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campus-recruiting-forum.jpgI've had the pleasure of presenting at a number of college recruiting conferences. CollegeRecruiter.com occasionally even exhibits at or sponsors these events. One of the best conferences is the Brainstorm Consulting's Campus Recruiting Forum. If you're itching to learn what's new in campus hiring - from social networking sites to hiring trends to the changing nature of Gen Y -- then have a look at your calendar in early December because there will be a Campus Recruiting Forum in San Francisco on Tuesday, December 2nd and in Washington, D.C. on Thursday, December 4th.

You'll find that the Campus Recruiting Forum is focused entirely on increasing the skills and expertise with which organizations like yours hire students and graduates. It features several workshops, plenary sessions, and panel discussions in one full day.

Continue reading "College Recruiting Conferences in December" »

A number of Canadian employers have apparently decided that if they can't fight it, they should join it. That is, they have come to expect that many of their Gen Y candidates are going to involve their parents in the minutia of their career decisions. Although many of the employers likely shake their heads at how some Gen Y'ers go so far as to bring their parents to interviews and don't accept such behavior, those same employers have come to realize that if they don't expect such behavior and learn to deal with it then they won't be able to hire and retain the best of Gen Y.

Expect it but don't accept it. That is a new line that my wife and I are using as we enter the teenage years with our kids. We understand that they're going to do some things that don't make sense but that doesn't mean that we are going to let them get away with doing those things. They need to make mistakes in order to learn and it is our job to help them learn from those mistakes. Likewise, it is the job of a good employer to make their employees better. Expect that your employees, especially your less experienced ones, will make mistakes. But don't accept those mistakes. Teach them. Help them to grow. And then enjoy watching them mature into the fine, upstanding, highly productive employees they will become.

It always amazes me how critical of Gen Y are a number of thought leaders in the recruiting industry. You hear words being thrown around like lazy, selfish, misguided, under educated, and worse. There's no doubt that some of those words are entirely appropriate to describe some members of Gen Y but then the same words also apply to some members of Gen X and some Baby Boomers.

I recently read an article by Sarah Welstead of Head2Head and she makes the point that rather than complaining about the motivation, skills, or other attributes of Gen Y, those who complain would be much better served by directing some of that negative energy into helping members of Gen Y improve. Do you know a member of Gen Y who is unmotivated? Rather than bemoan their lack of motivation, give back to the community by investing in that young adult and teach them how to become better motivated. Do you know a member of Gen Y who struggles with oral communication skills? Give back by teaching them how to better articulate their thoughts.

Criticizing something is easy. Being part of the solution is hard. I wonder -- are these critics willing and able to become part of the solution? I hope so.

Jonathan Goodman HRMarketerI had the opportunity to sit down prior to the International Association of Employment Web Sites (IAEWS) conference with Jonathan Goodman, Vice President of Business & Membership Development, and Mark Willaman, President and Founder, of FISHER VISTA, LLC / HRmarketer.com.

For part of the meeting, Jonathan recorded his interview with me during which we discussed the economy, the future of the job board industry, the conference, and some assorted other odds and ends. HRMarketer did a really nice job cleaning up the audio. If only they could have made some of my answers a little more intelligible.

Two of my favorite recruiting experts recently teamed up to shoot a short video. The topic? One which is near and dear to my heart: tactics and strategies that employers should use to attract the best Gen Y / Millennial talent to their organizations.

In the video below, Bill Vick interviews Alexandra Levit. If you've never read Alexandra's work, you'll love it. If you've read her insights before, you'll likely be reminded of some great ideas and learn some new ones.

Continue reading "Alexandra Levit Video: How Employers Should Attract Gen Y" »

Generation Y a/k/a Millennials promise to:


  1. Hold only productive meetings. Hallelujah!
  2. Shorten the workday by focusing on productivity.
  3. Bring back administrative assistants -- even if Gen Y pays for them out-of-pocket and even if they're virtual.
  4. Redefine retirement by taking multiple mini-retirements.
  5. They'll find real mentors by teaching older workers about technology and in return be guided through office politics.
  6. Put human back into human resources.
  7. Promote people to management based on their managerial skills, not their seniority.
  8. Continue to value what their parents have to offer because Gen Y respects their parents and their parents respect their Gen Y children.
  9. Trade off potential raises and promotions for higher starting salaries.
  10. Re-invent the performance reviews by increasing their frequency from semi-annual or even annual to on-the-spot.

Source: Employee Evolution

It's been a year since Paul DeBettignies a/k/a the Minnesota Headhunter, Josh Kahn of Accenture at Best Buy, and I got together at Chipotle for some burritos and to plot strategy for how to increase the number of active recruiting bloggers in Minnesota. One thing led to another, which is often the case when you get three guys together over exceptionally good food, and the end result was the Minnesota Recruiters (un)Conferences.

