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You are here: Home / Archives for service

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Why Candidates should be treated like Customers

November 5, 2016 by Julie McGrath

Candidates are also customers! Bad recruitment experiences cost brands millions in lost customers

Giving job seekers a poor experience could turn them off a brand from a consumer perspective.

Interviewees may feel like they are in the spotlight during the recruitment process but the brands conducting the interview are under just as much scrutiny, as new research suggests a poor recruitment experience could turn candidates off that brand for life.

Recent reports have revealed that one in four British jobseekers have either entirely stopped purchasing (12%) or purchased less (11.5%) from a brand because of a negative candidate experience.

Poor candidate experience cost Virgin Media £4.4m in 2014, the study claims. More than 130,000 candidates applied to work at Virgin Media that year, 18% of which were existing Virgin Media customers. However, as a direct result of poor candidate experience more than 7,500 candidates cancelled their subscriptions and switched to a competitor, resulting in millions of pounds in lost revenue, according to the analysis.

The brand has since brought its recruitment function in-house, which allows it to “take a lot more control and engage with individuals on a one-to-one level”, says Neil Chivers, employer brand and marketing manager at Virgin Media.

He adds: “It wasn’t all just about the money but the saving to the business really helped us get the support from our CMO and head of finance to say that we could change the way we do things.”

 

Focus on candidates’ needs

Virgin Media has also invested in technology with a candidate portal that maps the recruitment experience. It looks at how candidates are going about their application process and explores what they want rather than Virgin Media leading. The process also features inspirational voice messages from brand ambassador Usain Bolt.

The brand was able to identify quick wins that cost nothing to change and improve but made an immediate impact.

“We have to make sure whatever we say to a candidate at that first touchpoint stays with them all throughout their life here.” – Neil Chivers, employer brand and marketing manager, Virgin Media

Chivers adds that changing recruitment practices is just the first step: “In order for this to be a success we have to deliver on what we promised those candidates. Giving them a great experience through the application process is just one facet of the whole employee life cycle.

“We have to make sure whatever we say to a candidate at that first touchpoint stays with them all throughout their life here.”

 

Positive Impression

Bryan Adams, CEO and founder of Ph.Attraction, says: “The recruitment process needs to be people-first. Every brand experience is as valuable as the next – whether it’s recruitment or anything else it’s an opportunity to delight, retain or attract a customer.”

The study of 1,200 British-based workers also shows that nearly a third (29.3%) candidates would consider becoming a customer of a brand if they had a good experience.

Given that more than 75% of respondents aged 16 to 24 have applied for a job at a company where they are already a customer, it is vital that brands look at how they treat applicants or they could risk losing their business.

In order to attract talent, particularly candidates aged under 24, brands need to advertise what they stand for. A separate study by LinkedIn shows that an organisation’s purpose is a deal-breaker for 52% of UK professionals when considering a job offer but businesses generally fail to include their values on their website or LinkedIn company page. That number rises to 56% among those aged 16 to 24.

Brands should also be thinking about the future work force in employer branding. There are projects and companies already helping young people make the right recruitment choices. Rise To, for example, matches 16- to 24-year-olds with suitable purpose-driven entrepreneurial companies.

Employers build a LinkedIn style brand profile and pre-vetted ‘matched’ talent is served to them automatically. Those aged 16 to 24 sign up for free and are guided through building a digital CV. As they refine their profile, the algorithm matches them with the companies and opportunities that best suit them.

Duncan Cheatle, co-founder of Rise To, who also co-founded Start-Up Britain and the Supper Club, says: “Companies learned decades ago they needed to build an ongoing brand. With employer branding they don’t do that. They just put a job ad up for 30 days hoping the talent they want to attract will be remotely interested.”

Business in the Community (BITC), a responsible business charity supported by the Prince of Wales, conducted a survey of 4,000 young people, which again finds that after a negative recruitment process one in five young people are put off that company.

BITC works with a number of large employers and educators, including City & Guilds, Barclays and Whitbread, on recruitment and promoting the importance of constructing an employer brand that is open and accessible for young people as part of its Future Proof campaign.

Creating positive experiences for candidates is vital for Costa-owner Whitbread as it relies on a large number of employees to grow in the UK.

