oday, only a minority of companies
nationwide are able to make investment decisions about
staffing and recruitment based on hard data, rather than
anecdotal evidence.
Those that keep track of their
hires and measure the success of recruitment channels have
slashed budgets and saved valuable time. Here is a look at
some of these forward thinkers, starting with Valero Energy
Corp.
Two years ago, the San Antonio-based
company hired Dan Hilbert as employment manager to transform a
staffing group for a company with a couple of hundred people
into a human resources department for a Fortune 25
company.
Valero had acquired Ultramar Diamond
Shamrock Corp., making it one of the top three U.S. refiners
of petroleum products, a $55 billion company with 15
refineries and 4,700 stores. Hilbert believes strongly that
what you can’t measure, you can’t improve.
A year ago, the company began using HR
Smart’s Smart Reporter product, which allows it to keep track
of the effectiveness of recruitment advertising and gives
Hilbert a weekly snapshot of which sources produce the most
hires. His metrics show how well each advertising channel is
delivering.
Valero then created a tool that
integrates employment data pulled from the company’s HR
information system, budgetary data and performance data from
employee reviews and uses it to predict which channels will be
most effective at filling a position and producing a quality
employee. "It has been a monstrous undertaking," Hilbert says.
Hilbert has saved the company money.
February’s data, for example, showed that of the 30
recruitment channels Valero uses, it got better candidates by
advertising on niche industry sites than on major job boards
or through other channels. Hilbert said the average
cost-to-hire for candidates from niche boards is about $1,100;
from major job boards it’s about $1,600; and outside
recruiters cost the company nearly $22,000 per hire. "We’ve
reduced our cost-to-hire 60 percent over the last two years
and rely on outside recruiters now for less than 10 percent of
our hires," he says.
With results like that, tracking and
measuring exactly where new hires come from would seem to be a
no-brainer. It’s not. Nick
Burkholder, founder of Staffing.org, an organization that
helps members use human capital measurements to make hiring
decisions, says one reason more companies aren’t measuring
recruiting performance is that workforce management executives
are obsessed with strategies rather than numbers. "Real
leaders are obsessed with objectives, not strategy. You can’t
measure strategy," Burkholder says. "The No. 1 reason HR execs
lose their jobs is because they can’t document what they do
for the organization."
Mark Mehler and Gerry Crispin,
co-founders of CareerXroads, a recruiting consulting firm in
Kendall Park, New Jersey, released the results of their annual
Sources of Hire survey in March. Of the 150-plus
Fortune 500 companies contacted, only 40 were able to
participate, a sign that many don’t track source of hire. "If
you are hiring thousands and tens of thousands of people,
that’s a lot of data to manage," Mehler says. "A recruiter is
trying to source candidates, set up interviews. They have 50
jobs on their plates, and then you’re asking them to do more
administrative work? It’s not high on their list of
priorities."
Convincing engineers
Drew
Farren, staffing manager for North America, the Middle East,
Europe and Africa at Corning Inc. in Corning, New York, says
the company has been tracking hiring data since 1999. Corning
is ahead of the curve, Farren says, because numbers are at the
heart of the engineering company’s culture. "Everyone we have
to convince when we want to make changes are engineers, and we
need numbers to convince them," he says.
Although Corning outsources all its
recruiting to outside vendors, Farren says the company decides
how recruiters spend their money and gives them specific
objectives in terms of hires needed, when they’re needed and
what qualifications are required.
Farren gets monthly reports from
Corning’s recruiting partner (an outside vendor that Farren
declined to disclose) showing the number of applicants versus
hires from each source, including all major and niche job
boards. That data allows Farren to dictate to recruiters what
percentage of their budget is spent on each sourcing channel.
Thirty percent of Corning’s open positions are filled
internally, and 40 percent come from employee referrals.
"We would probably spend 50 percent more
on recruiting if we didn’t track this information and look at
it," Farren says. "We would be throwing money away on the
wrong sources. Especially with online job boards, they can’t
tell you the true ROI numbers. They tell you they have X
amount of resumes for a position you’ve posted, but do those
resumes match your industry?"
