CIPD North West Region hosted a webinar in our regions series diving into the findings of the recent survey of 1800+ leaders and professionals which highlight the drivers and the expectations of candidates when considering a move to a new employer. Sharing the key challenges facing organisations looking to hire and retain great talent post pandemic will help organisations identity what they need to do to compete for the very best talent.
Panellist:
- Paul O’Donnell, HRM Search Partners
Chaired by Erin Helbert, CIPD North West Region
0:00
my name is aaron halbert so i'd like to open by welcoming you all to today's event on behalf of my colleagues
0:05
in the cipd northwest region and it's wonderful to see so many attendees today
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i'm delighted to introduce our speaker today paul o'donnell who's the ceo of hrm search partners
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we've been established over 30 years and partnered with all types of organizations and some of the world's most recognizable brands to solve their
0:23
leadership challenges i'm thrilled to have them speaking for us today not least because we previously partnered
0:28
very closely together on all things hr during my time at hrm so paul and the
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team have recently completed a very considerable and very interesting body of work uh surveying over 800 800 leaders and
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professionals deep diving into the the drivers and the expectations of candidates when considering a move to a new
0:47
employer as we begin to exit the pandemic so he's going to talk to us today about some of their key findings
0:54
paul welcomes any questions um so please pop them into the question and answer box and paul will
1:01
answer them in real time as we go along throughout the presentation over the course the next 20 to 25 minutes
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so i'm delighted to hand you over to paul o'donnell thanks very much aaron um i our time is
1:15
brief enough actually today so i i might just get straight into it if that's okay and maybe i might start by running
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through the timing of the research and why we felt it was important to gather this data
1:29
and just bear with me two moments we started as we felt what we understood
1:36
about employee preferences when choosing a new employer i think it's been turned on its head
1:42
by the pandemic and it's been a time that's changed people's perspectives on
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lots of things security and safety i think dominate as concerns in general and we're seeing this in our research so
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we felt this was a critical juncture in terms of redesigning employee value proposition around these
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change perspectives that candidates now have i think there's been a lot of discussion
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about what people really want after the pandemic in the media which on balance is very healthy
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but we felt probably there was a fair bit of noise and distraction too that can be very unhelpful when you're trying to manage
2:17
people within a business in particular the remote working change i think that's captured the imagination
2:24
of the media quite a bit and this creates an awful lot of noise around that topic some of it's helpful
2:29
some of it's not i've seen several articles recently telling me that the new expectation is that after the pandemic
2:35
everyone will bring their dog to work um so again it's lots of noise is it helpful does it
2:40
reflect the reality we don't know so i suppose what we wanted to know was what will really matter to candidates
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when the dust settles on all of this and what are the real expectations that people have around remote working
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for example because people leaders we're interested in facts and empirical evidence to back up
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decision making because the changes we're making are they're so fundamental and the environment is so unpredictable that
3:04
having hard facts i guess to test these
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decisions all your image around me therefore
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just you just switched over thanks my apologies um so uh i think i might have caught out
3:31
a second ago what we were saying was the survey was 2000 leaders and professionals
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and it looks at all of this their perspectives of candidates when moving to a new employer or staying with the
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new one and my hope is by the end of the session that you'll have a good sense of what the data is telling us about how they're
3:48
making these decisions and that should i guess in turn arm you with the information you need to design
3:54
a fully up-to-date recruitment and selection process or redesign your employee value proposition
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if if that's what you feel is needed so just to begin by acknowledging that
4:06
for those of us who spend their time organizing people or organizing ourselves around people we've had i would say a very
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challenging year the problems with the pandemic i think that they the pandemic created or surfaced they were
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challenging and fairly unprecedented so well-being for example within the context of an employee value
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proposition went from being maybe a peripheral concern to being thrown very much
4:33
center stage but if there's one thing that the report and the research is telling us is
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that there's no time to stop and take stock and maybe even rest a little
4:43
i'm sure we could all do with the rest i certainly could but alas no uh the immediate landscape i
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think has two big concerns uh looming the first one is attracting talent in a highly
4:56
