gear

The war for talent around the world is getting worse, with managers forced to "sell" jobs to scarce candidates to get them on board, only to find that nearly a third will leave for a better offer within six months.

Firms neglecting their sales teams

Despite the importance of an effective sales team to the bottom line, many companies in the U.S. are not adequately investing in the recruiting, hiring or training of this most vital of assets.

Managers don't care if recruitment money is well spent

British bosses are pouring money into recruiting new talent but have little idea whether the cash is being well spent, and when things go wrong their answer is simply to throw yet more money at the problem.

Benefits programmes missing the target

It's quite simple: American workers want their company benefits programme to look after them when they fall ill and when they retire. But more often they not, they feel let down and frustrated at how little help and support their company is offering.

Job seekers give thumbs-down to lazy employers

For all the talk about the importance of employer brands and the difficulty in attracting talented staff, the depressing reality is that a quarter of job seekers believe that they have been badly treated by a prospective employer.

Employee engagement starts on day one

Ignoring new recruits is dumb. It sounds obvious, but a new study has found real failings in how companies hire, orientate and integrate their new employees.

IT managers in short supply

Skilled IT managers are now in such short supply in the U.S that employers are finding it can often take up three months to fill a vacant position.

Recruitment challenges intensify in 2007

European organisations are going to find recruiting the right staff a struggle in 2007, with the situation being made worse by a major gulf between the expectations of employers and those of job seekers.

Applying for a job? Expect to be up against at least 50 others

U.S workers feel over-worked, unappreciated and underpaid, but for those thinking of looking for pastures new as a result, be prepared to be up against at least 50 other workers.

Boom in $100,000+ jobs

With U.S. employers hiring more than 150,000 additional staff in December, all the signs are that strong overall employment growth is having a significant impact on higher-end jobs paying in excess of $100,000.

UK firms scrambling to recruit new talent

January is traditionally one of the most popular times to move jobs, and this year looks like it will be no exception, with nearly half of British employers saying they plan to hire new workers in the coming months

Why nepotism can have its merits

Hiring someone simply because they are "family" has traditionally been considered bad business sense, but may actually have its benefits, particularly for smaller businesses.

Bright outlook for jobs in 2007

With retention problems growing and four out of 10 U.S. hiring managers expecting to increase their headcounts, the new year looks like bringing with it bigger paychecks, more opportunities for promotion and a greater sensitivity to work-life balance issues.

Indian firms offer stock options to new recruits

India's booming economy means that the rampant war for talent has become so fierce that some companies are now offering new recruits stock options from day one.

We're all becoming managers now

The past decade has seen a huge growth in the number of people, particularly women, being appointed into relatively well-paid, managerial or semi-professional jobs.

Boardroom complacency over talent management costing UK millions

A deep-seated lack of commitment from senior managers to developing and nurturing talent is potentially costing British businesses millions of pounds a year.

Employers urged to plug talent gaps with interns

Better use of work placements could save millions of us from ending up in the wrong jobs, improving productivity and slashing the annual bill for hiring and firing.

Your digital dirt can come back to haunt you

Half the recruiters who use the web to research job candidates have changed their minds about a hiring somebody based on what they have found out about them online.

Talent shortages go global

Talent shortages among skilled professional workers are spreading across the world, leaving gaps in many organisations and forcing employers to pay higher salaries, a new global survey has revealed.

Paying through the nose for talent

Such is the demand for top staff in the City of London that investment banks are prepared to buy out the huge annual bonuses of top performers they want to poach from rivals.

Tempted to lie on your resume? We'll spot it and boot you out

More than half of American hiring managers say they have caught out someone lying on their resume, with the vast majority marching that employee swiftly to the exit.

Dynamic self-starters need not apply

International recruitment outfit, Robert Walters, has issued a blanket ban on using a whole raft of words and phrases in any of its recruitment ads for fear of falling foul of the UK's increasingly foolish-looking new legislation designed to combat age discrimination.

City spurns immature British graduates

City financial firms are increasingly looking abroad to hire new recruits because foreign university graduates are felt to be more mature than their British counterparts.

Younger workers benefit from departure of Baby Boomers

Short-sighted hiring practices are meaning that U.S companies are shooting themselves in the feet when it comes to attracting talented staff.

Employers falling over themselves to hire interns

Just in time for back-to-school, the number of interns being hired by U.S companies is rising sharply, according to a new poll, with nearly half of firms expecting to be on the look-out for student talent this year.

Culture and reputation count more than money in war for talent

A company's reputation and its workplace culture are more important than pay and benefits when it comes to attracting top talent, new research has suggested.

Money and security still most important to U.S job hunters

When deciding on a job offer, employees still place the greatest weight on pay and job security, according to a new survey of U.S executives.

Bad recruitment methods alienate graduates

Almost a quarter of British graduates hunting for jobs have walked away from potential employer because they had been put off by the organisation's behaviour during the recruitment process.

Interns in demand

In an increasingly competitive jobs' market, U.S companies are becoming ever more reliant on interns when it comes to sourcing new talent, with salaries rising as a result.