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People, People Who Need People
Inger Larsen, Larsen Globalisation
Your best sales person has just been headhunted elsewhere, your strategic account manager for your biggest client is soon off on maternity leave - or paternity, depending on where you are, there's a large new project coming in and you'll need to hire new project managers with a specific technical experience and German, plus an engineer, and one of the new recruits is not working out. Being a hiring manager sometimes feel like it doesn't rain but pours.
Quite often in our industry, there isn’t a separate HR department with a
dedicated recruiter. It often falls to the hiring manager to "sort this
mess out." Files don’t jump from the client and through TM in the most
efficient way and with the most wonderful result; files don’t compile
themselves…
There are people behind all of these phases,
which is why people are so important. Good ones, in particular. You may be
able to attract them, but will you be able to retain them? Or maybe you
don’t want to? How can you attract the best talent?
Planning
ahead
Look back at the last year or two, how many people
left, how many didn't work out, and what has the growth ratio for the
business been? What will it be like for the next year?
Let's say
you've got a team of six project managers, and two of them have been with
you for three years. If they don't get a promotion within the company,
chances are that at least one of them will leave. Good people are
ambitious. They will stay in one job for typically two to three years.
After that, they will look elsewhere if they can't find their next step in
the same company. Either way, they may want a new experience in a
different company, with a different culture, learning new skills. So plan
accordingly.
"Study the psychology of the individual"
Quoting
Wodehouse's Jeeves, I think it might be appropriate to take a moment to
reflect upon what kind of people it is that we deal with.
Most of
our talent comes from either translators or engineers. Both groups
typically attract very bright, detail-oriented and often introverted
people. When they move up into project management or team management, not
to mention client management or sales, there can be a conflict when we are
looking for dynamic extroverts. So, for mid- to senior talent we are often
looking for unusual talents within the pool we have got.
How
to retain people
People look for a job where they feel
valued, reasonably secure, well paid and challenged - in about that order,
I think. The tone of a company's culture and personality is set from the
top. I have seen that a popular or unpopular operations manager, for
instance, can be very influential in how successfully the company manages
to retain people.
Money is quite important, but not the major
driving factor with most people. Yes, we want to advance every few years
in terms of challenges and a salary increase and we want to be paid the
market rate, but it is only in extreme cases that it is the major driver
for people to leave.
Little things can matter quite a lot. Such as
the day off on your birthday, free fruit, social evenings and reward and
recognition schemes. With bigger events, like the arrival of a family, the
companies that do best are those that cater for life-work balance such as
flexi-time and the ability to work from home from time to time.
Stress
and feeling overwhelmed by the workload is as detrimental as feeling
under-challenged. People don't want to work long hours every day, month
after month and never feel they are still not on top of things. Neither do
they want the same routine every day for years either. It should take
someone about a year to get properly settled into a job, a year when they
handle it well, maybe even excel at it, and in the third they will need to
be stretched again.
How long to retain?
Companies
have very clear personalities; some are “slipper” companies where
everything is very comfortable, while the other extreme is what I call the
“chew ‘em up and spit ‘em out” variety. There are some companies that want
to hang on to people for ever, keep the dynamics the same and hire people
with a perfect fit.
Others actually plan with only keeping people
for a relatively short time. In some cases, I can understand their
business reasons for doing so. Take one company that recruits very bright
graduates, using a specialist graduate recruitment company to do so. They
train them from scratch, don't pay them very much, they work hard and stay
for a couple of years. And then they come to me. Great! This particular
company is continuing to do well – they've had the same number of
employees and the same annual turnover for the past five years. Maybe
that's all they want. Others have grown by 30% year on year.
Personally
– and obviously – I am more of a people collector. I think the ideal mix
is retaining the majority, with some of the new replacements not just
being replacements, but a bit of fresh blood and “new brooms”. That way
you get a healthy circulation.
I see companies who look for clones
of the ones they have, maybe of themselves. Yes, that will work for many.
But I think the odd "troublemaker" can add a lot to a company. Not
comfortably, but many companies can get a bit stuck. Get someone in with
fresh ideas, who's seen something else, who can add to what you have got.
But you have to be prepared to support them.
How to
source candidates
First of all, look within your company.
