02 May, 2015

Are you still involved in skilled based recruitment?





For many years through the industrial and knowledge age, skills have been imperative when recruiting people. Are they capable of operating the right machine or be part of the right department. However work is changing and people are now entering corporations with a job title that are not likely to survive many years – we don’t even know what will be needed a few years from now. Marketing has gone from paper and television to online and mobile at a blistering pace rendering the entire skill base obsolete. The same thing is happening in sales, where customers has access to more information than the salespeople and are capable of identifying the best deal without even calling.


“Companies are running 21st-century businesses with 20th-century workplace practices and programs.” Towers Watson


Need for specific skills are changing at a rapid pace.


If the obsolescence of skills is accelerating, it does not make sense to hire for skills alone anymore. A better way is to combine skills with attitudes and behaviours when recruiting. Define the attitudes you want in your company – they are likely to interact with your values and culture and the basic belief system your company is based on. They should also be the first evaluation process that existing and new people are evaluated against as attitudes are hard to change. A very imortant point is that the attitude of an employee is going to decide if your culture and operating logic is able to create engagement - a key element of motivation.

"Getting an employee with the right skills is not the same as getting a motivated employee"


Secondly it is needed to look defining the behaviours you want. On LinkedIn it is possible to get a good idea of behaviours of a candidate that can be explored through the interview phase. Even though you would like certain behaviours it is more important to look for the potential of behaviour you would like to have in your company as behaviours can be coached.

Skills should really have the last priority and you need to be looking for the potential to acquire the necessary skills and the ability to acquire future skills. Whatever you are looking for right now is going to be obsolete faster than you can believe.
Pulling it all together will help you identify your high performance A Players that exhibit the desired Attitudes, Behaviours and Skills you are looking for. B Players that have the potential to become A Players and finally C Players that does not have the potential.




Using the 3 Gate process will ensure that you get the right potential people into your organisation but not that they are motivated and engaged. Engagement is an emotional relationship between the employee and the company that the company is responsible for creating. It is not a characteristic of the employee.


"With high levels of engagement, firms can see revenue growth 2.5 times that of their peers and a 40 percent reduction in expensive staff turnover" HayGroup

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