The Recruiter Obstacle Course: What Type of Candidate are You Recruiting?

couple of weeks ago in The Job Search Obstacle Course, we discussed how difficult it can be for job candidates to find the right type of recruiter. There are several different categories of recruiters out there, and if you¡¯re working with the wrong type, your search is going to encounter some problems.

The situation for recruiters isn¡¯t all that different. There are various types of candidates out there, and different tactics need to be employed to successfully recruit each one. Systematic HR recently provided an overview of their ¡°3 major types¡± of job candidates and how to recruit each one:

¡±The high maintenance job seeker is marked by the need for more attention, more information, more interview time, more decision making time, and more negotiation. The reason for the extra time is simple ¨C money is not as important¡­

¡±In the middle tier, there might be need for short and mid term employees for specific projects or to act as turnaround agents. These are the perfect spots for habitual job seekers. They enjoy new challenges and get bored easily if they don¡¯t constantly try new things. Occasionally you¡¯ll find a habitual job seeker that is worth hanging on to (in fact there are many out there who are wonderful ¨C they just have commitment problems)¡­

¡±The indifferent job seeker may be the most problematic¡­Identifying and avoiding these types of job seekers early in the process and certainly before you offer them a job will save you much headache in the future.¡±

Once you know the type of candidate you¡¯re working with, you¡¯ll have a much better idea of how to successfully recruit them and match them to the right job. But how do you know exactly which category they fall into? Slowly but surely, recruiters and hiring managers are realizing that the simple resume doesn¡¯t quite do it any more:

¡±Artists of all types have been using portfolios to show their ability since before the renaissance. It¡¯s now time to expand that concept to all candidates. When I talk with someone about a project management job, or a software engineering job, or even an administrative job, I ask them for examples of their work.¡±
(From Simply Hired)

Recruiters should have the same advantages as hiring authorities. They should have access to candidates¡¯ ¡°portfolios¡± before committing their time and energy to the recruiting process. With a fuller representation of a candidate¡¯s history, education, skills, etc. it will be much easier to identify which type of candidate they are, and it will make recruiting them or choosing not to recruit them a much faster and more effective process.

What does it take to win

In this ¡°flat¡± world, you gain competitive advantage by capturing the best talent, wherever they are. In Indiana or India. Gone are the days when recruiting was an administrative activity. Now it needs to be repositioned as a strategic weapon. You need to remove the gloves. Attack. And counter-attack.

Leading global recruiting strategist Dr. John Sullivan will show you how. His aggressive presentation includes topics like:

Why “but we are different” is no longer a valid excuse
How to use talent poaching to disarm competitors
How to identify, improve and build these capabilities
How to prioritize internal recruitment needs and external recruitment opportunities
How to block your employees from being poached
Get ready for an experience that will challenge your ideas about recruiting and turn you into a winner in the global war for talent.

China to introduce 30,000 overseas specialists

Dec.18 – China next year is to introduce 30,000 overseas specialists that the country is most in need of but also is in great shortage, according to the Ministry of Personnel.

“The government is to fund the introduction of 10,000 economic and technical specialists and 20,000 educational, health and scientific specialists in 2007,” said Minister of Personnel Zhang Bolin.

Zhang said China should further explore international intelligence resources which has provided strong support to the country’s overall development.

China has recruited a total of 400,000 specialists from overseas, Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions and Taiwan, and has dispatched nearly 40,000 qualified personnel to study overseas.

The Chinese government will fund 10,000 Chinese talents to go and study overseas in 2007, Zhang said.

He calls for more preferential policies for returning students from overseas study so as to draw more Chinese students back to the motherland.

Since 1978, more than 400,000 Chinese students have studied abroad, with more than 100,000 returning to the country over the last two decades.

Official statistics show that government scholarships have allowed 26,658 Chinese to go and study overseas since 1996, and 97 percent of them returned to China after completing study.

Most students go to top notch universities and research institutes in the United States, Great Britain, Germany, Australia and Canada.

Software Engineer lead

Company introduction:
Our client company is the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet.