Josh has been instrumental in getting the group access to the Best Buy world headquarters facilities. They have superb meeting rooms and the price is certainly right. Their in-house catering service also bends over backwards to make it as easy as possible to host an event in their building.

Joining the group later was Nicole St. Martin, who we affectionately refer to as Paul's wingman. She's the one who makes these volunteer-driven events happen so professionally that I have to believe that most attendees think that Tinkerbell must be involved as everything just magically works perfectly. She's an incredible asset to the recruiting world generally and the human resource search engine optimization community
specifically.

But it is Paul DeBettignies who is the driving force. He is the visionary and the face of the organization. My involvement has been negligible after that initial burrito fest. His involvement has been almost like a full-time job. His energy, enthusiasm, sense of humor, and wisdom are infectious. People just love to be around him. He must do incredible work helping his employer clients find outstanding I.T. candidates.

If you've never attended a Minnesota Recruiters (un)Conference, you have another chance. Here are the details:

Continue reading "Minnesota Recruiters (un)Conference Spring 2008 - Free!" »

Ryan Healy at Employee Evolution just posted a very thought provoking blog article for Gen Y employees about how they can become leaders in their organizations. Healy offers four tips:


  1. Demonstrate that you're able and willing to make the decisions because leaders need to decide even when they don't have all of the information available.
  2. Try new things. "Being comfortable and competent in unfamiliar situations is a sign of true leadership ability. So whenever you have the opportunity to do something new, try it!"
  3. Surround yourself with people smarter than you. You don't need to lead them at every opportunity or even occasionally. But interact with smart people and learn "to hold your own in complex or thoughtful conversations."
  4. Learn to work well alone. Leaders often have to make decisions by themselves and work through issues without the assistance from others.

    Continue reading "How and Whether to Make a 22 Year Old Your Leader" »

There aren't many training sessions designed specifically to help college recruiters become more successful at their trade and fewer still which have been around for 19 years but there is one: the popular Recruiting Workshops offered through Duke University's Fuqua School of Business.

Since 1987, the popular Recruiting Workshops have provided training for thousands of college recruiting professionals across the United States. The format of each workshop is designed to accommodate a variety of experience levels, company sizes and individual needs. The interplay of general seminars -- conducted by outstanding professionals -- with small group and hands-on learning opportunities permits each participant the maximum flexibility to gain what he/she needs from the program.

Continue reading "Duke University Offers Training for College Recruiters" »

Those who meet me often quickly detect that I have a strange accent for someone who lives in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis / Saint Paul. Some people here think that I must have grown up in New York while others more accurately put my hometown somewhere up in the Iron Range of northeastern Minnesota. The latter is closer to the truth but not quite there.

I grew up in Winnipeg, Canada and became a dual citizen after moving to Minneapolis for school and the weather. One of the advantages of growing up in Canada is that you realize better than a lot of Americans do just how intertwined the countries are and aren't. Culturally they're pretty similar but they have some remarkable differences. Economically they're even more similar yet are still and probably always will be remarkably separated.

An example of that economic separation are recruiting conferences. Few American recruiters or other human resource professionals have ever ventured north of the border for a recruiting conference. That's a shame because there are some wonderful conferences in world class cities such as Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal. And the lack of northern exposure shouldn't be the case because those cities are so incredibly easy to get to from just about every American city.

Continue reading "Search, Employment and Staffing Conference" »

Great article in the Dallas Morning News about why employers need to learn how to get the best out of Millennials and how to do that.

In a nutshell, Millennials are imminently teachable and well worth the effort. They're high achievers, confident, and go, go, go. But to get the best out of the Millennials, you have to invest in them. You have to give them a mentor to teach them how to navigate the adult world. You have to tell them in black and white what your expectations are for them and what the consequences will be if they don't meet those expectations.

tattlingHere's the scenario: you're a hiring manager, recruiter, or other human resources professional and you're trolling the CollegeRecruiter.com resume bank (why would you possibly want to use any other?) in search of students searching for internships or recent graduates hunting for entry level jobs. You stumble across the resume of one of your organization's current employees. Do you forward a copy to that employee's manager to let her know that her employee may be looking to jump ship? Do you confront the employee? Do you ignore it because taking action would be akin to tattling?

I believe that that HR should inform a manager when HR discovers that one of the manager's employees in a job board's resume bank. However, I also think that HR should make sure that the manager understands that the existence of the resume does NOT mean that the employee intends to jump ship.

