Ghosted & rejected candidates matter most!
The moment I saw Lee Andrese, write, âDear Hiring Managers & Leaders â YOU are the candidates. Ghosting candidates after theyâve spent SIX HOURS with you? Shame on you.â I knew I had to know more. Lee was sharing a job seekerâs post and she was encouraging job seekerâs to choose wisely!
With years of experience in the recruiting profession, Lee is now a Learning & Development Leader, creating best in class recruiters at Onward Search. Tune into our fabulous conversation and youâll hear:
- How rejected candidates hear ânoâ matters! And itâs costing you.
- Why recruiters need to be selective over the brands they represent
- Ensuring you work for a company that you can support wholeheartedly
- How changing an outbound message, can change the entire experience.
- What it costs you when you let your company or client ghost a C-suite candidate
- Making feedback of benefit to the person delivering it!
- How to tackle those dreadful no feedback policies.
Grab a cuppa, pen and paper and settle in! âđ»
Full Podcast Transcript: Rejected Candidates Matter Most
Katrina Collier: Lee Andrese, welcome to The Hiring Partner Perspective podcast proudly supported by the beautiful people at WORQDRIVE. Iâm so excited to have you here today. Welcome, welcome.
Lee Andrese 0:59
Well, thank you for having me. And Happy New Year.
Katrina Collier 1:02
Oh, yes, that as well. 2022 ugh. The only way is up, surely. Iâve had that on a loop in my head. So for people who donât know who you are, which would be surprising because you have your fabulous LinkedIn Lives and youâre very present and always helping the industry? Can you share a little bit about what it is that you do?
Lee Andrese 1:23
Sure. Today, I oversee training, learning and development for a company called Onward Search. The capability is brand new, and the goal there is to create a learning culture and environment that allows recruiters to expand their capabilities and careers in the sales and servicing side of staffing. But Iâm a, you know, Iâm a former high school teacher who became a recruiter. You know,
Katrina Collier 1:51
Thatâs a novel way in
Lee Andrese 1:53
We donât exactly plan to be recruiters.
Katrina Collier 1:55
No, I have met two, in 18 months, 18 years who planned to join recruitment?
Lee Andrese 2:02
Yeah, itâs itâs a different, itâs a different beast. Yeah.
Katrina Collier 2:05
You know, before we, before I hit the record button, you were saying, you know, over the last 10 years, itâs become quite heartbreaking in recruitment. Do you think some of thatâs why? Because we donât have a formal path in we just fall in, and then donât have support?
Lee Andrese 2:21
No, I think that itâs the, itâs, I think that the world has just excelled at such a pace. And technology has helped, you know, support that pace. So when you look at what I would call the perfect storm of human behaviour, when youâve got the speed, the tool, the drive, the demand for speed, you tend to forget that thereâs a human being involved.
Katrina Collier 2:57
Which is kind of ironic when weâre human beings, isnât it?
Lee Andrese 3:01
It is, but you know, youâre a human being, regardless of what your job is. And recruiters are just as much, you know, susceptible to human behaviour as anybody else. So I just think what I think is sad, is that weâre not weâve become a body shop, you know, we fill seats, we donât, we donât give enough consideration. Itâs not always, but itâs not consistent in the consideration that that we give the candidates as to what they want, they should be our first customer. If the candidate is happy in the job, the hiring manager is going to be happy. Itâs not the other way around.
Katrina Collier 3:41
Yeah, very true. And actually, the podcast that just came out with Suzanne Lucas, we were talking about that, you know, it used to be âoh be grateful to have a jobâ now itâs like employers should be grateful they have employees, which is a similar thing to what you are saying, itâs a switch.
