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Articles tagged 'leadership'

Leadership, SourceCon

Sourcing Through Adversity


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LaChaux2012ATL

Life isn’t always rainbows and roses. And neither is sourcing, as attendees and livestream viewers learned today from Yahoo!’s Senior Manager, Talent Attraction, Aida La Chaux.

In case you’ve lived under a rock for the last couple of years, you know that Yahoo!’s been going through some tumultuous times. Between management changes and whisperings a couple years ago of buyouts, in addition to other search engines coming on strong into the search space, Yahoo! has had its share of challenges with both attracting and retaining talent.

The biggest lessons learned from La Chaux’s presentation is this: no company is immune from tough times — and it’s good management, a unique and personal approach to sourcing, and positive attitudes that will power your sourcing efforts through these inevitable road blocks.

Leadership, Metrics

A Sourcing Checkup From the Neck Up: Assessing Your Sourcing Team


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checklist

Lately I’ve been getting lots of questions around assessing a sourcing team. Most leaders see this as quite a difficult task, yet its absence can compromise the team’s ability to survive corporate changes.

There’s clearly evidence that sourcing does reduce cost per hire, but it is incredibly difficult to hold sourcers accountable to a “number of hires” raw metric like you would with recruiters who are responsible for both internal and external hires, and have inbound candidates from established sources such as employee referrals, the company career site, and major advertisement. Every sourcing organization I know that has tried to measure sourcers with the same ruler as recruiters has struggled in one way or another to provide evidence of the value of sourcing. Why? Simple…

Leadership, The Sourcing Function

Sourcing Education: Philosophy First, Then Training


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Philosophy

In 2010 I had the opportunity to put a sourcing workshop together for a group of local recruiters.  As I began to formulate a sort of “wire frame” for my presentation, it became obvious to me that I needed to make some decisions about how to adequately cover what I felt were the base components of good, comprehensive sourcing strategy and training.  My audience had a wide range of background and experience – what would tie it all nicely together?

As I reflected on my own background and observations, I realized that I wanted to help the newbies catch hold of a true sourcing philosophy…a “true north” that they could stay focused on.  I wanted to give the senior recruiters a different, upside-down perspective that they had not considered before.  And to the managers, I wanted to convey a bigger sense of aptitudes, collaboration, and far reaching strategy to help them build and develop competent teams.

In the end, my little workshop developed into a 4-hour, 2-part series, and the “binding glue” became a discussion about our view of “Knowledge Capital” and “Information Management.”  In short, I presented this observation to the group:

If you (and more importantly, your senior leadership) do not place a high value on collective knowledge capital and information management practice, then the advanced tools and techniques portion of my training (or any training, for the matter) will have little value for your staffing effort going forward.   

Corporate Sourcing, Leadership, SourceCon

PNC Case Study at SourceCon: Four Steps to Developing a Successful Sourcing Team


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Jillian Snavley SC 2011

Jillian Snavley has built a phenomenal sourcing function at PNC Financial Services. And she has the data to prove it, as she very effectively demonstrated during her keynote presentation at SourceCon on Friday morning. This is something that sourcing leaders, practitioners, and corporate executives alike need in order to justify the very existence of a sourcing function within a company. Conference attendees were treated to a stream of useful knowledge to bring back to their individual companies to help build a case for both developing a new sourcing function as well as investing into existing ones, based on the successes shared by Snavley during her presentation.

Snavley appropriately divided her presentation, titled “Revving Up Your Sourcing Function,” into four “laps”: Building, Developing, Strategy, and Refining. Each “lap” of building PNC’s sourcing function (which was non-existent at the beginning of the process) presented challenges which were overcome by providing business cases, data and metrics, and examples of success from other areas that have led to a highly successful and very unique group of sourcers, who have earned the designation of “in-house agency” partners for various business units.

Global Sourcing, Leadership

The Australian Sourcing Industry Is Getting Serious…


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australia

A spectre is haunting our industry – the spectre of sourcing. Too long have we spent time under the shadow of recruiters, under the guise of recruitment. Fellow sourcers, I am tired of having to explain our value-add to people who just don’t get it, to justify our worth to businesses who simply aren’t interested in moving beyond the status quo, and I am tired of having to validate our very existence.