competitive landscape where these candidate expectations have been turned on their head
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and then there's the more pressing issue that's upon us now which is this issue of talent churn or more large-scale talent churn and i
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think we can see a period of significant churn has already begun i think it's driven by seems to be
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driven by a mixture of a desire for change or maybe candidates taking back some degree of control over
5:22
their lives at a time when so much control has been taken away but it's really been accelerated by the
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extent of remote working and what that clearly does to relationships and the cultural glue i suppose that binds
5:35
people to companies i don't i don't really believe personally that remote has been remote
5:40
working has been an entirely positive experience i think um from a productivity perspective it's been
5:46
largely flying in most instances people don't seem to need close supervision in order to do their work
5:52
but lots of other things have been lost and people don't feel really feel bound to the team in the way that they did
5:58
before so making a move is that bit easier and i think the research shows
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while many of us are aware of these issues and probably working on them as we speak
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the candidates expectation is that they're resolved now so that they're not future decisions but
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instead imminent ones we're actually doing another piece of research on this at the moment and we asked the
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candidates on that uh how many of them their employers had a work from home policy in place
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from september onwards and 52 said no now that they didn't have a work
6:37
from home policy in place and hadn't been communicated which it might seem reasonable perfectly
6:43
reasonable because so much of this is still up in the air i mean we had the highest case numbers
6:48
in recent months yesterday uh so we can't say when this pandemic is going to be over
6:53
and government advice on this can oscillate quite a bit but regardless candidates candidates
7:00
expect that the remote policy exists now and has been communicated as they need clarity on what their future looks
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like so i don't think a wait-and-see approach will be met benignly by them even though that might feel like a
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perfectly reasonable stance at the moment i think what they're what they expect is a picture of what
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working in a company will look like post pandemic because if you think about
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it so much of the pandemic has been about imagining better days ahead
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so people are ready for that now and they need to see the vision of what the days ahead look like or or this danger that they create their
7:35
own picture elsewhere so we have these four challenges and that organizes in our organizations now
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face so we're going to run through them over the course of the next 15 or 20 minutes
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and i'll just start if you can move it on cloud to the next slide
7:52
and to what the report says about designing employee value proposition in
7:58
this new landscape and i'll take a break just after this if there's any questions popping up if not
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no problem at all so what's important now to existing employers
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employees rather so that they stay put and what's important to new talent to ensure that they join your company
8:16
the first thing i think that appears clear in the research is that an awful lot of the current evps are being ripped up and
8:23
that approach that calls for engaging office spaces breakout rooms or you know small
8:28
park-based systems like subsidized canteens and so on they're no longer relevant for obvious
8:33
reasons but what's clear is that how a company approaches the sustainable well-being of
8:40
its employees is a dominant consideration amongst candidates if you think about it employees are
8:46
thinking of their own physical and mental health now their safety and security and they want employers to be thinking of the
8:53
same thing and of course that makes complete sense given the context of the last year and a half
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all of these things have been assaulted over that period of time so the question is will it change when
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the pandemic backdrop leaves us but but i suspect not uh will the desire for a
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work-life balance change after the pandemic again i suspect not there's one piece of data in the
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research there's a much higher rating given to well-being and people at the early stage
9:23
of their career so the younger guys so we believe that reflects a changing attitude
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that's pretty much here to stay and i know it's quite complicated to design evps
9:34
around this but personally i believe it's quite a positive development for employers as it levels the playing
9:39
field a little bit if you think those environments that are based around the concept of community
9:44
where genuine interest is taken by leadership in all aspects of an
9:49
employee's well-being they're at an advantage now and maybe that's as it should be deep pockets aren't so much the factor
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anymore i think the the pandemic has opened the door for employers to support employees around mental health challenges like
10:03
never before so that's hugely positive but only if employers take that
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opportunity and don't see it as a short-term consideration just related to the pandemic