Sandra Kelly, head of education at Whitbread, which owns Premier Inn and Costa, believes creating positive experiences for candidates is vital for the company as it relies on a large amount of employees to grow in the UK. It aims to make the process “fair, accessible and transparent”.

Kelly believes this is “particularly important for young people who will form an increasing part of the future consumer market”. She says: “We have worked hard to open up different routes into our business, focusing on attitude, values and motivations in our expanding apprenticeships programme.”

“We have an ageing population so young people will become a scarcer resource than they are today,” adds Chris Jones, CEO of The City & Guilds Group. “If businesses don’t make changes now to break down the barriers young people face when entering employment, their futures – and indeed our economy – will be at risk.”

“If businesses don’t make changes now to break down the barriers young people face when entering employment, their futures – and indeed our economy – will be at risk.” – Chris Jones, CEO of The City & Guilds Group

Jones is backing the BITC campaign because he wants “businesses to take a look at their practices, be honest about how youth-friendly they really are, and commit to changing for the better”.

 

Treat talent like consumers

The Ph.Attraction report states that 22% of British workers believe a brand’s candidate experience is more revealing about brand culture than its customer experience. It therefore makes commercial sense to treat potential recruits the same as potential consumers.

“These days, recruiters are marketers, they just sit in a different department,” says Joe Wiggins, head of communications, Europe at reviews-based recruitment platform Glassdoor. “Employer brand is a product of employee engagement, which is in itself a product of employee experience.”

Brands are using the platform as a marketing tool by linking reviews to profiles on careers pages, and using social platforms to show employee-generated content.

Wiggins adds: “The lines between internal and external communications are blurring. Smart organisations are using social to give a look inside their organisations.”

Once those candidates are attracted to roles and companies it is up to the brand to deliver on what that employer marketing has offered. One way of improving candidate experience is adjusting the power balance in the process.

Cheatle at Rise To says many employers view recruitment as a one-way process. Employers want to attract talent but the moment they start recruiting it comes down to deciding whether to give someone a job “instead of recognising that they are going to be assessed the other way round”.

He adds: “The whole approach needs to be seen as one of embracing in a much more equal way.”

Being asked the right questions and receiving feedback from a prospective employer can improve how that company is viewed, according to Cheatle.

He says: “Too often the recruiter doesn’t get any training or steer so they will come in with questions that aren’t quite appropriate or are not exploratory.”

The sentiment is mirrored in the Ph.Attraction research, which reveals 18% of respondents felt more valued by a receptionist than the interviewer during their last job application. Furthermore, one in four believe interviewers do not care about their goals or aspirations and 37% believe it is more likely they will win the lottery than receive detailed job feedback.

It is clear that employer branding takes effort, but failing to consider the recruitment process could cost a brand both talent and customers.

 

A large number of Businesses fail to consider the importance in providing a good candidate experience in their recruitment processes for reasons such as time limitations & lack of HR Staff.

This is when Recruitment Companies such as Graffiti Recruitment become a highly useful, cost effective solution. Our Recruitment Consultants are all trained to give the highest possible standard of experience to both Clients & Candidates. We understand the Recruitment Process can be extremely stressful, therefore our goal is to extinguish that stress by streamlining the recruitment process and provide a unique, premium quality experience along the way.

Find out what our clients and candidates think of our unique service here!

 

 

Filed Under: Latest Industry News Tagged With: candidates, consumers, customer, customers, employees, employers, experience, recruitment, service, study, virgin

Cloud Competition: Amazon vs Google vs Microsoft

August 12, 2016 by Julie McGrath

With Amazon, Google and Microsoft all reporting strong growth on the back of cloud, we take a closer look at how they have achieved it

The grip that Amazon Web Services (AWS) has on the infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) market can make it hard for even relatively big players to get a look-in when enterprise CIOs shop around for cloud services.

Microsoft has managed to hold its own, with the help of its Azure platform, by focusing on convincing its existing base of on-premise enterprise customers to ditch their own servers and use its cloud infrastructure.

It is a strategy that appears to be working very well for Microsoft. Its fourth-quarter 2016 financial results saw the Azure cloud division emerge as one of the company’s best-performing business initiatives, with revenue growth of 102%.

