In linear recruitment, the candidate journey is usually in four stages: job or candidate search, application, selection process, and decision. Regardless of whether the candidate is ultimately employed, receives a rejection, or even turns down the offer, his or her journey ends at this point. For HR this means starting from scratch each time: with the next vacancy, the time-consuming and costly trip through the recruitment funnel starts all over again, with the goal of a successful appointment marking the end of the process. And so on and so on. The leads gained from time-consuming recruitment drives are forgotten even before the ink is dry on the employment contract. This is how valuable potential falls by the wayside.
But in times when it is becoming increasingly difficult to find and attract qualified applicants, companies following this start-finish straight line will not make the running: their recruitment processes are too slow, too inflexible, and too expensive. Even more annoying is when new employees decide to change jobs again within the first twelve months. Nowadays, this is not uncommon. If at this point, the recruitment process starts again from scratch, the investment in filling the vacancy was completely wasted. A new search could have been avoided because suitable candidates had already been found. But they were let go with a ‘second-best’ rating and contact was lost.
Second-choice contacts are a good reason for the candidate’s journey continuing even after a rejection. Because candidates that make the advanced stages of the selection process do not usually fail due to a lack of ‘must haves’. Instead, it is the little things that tip the balance. A little more professional experience, a slightly lower salary, and quick availability distinguish the ‘more perfect’ from the perfect candidates for the job. However, with regard to upcoming vacancies, second-choice candidates are still valuable for the company – far too valuable to lose sight of them.
The classic second-choice candidate is no longer a blank slate for the company. She or he has already been put through their paces. The information that you have gleaned will allow you to maintain contact on a personal level with appealing tailored content. A talent pool offers the necessary structure to capture and organize leads systematically and keep people enthusiastic about the company through targeted campaigns. At the same time, it enables all HR decision-makers to access the same data and to filter according to their respective requirements. If necessary, talent leads can be mobilized and hired much faster than the linear recruitment funnel allows.
But the journey continues not just for the runners-up in the application race. New hires also play an important role in future recruitment and, therefore, should not be neglected in this respect. After all, in terms of employer branding, they now act as authentic ambassadors for the employer and, as such, can make an important contribution to talent acquisition. Systematic approaches, such as employee referral programmes and intuitive platforms providing content that can be shared in personal networks, also help here.