/blog/best-practices-and-tips-to-navigate-virtual-recruiting/-10-07-2020
COVID-19 has made fully-remote teams and virtual recruiting become the new normal. Despite hurting the job market and presenting an unprecedented challenge for recruiters, the pandemic also speeds up the digital transformation in many functions, recruiting included, and encourages modern recruiters to come up with new strategies to find talents. Desperate time calls for adaptive measures, those who thrive will lead the game when normalcy is restored. For example, Charter was able to hire 3000 new employees 100% virtually during the last few months, and they will possibly be in a good position when the offices resume openings. Interested in how to adopt a wide range of virtual recruiting tactics? Here is Rakuna’s guide to virtual recruiting with best practices.
Virtual Recruitment has been around for years, and many of us have probably implemented at least one or two methods. However, the need for virtual talent acquisition has rocketed since the Covid-19 outbreak, and now virtual recruiting is required everywhere.
Virtual recruitment employs a wide range of virtual HR tools, tactics, and resources to find, influence, interview, qualify, and onboard the best candidates. This way of recruiting can be integrated into organizations’ recruitment plans under different circumstances to maximize the quality of hires. Virtual recruiting becomes especially effective when you have to deal with a large number of applicants, remote hiring needs, and unprecedented challenges, e.g., COVID-19. This agile recruitment strategy has been implemented in many organizations and businesses, including both multinational corporations, SMEs, and start-ups.
The top benefits of using virtual recruiting tactics in your recruitment plan involve:- Eliminating in-person interactions and sustain an engaged workforce to maintain business performance during the pandemic
For a detailed analysis of the advantages of implementing virtual recruiting, check out this Virtual Career Fair guide.
The top five common methods of virtual recruiting include:
Virtual career fairs are job events organized via online platforms that help businesses connect with job-seekers. Organizations can choose to build their online sites or have a booth at the top virtual recruiting events. They are probably identical to the traditional job fairs, yet with a few technical perks, such as:
For the best practices of career fairs and how to start your virtual recruiting journey smoothly, check out our Virtual Career Fair article.
Virtual assessment is the second stage of recruitment, usually referred to as a pre-employment or a pre-interview assessment organized via online channels to help employers evaluate the qualifications of their prospective employees effectively and conveniently. While the most common forms of virtual assessment are online one-way tests for sorting candidates, some organizations are also moving their assessment centers to online space in response to changes in environmental factors.
In terms of design and implementation, the usage of this method ranges from measuring candidates’ levels of competency with hard skills, numerical, logic, and verbal tests to evaluate cultural fit with behavior and personality tests. Additionally, according to SHRM, 82 percent of companies are using some forms of pre-employment assessment, and the way they use it is evolving.
If you are considering implementing virtual assessment or finding the way to upgrade your online tools in the following months, here are some tips and best practices:
So how to use a wide range of virtual assessments to serve your purpose effectively? Here is our simplified breakdown of the three common tools:
Using an Automated One-Way Online Assessment as a Quick Screen Tool for Hard Skills
This is probably the most common type of assessment tool among companies, and it is also especially helpful for large corporations that receive thousands of application forms per recruiting wave. The types of tests include logic reasoning, numerical and verbal reasoning.
Assessing Candidates’ Capacity with Job Stimulations or Programming Challenges
Recruiters can create a virtual workspace that immerses applicants in key roles of the organization based on their interest in the application forms to solve real business problems. This type of test involves case solving, situational judgment, or role-playing challenges. If you are looking for talents with technological skills, consider utilizing well-designed platforms to organize programming challenges for proper assessment. Some of the commonly used platforms for this particular type of evaluation used by top companies such as c, Adobe,… are HackerRank, HackerEarth.
Getting the Whole-Person Impression with Personalities & Culture Fit Tests
To ensure a sustainable employment pipeline, we, as recruiters, are always in the search for the candidates who “fit”. Those are the ones who not only have the necessary skills and knowledge to perform but also demonstrate desired personality traits, cultural fit, and motivational drivers. Finding the “right” candidate is especially important to drive the growth for an organization, and that’s why conducting this type of test is necessary to look for people in leadership positions.
Along with the rise of virtual recruiting, how companies use online assessment is also evolving. Along with traditional psychometric tests mentioned above, big corporations are stepping up in the recruiting field with gamified assessments. This method, which is powered by advanced technology, requires applicants to solve dynamic problems. Therefore, it doesn’t only improve candidates’ experience but also enables companies to track behavioral data and how prospective employees respond to dynamic situations.
An example of this method is PwC’s game-based test called Career Unlocked. According to WikiJob, this engaging way of assessment consists of eleven different games that cover the different skills PwC wants to assess. PwC will then collect and evaluate the data extracted from 3000 data points, which reflect not only gamers’ competencies but also candidates’ thinking process and approach to logical problems under pressure.
The on-ground assessment center has been in the recruitment process of many companies for a long time. However, due to the restrictions of in-person interactions during the current global pandemic situation, modern recruiters are finding adaptive ways to maintain and organize this crucial assessment via online platforms. So, recruiters, no matter how you arrange it based on your company’ resources and situations, here are two notes for you: Keeping it short, personable, and sweet to engage talents. Aiming to have two or three activities with built-in breaks to ensure the energy levels of candidates during the process.