Responsibilities:
This position is opened to a Technical Leader I or Software Engineer IV.

Join an energized team focused on developing platform and tools of globalization / internationalization / localization that may include the following list of responsibilities:

1.Lead a small group of engineers working on a brand new product. Provide highly specialized technical leadership to the group. Mentor junior team member.
2.Write complete functional and design specifications independently.
3.Design and develop new software product features, implement large portion of software independently.
4.Take a product through some or all stages of product development.
5.Responsible for design reviews and code walkthroughs.
6.Helps engineers find ways to attack new or difficult problems.
7.Contribute innovative ideas for multiple module architecture.
8.Contribute to the development of project goals, schedules, and resource planning.

Requirements:
1.Solid background in SW design, documentation and implementation, and hands-on experience with programming, networking and distributed system.
2.Extensive knowledge of Java, J2EE, JSP on both Windows and Linux. Extensive knowledge of network application development and very good GUI design skills. Strong Java/C/C++ programming and XML development skills. Solid background in object-oriented design and development.
3.Strong experience in developing multithreading and client/server applications.
4.Experience working on database, SQL.
5.Strong experience in defining and developing component level API and API definition guidelines for other to use.
6.Experience in the entire lifecycle of software product development.
7.Ability to plan, design, develop and successfully deliver projects on time with quality.
8.Good oral and written communication skills
9.The idea candidate will have an understanding of globalization / internationalization / localization, translation memory and relevant software systems.
10.Project management skills with emphasis on execution and product delivery.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to: ‘topjob_it089sh@dacare.com’

Software and Hardware Project Coordination Manager (IP Phones)

Company introduction:
Our client company is the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet.

Responsibilities:
Join the enterprise voice development team as a strong, contributing member of the Unified Voice Over IP(VoIP) Phone team focused on developing the industry’s best IP Phones. Candidates must have a proven track record in all aspects of the software and hardware development lifecycle, including the following list of responsibilities:
1.Oversee all IPCBU-CRDC Project processes for hardware, software and dev test teams.
2.Work with cross functional project teams to develop, track, edit, and report on the status of all project deliverables and schedules throughout the product development cycle and provide overall program management support for IPCBU teams in China on a daily basis.
3.Drive IPCBU-CRDC teams to deliver projects on schedule and on budget
4.Create and edit program plans, and program status presentations
5.Manage IPCBU-CRDC project priorities
6.Run weekly product team meetings for IPCBU-CRDC projects
7.Work closely with CRDC manufacturing teams and external hardware vendors to ensure milestones are tracked and schedule or budget impacting issues are escalated to IPCBU management
8.Assist IPCBU-CRDC manager with resource allocation and daily team deliverables
9.Update IPCBU status pages with current issues and risks on a regular basis and when appropriate participate in IPCBU Ops reviews and R and D meetings
10.Coordinating information transfer across time-zones and development teams
11.Ensure that teams adhear to company’s Engineering process standards
12.Work with US based Program Managers and Engineering leads on IPCBU projects that require IPCBU-CRDC deliverables
13.Willing to travel occasionally and can attend off-hour meetings with company’s teams around the world

Requirements:
1.Oral and written fluency in Mandarin and English
2.Minimum of two years experience project/program management
3.Minimum two years of experience in facilitating cross team development projects
4.Demonstrated experience with the principle practices of the product development cycle
5.Demonstrated ability to articulate complex project dependencies in verbal and written communications.
6.Strong project/program management skills. This includes a working knowledge of MS Project.
7.Track record of delivering on-time, high-quality product/project deliverables and optimizing outcomes per objectives & priorities.
8.Experience working with cross-functional teams, identifying potential problems, ability to work issues at appropriate levels, and drive issues to timely resolution.
9.Experience in working with contract manufacturing to deliver high quality hardware products.
10.Experience in delivering Joint Development Manufacturing projects with external vendors
11. An understanding of hardware manufacturing process used with Foxconn desired
12.A solid understanding of software and hardware development cycles desired
13.Strong skills in working with different groups and managers in a matrix project structure.
14.Demonstrated strength in listening, learning & adapting based on team and partner feedback.
15.Excellent communication skills, including the ability to communicate appropriately with upper management and stakeholders. Know when to discuss details, when to make decisions and, most importantly, when to escalate issues.
16.Good negotiation skills. Demonstrated diplomacy when working with diverse groups with different priorities.
17.Demonstrated ability to influence for results across organizations, functions and organization levels.
18.Demonstrated effective judgment when making tradeoffs. Able to communicate pros and cons of resolution and explain conclusions. Adept problem solving skills.
19.Working Experiences with US based multi-national companies is a strong plus.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to: ‘topjob_it088sh@dacare.com’