In recent years, the company has also publicly committed to matching AWS on price for various commodity cloud services, which has been a useful marketing tactic.

For instance, every time Amazon decides to publicly announce a price cut for any of its cloud infrastructure services, Microsoft grabs the opportunity to crowbar its way into that narrative and announce a price cut of its own.

This has helped to create the impression that the IaaS market is something of a two-horse race between AWS and Microsoft, which is an image Google has been working hard to dispel since late 2015 when it appointed former VMware co-founder, Diane Greene.

A Google board member since 2012, Greene was appointed to oversee the running of Google’s newly-converged cloud services business, bringing the product, engineering, sales and marketing efforts of its off-premise infrastructure and software initiatives under one roof for the first time.

Unified approach

The move was comprehensively referenced during a conference call to discuss Alphabet, Google’s parent company, and its 2016 second-quarter results, with CEO Sundar Pichai, who described how taking a more unified approach to cloud was opening doors for it in the enterprise.

“It’s a big set of changes, and it’s obviously having an impact,” said Pichai on the call transcribed by Seeking Alpha.

“So for me, I see a shift to a world-class enterprise approach, and it’s definitely having an impact on the type of conversations we are having and the outcome of the RFPs [requests for proposals] we are engaged in.”

Proof of that is evident in some of the high-profile contract wins Google has secured this year with the likes of music-streaming site Spotify and Apple.

To keep up this momentum, the company outlined the steps it has taken to increase its headcount across several areas of the business, including its cloud division, with more than 2,460 recruits taken on in the previous quarter.

Google vs AWS

At present, Alphabet does not provide a breakdown within its financial results of the cloud’s contribution to its wider business, which banked a profit of $4.9bn against revenues of $21.5bn in Q2.

Instead, it is reported as “other revenue”, which means the performance of Google’s converged cloud unit is muddied because its figures are lumped in with those for Google Play and the company’s hardware ventures.

Even so, this part of its business brought in revenue of $2.2bn, up 33% on the year before.

It is currently unclear just how big Google’s cloud business is, but there is no denying that AWS has the upper hand, based on its financial results, which were released the same day.

The activities of AWS alone brought in $2.9bn in revenue for its parent company, Amazon.com. This figure is 58% higher than that for the same quarter a year ago, and equates to about 9% of Amazon’s total sales.

During a conference call to discuss the results, also transcribed by Seeking Alpha, the senior management team at AWS said the work being done behind the scenes to improve the efficiency of its infrastructure was having a positive impact on its revenue generation.

Datacentre footprint

The company is also currently building out its datacentre footprint across the globe in response to customer concerns about latency, data sovereignty and security, and this looks set to bring a fresh tranche of users on board, it said.

Brian Olsavsky, chief financial officer at Amazon.com, said: “When we expand geographically, existing customers will run more of their workloads on AWS. Sometimes they have local latency concerns or security issues that require them to run things in their country, so that helps.

“We also open up to new customers when we add these regions, and it is certainly an exciting investment for our customer base.”

In view of Google’s and Microsoft’s attempts to become even bigger thorns in the side of AWS, the company is in no danger of overlooking the competitive threat either of these rivals pose to its market-leading position in the cloud.

Particularly, as Olsavsky referenced elsewhere during the results call, there is a strong chance that AWS, Google and others will find their services being used by the same customers as enterprises move to adopt a multi-cloud approach in their IT environments.

“We have been in this business longer than anyone,” he said. “Having said that, there is plenty of room for multiple suppliers in this business.

“What we focus on is innovating on behalf of customers and expanding our geographic footprint to make our services more widely available.”

In a briefing note following the recent wave of financial results, Kate Hanaghan, research director at analyst house TechMarketView, said AWS clearly continues to lead the way in the cloud market.

“We know more about the performance of AWS than its competitors,” she said. “Google’s cloud revenue is buried, and while we know Microsoft’s Azure revenue was up 102% in its last quarter, this was from an unknown base.

“Our view is that AWS is growing at a slower rate in the UK specifically. That said, AWS is outpacing the market and most of the other players.”

– Caroline Donnelly

Filed Under: Latest Industry News Tagged With: aws, Big, business, Cloud, data, google, Infrastructure, microsoft, service, web

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