Continue reading "Telling a Manager You Found Their Employee's Resume On-line: Is It Tattling?" »

Well, that's what I hear from too many hiring managers and recruiters when I speak with them by phone, trade emails, and at recruiting conferences. The hiring managers tend to fall into two groups:


  1. Those who are frustrated by Millennials who accept a job offer but then quit within months to take a position that offers a bit more pay from an employer across the street.
  2. Those who are frustrated by Millennials who won't accept a job offer because the pay isn't enough even though the opportunity is otherwise perfect for them.

What's behind all of this? Massive student loan debt. The cost of college education has spiraled so far out of control that this generation is faced with a necessity to make good money, where previous generations preferred it but didn't need it. The job-hopping that Gen Y has been accused of doing is directly attributable to the irreconcilable differences between their needs and their wants. They need to make lots of money through their internships and entry level jobs upon graduation in order to pay off their student loans. But they want flexible time, lots of time off and lots of vacation time -- all those things that prohibit an employer from paying a lot of money.

Continue reading "Millennials Are Driving Me Crazy" »

Small businesses can leverage the recruitment process by integrating successful internship programs into their companies. The process is simple: develop an internship outline with objectives, provide students with career related experience, and recognize students whom excel within the program. The list is quite short, but the most innovative internships withhold these three necessities. Small businesses can use an internship to create a funnel of talented recruiters for future employment with their company.

Develop a program with learning objectives.

The first step to integrating a successful internship is by developing a program with learning objectives. While planning, the company must address its needs by surveying current staff of strengths and weaknesses. The survey will pinpoint aspects of the small business that needs improvement through human resource’s recruiting efforts. The best way to outline learning objectives (or milestones) is by evaluating the staff in each department of the small business. Without an understanding what the small business needs, the recruiting process may become blurred. With this said, successful internships must provide a clear objective so recruits experience career options the company offers.

Continue reading "Three Steps for Small Businesses to Integrate Internships to Develop Candidates for Future Employment" »

I was honored to be offered the opportunity to be part of the presentation by Bill Vick for this week's Dallas Recruiting Roadshow Unconference. Bill, who is always looking for new and better ways of getting the job done, used webcams and Skype Video to record the segment with me and the other "panelists."

For my segment, Bill interviewed me about how recruiters can and should use social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace. Couldn't be at the Dallas event? No problem. Here's my presentation:

I recently read a note posted to a recruiting discussion list saying, in part, that candidates who have time to be active on social networking sites aren't working and aren't of interest to him. I couldn't disagree with the author more on this point.

I suspect that the author was thinking about the typical Baby Boomer or Gen X candidate when he was writing his post. But 95 percent (that's the actual number) of college students and recent graduates are active users of Facebook. As these candidates progress through their careers, they will continue to be active users of social networking sites because those sites are as much a part of their lives as is TV for Gen X'ers. Even the busiest of Gen X'ers watches TV and the same holds true for Gen Y'ers: even the busiest of them uses social networking sites.

Continue reading "Why Employers Need to Embrace Social Networking" »

Doug Risebrough photoDoug Risebrough, former hockey player extraordinaire and now general manager of the Minnesota Wild, has quietly joined the recruiting blogosphere. According to the Star Tribune, Risebrough didn't know what a blog was a year ago but is now a blogger. Welcome!

Risebrough's first blog entry came almost a month ago on October 30th. His blog entry initially discussed the team's upcoming game against Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins. I was fortunate enough to attend that fabulous game after finding tickets for sale at the last minute on Facebook. More interesting than that, however, was his discussion of the potential negative impact of the huge new contract he had just agreed to with future all-star defenseman Brent Burns.

Continue reading "Minnesota Wild GM Joins the Recruiting Blogosphere" »

Innovative internship programs are the number one concern for students interested in gaining experience in their desired fields. You can integrate a great internship program into your company, but you need to learn the basis of how to succeed with the first intern. In this blog entry, I will review four ways to succeed with the first intern in all sized companies, primarily small or mid-sized businesses.

Continue reading "Four Ways to Succeed With Your First Intern" »

One of the great new additions to the world of recruiting blogs a/k/a the recruiting blogosphere is Mark Liston of Valpak. He just posted a great blog entry in which he gave an example of how a Gen Y sales rep would handle his work differently than his Gen X and Baby Boomer counterparts:

Continue reading "Gen Y vs Gen X vs Baby Boomers" »

mark-liston-valpak.jpgMark Liston, the director of recruiting and new franchise development for Valpak, just posted a great blog entry to CollegeRecruiter.com.

Mark argues that the problems that Boomers like him and Gen X'ers like me (had to get that jab in -- sorry Mark) have with recruiting and managing Gen Y are due to our behaviors, not theirs. Mark lives and breaths these issues day after day for our valued client. If you want to benefit from the insight of someone who is in the trenches, read his entry.

