Global Learning Resources

January 2006 Issue

Spotlight

Recruiting ROI Symposium Series, Spring 2006
Are you trying to measure the effectiveness of your recruiting function and are not sure you're doing the right thing in the right way? Then you need to learn the latest trends and critical metrics by attending the "Recruiting ROI Symposium Series."

Coming this spring, Kevin Wheeler hits the road on the west coast to deliver a half-day symposium/interactive workshop on Recruiting ROI. Come hear the latest insights in this updated workshop based on Kevin's metrics symposiums from previous years.

In this workshop you will:

Spring dates are being confirmed for the following west coast cities: San Francisco, Seattle, Irvine/Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Dallas. An east coast tour will be scheduled for this fall.

To learn more and pre-register, contact Erik Foss of Global Learning Resources, Inc. at 916-788-0977 or email efoss@glresources.com.

HOT TREND! What's Your Corporate Learning Strategy?
If you are charged with corporate education, and developing or executing a corporate learning strategy, GLR can help. Corporate education expert and author of "The Corporate University Workbook - Launching the 21st Century Learning Organization," Kevin Wheeler and his team of consultants are ready to help you develop and retain your critical talent.

GLR can help your organization:

Get started today. Contact Erik Foss of Global Learning Resources, Inc. at 916-788-0977 or email efoss@glresources.com.

Take Our Global Recruiting Trends Survey - Get Free Results
The world has gotten smaller this year, with more outsourcing, more interest in India and China, and greater talent shortages than ever before. At least half a dozen major American-based organizations, including HP and Cisco, announced large new investments in India. Global recruiting is happening with an increasing velocity and potential to impact business results.

What are you doing to meet the challenges of today's global employment marketplace? Take a few minutes to participate in our Global Trends Survey and you'll get some free data and insight.

If you are an international recruiter, a US recruiter with global recruiting needs or responsibilities, we'd like to hear from you. To take the survey, which will take not more than 10 minutes, visit the following website: http://www.glrsurveys.com/globaltrends/

Survey results will be reported in upcoming articles available from ERE or from our corporate site at www.glresources.com.

New Tools for Leadership from the Extremophile Project
Discover the secrets of "super-copers" and "super-communicators" in a seminar March 8-10 in Santa Barbara, California. Thriving in today's social and business environment requires skills most of us never learned. But now there are specific practices that enable you to:

Join seminar leaders Eileen Clegg, a future researcher, popular author, and leading practitioner of visual language working on the front lines of organizational change and Betty Frain, Ph.D, a veteran therapist and crisis counselor working on the front lines of individual change. Together they have developed The Extremophile Project studying people who have overcome seemingly impossible challenges through extraordinary personal resilience. This highly-interactive seminar trains participants in the specific practices that emerged from the research.

For more information and to learn how to attend, visit: http://www.visualinsight.net/newtools.html

What's Been, What Will Be in Recruiting

By Kevin Wheeler

2005 was an exciting year for GLR. We worked in 6 countries, 4 continents and found similar challenges and issues in each although with their own twist, whether a booming economy, a dearth of people, or lack of technology. This forced us to think differently about a lot of the concerns we hear in the United States. In many ways, our problems are not as severe as we think.

For example, Australia faces significant shortages of skills and people. About 25% of Australian workers were born elsewhere (compared to about 12% in the U.S.) and immigration will have to remain very high to grow to sustain their booming economy. At the same time, opportunities in the United States, Europe and other countries are enticing many Australians to leave and their educational system is struggling to entice and graduate enough new workers to make up for the number projected to retire.

China is also very short of skilled workers. While there are tens of thousands of laborers, only a small fraction have the skills to work in the new factories, high tech establishments, software firms, call centers, and service industries that are sprouting up. They are educating a record number of people, but they cannot keep up with the growth. The lack of skilled people will almost certainly constrain China's ability to grow as fast as it wishes to.

While we in the United States face the issues of fewer skilled workers and an aging workforce, we can, and will, tap into that aging workforce in many ways. Some will choose to not retire; some will work part-time or as contractors or consultants. Organizations are finding ways to entice older workers to stay and are also focusing more on keeping younger workers. China has none of these older, skilled workers to tap. They will most likely turn to the worldwide Chinese-speaking diaspora for help.

The issues we were asked to help on this past year feel into three areas: (1) market knowledge and awareness, (2) employment branding, and (3) retention.

Many clients asked us to help them and their management teams understand how significant the skills shortages are and to analyze the likely number of Baby Boomers who will retire. They were also focused on lo0king internally and analyzing their current employees' skills so they could be recruited for new positions.

Other clients were focused on building market-oriented strategies to attract better candidates and tom attract the "right" candidates. We helped do research in brand perception and awareness and helped clients improve there web sites and marketing approaches.

And several were concentrating on keeping their current employees, finding which ones had skills that could be used elsewhere in the organization, and on changing policies so that older workers might be inclined to stay a while longer.

What will 2006 bring? We are already seeing an increased focus on selection and on finding easy to screen for the best candidates. This is being done to lower the amount of time it takes to process potential candidates and to relieve the workload of overworked recruiters. It is also being done to improve the candidates experience and provide her with a faster and more accurate response than today.

We are seeing a continued interest and commitment to better employment branding and candidate awareness programs. These are being launched as new websites, as improved college recruiting strategies, as better use of product advertising as a way to do employment branding, and as more publicity aimed at the segments of workers the organizations wish to attract.

The desire to put in place screening and assessment systems is growing rapidly. Almost all our clients have some program in place to better screen candidates and to provide recruiters with a more qualified candidate than has been the case.

Along with these major trends, we also see more time spent on on-boarding new employees and in making sure they have a positive initial experience. We see some increased interest in better and more modern college recruiting, and a huge increase in global recruiting best practices. The results of our survey on global recruiting will be released in a few weeks on the Electronic Recruiting Exchange (ERE) and on our web site. There is still time to take the survey if you are involved in global recruiting (go to the survey here).

GLR is also actively involved in education and in helping organizations create learning strategies, leadership development curricula, and corporate universities. I will report on our year in this arena next month. Let's just say for now that it is an exciting and as much of a growth area as recruiting. Creating learning strategies and finding ways to rapidly create the skills organization need will be an area of research and experimentation for the next decade at least.

We at GLR hope you have a wonderful, exciting and challenging New Year. If we can help you in any way, please give me a call personally at 510-659-1079 or send me an email at kwheeler@glresources.com.

About the Author
Kevin Wheeler (kwheeler@glresources.com), is the President and Founder of Global Learning Resources, Inc., publisher of this newsletter. GLR can be explored at http://www.glresources.com.