Hardware Engineer Lead

Company introduction:
Our client company is the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet.

Responsibilities:
1.Self-motivated, team oriented engineer to be part of a geographically disparate engineering organization developing the next generation IP telephony platforms.
Responsibilities include participating in all areas of platform development including design and architecture of modules, timing analysis, system and module testing.
2.Developing tests for prototype bring up and verification,working with cross-functional teams (hardware, software, diagnostics, signal integrity and more) to ensure technically robust product development. Explore and evaluate new tools and methodologies.

Requirements:
1.Ability to communicate clearly with team members and teamwork skills.
2.Excellent understanding of digital hardware design, power design, audio, high speed interfaces, timing analysis and signal integrity issues.
3.Understanding of analog electronic concepts and EMC.
4.Working knowledge of Concept schematics capture, Signal Integrity simulation, verilog HDL, familiarity with Allegro.
5.Experience with high volume run products.
6.BSEE/CS or equivalent with 10+ years relevant experience in internetworking technologies and applications. Experience in Voice Communications, Ethernet Switching and IP is a plus.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to: ‘topjob_it087sh@dacare.com’

Advice from employers

Just because the job market is a good one doesn’t mean you can or should get cocky about getting the job you want. If you want some control over your opportunities, consider this next section your homework¡ªit’s advice employers¡ªthe people who are recruiting and hiring¡ªoffer. Most of the following sounds like common sense, but you might be surprised by the number of job candidates who blow off these details (and employers can tell which students/new graduates have taken their advice seriously).

Research
Take 60 minutes, go online, and learn everything you can about any company you might want to work for. Your goal is to be able to articulate how you will be a good fit within the company. If you have trouble putting your research into words, ask a career services counselor for help.

Experience
Do you know what you want to do? An internship or co-op experience (or several of these positions) on your resume will tell an interested employer that you’ve tested your career up close and you’ve learned some of the basics of the workplace. Almost three-quarters of employers say they prefer to hire students who have relevant work experience, and a little less than a fifth of employers said they are willing to consider any type of real-workplace experience.

If you’re an underclassman, line up your experience as early in your college career as possible (go to your career center for leads on internships and co-op positions). Some employers recommend getting that first internship during your freshman year so that you get to know a company well and have your “foot in the door” at graduation!

Prepare
Employers rate the influence of attributes when choosing between two equally qualified candidates Attributes Rating
Has held leadership position 4.0
Major 4.0
High GPA (3.0 or above) 3.7
Has been involved in extracurricular activities (clubs, sports, student government, etc.) 3.7
Has done volunteer work 3.2
School attended 3.0
(5-point scale, where 1=no influence at all, 2=not much influence, 3=somewhat of an influence, 4=very much influence, and 5=extreme influence)
You’d think getting organized and ready to apply for jobs would come naturally, but it doesn’t. Just because you learned to write a nice thank-you note in sixth grade or put together a rudimentary resume in “career class” in high school doesn’t mean you have the skills to crank out the appropriate cover letters or build resumes that attract employers. Among the skills you need to learn in college include:

how to write a cover letter that markets you to employers.
how to compose a well-written, error-free resume that articulates your skills and course work as a match for the company and position.
how to interview and explain the value you can bring to a potential employer.
Take advantage of the resources on your campus provided by the career center. Trained, professional staff are available to guide you through the process and teach you how to take the various steps in the process with success. Plus, these career counselors know the employers¡ªthey work with them on a regular basis¡ªand can put you in touch with the organizations where you’d like to work.