There are certain cliches which are true: such as employees are the greatest asset of just about any organization. Yet how many employers truly pay close attention to what are the needs and wants of their employees? Not nearly enough, in part because it can be difficult to know. Some employers will attempt to understand what their employees need and want by talking with a sampling of the employees, but unless these samples are representative they end up creating misleading information so can do the employer and therefore its employees more harm than good. So what's the solution?

One solution is for employers to measure employee satisfaction by using employee surveys to simply ask the employees. Employee satisfaction surveys can give employers with great insight into issues such as whether its employees are happy in their current positions, what are the most important issues facing them today, and what changes they feel need to be made in the organization.

Interested but don't know what organizations offer these services? One to check out is Vovici.

Well, I do. And so does one of our clients whose identity will remain anonymous for reasons which will become apparent a little later in this blog entry.

I recently learned from one of our clients that they've hired several thousand outside sales representatives since 2000 but only seven percent are still employed by the client. Of the 93 percent who turned over in the past seven years, an astonishing 70 percent left within a year and 96 percent within three years. Ouch.

The average sales rep at this client generates a little over $150,000 in gross revenues in their first year. They're paid a 15 percent commission so receive about $23,000 per year. The top third make about $35,250 and the bottom third make about $15,000. Double ouch.

Continue reading "Who Says You Need to Recruit Entry Level People for Entry Level Jobs?" »

Are members of Gen Y, also known as Millenials, the lazy, selfish, narcissistic, and demanding new generation of employees that believe them to be? According to Sarah Pierce of Enterpreneur.com, the attitudes of this new generation "are actually intuitive responses to a changing economy. And if employers want to keep up, they better change, too."

Continue reading "Three Myths About Gen Y Employees" »

There will always come a time when managers will be faced with the task of firing an employee. This is an uncomfortable experience for all parties involved. Depending on the situation, firings ought to be avoided if at all possible.

To help alleviate these situations, managers should conduct regular performance reviews with their employees. During these sessions, both the manager and employee should be open and candid. First, the manager should identify the positive work that the employee is performing. If there are any areas that need to be improved, it should be addressed during that time and a plan of action to correct any problems, should be discussed.

Continue reading "How to Terminate an Employee" »

No matter if you have performance reviews at the end of the year or around an employee's anniversary date, performance reviews are extremely important for employees. Employees want regular feedback on their work and what areas they can improve. Providing ongoing feedback can help improve employee morale in the workplace and help prevent larger issues in the future surrounding employee performance. Below are a few performance review tips:

Continue reading "Best Practices for Performance Reviews" »

Santa Claus dogThe holidays are quickly approaching! Yes it's the season of togetherness and joy but it can also be a very stressful time. We have to worry about buying and wrapping gifts, sending out holiday cards, decorating and the list goes on and on. During this frantic time, it is very easy for employees to get distracted. Below are just a few helpful tips to help them stay focused at work:

Continue reading "Tips to Keep Employees Focused During the Holidays" »

It used to be that employers could correctly believe that they were in control of the employment game. They would advertise a job opening, receive dozens and perhaps hundreds of well qualified applicants, hire one, and know that person would never quit. Thankfully those days are long behind us. Our the economy and our workforce have changed, including the willingness and ability of employees to change jobs. So how does an employer make it really hard for its best employees to quit? Let me count the ways:

Continue reading "Five Great Retention Strategies to Make Your Best Employees Want to Stay" »

After you hire your ideal candidate, the goal is to not only fulfill the immediate needs of your company but to have that person stay at the company for many years. The time and money that is involved with training a new employee is very costly especially if the employee decides to leave the company within a short amount of time.

employee retentionRetaining your employees is critical to the health and success of your business. Below are some tips to help you retain your employees and get the most out of your recruitment investment:

Continue reading "Best Practices for Retaining Your Best Employees" »

It was announced yesterday morning. It was astounding news. It is the grist of retention and healthy corporate culture fundamentals. The announcement was made by Working Mother magazine CEO Carol Evans regarding the 100 best companies to work for in 2006, the most mom friendly.

Now it is true that this site is dedicated to serving the interests of college students and recent college graduates. However, those populations are not entirely your traditional student. With the fact that so many are admitting that a degree is important to one's career opportunities and advancement, many are either returning to university after a break or embarking on studies at a more mature age. So it's not entirely unreasonable for us to be interested in companies that address parent-friendly issues. In fact, the criteria for making the list are: (a) flexibility, (b) leave time for new parents, (c) child care, (d) elder care, and the (e) number of women occupying top jobs.

Likewise, college students do start families while in school. Additionally, there are women who have left the workforce in order to raise familites for a time and are now ready to re-enter the workforce. These populations have dual priorities: (a) where to work that will be healthy for one's career and (b) where to work in order to have an environment that bends to the demands of raising the next crop of responsible and focused workers.