Lee Andrese 3:57
Yeah, and I donât know that that is new, like a George Eastman, I always go back to the story. So George Eastman head of Eastman Kodak Company. So he is one of the, you know, back in the day, when very large manufacturers and their employees were fighting to get unions in place, The Eastman company never did. Because when George was alive, he said, weâre going to pay the best, weâre going to treat our people the best and thereâs not going to be a need to have a union. And so, unfortunately, that changed too right as you know, Mr. Eastman left this world, but if we just do whatâs right by the people who are helping stand up our companies and, and make them what they are. You know,
Katrina Collier 4:42
You wonât end up in this situation weâre in at the moment where everyone over fired and is trying to over hire and itâs all becoming a palaver. But Iâm loving it because I feel like the patriarchy is falling. So one of the reasons I wanted to talk to you was I saw your post âDear hiring managers and leaders you are the candidates, ghosting candidates after theyâve spent six hours with you, shame on you.â And then you had a thread of stories. And this was youâd relayed somebody elseâs, like quite heartbreaking story. What I loved that you wrote there, though, was hiring managers and leaders, you sort of push the responsibility onto them, which was, I wanted to like delve into that more, what prompted you to do that.
Lee Andrese 5:25
So culture starts at the top. When youâre hearing a CEO communicate to senior leaders, what they should be focused on, and if people are not part of that focus, youâre going to get, just get them in and get them out, I donât care. Right, youâre going to just hire these people who they think they are, blah, blah, blah. If leaders arenât saying, we need to carefully, think carefully, about the people that we bring into the organisation, and because we think so carefully and thoughtfully about those people, we need to take care of those people. Weâre going to invest in them so make sure that the experience is really superior. The other part of that is we no longer have the, whatâs the word Iâm looking for, we no longer have the luxury of being snobs. You know, because weâve got the job. We need to be able to say the most important person in the hiring process is the person that we reject. When we really think about it. Whatâs that experience like for them, when they get rejected? Because people hear no all the time? How they hear no, is whatâs going to be that lasting experience. Because those people will also talk about that experience, and encourage others not to buy your product, not to support your company.
You know whatâs amazing I have only ever seen, and they refer to this case study all the time, one company actually looked in this, which was Virgin Media case study from like, five, six years ago, where they looked at the amount of money they lost by the number of people they annoyed by rejecting them poorly, or giving them a bad candidate experience. Itâs crazy that thereâs not more emphasis on that.
Why rejected candidates matter!
And then thereâs more facts to that. So I just posted again this morning. Charlotte Beasley just aggregated a bunch of statistics about recruitment. And weâre talking two times the amount of people who are ghosted, who donât get follow up, they are very likely to spread the word. âhey, this is how the company treats their people.â Why would we want to support their existence? Why would we want to feed them? Because every time every dollar you spend with a company, youâre fuelling them? So once you take that fuel awayâŠ
Katrina Collier 7:41
Itâs gone. Tribepad who have created the End-Ghosting.com, which is a little like The Circle Back Initiative. Theyâre both very similar. They did some studies, and Iâm sure you saw my LinkedIn rant about this where candidates are left down or depressed. We as recruiters, when weâre ghosted, itâs irritating, we might even feel angry, but most of the time we just dismiss it move on. But we donât feel down or depressed. And I just find that so, like you, heartbreaking.
Lee Andrese 8:15
Well, the recruiters arenât, you know, today, the recruiters are even in a thereâs two sides to that. So the recruiters are sandwiched if they donât select the company that they work with very carefully. Recruiters need to be very selective on the brands that they represent. Because if theyâre not, theyâre going to theyâre⊠a recruiter is only as good as the candidates who follow them.
Katrina Collier 8:40
And actually, that applies for in-house as well.
Lee Andrese 8:44
In house, external, I donât care who it is. Thatâs itâs either way, a recruiter is only as good as the candidates who follow them, especially if their niche. If theyâre niche, like if theyâre in marketing, communications or technology. The hiring manager of that talent acquisition capability is going to hire the candidate, hire the recruiter whoâs got the following. Hands down. So if that recruiter doesnât manage their portfolio, well, then theyâre going to be in a situation where they donât have a choice. Theyâve got to go fast. Theyâve got to be furious. Theyâre gonna let balls drop, theyâre not gonna follow up. And if the recruiter selects a company that doesnât have the right tools for them to do their job, Heaven help âem. So itâs the recruiter. If the recruiter doesnât mind that, then that kind of says something right there,
Katrina Collier 9:38
Oh, yes. Sorry for the podcast. We were pulling faces at each other because of course, you canât tell that weâre doing that because itâs just audio.