Having prompt responses addressing candidates’ needs and concerns during the process is crucial to create positive talents’ experiences during this strange time. Thus, organizations should appoint and announce a facilitator hotline, who is dedicated to overseeing the process and becoming the contact point in case of emergencies. Companies with a large number of applicants can also consider having an online support system to fasten the process, such as P&G’s virtual job assistant named Olivia. No matter which type of online assessment your company is implementing, we suggest maintaining best practice assessing standards among alternatives to ensure quality hires.
What will you do when you have to interview remote candidates, or your hiring manager is unavailable for in-person interactions? Well, the common approach is to organize Skype/ Zoom/ Hangout meetings. However, there are two primary methods of conducting digital interviews for your consideration:
While the simple two-way interview via online tools mentioned above seems to be widely used among businesses, some corporations are also adopting advanced technology with up-to-date algorithms to get in-depth information on applicants’ behaviors.
Online interviews may be harder to track, manage, and coordinate compared to their in-person counterpart. Therefore, if you are planning to organize multiple two-way interviews, make sure that both interviewers and interviewees understand the progress and have proper expectations towards recruiting milestones. You can also utilize modern interview scheduling software to ease the burden of administrative tasks and back-and-forth communications between stakeholders.
Though using pre-recorded video interviews may remove the personal touch points between interviewers and candidates, this method is undeniably useful in the initial stage when you probably have dozens (or even hundreds) of applicants. It also enables candidates to conduct an interview in an automatic manner at their convenience. Furthermore, the emergence of new technologies has allowed leading HR vendors to introduce new advanced tools, such as AI-powered screening features. AI applications in video interviews may remove the unconscious bias caused by human errors, analyze candidate behaviors in a timely manner, and provide necessary data to hiring managers. A well-known example of an organization which digitizes its hiring process to achieve high productivity is Unilever. The leading FMCG corporation has been working with a provider to implement AI-powered interviewing tools, which can not only record candidates’ responses but also be able to analyze interviewees’ behaviors such as keywords, intonation, and body language. Based on the analysis of collected data points, hiring managers can have an overview of candidates’ personality traits and come up with an objective evaluation.
While the notes on abiding requirements can be applied to both traditional and virtual interviews, the latter poses a higher risk of legal issues as they leave a digital footprint. Therefore, no matter whether your companies are organizing two-way interviews or utilizing an online “pre-screen” computer program, your interview questions must not violate guidelines or pose a threat of discrimination on a candidate’s protected characteristics. These characteristics include sex, religion, race, age, etc.
We know that different companies may use different platforms (Skype, Hangouts, Microsoft Teams, etc.) to communicate externally, but your candidates may not possess the proper applications or settings, Thus, organizations should avoid using technology that requires users to download anything onto their phone or computer to reduce the risk of technical issues. Before each virtual interview, recruiters should also give a test run to minimize technical hiccups and maximize candidate experience. A final tip for video interviews and virtual recruiting: Having a compelling company culture pitch can effectively grab candidates’ attention and differentiate yourself among employers.
Okay, this is probably the end of your virtual recruiting journey. Ideally, we should organize small and in-person onboarding events in the office, where your new employees can get around and meet their future teammates. However, virtual onboarding happens when A. you have remote employees or B. you need an adaptive measure during an unprecedented time, such as COVID-19, when social distancing is recommended. Though it may seem strange to organize virtual onboarding, no matter the situation, modern recruiters should always maintain the working standards and make sure that your new hires not only have all the necessary materials to perform but also feel like a part of the team.
Make sure that you collaborate with the supervisor and prepare a solid plan of what your new hires will do from day one. It’s always easy to feel lost during the first few days, and without proper preparation, your new employees may stare at their screens or be drowned under a load of information. Here is a quick checklist:
If the onboarding time happens at the office, the new hires can reach out to their supervisors or teammates easily to sort things out. However, challenging times require adaptive measures, and this is an opportunity for the rise of online learning hubs. Utilizing these tools ensure that your new employees can have the proper training to perform productively despite the lack of in-person communications and guidances.
We also suggest team managers conducting regular meetings or check-ins with new hires and team members to ensure that the team is on the same page and communicating effectively. These interactions are also opportunities to instill the company culture and values.
Okay, so what if you have done all the suggestions above? What can be the next big and interesting thing in virtual recruiting (and virtual onboarding)? At this time, we will bet on virtual reality, which can make candidates’ experience more interactive and exciting. Recruiters can design simulated office tours to show the real working environment or the experience of specific roles to give new employees an insight into what they can expect from the job. A fully immersive experience allows them to see and feel the office culture and imagine themselves in a specific role while maintaining social distancing.
Even though more than 82 percent of companies are adopting virtual recruiting methods into their recruitment processes, we believe that moving from partly remote hiring to 100% remote hiring is still a challenge for many companies during this strange time. However, businesses must go on. The surge of virtual recruiting reflects adaptive strategies of modern recruiters in response to this unprecedented change, and those who manage to adapt will thrive.