Continue reading "Voted 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers in 2006" »

There's been some controversy over using cell phone text messaging (SMS) to recruit Gen Y candidates. Some believe that sending messages to the cell phones of candidates is equivalent to email spam while others point to the heavy use by Gen Y of cell phone text messaging as evidence that they would not react negatively to receiving a well targeted offer, unlike their Boomer parents. But how many feel right about some being fired by a cell phone text message?


cell-phone.jpg Katy Tanner, a 21-year-old sales assistant, received the a termination message while she was off work due to an illness. As reported by the South Wales (United Kingdom) Echo newspaper, the text message from her employer was: "We will not require your services anymore...Thank you for your time with us."

"I don't think it's right to just text someone. At least they should have talked to me face to face," Tanner said. "You're not allowed to text in sick, you have to phone. The fact that they texted me is a bit of double standards."

Tanner was employed by Blue Banana, a body-piercing and jewellery shop based in Cardiff. The company employees about 120 people, most of whom are under 21 years old. Senior managers there defended the decision. They claimed that they tried to reach Tanner directly "five or six times" and passed on a message through her boyfriend before the text was sent. Store director Ian Besbie added that the dismissal method was fair because texting was a part of "youth culture."

No word as to why text messaging a termination notice was part of "youth culture" but it is not part of the same culture to be able to text in that you're home sick.

CollegeRecruiter.com just released another free white paper. This new white paper outlines the best practices for internship programs. It walks readers through the 12 points which are necessary for employers to create successful internship and co-op programs. Employers who follow these best practices will see significantly more of their interns convert into permanent employees and those employees will eventually turn into the next generation of leaders. Successful internship and co-op programs are not about saving money in the short-term by paying the students less money than permanent employees. Rather, successful programs are all about the recruitment of stars into permanent roles within their organizations.

As thousands of students begin their summer migration to corporate campuses to serve as interns, two possible fates await them:

The interns may find they are driven hard to learn the business and to accomplish real results, while earning the respect of their managers and accumulating valuable impressions of the firm’s executive team. Conversely, interns may end up making the coffee, fiddling with back-burner projects, fending for themselves in an unfamiliar city and otherwise learning how dispensable they are to the organization.

In reality, the latter fate is all too common. Even among major corporations, “internship programs are incredibly inconsistent in terms of quality,” says Steven Rothberg, president of CollegeRecruiter.com in Minneapolis. “You hear all the time about investment banking houses sending their interns to the mailroom for three months.”

That doesn’t bode well for human resources departments, which have a keen interest in internship programs: recruitment. “Bringing in students directly from college is key to having a good, sustainable pipeline of employment,” says Lonnie Pacelli, a human resources consultant in Sammamish, Wash., who oversaw internship programs while he was a manager at Microsoft and Accenture.

But some companies shy away from making the investments that a robust internship program requires, including the interns’ pay and perks, their supervisors’ time, and facilities costs and other overhead. Advocates of internships counter that these expenses shouldn’t be considered in a vacuum, but rather relative to the costs of other modes of recruitment, which can run to tens of thousands of dollars for candidates with senior management potential.

Without Internships, Employers Miss the Cream of the College Crop.

Internships are a powerful recruitment engine indeed. Employers make offers of full-time employment to 58 percent of students who serve as interns within their organizations, according to the 2004 Experiential Education Survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers. And these offers that follow internships boast an impressive conversion rate; nearly 78 percent of them are accepted.

With internships so common these days, HR executives need to show hiring managers that if they don’t connect with college students before they’re seniors, the entry-level recruitment pool is already picked over. “Most of AOL’s entry-level hiring is done through our internship programs,” according to an explanation on the company’s Web site.

The recruitment potential of internships isn’t just about the numbers. Student internships are also a means of reaching out to sought-after diverse students who show much promise. Time Warner Cable’s STARS internship program, for example, specifically targets these potential recruits, tempting college and even high-school students with mentoring in the entertainment, media and telecom industries.

Human Resources Should Orient Interns and Oversee Firm-Wide Training.

When student interns head for their temporary cubicles, HR’s first job is to provide support for this next generation of potential recruits.

“Our job is getting the interns to that first day, and through the first week of training,” says Blane Ruschak, national director of university relations for KPMG in New York City. Internships are a major recruitment program at KPMG, where about 1,000 students converge for national training on one day in June.

As a public accounting firm, KPMG’s operations are heavily regulated. So, training is critical, whether the trainees are interns or new hires. “Interns go through firm-wide training and risk-management training, so they understand what rules they’re bound by,” says Ruschak, whose group reports to human resources.

Interns Can’t Thrive Without Demanding and Meaningful Work.

Beyond those first days, HR plays a critical part in ensuring that interns are given important work and have someone to turn to if issues arise. “HR’s role should be – and often isn’t – to educate hiring managers” about how important it is for the company to make a positive and powerful impression on interns, says Rothberg.