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one big proviso in all of this is how it's articulated internally and externally to attract new
10:22
talent so you could care deeply but if you're not able to paint a picture of that to candidates the competitive
10:28
advantage around that is lost so it's in everything you do your career shop window
10:34
what recruitment suppliers say about you your talent acquisition function your hiring managers
10:40
are they all articulating the same story and if if they are you're doing brilliantly because that's incredibly
10:45
hard to achieve just one last point on the next slide just in relation to
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um evps it's uh we just had a look at how all of this
10:57
gets undercut by adverse publicity of your employer brand and we ask direct questions on that
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and if you consider these days with social media how can how fast information travels and the detail with
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which it travels adverse publicity about your brand will rip everything else you've done
11:15
on your evp to shreds unfortunately and the survey shows some really interesting reactions to how people feel about
11:21
organizations that have experienced that which are on the screen now so i might take a little minute at this
11:28
point and see if there's any questions or observations that anyone wants to look at in relation to employee value proposition
11:38
and probably one question well it's kind of more of a comment that
11:43
you might like to refer to it is not fair to have the temporary remote working policy based on
11:50
government guidelines so and the health and safety of employees as an employer we
11:56
see september as an opportunity to have a pilot scheme of a hybrid model working before adopting the permanent teas and
12:03
seas the terms and conditions around it to the new and existing contracts
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and so just interested to see your thoughts paul like you know what's what's your what's
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the feedback from you know maybe parties partners that you've maybe been in contact with around
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that yeah i think that's a very clever and it's it's the right approach in my view
12:27
because the the changes are so fundamental we don't know how they're going to turn out
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and we don't know what problems are going to emerge so committing yourself so fundamentally to such a dramatic
12:38
change can be um risky at best and um so adopting it in that um
12:45
that fashion where you'll try a pilot program is is a brilliant idea i think the key to it is is just
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engaging with employees and letting them know that that is the that is what you're doing and that's the
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period of time you're assessing it over and i think they're absolutely fine once they understand that that picture
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so i totally get it in terms of committing yourself to a policy that that is forever more that way
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and that can be risky and people might feel a little bit exposed by doing that but i
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think that's a very very good option very very good option indeed
13:24
so the comments right now pause if you want to carry on brilliant and what i might do it's actually a good segue i could jump into
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what the survey says about remote working and i might just run through a couple of the results and
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then discuss a little bit about what they might mean firstly the survey gives a clear
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preference amongst candidates to a hybrid of either two or three agile days in in a week so they
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definitely want to mix um there's another stat there i thought was interesting 16
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of respondents don't want to return to the office at all i know it's a smallish number but i
14:01
think it's usually significant because it's a further illustration of how important it is to start communicating and engaging now about
14:07
this as that might be completely unrealistic um the people's preferences for onboarding
14:15
is another interesting thing in that they look for a mix of agile and fixed office days that makes
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complete sense in terms of how people learn when they're on boarding and their their cultural integration
14:26
it can't really be achieved online and one of the last stats which i thought was interesting is
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that it doesn't appear to be a great exodus from cities to the country to take
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advantage of remote working 100 of the time and i think our anecdotal observations
14:43
have backed this up a little bit as well that there is some movement but not as much as people are suggesting
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which i guess is relevant because west of ireland based companies would have hoped to take advantage of that but it hasn't
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really materialized in a meaningful way i live in south galway myself and i can see it i can see more people coming into
15:02
the town that i live in but it's not hugely significant because i guess people see it as a future of hybrids so they need to stay
15:09
close to their workplaces just just a couple of observations on on
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what the data is telling us um i think the purpose of the
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fixed office days needs to be clear do people have a choice about when they
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attend or not so the experience of turning up to an empty office for two or three days in a
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week might present a problem over time if if there's nobody in the office or
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nobody in the t their particular team if people are given a choice when to attend or not people i think will begin
