Social Media Recruiting by Chris Russell

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JobRadio.fm

My latest project is a internet radio station dedicated to career advice. Its called JobRadio.fm. http://jobradio.fm Featuring interviews with career coaches, industry executives and employer jobcasts, the station broadcasts online 24 hours a day. We are sponsored exclusively by SimplyHired. When you consider the crazy job market that exists today, JobRadio.fm is a voice of reason and support. Its more important than ever for job seekers to educate themselves on the job search. So if you know a job hunter, pass this on and tell them to tune into JobRadio.fm

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5 latest Jobcasts from Jobs in Pods

Tired of reading job descriptions that bore you? Then listen to these audio jobcasts published on Jobs in Pods.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Recruiting 2.0 Tidbits

I write a lot about social media as it pertains to recruiting. Here are some interesting posts you might be interested in reading.

Facebook removes network pages, bad news for recruiters How to get your own web 2.0 recruiting site Southwest Airlines using web 2.0 to recruit, retain Top 5 Sourcing sites for this and the next generation Jobs in Pods Youtube channel hits 10,000

 

 

 

 

 

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Two things every corporate recruiter should see & hear about social media

I have discovered 2 pieces of media which every recruiter MUST consume if they want to adopt and promote social media in their own company.

The first is a video from Jeremiah Owyang, Forrester Analyst.

In it Len Devanna, Web Strategist at EMC says the following on getting executive buy-in:

“How are your kids communicating? Are they talking online? Are they twittering? And that generally rings true, that this medium is real…its here to stay and the current generation coming up expects it from a company.”

The second item is a podcast from the Marketing Edge. Its even more revealing than the first.

In it, Chris Barger, a Social Media Strategist for IBM/GM says this about the ROI of social media:

“This is a relationship building process, sales happen as part of a larger relationship and thats what blogging, podcasting and online social media was intended to do.”

Interviewer Albert Maruggi’s reaction to the above statement is priceless. There is no better explanation of what social media is and is not in this interview.

Click here for the links to video and audio. 

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What happens when you mix web 2.0 and HR

I got a call yesterday from a recruiter at a major insurance company. She was investigating the use of “web 2.0” technologies (aka ‘social media‘) for recruiting and wanted some advice. It was a refreshing call. We think HR is finally beginning the push into these new media tools.

Several employers we have talked to recently seem to be researching the tools of web 2.0, so at least they are beginning to recognize the fact that they have to change their strategies to take advantage of them. In this month’s HR Magazine we came across a study about the use of web 2.0 and HR. Here's the press release.

Its interesting to note that 34% are actively using some form of web 2.0 to recruit.  But 65% of respondents said they do not use or have never heard of them. Over the next 2 years that should change in our opinion. Most HR departments are rather slow at adopting new technologies, but as the milennials enter the workforce their influence will help change that. They will expect their employers to integrate these tools into the workplace (see what one company does). In fact, we think there will be whole new positions created like “Social Network Recruiter” whose sole job it will be to post jobs and interact with users on Facebook and MySpace.

Social Media Recruiting. Just do it.

 

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Map of social media recruiting

In honor of Robert Scoble's social media starfish, I created a recruiting version called the social media recruiting starfish. These are tools any employer can use to promote themselves and attract candidates.

 

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Recruiting with Podcasts Catching on with Employers

Several prominent employers now podcasting their jobs as part of their recruiting strategy.

Is your company looking for a different way to advertise your jobs? A growing number of employers are beginning to use podcasts as recruitment advertising in an effort to standout and connect with the iPod generation now entering the workforce.

 

'Jobcasting' as it's called is a fairly new tool among corporate recruiters. Companies like Microsoft and Accenture were among the first to recognize the media as a marketing tool. Microsoft began theirs in March of 2005. You can hear several of them on the Microsoft Jobs Blog. Now a new service called Jobs in Pods (http://www.jobsinpods.com) has become the defacto site to hear jobcasts from employers in the US and Canada. In existence since March of 2007, the site now claims several prominent companies such as Intel Corporation, ZoomInfo.com, AT&T, Verizon Wireless among its clients.

 

What's unique about the service is that employers don't have to have any knowledge about actual podcasting. "We do all the work," says Chris Russell the founder of Jobs in Pods. "All the employer has to do is pick up the phone and answer the questions," he adds. Once the call is finished, the audio file is then published on Jobinpods.com and sites like Podcast.com, Blogorama and Podcast Alley. They even make their way onto a YouTube channel as videos where the audio is teamed with an image placeholder that details the topic of the podcast.

 

Jobcasts are also available for employers to place directly on their own corporate career site via the use of a widget or RSS feed.

 

Clients like Exempla Healthcare in Colorado love the service. "We hope this communicates to candidates that Exempla embraces a forward thinking approach in all aspects of business -- from recruiting employees to delivering patient car," states Gillian Sloan, Exempla's Recruitment Manager.

 

Each jobcast is about 8-10 minutes long and typically discusses one job in detail or a particular career path within a department. Employers are given the questions ahead of time so they may prepare. Russell believes that podcasting is part of online recruiting's future. "Social media is taking over and employers can either embrace it or hide. Blogs, podcasts, video and social networks will soon become the candidates preferred choice of contact", he adds.

 

With the rise of sites like Facebook, YouTube and others, he may be right.

 

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11:20 am | 3 recommendations | 1 comment

Recruiting is evolving

Social Media writer Monica Hamburg has just written a great post entitled Recruitment 2.0/HR 2.0. There is a particular passage which caught our attention:

Companies should keep in mind that there is now, more than ever, a balance of power with e-recruiting.  Businesses can learn more about candidates and attract ideal employees, but employees have the same ability to research businesses and find their perfect workplace.  With that in mind, company culture has become an immense selling point for prospective hires.  The use of a company’s own videos and pictures can entice candidates by giving them a glimpse of the inner workings and presenting the human side of the company

Natalie Michael, Partner of the Karmichael Group, an executive search and recruitment strategy firm, states that now “there is even greater pressure on organizations to focus on employee engagement and retention, and having a culture that is a unique differentiator.  If competitors are “sharing employee lists” by having employees visible on Linkedin, for instance, “they need to strengthen their people practices so this is not a competitive threat.  They can do this by having a unique value proposition, focusing on meeting individual’s needs and having a culture that can not easily be replicated by the competition.”

She is so right. Your company culture has to become a major selling point in your recruiting efforts. Anything you can do to showcase that culture, be it video, pictures, blogging or podcasts is a good thing. Today’s job seeker has a myriad of choices before them. Your company needs to give them lots of reasons to make you their employer of choice.

Being proactive with social media recruiting is the latest way to do just that.

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