Lee Andrese 9:45
Thatâs right. And so if a recruiter, if a recruiter stays at that brand, and either the brand has a bad reputation, or the tools arenât right or systemically, there is something there is a culture that says âPeople are disposable?â If and it exists, that that belief does exist at many companies. If theyâre there intentionally, that tells me more about the recruiter.
Katrina Collier 10:11
It does. Actually we saw that over the pandemic? Didnât we by the companies that were like, well, you must have a zoom open all day, or they put monitoring software on the computer because they donât trust their staff. And we wonât even go into the whole.
Lee Andrese 10:26
Yeah, thatâs a whole other conversation.
Katrina Collier 10:27
Yeah, but itâs the same for recruiters who are aware of that they know what theyâre entering into. And whoâd want to recruit for a company like that?
Lee Andrese 10:34
They need to be very picky the recruiters. Thatâs how I would coach a recruiter in their their career search.
Katrina Collier 10:40
Do you think thatâs because weâre older and more confident that we would be like, Iâm not working for them?
Lee Andrese 10:45
No, I donât think so. Youâre either you either have that a bit? Well, it depends if people have economic situations where they do have to take something because theyâre just no choice. You have to forgive that. I mean, that just is what it is. But the goal is to always try to move to a company that you can support wholeheartedly, without any reservation whatsoever. Where I, where I lost faith, I began to lose faith. Well, if I didnât lose faith, where I were, there was a bullet that was taken from me is when I talked to the head of acquisition for a high tech company. And she said to me, Lee, letâs face it, if it recruiter doesnât have a job, or somebody doesnât have the job, theyâre really no good during a pandemic.
Katrina Collier 11:36
Say that again!
Lee Andrese 11:38
The head of talent acquisition. Yeah, she has since actually gone on to another company, the head of talent acquisition at a technology company. Said to me, Lee, if somebody doesnât have a job, theyâre probably no good.
Katrina Collier 11:56
Oh, okay. So the recruiter had been, for example, theyâre recruiting recruiters or theyâre recruiting something else. Yes. Recruiting, I happen to be in the hospitality industry, all the travel industry, and they lost their job. So they werenât any good. Wow, I love the compassion there.
Lee Andrese 12:12
Right? During a pandemic.
Katrina Collier 12:14
During the pandemic! I do wonder how some of the people in those particular roles get to where they get to, I had somebody tell me and Iâm going pre pandemic. And Iâd just been going through like being proactive and sourcing because you know, youâre looking for technology professionals, or whatever it was. And she said, âOh, no, my team are maxed out. They donât have time to learn.â And she was proud of it. And I was just like, youâre proud of the fact that your internal recruiters do not have the bandwidth to learn. Whoa! Itâs your responsibility. You are bringing in the people to the company, like we started this conversation with.
Reject candidates without turning them against your company or client.
Lee Andrese 12:52
Yeah, and I think the pandemic revealed who these people truly are, right? They were always this way. So as a recruiter, if you are being if, if Iâm being told, if Iâm a recruiter, working for a hiring manager, and Iâm being told that donât worry about ghosting, too, you know, we donât have to have automated processes in place that make you sound like a human. Because you can automate human sound, right? Human voices, your feelings, to a certain degree,. Saying, âHey, thank you in the email. Thank you so much for taking the time to apply. Right now. Iâve got over 400 candidates, so Iâm sifting throughâ that can be an automated email. Just at least let the person know you got their information that you are human. And you can only do so much that if you donât hear from me, hereâs why. Yeah, if you just change that outbound message, youâve changed the entire experience,
Katrina Collier 13:46
And sign it off with your name!