Don’t be fooled. A career counselor won’t find you a job or “place” you in a position. They’re on campus to teach you something more important: the tools and contacts to successfully find a job today¡ªand in the future when you’re looking for your second, third, or 10th position!

Research, experience, and preparation: If you have these, you won’t need “good luck” to be successful in your job search.

Striking tire workers lose cool and present case to customers

STRIKING union members battling Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co took their picket lines to about 150 tire retailers in the United States and Canada on Saturday.

They decided to take their case over health care and retirement benefits directly to consumers.

In Lincoln, Nebraska, 50 United Steelworkers’ members protested at two Goodyear retailers, decrying the company’s use of replacement workers during the two-month strike.

“We know what it takes to build tires, and unskilled workers just can’t do it,” said Gary Schaefer, 54, vice president of the United Steelworkers’ Local 286 in Lincoln. “We do not want the general public riding their lives on temporary workers.”

Goodyear spokesman Ed Markey said the protests do not affect plans to return to the bargaining table in Pittsburgh today for the first time since talks broke down on November 17.

“Our goal in the negotiations remains the same, and that is to reach a fair agreement that enables us to be competitive and win with our customers,” he said.

The company’s temporary workers are qualified and received the same training as all new employees, Markey said. “Goodyear will never compromise quality.”

About 15,000 workers are on strike at 12 US and four Canadian plants.

Goodyear workers went on strike on October 5 after talks broke down on a new contract.

Since the strike began, Goodyear has been making tires at some of its North American plants with non-union and temporary workers, as well as some managers, and relying on production at its international plants to help supply home customers.

In suburban Pittsburgh, more than 80 people handed out fliers and urged holiday shoppers driving past a Goodyear service center to honk in support of employees.

Leo Gerard, USW international president, said the protests were intended to inform consumers about treatment by Goodyear, including plans to slash health care and retirement benefits.

Wall St chief wins US$40m bonus

MORGAN Stanley has given Chief Executive Officer John Mack the biggest bonus for the head of a Wall Street firm, awarding him US$40 million as the company headed for the best profit in its 71-year history.

Mack, 62, was granted shares valued at US$36.2 million, and about US$4 million in options to buy Morgan Stanley shares, Bloomberg News reported yesterday.

Seven other top executives in the company were given bonuses of more than US$57 million.

The payout for Mack, 44 percent more than Morgan Stanley awarded him last year, eclipses the US$38.3 million given in 2005 to Henry Paulson, CEO of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Shares in Morgan Stanley, the second-biggest United States securities firm by market value, are recording their best year for investors since 2003 after Mack put the firm on course for record earnings.

“You expect performance to be reflected in the compensation,” said Laura Thatcher, an Atlanta-based partner in charge of the executive-compensation practice at law firm Alston & Bird.

“You’re talking about staggeringly big companies with huge market caps and huge performance.”

Shares of Morgan Stanley have gained 40 percent this year and closed yesterday at US$79.60, giving the company a market value of US$84.2 billion.

The firm may report next week that full-year profit rose 41 percent to US$6.98 billion, the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 10 analysts.

Mack, who’s also chairman, received his entire bonus in stock and options, Morgan Stanley said. Last year, he declined a US$28 million bonus because he had worked at Morgan Stanley for only five months.

He accepted a pro-rata payout of US$11.5 million in stock and also received a US$337,534 salary.

Lehman Brothers, the fourth-biggest US securities firm, earlier this week said Chief Executive Richard Fuld received US$10.9 million in stock for 2006, down from US$14.9 million last year.

Mack, who left Morgan Stanley in 2001 when he was president, returned in June 2005 as the board’s choice to revive a firm bruised by a battle with dissident shareholders.

