Archive for ‘Job Search’

February 23, 2022

Mean Girls & The Great Resignation

Employee Appreciation Day is March 4, 2022. 

Get it? It’s March 4th… “March Fourth”.

As in… to march fourth / forward. Employees are marching fourth. And they aren’t looking back. The Great Resignation continues to be a threat to businesses and bottom lines everywhere because employers don’t know what to do to attract and retain top talent.

How do employers stop the bleeding? 

I’m in the job market now. And I gotta tell you… it’s a wild ride. On one hand, I read article after article in the WSJ and the NYT, and quotes from leaders who are desperate. “Where are the workers?” “How can I compete?” – say business owners, CEOS and COOs. 

Well, I want to tell you that the great workers are out there. Here I am. Ready to work. For the past few months, I’ve been attempting to run the gauntlet of your truly awful hiring process. And even more ironic, most of the companies I’m meeting with, are actually in the Talent Acquisition business. No, these aren’t transportation companies, or biochemistry labs… these companies core services (and position themselves as experts) are all about Talent Acquisition and Talent Management. Talk about the cobbler’s children having no shoes. 

Attention Fortune 500 companies (you can skip this paragraph if you’re a small/medium business/SMB)! Seriously, how did you get so successful? You are so slow! Talent doesn’t wait. Panel interviews with 5-8 members of the team that take 2-4 weeks to schedule. The hiring process can take 10-12 weeks. This is how SMB is beating you and winning top talent. Intuitively, you know this. You approve budgets for expensive AI tools that your HR leaders demand but your hiring process is still awful. CEOs / COOs, I hear you boo-hooing in business podcasts talking about “what keeps you up at night”. You talk about attracting and retaining great talent… want to know why you can’t find great people? Your hiring process sucks. Despite how much people are complaining about how their businesses aren’t growing because they need to hire people, so… what are you actually doing to fix the problem? 

Your journey starts with a single step… you need to decide who you are and what you stand for. Sounds simple enough, right? Because if you are a good company and you listen to your team (really listen), then you are way ahead of the pack. You already did the really hard part. You built a great company. But you aren’t leveraging your great company well because nobody outside your walls knows your story. That’s marketing. Not consumer marketing. Talent Marketing. So stop hiring more salespeople (if you can even find any or afford them) and start building a Talent Brand.

Here’s how to start.

3 (Real Talk) Strategies To Become an Employer of Choice

  1. First… and if you only do one thing: Invest in a Talent Brand
    • Now more than ever, talent needs to understand who you are (so your best candidates have a reason to stick around). The simple reason candidates are not applying for your jobs is because you still haven’t told them WHY TO APPLY. That one-pager with high level info about your health insurance and 401(k) isn’t going to cut it. You know why? Because that’s what everyone does. Candidates demand real information. What actually makes you unique as an employer? Start thinking of candidates as window-shoppers. Supply your consumers with all the reasons why they should invest 2, 4, 6, 10+ hours of their valuable time in an attempt to join your company. They will stop window-shopping and buy your jobs.
  2. Sell your opportunities
    • With very rare exception, employers are no longer in the driver’s seat. So why are recruiters behaving like bouncers? There are some standout superstars. The best recruiters I have spoken with (I’m looking at you, Patty Fortune) engage and invite people in. Ask your HR leaders about where there are stumbling blocks.
      • Hire salespeople and cross-train them as recruiters (see #3) because salespeople understand how to listen and provide a hot prospect with a reason to stay engaged. Some recruiters act like ‘mean girls’. And I’m not just talking about the women. Men, too. Looking for a job is tough. The really good recruiters understand and empathize with candidates. The great recruiters understand how to sell the opportunity.
      • Read your job descriptions. Are they sexy? Are they fun and engaging? Or do they read like the back of a vitamin supplement bottle with 27 bullet points. When was the last time your HR leadership overhauled your job descriptions? Every time someone starts a new role, they should be adding to the job description so it’s accurate. Good job descriptions are more than bulleted lists. They should reflect who you are.
  3. Take a chance on me
    • We have an enormous problem. There aren’t enough people to do the jobs we have. Think about that. Really let it sink in. And this labor shortage isn’t just because of a worldwide pandemic. No. In fact, this tight talent market was only exacerbated by Covid. The harsh business conditions we feel today were predicted in 2010. And lots of companies invested then in better HR processes. While it’s true that you can’t control the world’s talent market, you can control the everyday hiring practices in your organization. Encourage your recruiters and hiring managers to meet with candidates who don’t have all 20 out of 20 bullet points from a job description. We’ve all become too dependant on AI and it’s taken over hiring. We need to put the “human” back into Human Resources. You know this intuitively: the best candidates have that “Je ne sais quoi”. Uncovering their unique talents will require a bit of digging.
      • Make the ‘phone screen’ stage matter. Take 20 minutes and really learn about a person because most of the phone screens I’ve been on a total waste of my time and more importantly to you, the thousands upon thousands of hours your company invests for your recruiters to do them.