Lee Andrese 13:50
Yes, yeah, humanity!
Katrina Collier 13:52
Because you might get 1 in 400 who might actually pick up the phone and contact you most unlikely, you might get another email back, or you might get a LinkedIn connection or a Twitter follower, an Instagram follower, or they might come to you another way. But donât you want those people? This is a huge bugbear this whole âKind regards the talent acquisition team or the recruitment teamâ or⊠Oh my God.
Lee Andrese 14:15
Yeah. When you take it to the next level, what that column was that you saw posted on LinkedIn that was about people who are going through the hiring process. Two, three, four, sometimes five interviews deep and then nothing. Nothing from a hiring manager. Nothing from the recruiter. How awful does and weâre talking about the C level. People I represented at the C level. CMOs are saying to me, âLee, they just fell off.â And you know, whatâs even more horrifying, is that theyâre from the top, the the top recruitment firms and Iâm not talking about your typical recruitment firms. Iâm talking about executive placement firms.
Katrina Collier 15:00
Like theyâve ghosted post as well as the company?
Lee Andrese 15:04
Theyâre ghosting.
Katrina Collier 15:06
Itâs just really short sighted because, you know, when you are executive search or your agency recruitment, obviously itâs the client. But there are far more reasons. Itâs also short sighted.
Lee Andrese 15:15
Now, not only will that candidate never work with that firm, but that candidate who now has a C level position at another company will not bring in that firm. That firm has lost her as a client.
Katrina Collier 15:29
Yeah. Or and who do they know?
Lee Andrese 15:32
Exactly, exactly. Theyâre not only going to hurt not that, that situation, that particular situation negates that relationship with the staffing firm, but as well as the executive recruitment firm, as well as the company that that recruitment firm represented. So now youâve got somebody who is a CMO, with a bad taste in her mouth, on two brands. Talking about that experienceâŠ
Katrina Collier 16:02
And very well connected
Lee Andrese 16:03
Over and over, and very well connected. Top in the field, top 100 in the nation. You know, itâs just, itâs sad. And unnecessarily, it doesnât have to be. Right.
Katrina Collier 16:15
It doesnât have to be that way. And itâs, I think thereâs this kind of weird, Iâve always said, weâre in a rejection business. And itâs a horrible thing to say, but youâve got one job and you get, you know, 10, 20 100 people, however many interested, youâre saying no to most of them. Why is it that recruiters on both sides, in-house or agency, are so scared of that conversation?
Lee Andrese 16:35
Littigation.
Katrina Collier 16:36
If they got better at that. In the US? Yes. But that doesnât excuse the rest of the planet, thatâs less litigation focused. But that also goes back to the hiring manager. And getting the information from the hiring manager.
Lee Andrese 16:48
Itâs itâs communication. Itâs, thereâs so thereâs systemic, right? So thereâs systemic processes, where the people just somehow they only find time for the things that are going to benefit them. Right. Thereâs no niceties on any other side. There are, thereâs the feedback from a hiring manager, hiring managers are also human beings. And theyâre caught up in the fray of, you know, a boatload of tasks, right and outcomes. So theyâve got to prioritize that feedback. If they are not told to prioritize that feedback, they wonât.
Katrina Collier 17:21
So actually, not only do they need to prioritize it, but from what youâre saying, which actually, whatâs in it for me. So itâs like, Katrina, bit slow today? How can we make it so that feedback is of benefit to the person delivering it? So thatâs what we need to manipulate.