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to question the purpose of attending am i connecting with people or am i connecting with a building
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and i think it's really important to start engaging with employees around this and not focusing the discussion on
15:56
remote around productivity exclusively i think that's been the dominant discussion around working from home
16:02
is will people actually work which turns the debate into a trust issue
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but if people are at home without without supervision will they work of course they will i think too much time is spent
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discussing it but really the key issue is what will happen when you have your time in the office together it should be
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about collaboration learning formal learning that osmosis learning as well that's so important
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and then relationship maintenance and team bonding so i think on that basis some real consideration should be given to whether
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everyone should come in on the same days if that's feasible to do by team or by company depending on
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the size another observation would be that the company needs a long-term
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remote pro program and so what it maybe what are the team
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leaders or the middle managers doing now for example uh how has that changed uh have they
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been upskilled to manage remotely i think so many organizations have a team lead type structure but the real
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purpose of that is on the job learning and ensuring productivity is high but both of these
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things are mildly redundant in a working from home scenario so our observation is these guys are
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using the same tool kit as they used before and sometimes that's accelerating breakdowns and trust and relationships
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making it easier for people to move and they themselves they're under considerable duress because their tools
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don't work the same way that they used to so it's a really important factor to consider i think the performance
17:30
management system in general in a company needs to be accommodated in this long-term remote working program it is a
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real opportunity to manage by results here rather than inputs but it's only effective if the whole
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system is fully designed around that so full control and accountability goes to the employee
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absolute clarity about what's expected and from them in a robust system of managing when people fall short or
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the converse when people do really well that there's a really strong and vocal recognition program around that
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so i think all of these issues need to be worked through when designing that hybrid model
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and truthfully we're not seeing those elements in place when we're talking to candidate communities right now
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in some instances they are and those are the companies i think with the competitive advantage in the talent
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space right now and the i'm laboring this point but
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just to say candidates are making the decisions around this now and we can see that every every day
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so it's it's it's it's really important to get this designed quickly and communicated quickly and
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i think i could take another break leslie if that suits just to see if anyone had any
18:44
comments or questions in relation to the survey around remote
18:50
anyone any questions nothing's coming to the chat for maybe to allow maybe if one if someone
18:56
wants a question just regarding i think it's a good point you raise around you know designing the hybrid model
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whether it's you know hybrid working remotely and working on site there's a lot of factors
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you've you've mentioned there that it's not um it's not very straightforward you know
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you talked about performance management we need to adjust that to accommodate so managers i know i i think in many
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organizations managers struggled with managing performance and outside of that
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traditional manner so when they're physically on-site and that's a challenge i think
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we would have faced last year and but in regard to any did anything come back from the
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server around health and safety and accommodating the workplace as in the workplace at
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home did much come back from the survey around that fall or concerns that employees had like you mentioned physically it helped
19:53
but anything around those kind of factors is ergonomics or that it it wasn't actually surveyed uh let's
20:00
see but um there's a new piece of research underway where we're looking at a couple of these things it's definitely a factor
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the the the key thing i think that people found um quite aside from the the physical
20:14
health and safety was was the bleeding of work and home together and how the boundaries of it
20:21
became completely blurred and how that effectively felt that people were working all of the time