“HR needs to put guidelines in place,” says Pacelli. “Interns aren’t there at managers’ disposal; they’re there to make an assessment of whether to spend a career at the company.” To maximize the benefits of the internship for all parties, students should work side-by-side with full-timers doing the same job, he adds. Internships organized around “special projects” often look like make-work, and sometimes are.

“We make sure our interns serve on client engagements,” says Ruschak of KPMG. Students in the firm’s internship program typically are assigned to two or three audit, tax or advisory clients.

Hiring managers who want to foster ongoing relationships with best-and-brightest interns need to consider the value of the summer experience from the student’s point of view.

“Student interns tend to make more of an impact more quickly than employers expect,” says Philip Meade, internship coordinator for Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y. “An intern who ends up sitting around a lot will be concerned about having a hole in his resume because he didn’t accomplish much.”

What Students Should Take Away from Their Internships.

At summer’s end, the best potential recruits will remember more about the substance of the internship than its style, observers say. “It’s not about impressing students by taking them to a luxury box at the ball game,” says Rothberg. “It’s about turning them on to the work.”

Still, savvy firms, even industry leaders, find ways to endear themselves to the top student performers. Microsoft gives its summer interns a round-trip plane ticket, provides a health club membership and pays for outside training seminars. Nearly 58 percent of employers responding to the NACE survey provide housing assistance to their interns.

-- Courtesy of Workforce Insights. Copyright 2006. All rights reserved. Written by John Rossheim, a journalist in Providence, RI. He writes about workplace issues, employment trends and changing relationships between employers and workers.

Communication in a business is part of one's brand. Novel idea. But it's true. The tone of the communication, its timing, the content, to whom it's directed all say a great deal about the inner workings of the organization. And the focus is not on the newsletter, the correspondence, the web page blurbs that talk about the mission and focus and purpose and driving force. Today's examination is the oral communication that exists in the business.

Continue reading "Communication and Branding, It's All-Important" »

One of the things I do is provide career development advice and coaching to job seekers and those who are employed. One of the other things I do is provide evaluation and then advice on various internal business issues that need a solution or a better way of getting the work done. Yet another thing that I do is network. Actually, it's simply chatting with people about this, about that, and just getting to know them.

So it was that I had an interesting opportunity to do some organizational development as well as career coaching.

Continue reading "Holding on Too Tight -- The Best Way to Kill a Relationship" »

Austin (Texas) high school officials recently fired art teacher Tamara Hoover, purportedly for posting naked photos of herself on-line at Flickr.com, a very mainstream photo sharing site. As reported by the Houston Chronicle, the photos, which are no more erotic than the statue of David, depict Hoover in a variety of routine activities, including lifting weights, showering, getting dressed, etc. Her breasts are visible in some photos but she is fully clothed in about 90 percent of the photos. Her genitalia are never visible. She did not tell her students or co-workers about the photos yet she is now fighting for her job. Indeed, her students only found out about the photos because they were told about them by another teacher who apparently had some type of grudge against Hoover. Hmmm. More about that later.

Tamara Hoover photo Is this yet another example of why people need to stop posting nude photos and other such material about themselves on-line at sites like Flickr but also at social networking sites such as MySpace, Facebook, and Friendster? Or is this actually an example of a school finding an excuse for firing a lesbian teacher because of her sexual orientation? The school district claims that it fired Hoover because the photos were inappropriate and violate the "higher moral standard" expected of public school teachers. The district is arguing that Hoover became an ineffective teacher simply because nude photos of her were accessible to students. Yet colleagues and students dispute the district's characterizations of Hoover. Fellow Austin high school teacher Robin Lind stated that she doesn't view Hoover any differently after having seen the photographs. From Lund's perspective, the naked photos of Hoover don't "make her less credible or less respectable."

Continue reading "Texas Teacher Fired for Posting Topless Photos On-line" »

You hear it continuously: we need to improve. We need to become more efficient. We need to become more effective. We need new features. Better features. Better service. According to Seth Godin, that's the wrong approach.

Seth feels that better is not always the right strategy as better is not always superior to different. "When you make something that works a little better, you're playing the same game, just keeping up with the status quo. When you make something different, on the other hand, you're trying to change the game."

There are two essential elements required of being a successful leader. Those two elements are also critical to being an effective instructor. You need to be able to communicate very effectively. You need to have control of your environment.

However, it is nearly impossible to communicate with a mob because there is no control. So the logical first step in creating a healthy environment is to have the correct type of control so that you can communicate.