Some of Morgan Stanley’s top executives, including President Stephan Newhouse and Vikram Pandit, abandoned then-CEO Philip Purcell during the dispute and dozens of other bankers and traders quit.

Since Mack joined, Morgan Stanley has fired more than 1,000 underperforming brokers, made acquisitions to bolster the firm’s energy, fixed-income and hedge fund businesses and created new incentives to keep top employees.

International Recruiting: Applicant Screening in Developing Markets

Screening techniques honed in developing markets provide valuable lessons for talent management everywhere. Originally, the push for screening in the developing markets was driven by the multinationals, but now local employers are increasingly recognizing the need for background screening.
By Fay Hansen
——————————————————————————–
The White House sent Steve Casteel to Iraq for two years to recruit 200 people to rebuild the Interior Ministry under the Coalition Provisional Authority. In Iraq and in his previous position as chief of intelligence for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Casteel learned how to screen candidates in Latin America and the Middle East.

“Recruiting in Iraq is not that different from recruiting in Jordan or Egypt, or China, for that matter,” Casteel says. “You can use any databases that are available–military and police data, for example–but in the end you have to rely on local contacts to research an applicant¡¯s reputation and history in the community. You can¡¯t just use a Western approach.”

Casteel is now senior vice president for international business development at Vance International Inc., an investigation and security consulting firm based in Oakton, Virginia, with 3,200 employees worldwide. His approach to screening and background checks will become increasingly relevant as globalization accelerates in 2007 and corporations pursue a broader mix of geographies and less familiar locations.

Business reports indicate that companies will continue the trend toward staffing new facilities with local nationals instead of expatriates.

“Multinationals have found that they can reduce costs and eliminate many problems by hiring locals,” Casteel notes. “Shell, for example, has moved to local hiring in Nigeria.”

As Shell has discovered in Nigeria, however, recruiting in the developing nations requires extreme due diligence.

“By far, the biggest risk in recruiting in less-developed markets is corruption, most likely in the form of political corruption but also, in some locations, organized crime,” Casteel reports.

In 2005 alone, Shell Nigeria investigated 74 cases of employee fraud and ethics violations, ending in the dismissal of 24 career and contractor staff, warning letters to 49 employees and delisting for six contractors. In addition to the recruiting difficulties that arise from corruption among candidates and employees, Shell is also plagued by local scam artists who make bogus offers of employment at Shell Nigeria and then shake down job seekers for money or personal financial information.

Digging deeper
“The biggest weakness among companies that are recruiting in the developing countries is their lack of knowledge about the local market and their willingness to rely entirely on cheap background checks,” says Bob Sikellis, managing director and associate general counsel at Vance. “In the U.S., the quality of standard pre-employment screening is good enough for entry-level positions. But outside the U.S., the quality is abysmal. The databases are simply not available.”

Instead, companies must develop the capacity for deeper pre-employment investigations, often working with local partners. Even then, the company must know which local security companies do quality work.

“In Iraq, there are 52 security companies, and you need one that has local operations in the city where you need to recruit,” Casteel notes.

“Companies need to be very cautious and do full due diligence on the security companies they choose to work with,” Casteel says. “Just because a local vendor seems to take a Western approach and shows up in a business suit does not mean you will get high-quality work. This is true anywhere.”

The client company should ask the security firm exactly what information they will provide.

“And, as the Hewlett Packard case demonstrates, the security firm should also explain exactly how they will get that information,” Sikellis says.

The fact that negligent hiring lawsuits are uncommon abroad does not reduce the need to screen applicants carefully.

“To focus on the potential for negligent hiring lawsuits or other legal actions is a dangerously narrow approach,” Sikellis says. “Outside of the U.S., the ability to remove employees is so limited that you want to be extremely careful about who you hire. In many countries, a company that removes an employee faces long unemployment payments and other significant costs.”

Local demand
Originally, the push for screening in the developing markets was driven by the multinationals, but now local employers are increasingly recognizing the need for background screening, according to Chuck Papageorgiou, executive vice president of international services for First Advantage, a risk mitigation and business solutions provider. The company, based in St. Petersburg, Florida, employs 4,500 people, with 1,200 outside the U.S. devoted to employee screening.