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the computer would be left on in the corner or people would be emailing out of hours and so on so there's no kind of clear
20:35
line of demarcation between when my person when my working time is over my personal time begins and and that
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with all of the other things in relation to the the wearing nature of video calls
20:48
they're they're they're not the same as physical interaction in terms of how they how they wear on people just led to very
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very high stress levels and we didn't look at it in this particular survey but we are looking at
21:00
it because we feel it's a very very interesting topic for future reference but definitely it's having an impact a
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mental health impact and i think the opportunity that's presented itself is that we can we can discuss it openly
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if we look at our company we've set a number of rules around you're not allowed contact anybody over lunch
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you're not allowed contact anybody internally after five o'clock there's all these rules around what you
21:23
can and can't do in relation to work so that people aren't sending people emails at nine o'clock so that they don't get an opportunity to switch
21:30
off i think that's really really important very good point yeah no thanks for sharing well
21:35
good to get your thoughts on that and i think we can move on thanks bob okay um
21:42
so i'll just jump into it's it's more or less the final section on it where we're looking at another item i
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suppose that's been turned on its head by the pandemic which is um the selection process during
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recruitment so as i say video conferencing is good it just doesn't really cut it when
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trying to develop relationships uh in the recruitment process i i think managers feel less able to
22:08
objectively assess or or bond with potential employees and they often create
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when necessary sorry they often create unnecessary
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layers in the process to compensate for that so it's a bit of a double-edged piece as
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the survey says 55 percent of candidates will out never refuse a new job with a
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company if they don't feel a strong rapport with a hiring manager during a recruitment process
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which i think is very hard to create via video just speaking from personal experience it's very difficult i think
22:45
so just picking out one big stat here 69 of respondents said to us that a
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poor experience during a recruitment process would switch them off a company but i
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think the the issue here is is that recruitment is sometimes seen and treated in organizations as an administrative
23:04
chore and i think if it's engaged within that way it creates lots of lost talent opportunities so
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our first observation here in this one is that um this is it will become or it has already
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become a very very competitive environment so having a clear strip true of recruitment
23:23
processes and expectations now is critical and sometimes the hiring manager can be the source of the blockage and
23:30
in so far as they may know what they need but they might engage with the process in a very outcome-focused way
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so i think thought needs to be given to whether you're hiring managers have measurements for hiring and who manages
23:42
them on that and then the the other thing just to go back to another point that i was
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making earlier about the evps designing them is one thing but how they're articulated
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is another and who articulates them so if you're using external providers like
23:59
us are they tested on how well they do this if if it says the survey if over half of
24:07
respondents will not go to a new employer because they don't feel aligned with the company's purpose and values
24:13
who in the process is articulating these things to them is it the external provider and and are
24:19
they missing people simply because they can't articulate it there's a couple of really practical
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points that come from the survey on hiring um first is they
24:30
absolutely want the face to face component in the hiring process if that doesn't exist currently and i
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would completely understand if it doesn't given circumstances but there is the potential to miss talent secondly just a basic
24:46
point nobody wants a panel interview uh at the moment people feel like with videos in particular one to one should
24:51
be the max maybe maybe one to two and just moving on to the next slide there
24:57
clara the the final point in the recruitment process is about articulating flexibility so it's
25:05
crucial in recruitment because it's so important to people right now but it has to be real flexibility so
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we've seen several companies reverse out of flexibility commitments at offer
25:16
stage after promising the candidate that they were okay to offer it now i think this is perfectly understandable because sometimes it's
25:23
leaders not believing in it and forcing the reversal at the last minute and it's a huge issue that there's still
25:31
a large leadership discomfort about how fast all of these things are moving
25:38
but in that particular scenario unfortunately you lose the higher obviously but the brand has a very very strong impact on the
25:44
brand but that leadership issue is a massive massive deal it actually segues on the next slide actually to another
25:52
piece of research that we have underway at the moment which it gives us this stat that it's the
25:57
single most important and influential factor in the hiring process so it's just a taster of a new piece of