Lee Andrese 17:38
Yes, those are processes. So when a company has that process, that recruitment process in place, and itâs very well defined. So if you want the solution to the problem, create a process that allows for the hiring, that allows, that sets the expectations of what the experience is going to be from the job posting, all the way through to the date that they start. through onboarding. Right. What is that hiring process going to be? The sourcing process, the hiring process, the evaluation process, when you get those expectations together, and they are followed and managed to, youâre going to see more consistency in superior experiences for candidates, the hiring manager, and youâre going to hire superior people, right? And so youâre much more likely to reach your companyâs goals and missions. People are at the foundation of the success of a company. And but if people donât have the right processes, if they donât have the right tools, and if the culture isnât just soâŠ
Katrina Collier 18:39
Itâs pointless. So yes, I mean, that is thatâs a bigger picture, because thatâs C suite, making sure that the people that bring in the people understand that they need those things. But I also think,
Lee Andrese 18:51
People first. Weâve always said normal first, we used to say web first and all this mobile.
Katrina Collier 18:56
People first. Human first.
Lee Andrese 18:57
Itâs people first, yeah, first.
Katrina Collier 19:00
And it also goes back to, you know, chapter five of The Robot-Proof Recruiter, Iâve just actually writing addition two so Iâve just been through it again. And Iâm like, Oh, my God, you know, that stuff Steve Levy gives you particularly in that chapter is like mind blowing. But it goes back to reiterate it. When youâre in your intake strategy sessions, as âRight to remind you, this is the processâ and then how do we work together, How is best for you? How is best for me? How are we and thereâs just not enough focus on that one hour up front, that will save so much time, but again, I think we need to go more into the not only having those processes that we need, but the whatâs in it for them, which wil help the culturehelpful.
Lee Andrese 19:39
The other thing is, you know, I thereâs another term thatâs always been thrown around now for quite a bit the term empathy. Itâs like telling me I built great relationships. Thatâs fluff. If you tell me that youâre empathetic without telling me how , and weâve got a weâve got to be responsible for that. So weâve got to realize as recruiters that the people weâre talking to probably lost somebody in their life, probably are financially strapped, they have lived through a time in history that we hope to never repeat, but we made it through. And if weâre not empathetic to that situation.
Katrina Collier 20:20
Yeah. Well, thatâs actually probably compassion, isnât it? Because narcissists can be empathetic. They can read your energy and manipulate you. But youâve got to have the want the best, donât you that compassion.
#BeHuman!
Lee Andrese 20:32
Youâre talking about being human. Again, so youâre going back to are you human? Are you human? Or are you really going? Just like your book? Youâve got to be robot proof.
Katrina Collier 20:41
Yeah, which is human-first.
Lee Andrese 20:43
In so many ways that title applies. So itâs, yeah,
Katrina Collier 20:50
You talk about the impact. So Iâm having a conversation with a friend of mine. Now. To be fair, Iâve just been through her CV, or resume as you would call it, itâs dreadful. Bless her. Theyâre really hard documents to write. And I remember, when Kogan Page approached me, I still canât believe they came to me and asked me if Iâd like to write a book. And I knew immediately, we have to get around this thing of technology can replace recruiters because people cannot write their resumes. They canât write them in such a way that they get hired. So sheâs having a really bad experience, because not one single person has gone. Okay. I can see on this document that she has eight years of recruitment experience, why donât I call her and see if she can explain better than this piece of paper? Nope, reject. Canât see what Iâm looking for reject. Itâs just because thereâs no empathy and compassion for this, the pickle that sheâs ended up with by being made redundant. But because sheâd actually moved into a HR tech company, and of course that got hit quite badly. But due to the pandemic, thereâs just no empathy and compassion. Iâm having a little rant, imagine me having a rant on my podcast.
Lee Andrese 21:55
What a novel idea.
Katrina Collier 21:57
Thatâs why I brought it in.
Lee Andrese 22:00
I think that, I think that, if we can, if talent acquisition leaders really want to make a difference and want to make changes in our profession, and within their organizations, theyâre going to take the time, Katrina, to take that step back and say, what how are we being perceived. Look at it as a user experience. Bring in a user experience professional, and say, you go out and look, this is not a marketing and branding exercise. This is really about understanding how our audience, how our customers, which are future candidates and future hiring, you know, talent, how do they perceive us and and then build it backwards, you know, build it from that feedback, but that thatâs my recommendation, totally.