Papageorgiou reports that screening by local employers in the developing markets has accelerated during the past three years, driven by different factors in each country. In India, for example, the rise of diploma mills has generated a new focus on education credentialing.

In other developing countries, concerns about cyber-crime, corruption and terrorism have spurred local employers to institute screening policies along with the multinationals that operate there.

In addition, developing-market BPO providers that work for financial institutions must screen applicants to meet their contractual obligations.

“Some of the contracts are very explicit,” Papageorgiou says. “This is spreading to other industries, especially design firms and manufacturers with high-value intellectual property. Also, more companies are screening all management applicants because they see credentialing managers as very important.”

India¡¯s outsourcing industry has been rocked by cases of data theft and fraud. KPMG¡¯s 2006 survey on fraud in India reports high levels of deception in CVs, fueled by unethical practices at placement agencies. In March 2006, Wipro cleaned house after discovering major screening shortcomings in the placement agencies it used.

The National Association of Software and Service Companies, the trade group representing the Indian IT software and services industry, launched a national skills registry in early 2006 that provides information on employees¡¯ backgrounds. Job candidates authorize release of the information to employers.

Papageorgiou does believe that other nations will soon follow with the same level of self-policing.

“But we are seeing professional associations in some countries building membership rosters, and we can work with this information to verify certifications,” he says.

According to Papageorgiou, companies in India are also plagued by scammers posing as recruiters who demand money and personal financial information from job seekers.

In both India and China, candidates and employers can no longer rely entirely on familiar village contacts to make recommendations. Dramatic increases in worker mobility in recent years leave candidates and employers more vulnerable fraudulent practices

Living with limitations
In some countries, full accurate screening is simply not possible.

“We deem screening in these countries as ¡®nonreliable¡¯ for background information,” Papageorgiou says. “The limits on the amount of information available about candidates may enter into site location discussions, and some companies may decide that they cannot expand into these areas.”

“There are many ways to get information in many countries if you are willing to break the law, which we are not,” Papageorgiou says. “We advise clients of these restrictions and then use research teams to gather as much information as possible on criminality, for example. The key is to make sure that the client is well aware of the limitations.”

In India, the crime rate is relatively low and some information is available about most job applicants.

“If all the education and employment checks are clean, it is highly likely that the candidate is clean,” Papageorgiou says. “In other locations, a clean check may not mean the same thing.”

In China, educational and professional qualifications, employment history and employment performance history can be secured, but criminal record checks are more difficult.

First Advantage is developing statistical models that provide some indication of the probability of criminal records and other negative factors for specific groups of applicants. These models are in place in some locations and in development for others.

First Advantage abandoned the idea of screening candidates abroad from offices in the U.S., and now has offices staffed with its own employees in the Philippines, Singapore, China, Japan, India, New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the United Arab Emirates. It will open an office in South Korea by the end of 2006 and new offices in Europe, Africa and the Middle East in 2007.

The international portion of First Advantage¡¯s screening services now represents 25 percent to 30 percent of its total screening revenues. The company expects 20 percent growth in the international portion in 2007.

“In this industry, it is extremely expensive to have a physical presence on a worldwide basis, but there is a competitive advantage in expanding our international presence,” Papageorgiou says. “In addition, the market for screening is relatively saturated in the U.S.; the real growth in screening is abroad.”

For clients, the biggest advantage in using screening firms that have a physical presence overseas is speed and more control over compliance. Also, firms with offices abroad may be more effective in managing costs because they utilize their own staff and operations.

In any developing market, screening must be tailored for the specific risk level, legal environment and infrastructure, and executives should be aware of any limitations.

“When a company moves into a new location, it must develop a market-entry strategy,” Sikellis says.

“Recruiting should be part of the discussion and HR should have a seat at the table.” Sikellis says. “HR executives need to analyze the personnel risks and maintain a close relationship with legal counsel while they do this.”