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research we have underway and we'll we'll we'll release that in due course in the next few weeks
26:08
but just to say it's such a huge influence on getting talent in and i think what we're seeing is we're
26:14
not convinced that all senior leadership have gone along this journey at the rapid pace that it's
26:21
gone which to my mind is totally understandable but at the same time it's it's it's an impediment to hiring and it's an
26:27
impediment to keeping staff it's such a large topic we won't get into any info detail on this but there's
26:34
more on this to come so i'm just conscious of time so i might wrap up and then see if there's any further questions on
26:40
it so i think it gives us some very strong pointers about how to redesign
26:46
a successful employee value proposition in this post pandemic landscape assuming
26:52
hopefully we are post pandemic soon and hopefully it gives you some help in terms of actually retaining
26:59
existing employees and attracting new ones but but definitely there are some fundamental questions to
27:05
ask before designing the process the first one is do you have a firm view
27:10
and a picture on what it's like to be an employee in your company in a post-pandemic world
27:16
all of those things figured out because it's not straightforward at all and and then the second question started
27:22
reiterating one of what i've said before but have certain things about the post-pandemic world
27:28
being fully accepted by senior leadership in in your company or do they expect things to revert back to
27:34
the way they once were once the dust settles on all of this and again our experience says that there's quite a bit
27:40
of that going on and then the final question to ask yourself is is the hiring machine ready
27:46
for this are all the actors involved ready for this and if not how will the experience stack up
27:52
against uh the competitors that you're you're fighting against for talent so i
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think it's it's difficult this stuff is really difficult a little exhausting to face into these things i know after the
28:02
year and a half that everyone has had but i suppose my core message is that if those companies that do will hold on to
28:10
the talent that they have and will new hires win new hires and i hope i've cleared through some of
28:15
the noise around the topics and made the decisions that you'll be making around that that bit easier
28:21
hopefully if anyone has any questions happy to run through them i know we only
28:27
have one minute before before half past but every time yeah we've a couple of questions that have
28:33
come in paul but maybe if i just select one because i know aaron wants to wrap up as well of course
28:38
very much very insightful paul and very comprehensive and i there's been a question asked around can we circulate
28:44
the slides so of course circling slides and the survey i believe so we'll be sending that out
28:50
post and post the session so maybe if i just take one one question has come around and are
28:58
i suppose do we know what companies are doing to get the right balance between business teams and individual
29:04
needs but from the survey or from your maybe other colleagues working in that area do
29:10
we know that insights right now do you mean that candidates would have the ex certain
29:17
sort of high level expectations that might be a bit unreasonable and that might actually impede business performance as well as
29:24
yeah getting the balance i think and also there's another question in and maybe ties in a little bit to it is
29:30
you know did the survey look at generation lens so different types of generations you
29:36
know the age profile what their needs are versus someone a different age profile did the survey look at that
29:42
it's yeah it's really detailed on it actually and i could send that out you know what we don't have is a sort of a breakdown a generation but
29:48
you you know the information comes in and we have asked people kind of roughly the stage that they're at in their career
29:54
and definitely early stage career people look at um well-being above and beyond
30:01
everything so their physical and mental well-being uh is is just such a huge consideration
30:07
so i funnily enough i i don't uh to answer the first question it it
30:13
it feels like the the candidate considerations that they have they're they're not unreasonable given
30:20
the context in any way shape or form i think if somebody has a strong employee value proposition based around
30:25
well-being that should increase performance so they're not at odds with each other as far as i can see
30:32
they can be difficult to do difficult to implement difficult to manage and so on so forth but if they're there a strong well-being
30:39
component of an evp they really increase productivity and they increase stickiness to a company if
30:46
if you like people are less likely to leave so there's a lot of work in it but they're definitely not at odds with each
30:51
other candidate expectations and what's right with the com for a company and a company's productivity in
30:57
my view okay great listen thanks for thanks very much
31:02
paul um and i know there's some other questions there but we just don't have time so i'll hand it over
31:08
you to aaron here it's going to close out the second perfect thanks leslie anne um yeah so just before we close today's
31:13
session just want to let you know there'll be lots of information and updates coming out from cipd ireland
31:18
the team in the next month so in august along with a review of the outputs from
31:25
june's reimagining ireland's talent seminar and information about next steps and opportunities to
31:30
get involved the team will also be keeping everyone up to date with the plan and and everything that's
31:36
coming up in the next 12 months so so keep an eye out for the august events and for the hr update newsletter so in closing i
31:44
just want to say a big thank you to our speaker paul o'donnell from hrm search partners really really interesting uh takeaways
31:51
there and certainly some food for thought for everyone and i just want to say a massive thank you to everyone for attending today on
31:57
behalf of cipc ireland and in particular cibd northwest region so thank you to everyone and have a nice
32:03
afternoon thank you thanks aaron
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