Continue reading "Communication and Control" »

The Army National Guard has a long and proud history of serving this nation in good times and in bad. They've been there for us when we were struck by tornadoes, floods, armed conflicts, and other disasters. And now President Bush wants them to fight another war: the war against illegal immigration. Regardless of which side of the political fence you line up on, the war against illegal immigration will place additional burdens upon members of the Guard. Remember that those who sign up with the Guard have historically done so because they thought they would serve a weekend a month and two weeks a year and be called up for short periods of time to help mitigate the effects of a natural or man-made disaster. The wars in Iraq and Afganistan changed all of that. Many members of the Guard haven't been home for over a year and many come home, settle in for a few months, and are then re-deployed for a second 15 month tour of duty halfway across the world.

Should the Guard's strength be increased along the Mexican border from a few hundred to 6,000 as President Bush has proposed, well over 150,000 Guard troops per year will be deployed to that area for several weeks each. While a deployment in the deserts of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California hardly compare to a deployment in the deserts of Iraq, both take those Guardsmen away from their families and their jobs and increase the burdens being imposed upon those Guardsmen, their families, and their employers. How long can we ask so few to do so much?

I have the world of respect for our armed forces, including the members of the Army National Guard. While the Guard is one of our clients, my respect for the organization and its members runs far deeper than the business we do with them. These are people who sign up in part to provide their families with additional income but primarily because they feel a calling to help their neighbors in the worst of times. They have always done so. They always will continue to do so. And we must do whatever we can to minimize the burdens we impose upon them both in times of peace and in times of war. If we need 6,000 Guardsmen stationed along the border to secure it until the Border Patrol can be strengthened sufficiently, then so be it. But let's resolve to provide those resources to the Border Patrol as quickly as possible so that the men and women in the Army National Guard can return to their family and places of work.

Although my first love is still The Law, it appears I've reached saturation point in employment issues. I attended a handbells concert on the first Sunday of this month and saw the organizational development issues that correlated to the work of the musicians as well as some issues relating to being a good leader.

Being a handbells musician is a very unique musicianship. You are part of playing an entire piece of music. You are an essential piece of the overall presentation. You have a definite part and without it, there would be a gaping hole in the presentation. Played out of order or at the wrong time, and the sound will be something discordant, as though there's internal strife. Yet by necessity there is only a limited involvement in the overall presentation for each musician.

Continue reading "In Concert" »

Contrary to what many employers believe, interns are not cheap, short-term sources of labor. The cost to recruit, supervise, and train them is greater than the value that they return because they typically only work for a period of a few months. There’s no time for them to really learn their jobs and therefore to really provide value to the employer. Yet employers large and small persist in recruiting interns. Why? Because they provide excellent value to employers that understand that successful internship programs are all about recruitment.

A recent study by Wetfeet indicates that more employers are extending more permanent offers to interns. As of November 2005, 59 percent of undergraduate and 71 percent of MBA students who interned reported that they had receive or expected to receive an offer for full-time, permanent employment from their internship employer. By way of comparison, only 43 and 63 percent, respectively, received such offers two years earlier.

Continue reading "A Successful Internship Program is All About Recruitment" »

Employers, already faced with the prospect of Boomers starting to retire in droves, are now also faced with the prospect that today's college students and recent graduates, often referred to as Gen Y, are turning away from a life in the corporate world and toward entrepreneurship. As reported by the Boston Globe, 30 to 40 percent of those who graduate from colleges such as Harvard and Carnegie Mellon are choosing to start their own businesses.

My paternal grandfather was an entrepreneur. My father is an entreprenuer. I'm an entrepreneur. And I hope that my kids are too if it will make them and their families happy. I love the feeling of creating something out of nothing and continually making decisions that haven't been made before. Yet running a small business can also be difficult as that business sometimes lacks the size or resources to be competitive against larger organizations which are in the same space. Fortunately, I was able to learn value of strategic partnerships pretty early on. Too many entrepreneurs don't. They're entrepreneurs first and foremost because they can't or won't work with others. Rather than collaborating, they internalize. Rather than looking for solutions beyond their own walls, they look for reasons why they can't help a client with a particular need. Rather than assuming success, they assure failure.

Continue reading "Gen Y Choosing Entrepreneurship" »

When I travel around the country and people ask where I'm from, I take great pride in telling them that I live in Minneapolis. If I'm in Chicago, chances are the person asking has been to Minneapolis and therefore has first hand knowledge of who we are and what makes this city so great. But when I'm a little further afield, most of the people asking the question have never been here and likely never will. But almost everyone knows Minneapolis. We're the home of Mary Tyler Moore, Jesse Ventura, the Vikings (although the "Love Boat" scandal took place in the suburb of Minnetonka), and the Geek Squad. The What Squad?