Katrina Collier 22:46
Go an run through your own job application process on your mobile phone. And just see, like, and have
Lee Andrese 22:53
a third party person, do it. Because weâre too myopic. Weâre too biased. Weâre in it, we are too, too close to see. Yeah, seeing the problems, but
Katrina Collier 23:02
and you could get that person to go through your competition, you know, if youâre a tech company, go and see what theyâre doing.
Lee Andrese 23:09
Absolutely, absolutely. Yeah. And they have and when you when you turn to somebody who isnât in recruiting, who really looks at processes, tools, technologies, and how the interaction goes, you get a whole different read, all different reads. That takes a leader who has a level of humility, to say, I want this feedback. We, we know that thereâs problems, I just donât know what they are, or I canât articulate them well enough. So letâs get some adult supervision on it.
Katrina Collier 23:40
Any thoughts on how we can persuade our leaders?
Lee Andrese 23:44
Yeah, absolutely. So when you look at costs, right, so CEOs, the C level suite is really looking at profit, at revenue at profitability. So thatâs the top and the bottom line. What the talent acquisition person has not an indirect, they have a direct link to top and bottom line, meaning that if it is taking them longer than, say 30 days to get a hire, thereâs a problem. Thatâs costing the company money, if the company has turnover rates that are really, really high, and the talent acquisition person isnât stepping in to say, why are we feeding the turnover? Are we hiring to turnover? Thatâs not cool. So if youâve got a strong TA leader, theyâre going to that C suite and saying, We got to stop this, we have to stop the bleed. Letâs figure out where the problem is. If theyâre if the TA person finds that theyâre getting less qualified people in the pipeline, and they are not bringing that thatâs another expense. So now youâre recruiting unqualified people spending all that time, multiply that time that youâve lost times $100 an hour. Thatâs how much that company is losing on recruitment costs.
Katrina Collier 24:57
Yeah. And then the other way is obviously, you know, we havenât bought that person in that project, itâs not being delivered. How much is that costing? That hiring manager should know that as well.
Lee Andrese 25:06
Thatâs the other side of it. So thereâs the practical part of it the process of the actual TA function. Yeah, thereâs the hiring mediocre people, which is far worse than hiring, bad people. And then youâve got hiring no people at all, so the work isnât getting done. So if you look at those three things, thereâs build your case on those.
Katrina Collier 25:27
Totally, and there needs to be more of that. But itâs interesting that you keep saying strong TA leaders, because I see a few problems, which is to leaders have been promoted into the role and not supported and helped to be great leaders. But also, I see a lot of undermining from HR, because thereâs almost this weird competition, whereas I just see, HR looks after the people and TA brings in the people. And they work together side by side. But thereâs this weird, honestly, youâve pulled a face, but itâs a big focus of my work with my workshops. Is the communication breakdown between those? Because I donât I personally donât think TA should sit in HR when it gets to a certain size. But thatâs another whole conversation.
Lee Andrese 26:07
Yeah. That is a whole other conversation. Because if you would think that if they are overseeing if they have management oversight, the same senior leader overseeing the two that they would there would be harmony. But if thatâs not happening,
Katrina Collier 26:22
Not often. There are exceptions, of course, but again, itâs just another area of you know, in a way, in-house recruitment is a new function. Thatâs, in compared to the other business functions.
Lee Andrese 26:35
Itâs funny, you should say that, because I do think that there is a trend, that like I said, when you hire a great recruiter, youâre hiring the people that they know in their network. Right. So thatâs, thatâs a huge part of that. And my my, my question for that is, are they bringing more in-house people? Like theyâre hiring from the staffing industries, like mad? Theyâre just theyâre building these capabilities that are incredible. Theyâre just building their database of people. And if thatâs all thereafter, then recruiters are being taught not to worry about the experience.