A final note

Do not ever, ever tell a candidate “This place prints money”. Yes. This really happened to me while speaking with a Fortune 500 company. The hiring manager who recently had joined a major insurance company, located in Milwaukee, WI told me “this place prints money”. Can you imagine anything less motivating to hear during an interview? Basically, his clear message to future employees: “it doesn’t matter what your contribution will be because this company will be successful no matter what“. And you know what? There are some greed-driven and unimaginative candidates who will accept his invitation to sit back and collect a paycheck. And someday, sooner than later, that business will close its doors like every other arrogant company that has when it falls under the weight of its own hubris.

The time to act is now. Companies that are investing in smart and daring leaders are reaping the rewards and future-proofing their companies. They are hiring leaders who behave like humans — with humility and grace. Great talent is searching for you. Help them to find you by 1) investing today in a better employment brand strategy, 2) showing your deep understanding that people are your best asset and, 3) stop following your job descriptions like they are gospel.

Betsy Rowbottom

Betsy Rowbottom

I am an entrepreneur + cheerleader teammate excited to join the right organization who needs my Talent Acquisition & Talent Brand expertise.

Take A Chance On Me

Get in touch:

Betsy Rowbottom @ LinkedIn

June 6, 2012

One thing

One thing

I think I’ve figured out why people do not choose to start companies. Mostly because it’s really hard. Harder than you even imagine. People reject you constantly. It’s tiring pitching your idea to everyone you meet. And people reject you constantly. Constantly.  This leads to lots of questions and internal demons who chant – this is never going to work.  This mountain is too steep. There’s too many unknowns on this path. Oh, yeah, and the pay sucks (well, just until you IPO and you have more money than you ever imagined).

So. Getting a (good) job at a good company with good pay looks pretty damn good. Well, except when you have a job and you fantasize about starting your own business.

Grass is always greener. Life is a challenge on both sides. Seems like there’s always a better life, a better way. When you look around, people seem to have it a little better. Or do they? Really? I believe the trick to a good life – is finding that one thing (you know, like Curly said in City Slickers…)

Curly: Do you know what the secret of life is?
[holds up one finger]
Curly: This.
Mitch: Your finger?
Curly: One thing. Just one thing. You stick to that and the rest don’t mean shit.
Mitch: But, what is the “one thing?”
Curly: [smiles] That’s what *you* have to find out.

When you have that one thing in your grasp, and you know you’ve found it, then stop searching. Let that one thing be enough. Feel gratitude. Appreciate the beauty of your life because it’s fleeting. Because what Curly didn’t tell us is that one thing – it changes. Keep up.

April 19, 2012

Attention: Grumpy job seekers!

How’s the job hunt going?

Are the calls pouring in?

No?  Really?

Yeah, well, I sense your frustration.  So does everyone else.

I get it. Looking for a job sucks but you’re bringing me down.  Best not to regale recruiters with horror stories about looking for a job.  But, this is common sense, right?  Oh, you’d be surprised!  Perhaps it bears mentioning that it’s best not to talk about how the people you’ve reached out to don’t even know what a Curriculum Vitae is.  Best not to talk about how you find yourself surrounded by dummies is not an endearing way to start a conversation.  Listen to me… I’m focusing on the negative, talking about what you don’t want, instead talking about what you do want.  Let’s focus on what you want.

