In the midst of a persistently high
unemployment rate, the job market continues to be a buyer’s market. Because of
that, people who may be unhappy or feel frustrated with their current jobs are
stuck, reluctant to leave for fear that they won’t find another position
elsewhere.
This
double-edged sword is changing the nature of many workplaces and the
inter-relations there, while stifling the vital organizational renewal that the
natural attrition of normal times brings companies, with new employees
coming and established employees leaving.
With
little movement of people out of organizations (except in cases of lay-offs),
postings for the rare openings these days have become pursuits of perfection.
Requirements are often absurdly detailed and lengthy, virtual shopping lists of
specific talents, skills and experience.
That’s
fine for highly technical jobs where familiarity and facility with various
equipment and/or computer software is necessary. But for those positions that
require intellectual curiosity, agility, and creativity, as well as an ability
to work well with a variety of people, there is no ideal job description.
Still,
the employers advertising for many such positions apparently operate under that
delusion that “perfect” is attainable.
An
article in The Wall Street
Journal reported that a study found that 31 percent of the 811
small businesses surveyed had unfilled job openings in July because they
couldn’t identify applicants “with the right skills or experience.”
In
an opinion piece, “Mind The Gap,” in the July 9 & 16 issue of The New Yorker, author James Surowiecki
cited the “dearth of qualified workers… and the gap between the skills that
American workers have and the ones that businesses need.”
The
“Right” Candidate
That’s recruiters talking. I say
that in the pursuit of the perfect, employers may be overlooking the right candidate. Working from that notion,
that there is the perfect candidate out there, creates an insurmountable barrier to the
applicant who, in the light of day, could be the best fit for the team and
contribute the most to the greater good of the organization.
Unfortunately,
the resume screening software in wide use today seeks the perfect candidate,
but makes no accommodation for anything except for the candidates that match
nearly the entire shopping list. So, as the Journal
article notes, positions go unfilled.
On
the other hand, the right candidate is going to be the one that comes with
his/her own unique skills, talents, abilities and intelligence that may or may not
meet all the specificity outlined in the job posting.
While
the job certainly has its roles and responsibilities, in addition to fulfilling
those, the right candidate will also ultimately make the position distinctively
his or her own, reflecting his/her unique personality, approach, and talent
mix. In the long term, the team and the organization will be stronger for it.
This
paradox is compounded by businesses’ own reluctance to prepare new people fully
and properly for the job. Both the Journal
and New Yorker articles note
that, to an increasing degree, businesses are loath to invest in training, on
the assumption that the perfect candidate is ready to go full speed on Day 1.
As
Surowiecki notes, the ultimate irony of this weak economy is that “most
companies worry less about getting every possible dollar of new business than
they do about keeping costs down. That makes them slow to hire, which keeps
unemployment high, which keeps the economy weak, which in turn makes employers
more reluctant to hire,” adding that they are similarly disinclined to hire
anyone who needs the least bit of training because of the attendant time and
money investments.
With
unemployment stuck above eight percent for the past 41 months, employers can
afford to be choosey, willing to wait to find that one special needle in the
haystack of resumes and cover letters.
While
they make little accommodation for training, they also likely don’t provide
chances for the new hire to gain an understanding of and appreciation for the
company's culture, how things work, or anything much more than learning where
the washrooms and parking lots are. “Just do your job. Oh, and by the way, do
it at a salary far less than your last job.” And yet, they still get thousands
upon thousands of applications.
A
Changing Workplace
What does this do to the workplace?
What kinds of employees begin to populate an organization like this? How do the
older, more established employees – those who may consider themselves “stuck” –
feel toward and about the newbies who are working for less money? Are there
still time and opportunities for camaraderie, for personal moments and
friendliness anymore?
What's
increasingly missing today is the notion that new people come into a company,
feel their way around a bit, find their niche, and establish their own style
and unique contribution to the larger whole in their own unique way. They grow
into the job. They learn and understand their role, the nature and heritage of the company, how the business works, its customers, and the idiosyncrasies of their new boss.
Given that opportunity, they feel encouraged to bring fresh insights to old
challenges.
Instead,
we have an expectation that new hires will attain the necessary insights and
understanding to do the job – through osmosis or ESP, I suppose – and do so
quickly because there’s no time to waste.
Is
it an anachronism to believe that people can grow into the job? Is it wrong to
support the notion that every job is unique to the person who holds it, that
people can mold the job to their unique skills and style and thus contribute to
the strength of the team and the advancement of the organization?
1 comment:
Thanks for the interesting perspective. I recently read the same New Yorker article by James Surowiecki.
This notion of perfection seems further bogged down with processes like the applicant tracking system. My understanding is ATS’s seek a pared down set of “perfect” keywords and phrases from candidate’s resumes, further depersonalizing the process (and potentially the quality of individuals the employers seek). Lots of “great fit” candidates likely get dropped right out of the gate, without a human eye to review and assess their experience and skills in a more holistic manner.
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