Recruit 1220 1402x672

4 Things That Do Not Change for Recruiting and Hiring During a Crisis

Dec. 1, 2020
Unfortunately, there will always be another crisis to deal with. Whether it’s a health concern, a business concern with vendors, customers and/or employees, or an economic concern, it looks like […]

Unfortunately, there will always be another crisis to deal with. Whether it’s a health concern, a business concern with vendors, customers and/or employees, or an economic concern, it looks like these crises may be here to stay for a while. While companies spend time in their war rooms making important decision about customer, vendor, and employee, interactions, there is an important audience that requires your focus and planning as well: Job Candidates.

The candidate experience has likely been mapped out and refined by your Human Resources or hiring manager team, and is both an art and a science. Representing your brand from the very first interaction, through interviews and onboarding, it is all about the relationship.

Food for Thought from Our 2022 ICT Visionaries

4 Key Elements

In the turbulent times you have ahead of you it becomes even more important to bring your candidate experience to life, even if it’s done from afar. As you think about your strategy to keep the hiring engines on and bring in the talent your organization needs for the future, here are 4 key elements of the experience that should not change during any crisis.

1. Communication. You need to communicate in new ways and through different channels, but do not let your touchpoints or interaction with candidates go quiet! It’s even more important now to stay connected through phone, video, text, chat, or even carrier pigeon — whatever you use as your remote tool. Consider doubling your efforts to reassure candidates your hiring engine is not going to be turned off during this period.

2. Set Clear Expectations. In your communication, one area to be clear, consistent, and sure about, are Expectations. If your company has suspended all travel and banned visitors to your office, that is a reasonable business move at this moment. Not telling candidates that you’ve made this move is not!

If you had shared with a candidate that they will eventually be invited in for an in-person interview and that can’t happen anymore, be clear about the contingency plan, if the hiring will be paused based on the nature of the role, and when you will take a next step.

3. Keep Interviewing. Video interviewing is not new — but not every company is using it. You don’t need a fancy tool; it can be any two-way video chat that you use to establish a visual connection to your candidates.

If you do have a video interviewing tool in place, you can continue to scale your hiring efforts and build a talent pipeline — but make sure you keep Key Elements #1 and #2 (See above) at the forefront of your efforts.

If you are not entering a hiring freeze, talent acquisition teams should continue as much of their usual operation as possible.

4. Be Ready. Recruiters are the face of your company for most candidates. Arming them with the latest updates, decisions, business impacts, and positive steps your company is taking during this crisis, is very important. Much like you would share a new product release, award, or new executives named at the company, updates about your safety and productivity efforts should be available for Recruiters to share with candidates who will likely have questions about how your organization is protecting employees, the financial impact that might change the company’s outlook, or leading efforts to keep communities safe.

It’s a daunting time to worry about your health and the health of those you care about. There are complexities from manufacturing and retail roles that are done only in person, to trying to work in new ways to get a sense for who someone is in more corporate roles without being able to meet them. Companies are asking candidates if they feel comfortable coming to a business location for interviews, knowing there might be some risk, and both sides trying to navigate the pros and cons in the effort of having the best matched talent in each role.

Through all the uncertainty and differing opinions on what the best approach forward is, remember that the candidate experience must remain top of mind. It is your differentiator, and how you treat candidates now impacts your ability to hire for the foreseeable future.

If you don’t know the answer to timelines, travel guidance, or your office policies are in flux right now, that’s OK! Many companies are making decisions every day in real time as new information comes to light. Communicating badly, not being clear about expectations, stopping your talent acquisition engines, and keeping your Recruiters or HR teams in the dark is not OK!

Like this Article?

Subscribe to ISE magazine and start receiving your FREE monthly copy today!

Many locations may be in a state of change for the foreseeable future. It is not a place anyone wants to be in — but everyone is — so you have to make sure to keep focused on engaging with candidates to show them that regardless of any external factor, that your company is great place to be.

About the Author: Jeremy Eskenazi is an internationally recognized speaker, author of RecruitConsult! Leadership, and founder of Riviera Advisors, a boutique Recruitment/Talent Acquisition Management and Optimization Consulting Firm. Jeremy is a specialized training and consulting professional, helping global HR leaders transform how they attract top talent at some of the world’s most recognized companies. For more information, please visit www.RivieraAdvisors.com.

About the Author

Human Network Contributor

If you're interested in contributing an article, please email Sharon Vollman, Editorial Director, [email protected], or Lisa Weimer, Managing Editor, ISE Magazine, [email protected].