Simple
answer: “YES” and “NO!” (OK, before you
go out and stage a rally in front of my company’s building, continue reading
this Editorial….)
“Yes,
HR should get out of the hiring business!”
If
you are an HR or a recruiting professional, I could already see your tops
fuming in anger and wanting to slap me on the face! But putting your pride
aside and take a more objective eye on this issue, there are serious reasoning
to this argument. As Nick Corcodilos, America’s maverick headhunter,
aptly wrote in his blog,
there are 3 main reasons why he emphatically believes that HR should get out of
the hiring business:
✓ HR is not as
expert in the business of any department as that department itself, and thus is
not the best "manager" of recruiting, candidate selection,
interviewing or hiring.
✓ Putting the responsibility
of hiring in the hands of HR tacitly relieves the real hiring managers of their
most crucial management tasks---finding and hiring good people.
✓ HR has no
skin in the game. It virtually doesn't matter who is recruited, processed or
hired because HR gets paid regardless. In short, HR doesn’t really a “stake”
since they will not be the ones working with the people they recruit.
And
I can’t blame him. In fact, I have to agree that there is truth in his
argument. In recent years, as organizations become more complex, HR willingly
(or unwittingly) allowed its role to evolve into that of a mere facilitator and
“order-taker” in the hiring process. And hence, Corcodilos’ arguments can’t
just be simply brushed aside. HR should actually start looking at the mirror
and begin to honestly answer these arguments.
“No,
HR should remain in the hiring business.”
On
the other hand, if HR wants to remain in the hiring business, it should earn
its right to be there in the first place instead of having a free
ticket simply because they are the HR Department. Deep inside me, I still want
to believe that, hiring is, and remains to be, among the most important tasks
(if not the most important task!) an HR professional does for an
organization.
However,
it won’t be easy as HR needs to obviously overcome deeply entrenched values and
practices in how it finds, attracts, and retain top talent. In short, it needs
to reinvent itself and the role it should play in the hiring table.
How
HR Can Earn the Right to be in the Hiring Business
How
is this done? This is the tricky part but HR can start earning that right to be
in the hiring table by acting as an enabler rather than a gatekeeper in
the hiring process. It should refrain from being a mere pencil pusher, CV
screener or interview scheduler. Certainly there are more important things to
do than this. These trivial functions can even be outsourced to other companies
or delegated to a temp staff.
HR
should also go beyond the silo mentality where each step of hiring passes
through it as a means of “process control.” HR must focus instead in “quality assurance”
by encouraging hiring managers and recruitment partners to be involved
proactively in the entire selection process from the interview, assessment, and
validation, all the way to the final offer.
However,
the most critical action that HR needs to do is to adopt author and management
guru Jim Collins’ assertion that “people are not the organization’s
most important asset, the right people are.” By doing this, HR would
have probably earned 50% of the right to remain in the hiring business. Simply
put, while it is easy to put “warm bodies” in any position and hope and pray that
they get the job done, getting the right
people for the right job is an
altogether different story.
To
do this, HR should put in place a robust recruiting methodology based on
best-in-class hiring practices that ensures that the right people are indeed put in the right jobs. Specifically, I
recommend the following six proven steps, collectively known as the HireRightTM recruiting methodology, by which HR can find, attract, and
retain top talent for the organization:
Step 1: Define the total
job performance profile.
Step 2: Develop a talent
sourcing plan and create a compelling job announcement.
Step 3: Conduct evidence
or FACT-based interviews.
Step 4: Conduct behavior profiling assessment and reference or background checks.
Step 5: Recruit
and close.
Step
6: Transition coaching and
on-boarding.
A
Call to Action
So
there you have it. Should HR remain in the hiring business? The decision is now
in the hands of HR professionals like yourself. Will you remain the CV pusher
and interview scheduler that you are right now or will you start earning that
right to be in the hiring table? If you want to keep the status quo, then the
answer is clear: HR needs to pack up and get out of the hiring business as its
mere presence will just create more damage than gain.
Remember: At the end of the day, business expects HR to deliver results not
activities; solutions not excuses; and superior performance over mediocrity.