You want:

A great job where you are aligned on every level.  Matching your skills is just one part of the equation.  Look for place when you also share values (do you want to make the world better!? then find an organization that does, also, so you can double your impact AND be happy while working there).

You want:

A place where respect is important and mutual to all parties.  Don’t settle for a company that canceled the first 3 meetings.  Trust your gut.  If you are getting the sense that the company is run by flakes, then tell them you are pursing other opportunities.  It’s ok to move on.  You are wasting effort chasing every lead.

You want:

A job you love.

So go get a job you love.  Don’t settle.  Life is too effen short.

February 14, 2012

Pink Slip Valentine

Lots of people have faced being fired in their careers… or ‘let go’ or some other pleasant euphemism.  During this economic climate, many people – through no fault of their own, have simply been dismissed.   It’s heartbreaking.  But what if it wasn’t?  What if people accepted that ‘pink slip’ with a sense of optimism, freedom and joy instead of dread?

Where does that dread begin?  As usual, it begins with the F Word.  Fear.  The fear of the unknown is tremendously powerful.  Even paralyzing for many.  We see people cling to bad jobs, bad marriages even the way people vote in elections – the idea that people would rather stick with the evil (or even just boring / mundane / uninspiring) that we know rather than strike out in a new direction.  But more and more people are getting brave about chucking the same old, same old for the unknown.  Change is happening so fast in our world, through technology, early adoption is getting mad ‘street cred’!  Sure, people still don’t want to fail, but even the definition of failure is changing.

When I’ve described The Good Jobs to people, many people enthusiastically nod their heads and comment “Yes!  I get it – it’s like Match.com for job seekers!?”   We are creating an online job community for people who want to fall in love with their jobs.  What’s important to you?  Dogs at work – check.  Equity ownership – check.  Flexible schedules – check.  I know what helps me to work well, so I’m going to choose a workplace where I will thrive.  I’ve had lots of jobs that I knew from Day 1, this is not a love connection.  I made the best of it (translation: ‘best of it’ = salary).   But even a relatively decent salary is only compelling for so long…  and sometimes (between pay days) our productivity suffers.  And then, our integrity suffers.   And then, sometimes a pink slip isn’t far behind.

Beat your current employer to the punch by giving them a pink slip.  Select an employer that makes your heart and your wallet sing!

January 31, 2012

7 steps to avoid a terrible, miserable life.

“Do what you love and you will never work a day in your life!”

So.  What if your alarm goes off and you hit snooze?  And then you hit snooze again.  And then after calculating exactly how many vacation days you have left, and a bit of negotiation about how much trouble you’d be in if you called in sick, you start that familiar conversation of psyching yourself up for the day ahead, grab an energy drink and begin your commute.  It’s not even Monday.  It’s Thursday.  Where is your ‘school spirit’?  Have you fallen out of love with your employer already?

I know how you feel.  I’ve been there.

Here are the 7 steps to finding your next good job.

1. Shock & Denial – I can’t believe I accepted this bad job.  I wasn’t my fault.  I didn’t know.

2. Pain & Guilt – I have a terrible stomach ache and I feel guilty that I can’t just suck it up and make this bad job work anymore.

3. Anger & Bargaining – Dang.  I messed up.  I’m so effen stupid.  But maybe if I suck it up and make it work, then people will admire me and I’ll have a good stable work history!?

4.  Depression & Loneliness – No.  No.  No.  I can’t suck it up anymore.  And what’s worse is, I’ll never find a good job.  Some people are lucky enough to find cool jobs, just not me.  I will work at sucky job all of my life and someday, I’ll die.

5. Upward Turn – But hey…  What if I could find a job where I like going to work every day?  I feel better just imagining that there is a better place.  I believe in the possibility of finding a job I love!

6.  Reconstruction & Working Through – There are a few resources out there to help me to find a job that I really want…  http://www.thegoodjobs.com looks like a cool site (launching soon!) that provides relevant information that connects me to THE job, instead of just ANY job…

7. Acceptance – THIS is my offer letter!?  From this awesome company with an amazing culture that matches me and my desire for life/work balance!?  Yes! I accept!