CTMD Group

Name that Tune: A Great Hire in Less Than Six Seconds?

What Today’s Recruitment and Hiring Efforts Often Look Like

On the flip side, most people who are in the middle of a career transition didn’t go to school to become professional resume writers (thankfully). So accomplished professionals spend hours, days, even weeks on the painstaking process of crafting a resume. Job seekers have been coached when putting a resume together to practice humility and confidence. You don’t want to come off too passive, nor do you want to be tagged an arrogant know-it-all. That’s what we’ve been told, at least. That is a tall order to pull off on a piece of paper and show in six seconds.

The Algorithm Isn’t Working

After job applicants spend, on average, 20 hours crafting a resume, the recipient glances at their years of professional accomplishments for six seconds. The math doesn’t add up. The average professional spends 2,000 hours a year working, and in many cases, perfecting their craft. They spend more than 20 hours crafting their resume. But they’re judged in six seconds? With the greatest worker shortage in U.S. history – something needs to change immediately.

Change the Candidate Experience

While these recruiting challenges seem unfair, can we blame recruiters? The average recruiter receives more than 75 applicants per open position. What should they do? And what is the correct amount of time for a person to spend on a resume to determine a worthy candidate?

The term “candidate experience” has been around for ten years, but it doesn’t appear that we’re doing much to improve it. The most recent survey results indicate job seekers are more frustrated and discouraged than any other time on record. Something is very broken with the system. It must become a priority for every human resource and talent acquisition executive to address.

Consider the current open positions you’re working to fill. Are you really trying to understand a person’s skills, goals and interests? Or are you trying to fill an open position so you can move on to the next opening you’re tasked with filling or other tasks in general?

During my 25-plus years in the recruiting business, I made it my mission to research and study the behaviors of job seekers, hiring managers and recruiters. For the next handful of resumes you review, I would encourage you to look for these five essential elements:

  1. Stability: Assess their tenure, knowing that the average job tenure is 4.1 years.
  2. Skills: Determine what experience is embedded in the resume. Buzzword bingo and technical skills sections are dangerous.
  3. Recent applications of desired skills: Evaluate how recently they’ve done the work your company is looking for.
  4. Brand of employers: Gauge the reputation and cultures of their current/former employers.
  5. Second dates/repeat engagements: Establish that your applicant has been asked back to former employers for second and third gigs, especially in today’s gig economy.

I can assure you when done with intention, this critical checklist won’t take very long, but it will take you more than six seconds.

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