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General job boards: not dead, but dyingCorporate HR recruiters in South Africa looking for high-quality candidates should move beyond general job boards, which have become costly, ineffective black holes for targeting anything other than non-specialist skills. The big sales pitch of most job boards is their proprietary database of millions of candidates. Yet, this inflated number accounts for the total number of registered users, rather than active users in the last, let's say, 30 to 90 days. In reality, the majority of registered candidates are no longer active job seekers and recruiters will only reach a fraction of the claimed number of candidates on the respective board. The large numbers of candidate applicationsAnother problem being experienced by corporates is the large numbers of candidate applications received that do not meet the minimum criteria clearly stated on the job advert. This increases the time that corporate recruiters spend managing candidate responses to jobs. Advertising on general job boards increases the volume of applications received to the detriment of application quality. General job boards are fine for high-churn, easy-to-find candidates who are actively looking for jobs like call centre staff, cashiers or office admin - provided companies have an applicant-tracking system to deal with the CV avalanche. If you're looking for that new specialist developer, credit risk analyst or payroll manager with tax skills, you're not going to find him on a general board. The vast majority of talent with specialist skills at a professional level is already employed and not actively looking for jobs (also called passive candidates). There are more cost-effective ways of sourcing high-quality candidates and searching much better quality databases. The quality of CVs, not the volumeSuccess rides on the quality of CVs, not the volume. On job boards, all recruiters have access to the same CVs, which makes it very difficult to corner desired candidates. Companies need to start targeting a smaller number of the right people, rather than spending large portions of their budgets on roulette with a general job board. Companies only pay a reward on hireCrowd-sourcing candidate referrals are another hugely disruptive new force. Whereas the old method of headhunting had no incentive, employees are now financially encouraged to recommend quality candidates. Companies only pay a reward on hire, which makes it a risk-free strategy. In South Africa, home-grown solutions like HiringBounty occupy this space. About Mark GrayMark Gray is head of Graylink. His vision to re-engineer recruitment using a combination of traditional marketing principals and digital technologies was realised when he founded Graylink in 2002. Contact Mark at mark@graylink.biz. View my profile and articles... |