Based on its hiring data, Corning has
decreased its visibility at career fairs and spends more now
on networking for employee referrals and lists of people that
either could be candidates or who may know others that would
make suitable candidates for jobs at Corning. Two years ago,
it spent no money on such lists.
Getting better rates
Plantronics, a leading manufacturer of lightweight
communication headsets, uses metrics to back up every decision
made, says Layne Buckley. The human resources manager at the
Santa Cruz, California, company uses tools from Hire.com to
track applicants and hires. Buckley looks at the results at
least monthly, usually more often. The cost to track hires is
minimal, he says, because the technology to do it exists in
the automated services the company gets from Hire.com anyway.
Buckley also uses the data to gauge the
effectiveness of a direct-mail campaign he conducts every
month, where a targeted marketing mailer is e-mailed to a
specific group of potential candidates. Buckley determines who
gets the mailer--sent to 10,000-35,000 people a month—by
mining his database for those who have not been hired but who
have a particular skill set. "We keep track of how many open
the e-mail, click through to apply for positions and how many
get hired," he says.
Plantronics uses tracking data from job
boards to improve the terms of its contracts. "One major job
board we were using went from constituting about 40 percent of
our applicant traffic to less than 5 percent, and we were able
to show (the job board) we weren’t as heavily dependant on
them as we once were," Buckley says. "We wound up securing
greater services from them without increasing our investment."
Most productive, most
effective
Federated Department
Stores--owner of Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s and, after a February
merger with May Department Stores Co., 15 other brands--has
been tracking its hires since 2001 using WetFeet Recruiter,
which supports all of the company’s online recruiting efforts.
Federated’s No 1. priority is its own
recruitment Web sites, such as Bloomingdalesjobs.com and
Macysjobs.com, because of the tremendous overlap between job
seeker and consumer. Susan Burns, director of employment
initiatives at Federated, says her data shows that both
employee referrals and company sites are key sources of good
hires. "Not only are our own corporate recruiting sites the
most productive--in terms of hires and conversion rate from
applicant to hire--but they are the most cost-effective," she
says.
Burns looks at how successful a source
is in driving traffic that results in a completed application
and a hire. Last year, Federated noticed that a major job
board had changed its list of affiliated job sites--the
smaller sites to which larger ones like Monster sometimes
funnel jobs. "For us it was a pretty significant thing, very
positive. And based on our hiring data, we made a decision to
aggressively reallocate funds," Burns says. "A year later we
looked at the numbers and saw it was the right move."
Sarah George, senior vice president and
director of recruiting business, strategy and operations at Wachovia,
used hiring information to change the company’s Internet
recruiting strategy. Three years ago, Wachovia decided to look
more closely at its data and found that although Internet job
boards were the cheapest way to get hires, the volume of
applicants was overwhelming. "It was costing us money to deal
with it," she says. "You get a lot of spam. Abundance is what
the Internet is good at, but in this labor market we don’t
need abundance, we need quality," George says.
Peter Weddle, who publishes an annual
guide to employment Web sites, says volume is a problem for
many companies. He estimates that there are about 40,000
commercial job sites on the Internet at any one time. "That’s
a good reason to use niche sites--at least everyone is an
engineer or a software designer. We are in the third
generation of job postings online, and we need to be more
savvy buyers than we were as early adopters," he says.
Wachovia’s George used sources-of-hire
tracking data to see where the company’s investment in
Internet advertising was paying off. "We began looking at
sites in terms of quality of hire, rather than number of
hires," she says. Her analysis led to more limited posting of
jobs through job boards and for shorter periods of time.
Technology from Kenexa, a human capital
management company in Wayne, Pennsylvania, allows George to
track her hires at minimal cost, following them from
application through employment and also giving information
about where potential hires drop out of the process. Her goal
is to get more qualified candidates faster. Today Wachovia’s
recruiters deal with hundreds of candidates as they try to
fill open positions; George says that a year from now she
hopes each recruiter will have 10 well-qualified people in the
palm of their hand.