Before I go further, let me state that the Geek Squad is not a client of CollegeRecruiter.com. So the praise that you're about to read is from the heart, not the wallet. While there is nothing wrong with writing blog entries about clients, most readers understand that such entries are intended both to inform the reader and to flatter the client. With some blogs, the latter sometimes is more important than the former and that's unfortunate.

So what is the Geek Squad? Quite simply, it is a Minneapolis-based division of Best Buy Corporation. The Geek Squad's "mission is to alleviate the world's computer problems, educate people to fearlessly embrace technology and practice the art of human interaction." They take pride in being geeks. They wear white shirts, black belts, black slacks or skirts, black shoes, and, of course, the famous clip-on black ties. Quite simply, the culture of the organization is that they're geeks, they know they're geeks, they're proud to be geeks, and they make being a geek cool. And their customer service and flat rate pricing model is unparalleled.

Geek Squad

If you're in need of assistance, you can take your computer into a Best Buy store or they'll come to your home or office. Emergency service is available, but my experience has been that they can usually come within one business day of the call, they fix the problem within an hour or two, you pay, they leave, you're again productive. And they look really sharp in those ties. Did I mention they clip-on?

Successful organizations like the Geek Squad understand that they have an identity and culture. They can attempt to pretend that they're something that they're not like a lot of organizations do, or they can embrace and even leverage that culture to help them land new business, recruit new employees, and retain their best employees. The Geek Squad employees are part of a team, a club, a group. That sense of belonging and shared identity makes them far less likely to leave to work for a competitor which is offering a bit more money.

Does your organization understand its culture? Embrace its culture? Leverage its culture? If not, perhaps you need to find some computers that need servicing so that you can call in the Geek Squad. While they're fixing your computers, pay attention to their brand and how they embrace and leverage their culture. Maybe, just maybe, you'll end up with computers that work better along with a better understanding of the importance of culture to all organizations.

I read a great ebook today by Joel Cheesman. Battling Free describes the current opportunities and risks facing all classified sites, including job boards, as sites such as Google begin to run classified ads for free. According to Cheesman, "to remain competitive, it's imperative for such posting sites to reevaluate market positions, business models and evolve to find new sources of revenue."

Cheesman's book addresses these issues and offers over 25 nuts-and-bolts tips, each of which are designed to enable the site owner to raise revenues that they have, are, or will lose to sites which offer competitive content at little or no charge. But what I loved about this book is that rather than just focusing on the problem or offering vague, theoretical solutions, Cheesman dives right in and gets his hands dirty. He provides links to specific web sites that offer specific solutions to specific problems. He provides his opinions as to which of them offer more promising solutions than the others. And he doesn't pretend for one minute to have all of the answers or to possess the ability to accurately predict the future.

It was comforting to see that we have already successfully implemented many of Cheesman's tips, such as running Google AdSense code on our site to display pay-per-click text ads as well as pay-per-impression graphical ads, referring visitors to third party sites using trackable affiliate links through Commission Junction, being listed in directories such as Yahoo!, submitting articles to third party web sites, pre-selling sponsorship pages on our site to organizations which offer services which are complimentary to ours, delivering targeted emails to our users based upon their demographics rather than just a one-size-fits all monthly newsletter, encouraging employers and job seekers to pay nominal additional fees to have their jobs and resumes appear at the top of the search results, providing video content, charging for resume access, and selling complimentary services to the employers and candidates who use our site.

But even though we are successfully generating revenue through the above strategies, Cheesman's book provided me with a lot to chew on. There are substrategies in many of the above areas that we have not yet implemented and there are strategies that he recommends that we have not yet touch at all. The book is $24.99. And as stated on its web site, "just one idea pays for this investment times over."

The United States Army is like a business. It faces the same challenges -- of recruitment and retention, of productivity, of mission -- that all businesses face, and these common threads present both the Army and the private sector with opportunities to learn from each other and to move forward in ways that can benefit everyone.

Full disclosure: the U.S. Army is a client of CollegeRecruiter.com but did not request, know of, or participate in the writing of this article.

The enlisted force is the backbone of the U.S. Army, and the Army makes every effort to retain its best people. For years, there has been a significant concern in many circles around the negative impact on recruitment resulting from the war in Iraq and continued engagements in other hot spots around the world, including Afghanistan, South Korea, Kosovo, and many, many others. But apparently, the Army has found ways to battle turnover rates and retain its soldiers. Over the last three years, re-enlistment rates have been at least six percent higher than the Army’s goals. The troops re-enlist knowing they will return to Iraq and other hotspots and once again be risking their lives. Are they doing it for the money, the glamour, the prestige? Well, the Army is paying its people bonuses for re-enlisting, but I think that few would argue that anyone fighting the war in Iraq is going to stay in the Army for a few thousand dollars more a year.

Continue reading "Battling Turnover Rates: Lessons to Be Learned From the U.S. Army" »

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