Are there candidates groomed for promotion? Internal promotions always
send out positive signals. Ask your employees if they can recommend
someone. Maybe offer a "finder's fee".
Use your web site
wisely. A lot of potential candidates research web sites and send their
CVs to the companies that suit them. Sometimes this works, but I often
hear that "I sent my CV to them months ago and never heard back." It gives
a bad impression. Keeping on top of the candidate flow is time-consuming,
so if you don't have the capacity to respond to general job inquiries,
only post current vacancies and try to respond to everyone, even if it is
a standardized message.
The same goes for advertising either
locally or in the industry press.
Where you are based
geographically matters a lot more than you might think. It might be
idyllic to base the office in the country-side, but it makes it so much
harder to attract professional talent. Most of the candidates I come
across in Europe have very clear views of where they want to relocate.
Major cities and warm locations score about equally high. London ,
southern France and San Francisco are firm favorite with the vast majority.
It
also matters what kind of reputation a company has in the industry. It
doesn't only apply to senior, seasoned professionals. It happens equally
often that we get translators and engineers who will tell us exactly which
companies they don't want to work for, as they have heard about a company
from friends and colleagues. It is so prevalent, in fact, that we have
created a special field for it in our online registration system.
Recruitment
agencies
Some companies use recruiters like us to save
time, effort and money. Maybe they have tried themselves to recruit people
and not found the right person and it's getting urgent. In fact, the
candidate should have started yesterday. We have a pool of qualified
candidates from the industry and we already know what they are looking
for, where and for how much.
Others go straight to recruiters as a
way of planned outsourcing with a clear deadline for the various
activities – receiving pre-qualified candidates, interviewing them and
start date.
Some come to us very discretely, concerned that a
current employee is planning to leave and they don't want to be completely
unprepared. Or it could be that someone is not working out.
Be
clear about what you want from recruiters. You don't want twenty CVs that
you have to sift through yourself, and you don't want people who have no
idea they have been put forward for your vacancy. You need maybe five
really good CVs from qualified people who want to work with you, in your
location and at the salary scale you are offering.
You also need to
be realistic about the time it still takes to hire, bearing in mind that
you have to interview probably twice and that people have notice periods.
Regardless of how you source the candidates, you need to have some basics
in place.
How to recruit effectively
First
of all, be clear about what you need. Write a job specification with clear
tasks and responsibilities. List which qualifications you need as a
minimum requirement and which are nice to have. Think carefully about
which salary you are going to offer. Make sure it's in line with other
employees' salaries, while being attractive and realistic.
According
to one text book on effective recruitment [1],
on a scale from 1 to 10, assessment centers and a sharp interview and come
in at the top and 7 and 6 respectively, followed by psychometric testing
at 5. A badly prepared and casually conducted interview comes in near the
bottom, along with graphology and astrology.
Prepare your interview
questions well, for instance “Describe a really challenging project you
have worked on” and “What do you do when you disagree with your manager?”
Get people to talk about difficult situations rather than just their
talents.
Use the same questions for everyone; give them all an
equal chance. Make notes immediately afterwards, using the same assessment
criteria. You should think about carefully and define your assessment
criteria long before the interview.
Get as many colleagues as
practical involved in the selection process. The ones that have given
their thumbs up for the candidate will also be supportive of them when
they start.
In summary
Hang on to the
good people you have got by offering them a good place to work, suitable
for different levels of ambition and life situations. Some will still
leave, hopefully for good reasons. Plan with how to replace them just like
you plan a project. Put backup and succession plans in place; make sure
you have a pipeline of candidates and a good process to select the right
ones.
If it isn't a Chinese proverb already, let's make a new one:
Care about your people, then good people will come to you.

Pictured L-R : The Larsen Team: Inger Larsen, Denise Spacinsky,
Costanza Marinelli and Gretta FitzGerald
Inger Larsen is the founder of Larsen
Globalisation recruitment, which has provided recruitment services
to the localization industry worldwide since 2000, with offices in
London , Dublin , Paris and Boston . Before this, Inger worked
internationally in localization for 15 years. She is also pursuing an
MSc in International Human Resource Management. She can be contacted at
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[1] Pilbeam and Corbridge. Predictive
Validity of Selection Methods.