Showing posts with label human resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human resources. Show all posts

Human Resources Mysteries: What Does a Recruitment and Selection Specialist Do?


As a recruitment and selection specialist you will be performing the following activities:
·           monitor open positions;
·          get involved in designing the recruitment plan for the following period together with the managers of each department in the company or the clients sometimes, plan which will include the number and type of positions to recruit;
·           help managers prepare job descriptions for the positions they have in their departments;
·           use the job descriptions to create and post ads on various recruitment channels;
·       select appropriate recruitment channel depending on positions open (skills needed, number of positions);
·           read the resumes received and compare to job requirements;
·           select candidates to be invited to interview;
·           invite and conduct a first interview with selected candidates;
·           prepare together with specialists and managers and set of practical tests to be given to candidates;
·           be part of the team assessing the candidates during these tests;
·           write down as much information as you can concerning candidate’s performance;
·           offer managers and initial list of best candidates for them to interview;
·         give feedback to selected and rejected candidates – type of feedback is chosen according to source of candidates – internal candidates will always receive face to face feedback, the external ones will receive phone or email feedback;
·         keep an updated database of all positions and feed-backs to use later during recruitment; this will help use previously rejected candidates on other positions or the same position after a while after skills have improved or most important of all, avoid embarrassing situations where the same candidate gets invited to a second interview, after being rejected after the first one the week before;
·         participate in public presentations at the University, conferences, student gatherings to introduce your company and recruit people;
·            participate in job fairs for students, fresh graduates or other skills workers;
·        get involved in the creation of promotional materials to be used for students and during official presentations, either alone or with the help of the marketing department;
·      manage relationships with recruiting partners like recruiting agencies, student organizations, University representatives, job portals contacts;
·         organize internal assessments either for an open position or for selecting candidates to be involved later on in development for a certain position – i.e. select internal candidates who have team leader potential, candidates who will be enrolled in leadership trainings;
·          prepare various recruiting reports;
·          prepare various recruiting estimations requested by managers – i.e. the total cost of recruitment for a team of 30 FTEs (FTE = full time employee), French speakers with Linux skills and the deadline for such a project;
·        prepare newsletters for candidates in database to keep them informed about new positions or changes in the organization that might interest them;
·             prepare recruitment policies and work instructions;
·             in some organizations contact the selected candidates for employment offers;
·           in some organizations conduct trainings of recruitment and selection with managers, internship students, other employees interested or required to participate (i.e. a technical agent who will be part of the final selection process for members of the IT team);

Recruitment and Selection Strategy: What Should a Resume/CV Include Mandatorily?

First of all, if you have no idea how a resume should look like, you can try this link:
http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu/en/documents/curriculum-vitae

It's the link to the European Euro pass resume that most employers in Europe prefer. It's a clear, easy to use file that I personally recommend.

The main information to start a resume is:
- your name (full name, no nicknames);
- your address and contact information (be careful about emails - use a professional one, not foxylady21foryou@....com unless you are applying for video chat or something); recruiters check this;
- your nationality;
- your marital status;

The last two are not mandatory, but employers may ask about nationality to see if you need a work permit.
Marital status, children, religion, sexual orientation are not mandatory to offer and the employer is forbidden by law to reject you because of any of these. It's your choice to give them this information or not. Also, they are not allowed if you are female to ask if you are pregnant or if you plan to have any children in the near future. Pregnancy tests are also forbidden.

The next section of your resume should be the Professional experience. Some resumes have the section Professional objective before that and sometimes area in which you are interested to work in, but all those are not mandatory.

Coming back to the professional experience, you should specify the name of the employer, your position, the hiring date and ending of contract date. If you still work there, you should mention only hiring date. Besides all the above you should mention your responsibilities and achievements on the job. Try to be specific and adapt them to the specifications of the position you are applying for.

All your positions should be entered in reverse chronological order - meaning your current one first, not last.

If you don't have any experience, try to find something to put there - an internship, a volunteer campaign, a project you did in a team at the University. Try not to leave this section empty. Try to show that you tried to do something.

The next section is the studies section. Please enter all your studies in reverse chronological order mentioning the name of the studies provider, the time frames and the specialty/major you graduated or you are still following.

After long term studies, enter short term courses you had - all relevant courses in reverse chronological order. Don't offer too much detail and don't insert here courses that are not relevant to the position. An employer looking for a sales agent for example can't care less that you did a landscaping course unless you are selling landscaping products. Always think about how relevant the detail you are giving is for the position you are applying for.

A large CV is not ok. No recruiter will have the time to read. Keep it under 4 pages if you have a lot of experience and under 2 if you are fresh graduate or student. The largest CV I have ever received had 14 pages, it was for an Operations Manager position, it was relevant, but huge and I read below a quarter of it. I was desperately looking for CVs for such a position. Otherwise, I wouldn't have wasted my time. So be careful.

Additional skills: write here your technical skills - software you use, foreign languages that you speak (include only Advanced and Medium level not all languages that you know how to say "Hello" in), social skills, artistic skills only if relevant. Be careful that all you write here can be tested. If you say you speak advanced French and you don't, your CV will be rejected and you may never get another chance. Be honest and evaluate yourself correctly.

Other sections in the CV:
- prizes - keep it simple if you have to add it and write ONLY relevant information. Nobody cares that you had a first price in acting in kindergarten or in pottery class;
- Driver's license or other licenses - add only if relevant to the job;
- Hobbies - include in the CV. Some recruiters consider it relevant. However, keep it simple.

Please write to me if you have any questions. I am open for discussion.
Geo

HR Skills: If I work in HR, How Advanced Need My IT Skills to Be?

You need medium level IT - word processors, spreadsheets processors, presentations software, email software. Also, you may participate sometimes in conference calls and may need to set up your own equipment or you may do presentations and may need to set up your laptop and video equipment by yourself. Anything additional is useful. If you know some database software for example you can create your databases and reports easier. So IT advanced level is not required, but may prove useful.

Human Resources Mysteries: Do People in HR Travel?

Most of the times no. Only if you are on a higher position coordinating people in more countries or if yo have colleagues in another location and you need to go there for training or to support them. However, since costs need to be cut as much as possible, HR uses conference call and IT equipment to communicate remotely rather than travel.

HR Job Tips: How to Get in HR With No Experience?

1. Try an internship in HR first. A lot of multinational companies need students to help with paperwork or with simple tasks that the specialists don't have time to handle. They offer training and you will learn a lot if you are really interested. 

2. Try courses in HR - instructor led courses in class are better, but online courses go too.

 
3. Register to HR groups on social networks (LinkedIn for example). You fill find there people who can give you lots of advice and also HR jobs for entry, middle or senior level.


4. Get an entry-level job in a multinational company. This will get you closer to their internal job board. A lot of multinational companies prefer to promote from the inside. Applying to a position advertised internally may help you get the job you hope for.

Good luck,
Geo