Talent sourcing: Think of it as a supply chain

Talent sourcing

Man, it’s kinda depressing how everything in business that could have meaning somehow became a buzzword. Today’s example: “talent sourcing.” Let me set up a few things for you.

  1. Regardless of how you feel about the Baby Boomers, they were the most-educated generation in U.S. history.
  2. Now they are largely beginning to retire and/or, well, die.
  3. Now look at the perceived fastest-growing jobs between 2014 and 2024.
  4. 8 of 15 require an Associate’s Degree or less.
  5. Final little piece of the puzzle: automation getting to scale and employment protection issues.

This is what you’re left with. If you were to conceive an American child this evening, there’s a good chance that said child has no clear career path around age 22 — which is when the career path commences for many. The basic life path is changing. Some people are out there having real, honest discussions about it — but most are burying their head in KPIs. This is probably less than stellar for our futures.

Into this cluster mess walks Mr. Talent Sourcing. Typically this is some “HR pure play” (heard that in a meeting once) whereby someone presents a “strategic plan” — it’s really just a shitty PowerPoint — and claims that’s the “talent sourcing play” for the next few years. Meanwhile, every time a new job opens, the hiring manager covers his ass by throwing HR under a train. No one speaks of “talent sourcing.” Instead, everyone lights their hair on fire, does a little Post and Pray, and hopes the ATS delivers a big win. The ATS whiffs, screening out the best people, and it’s time again to rinse and repeat the All-Bullshit, All-The-Time hiring process mess. Talent sourcing? My ass. The hiring process is completely broken.

[Tweet “Candidates think hiring is inhumane. Companies get bad people. It’s time to fix this.”]

The last two people I talked to who were in a job search called it “inhumane.” Both of them called it that, without prompting. When we’re describing hiring like we describe slaughtehouses, we might need a new approach here.

“I need executive buy-in on my talent sourcing plan!”

Any office you work in, everyone talks about “executive buy-in.” It’s like gold. It should be traded commodity. This becomes a problem, of course. Those executives get inflated heads — “Everyone needs me!” — and essentially expect you to kiss their ass at every turn. If you don’t, you’ll stay at the same pay grade for 11 years. It’s a miserable cycle and many people simply call that “the middle part of my life.” (While spending 60 hours/week there.)

Here’s the simplest problem with HR, though: executives don’t give a shit about it. It doesn’t make money. What it does do — in their eyes — is compliance and hiring. Most executives view themselves as above compliance (ethics are doomed) and the common refrain on hiring is “Eh, people are interchangeable.” (Dirty little secret: so are executives.)

So when you’re talking about “talent sourcing” or “hiring strategy,” you’re starting from a place that executives could care less about. But for anything real to happen, you need to make them care. How does this occur?

Re-frame the talent sourcing discussion

Chest-pounding thought leaders would say “Put it in terms they can understand,” and then give no concrete example. I’ll try to give one or two.

First: re-define talent sourcing as a supply chain. Executives care deeply about their supply chain. Some probably think about it more than their wife’s happiness. (Not kidding.) Talent sourcing is just a supply chain involving people. As a Stanford MBA working in public policy notes:

Employers are increasingly finding themselves in the “post and pray” mode, rather than having confidence that there’s a sufficient pool of quality, diverse candidates that they can recruit from. That’s why, in the last few years, employers have become much more proactive in thinking through how they really restructure the supply chain that brings them talent.

Not sure how “proactive” most companies are, but hopefully it’s trending that way. Last place I worked once took 47 minutes to figure out how to save a job description as a PDF. That’s an 11-second task that somehow took significantly longer, so … we ain’t living in talent sourcing utopia just yet.

Supply chain!

Vocabulary is very important at offices. The words people use to describe their specific relevance are sacred to them. If you change “talent sourcing” to “supply chain [for people],” now there’s a bit more caring on the executive side. But you can’t just change the vocab. Next you gotta change the numbers. The spreadsheet has to reflect.




 

This is what you need:

  • Real cost of hiring process, including intangible numbers around time
  • Average tenure in various roles, sorted by manager
  • Turnover/churn numbers, sorted by manager and department
  • Salary information worked into this
  • Time-to-hire/fill relative to salary bands
  • A big final number: the “hit” you’re taking on bad hiring and talent sourcing

Now you’ve changed the terms and the numbers. You’re closer to executives actually giving a crap about this stuff.

What we did to “talent” in most first-world business

Follow this bouncing ball for me, OK?

  • We rooted ideas like “talent sourcing” in Human Resources
  • At almost every company under the sun, HR is not a data-driven department (** this may change eventually **)
  • Executives, while they often have not a fucking clue about data, still are taught to believe they are “data warriors”
  • They also care deeply about money
  • HR does not generate money
  • So, we have now rooted “talent” in a department that true decision-makers and check-writers barely glance at

OK. For decades this barely mattered and margins were OK. But now we’ve got a problem: an educated generation is exiting, a less-educated generation is entering, and we’re all about to have robot overlords. It’s a much more complex picture. Some exec can sneer, “I’ll just get robots for everyone — at cost!” That works for some businesses, sure. It doesn’t work for all businesses, though, and we need to spend a few years sussing this all out. As we’re doing that, how about changing the discussion around talent sourcing? How about using terms and numbers that executives will legitimately respond to?

Hiring is inhumane to candidates, and it often leads companies with the wrong person. So clearly it’s broken on both sides of the equation. We might as well try a few simple presentation and wording adjustments to talent sourcing, right?

Ted Bauer