Right now, as we’re starting to gain some real visibility, it is time for us to properly define ourselves and consolidate ourselves as a unified industry. The community has its eyes on us and it’s up to us to show them who we are, beyond recruitment, marketing, or a PR piece, and to carve out our own future.

Leadership

Rob McIntosh’s Brain Is For Sale


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Brain by Alexander Ward

You might know me from my many years of contribution here on ERE or seen me present at previous ERE and SourceCon conferences. After 16+ years of working in the recruiting industry across many different continents, I have decided to auction off my knowledge for a day to the highest bidder on eBay and donate the winnings to a worthy cause.

So why am I doing this?

I receive calls all the time from colleagues in the industry wanting to share best practices and pick my brain given my background and experience. When I got approached by the Muscular Dystrophy Association through a friend to donate some time to help raise money for children in need, I thought to help, by not only giving back to a worthy cause but also helping our industry as well.

I challenge you all to represent our industry and make a substantial donation to the Muscular Dystrophy Association through this initiative.

If you would like to read more about my eBay Brain auction and potentially put in your own 501(c)(3) charity tax deduction donation bid, see the eBay Auction Site. If you feel you cannot afford my brain, but you would like to help such a worthy cause, then please make a small tax-deductible donation here.

image source: Alexander Ward

Leadership, SourceCon

Anatomy of a Sourcing Leader: Tito Magobet


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Tito photo mosaic

On October 13, SourceCon will kick off with a keynote presentation from Tito Magobet. Tito was most recently Manager, Global Talent Sourcing for Research in Motion (RIM); I first met Tito at Microsoft in 2003 – we started the same day. Within months, Tito developed a reputation as a brilliant, hardworking sourcer. Since Microsoft, Tito has built a career as a sourcing leader at an enviable list of companies, including Google and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Tito’s keynote will focus on building actionable talent intelligence strategies. There are probably fewer than a dozen experts on this topic in the world. I asked Tito a few questions about his career and leadership style. His responses reveal a thoughtful, passionate, committed sourcing professional.

Leadership, Webinars

Webinar: Optimizing Recruiting and Sourcing Effectiveness


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organizational effectiveness

Optimizing Recruiting and Sourcing Effectiveness

Thursday, June 30: 2:00 PM ET

Effective Sourcing augments recruiting through ingenuity by leveraging information and expertise. In this session, Arbita founder Don Ramer will present highlights from a process used to identify opportunities that achieve this leverage through expert benchmarking against best practices. Also available to answer questions during the webinar will be Arbita EVP Shally Steckerl.

Leadership, The Sourcing Function

Sourcing Leaders – Have We Been Our Own Worst Enemy?


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public_enemy

As background, I spent the last two years leading the global sourcing team for Hewitt Associates so the finger I am pointing is directly at me. As the economy slowed it was hard not to recognize the industry’s deep, brutal cuts to sourcing teams without some feeling of responsibility. I realize that this hasn’t been a great time for corporate recruiting overall, but sourcing went first and seems to be the slowest to recover. I am afraid we have lost scores of very talented people who feel this “niche” maybe a bit to risky for them. Could some of this have been avoided if collectively we were able to tell our story more effectively and had the will to stand up for sourcing when tough decisions had to be made?

I have been thinking about this for quite some time and have shared this perspective with many of you who may be reading this — sourcing has lost its “mojo.” 

Corporate Sourcing, Leadership

Fear Leads to Failure – Building Trust within your Team


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sourcecon-default

– Managers rely on control; leaders inspire trust

My sons and I were watching a Star Wars movie marathon last weekend when Yoda (my favorite character) said something that caught my attention. “Fear is the path to the dark side….”  Now in our world, fear doesn’t lead to the dark side, but it can lead to failure. It inhibits us from taking chances and makes us question our own ability. The moment we have an idea that could be the next big thing or even a minor improvement to an existing process, the next thing we usually think of is “what if people don’t like it?”  Our ability to control our fear allows us to determine our professional and personal success.

Edward Deming, regarded by many as the leading quality guru in the United States, refers to eliminating fear as one of his 14 principles of quality management. Deming states, “Encourage effective two-way communication and other means to drive out fear throughout the organization so that everybody may work effectively and more productively for the company.”  Eliminating fear is crucial to innovation.