Factors that can Inhibit or Facilitate an Organisation’s Recruitment Success Rate (1) Unemployment: when unemployment is high, job applications abound and the selection process has to be handled with great care if the organisation is to employ the kind of people it needs. Even in times of low unemployment there may still be a lack of the ‘right’ or ‘talented’ people for your business. Diversity: the increase in immigration rates in recent years has had a positive effect on recruitment in that it has raised the level of the availability of required knowledge and skills. In a moderate way, this has helped to alleviate the skill shortage. Skill shortages: the existence of a ‘talent war’ in the external market means that organisations are competing with each other to ‘capture’ people who possess exceptional knowledge and rare competencesEmployer branding: employers need to be attractive to applicants. Three-quarters of organisations had made efforts to improve their employer brand – through employee surveys, developing an online careers site, attending graduate careers fairs, working with charities, or by extending flexible working practices (CIPD/Hays Resourcing and Talent Planning survey, 2013). The ‘Systematic Recruitment Cycle’Stage 1 – Identify genuine vacancy. This may involve the HR planning process. Stage 2 – Obtain authority to recruit.Stage 3 – Carry out job analysis or check that previous analysis is still applicable.Stage 4 – Write or revise job description and person specification/ job profile.
Stage 5 – Make the vacancy known (write the advertisement and decide on relevant media).
Stage 6 – Place the advertisement in the appropriate media.
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