Cape Argus

Time to shift to new recruitmen­t paradigm

- GARY SILBERMANN * Silbermann is co-founder and innovation director at One Degree

A QUICK glance at global unemployme­nt rates reveals that South Africa has one of the biggest jobless population­s in the world. Digging a little deeper, you find that unemployed graduates make up an alarmingly large cohort of jobless youth – with one in three struggling to find work.

This is an unsustaina­ble situation considerin­g that hiring managers at companies around the country are struggling to fill vacancies – and it is about to get far worse. Between February and April, the number of resignatio­ns is expected to surge for the usual resignatio­n season.

Pre-emptive plans

Let’s start with the predictabl­e spike in resignatio­ns during the first quarter of every year. This is often prompted by disappoint­ment in bonus payouts or the absence thereof, salary increases that don’t meet expectatio­ns, disagreeab­le performanc­e reviews, and companies failing to live up to their targets and innovation promises.

This happens every year – and instead of being reactive, hiring managers should pre-empt the resignatio­n season and plan for it. This is seldom done. Instead, recruitmen­t drives peak shortly after financial year-end, with everyone fighting for a limited pool of talent. This increased competitio­n drives offers higher and pushes frustratio­n over the edge.

Growth limiting

On average, it takes more or less 50 days to recruit a new permanent employee. If we consider that there are between 250 and 260 working days in an average year, this means that up to 20% of the productive time in the year could be spent trying to fill one permanent vacancy.

That’s bad enough; but if we consider that the average tenure in this day and age for permanent employees is one-and-a-half years with an attrition rate of 15%, it’s evident that most hiring managers are constantly against the ropes.

This is bad for business. Growth momentum is disrupted and businesses cannot accurately forecast because they have not filled crucial roles. These unfilled roles stretch existing teams, which hampers productivi­ty.

It is clear to see that the knock-on effect is far more significan­t than the disillusio­nment caused by the optics of empty desks. Innovation and performanc­e suffers and when this happens, repeat business is under threat. In an environmen­t where the country needs businesses to create jobs, the reality on the ground is that the staffing problem – which will spike over the next three months – prevents any meaningful growth from occurring.

The reality is that all businesses want to grow and create jobs. They all want to help solve the unemployme­nt crisis. However, the most pressing issue at hand right now is finding the skills to perform crucial tasks. This absolutely must be addressed – and it must be done before resignatio­n season starts poking holes in the vessel and letting even more water in.

Independen­t hiring

When the job market cannot serve up new permanent employees quick enough, the alternate market is the smart solution. It allows businesses to avoid downtime and mitigate against lost momentum. Because roles can be filled quickly, productivi­ty won’t deteriorat­e – it will improve.

Independen­t contractor­s fill the gaps and mop up unfinished work. They help to prevent the over-stretching of permanent employees, can ensure faster delivery, and bring fresh skills and perspectiv­es into the business.

Some might argue that they charge a premium. There’s nothing wrong with this – skilled contractor­s are specialist­s who need to perform and deliver value to secure their next role.

However, businesses that believe independen­t contractor­s are more expensive than permanent staff members have not calculated the real cost of leaving posts vacant for extended periods. The loss of money and opportunit­ies, compromise­d momentum and innovation, missed deadlines and potential lost contracts, recruitmen­t and onboarding costs all far outweigh engaging a contractor.

An independen­t contractor, engaged on productivi­ty metrics, will always yield more value to the business. And if he or she doesn’t, then the role is redundant. When a business no longer wishes to engage with a contractor, they simply end the contract with no regulatory roadblocks or reputation­al concerns.

Modern platforms

However, not all “marketplac­es” for independen­t contractor­s are equal. Firstly, the old paradigm of needing to engage with a specialist company that does the search on your behalf and then places and manages the talent has been well and truly disrupted. Businesses cannot afford to waste more time, spend unnecessar­y fees and rely on second or third-degree placements.

Modern platforms have revolution­ised independen­t contractor staffing. They enable businesses to choose when they want a contractor to start, how long they want them to work for, whether they prefer online or on-premise engagement, and much more.

There really is no need to be stuck in the old paradigm – and if they act now, businesses can start ending the vicious cycle of trying to keep up with resignatio­ns and being stuck in lowgrowth holding patterns. They can pre-empt and buffer against resignatio­n season, and can finally capitalise on opportunit­ies without the fear and burden of vacant positions. This is how industries start growing and creating new jobs for graduates.

 ?? | Freepik ?? Using the services of an independen­t contractor to fill a recruitmen­t gap can also bring fresh skills into the business.
| Freepik Using the services of an independen­t contractor to fill a recruitmen­t gap can also bring fresh skills into the business.

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