Katrina Collier 27:09
Yeah. My issue is that bringing a lot in, in a way, I think ex-agency recruiters make great in house recruiters because they have the drive to fill the role. Slightly more than what Iâve seen come up the HR administration role aside, however, there are exceptions, of course. But again, I think it comes back to there needs to be more training and understanding of Okay, so if you did something wrong at an agency the impact was Okay, pretty bad the agency mightnât get used, but it wasnât as great as people wonât buy our products and services. It ruins our future hiring because we get bad reviews, etc, etc. Think itâs far more detrimental.
Lee Andrese 27:47
And hereâs the other thing I would say is that we donât want to throw good people into a bad situation. You donât want to throw good training in a bad situation. So again, it starts at the top. This is this is this is top down. Always has been, always will be
Katrina Collier 28:04
Yeah and so that takes the it is top down. But itâs taking where you arenât at the top to persuade them.
Lee Andrese 28:13
Yep. And I think that those leaders, those talent acquisition leaders, who can articulate the impact that theyâve made at an organizational level, to say we have changed organizational performance by bringing in superior people, creating a superior experience, and boosting our brands that weâre actually hitting new revenue, because people we want a waiting line of people coming into the store to get into this company. We want to create a waiting line those are the TA leaders that I would be after.
Katrina Collier 28:43
Yeah, I like that. So that was stops being how it is at the moment where itâs impossible to recruit. Itâll actually be they line up. Oh a bit like they do with Google and the like, they line up people want to work there. Theyâve created a
Lee Andrese 28:55
lineup people that who want to work there. And and that hasnât changed for quite some time. And whatâs even better is when youâve got people at Google, who stage a structured kit, theyâre a community of have a voice, they have a voice. So Google has done a great job of hiring independent thinkers, who will stand up for what they believe is right. To me, that is the sign of exceptional leadership, and the leadership listens to them.
Katrina Collier 29:27
I do think thatâs where we will end up it might take another 30 years. And you and I will long be retired by then. But I do think, I do feel like the patriarchy is starting to fall. I think so much got shaken up by the fact. You know, the pandemic hit and all of these rigid processes. Oh, you canât work from home. You canât do this. You canât do that. Itâs all gone out the window. And I think, you know, it was funny. Someone I mentor just logged on to LinkedIn. She hasnât been in for a bit. And she just went, Oh my God, so many people have resigned.
Lee Andrese 29:56
Yeah, itâs been happening.
Katrina Collier 30:00
Yes, the US is ahead of Europe.
Lee Andrese 30:02
So the genie has been out of the bottle. Yeah, genie has been let out of the bottle. That and this to me is a big boost for inclusivity is that there are no more excuses to why people canât work from home. absolutely, positively None. No. And I give our credit, I give credit to our senior leaders. Theyâre not bringing anybody back in. They are letting go of the real estate. They are like you guys are doing great.
Katrina Collier 30:25
Yeah, most companies have been more productive. I think very few have actually gone the other way. Theyâre probably the micro managers. But itâs also then imagine if you then got really amazing and just went actually, itâs less about the hours. And itâs more about the when are you productive? And oh, you know, Lee, youâre really great in the afternoon, Katrina youâre great in the morning, whatever, and just let people work when they want to work. That would be even more exciting.
Lee Andrese 30:46
As long as the work is done. I tell the team, these are the hours that our customers need us be available. Other than that. When you do it, do it.
Katrina Collier 30:53
Yeah. Even thatâs just a quick reply. Isnât it? So often answer the phone. Yeah. Interesting.
Lee Andrese 30:59
Yeah. So I think that getting back to the ghosting is the easiest thing to solve. Just get back to your candidates. Is this, this isnât brain surgery. Just follow up with them until thereâs closure.
Katrina Collier 31:13
Yeah. And I think that just recruiters have just got to me, actually, the litigation thing, though, thatâs a problem.
Lee Andrese 31:20
It is a problem. And I think the way that we get around litigation, the way that a recruiter can really also set themselves apart as a recruiter is to act like an agent and not like a recruiter. An agent. If you talk to a talent agent, theyâre very picky and choosey about the people that they represent. They also set the expectation of what itâs going to be like to work with them. Yeah. So if I tell you, Katrina, you and I are going to have this relationship, if I donât have anything for you, youâre not going to hear from me. So donât donât take that as I donât care about you. But I have nothing to talk to you about. However, itâs a good idea. If you just want to say hello to me. And by the way, Katrina, I go through at least 100 candidates every single day. So if you want to keep in touch with me, please donât hesitate to connect with me on LinkedIn, donât hesitate to connect with me on social, you know, blah, blah, blah. So thatâs what this relation, however, Katrina, when you and I engage, and I represent you, whether Iâm an in house recruiter or staffing, it doesnât make a difference. I will make sure that you have closure and next steps from day one until the very end. And I will I will like a dog track that hiring manager down for feedback to give you something that you can use.
Katrina Collier 32:32
Yeah, I want to see more of that.
Lee Andrese 32:35
Yes, yeah, it but it could also be true about systemic issues. So Katrina, my company policy tells me that I wonât be able to provide you with specific feedback, all Iâm going to be able to do. Set the expectation upfront, so that person knows what is coming down the pipe. And stick to it.
Katrina Collier 32:53
Yeah, that gets around those no feedback policy, which Iâm dead against. But it does get around that if you at least say, Look, I know youâre going to go through six interviews and not actually got some substantial feedback, I guess. And then people can choose.
Lee Andrese 33:07
Eaxctly, choose to opt in. Katrina, do you want to go through a hiring process and then as a recruiter, I can go back to my manager and say I lost this great candidate, Katrina Collier, and because she didnât like our hiring process. Exactly. I saw a recruiter in the ladies room one day, this was before the pandemic. And she was crying. And I said, so and so, whatâs going on. She said, Iâm tired of lying about the jobs. Iâm tired of lying to candidates about how good it is. Now we were not at the same company. Thatâs what thatâs what some recruiters are going through right now. So I looked at her and I said, you know, you donât have to lie. You know that this is a choice, you know, that you can leave. But I canât afford to leave. But you can afford to start looking.
Katrina Collier 33:59
Yeah. And you can choose to be bit more honest and get applicants that choose to stay in the process.
Lee Andrese 34:05
Yes. And you can also be honest about what that candidate is going to want, you know, going to expect and that candidate may very well say, Okay, Iâll make the best of it. If it doesnât work, it doesnât work. Or the candidate may say, yeah, weâll see about that. Just get me in the door. Iâll change this company.
Katrina Collier 34:23
That might be up for a challenge. They might want to, they really might want to. Oh, exciting times ahead. If people wish to get in touch with you, Lee, what is the easiest way? Is that the usual LinkedIn spam, or have you got preference?
Lee Andrese 34:38
Yeah, no, have them connect with me on LinkedIn. Thatâs the fastest way. Iâm also on Twitter under @LeeAndrese. So Twitter and and LinkedIn are probably my two most favourite social media. Yeah, hit me up there.
Katrina Collier 34:52
I am so grateful for your time and, of course, your pearls of wisdom. Thank you so much!
Lee Andrese 34:57
Thank you so much. Thanks for having me.
Katrina Collier 34:59
Thank you for listening to The Hiring Partner Perspective unedited podcast proudly supported by the people at WORQDRIVE. Hopefully you really enjoyed what you heard and have left feeling inspired. And if so, I would love your help to create real change. Please pass this podcast on to your hiring leaders and other recruiters and HR, even share it on your social channels, if you feel so inclined. The more reach we can get, the more change we can create. So please remember to subscribe, of course, on your favourite podcast platform. And do come and say hello @HiringPartnerPerspective on Instagram where I share behind the scenes of whatâs going on. Until next time, thank you.