The lack of skilled IT workers is hurting the deployment of emerging technology, according to a new survey from Gartner. In areas from cloud to cybersecurity, this crisis is expected to last for years to come.
A huge 58% of
job seekers use Twitter in their search – the network actually has more active
candidates than professionally minded LinkedIn. It seems crazy to not use
Twitter for recruitment t and ignore anywhere with this many active candidates!
Also, the
best recruiting opportunities on Twitter are free. There are no ‘recruiter’ licenses
to pay or subscriptions to sign up to.
You can use
ads to extend the reach of your tweets, but if you take our advice, this
shouldn’t be necessary.
Here’s why you should use Twitter for Recruitment:
At a time
when many candidates are shutting down their LinkedIn profiles and leaving the
professional network, it helps to have another bullet in your chamber.
Twitter might
not have the wealth of professional information that LinkedIn has, but it’s got
nifty advanced search functionality that helps you find candidates and it’s
definitely more geared to conversation and relationship building.
There are a
couple of reasons for this:
LinkedIn
gives you a great snapshot of skills and experience, but at Beamery we’ve
definitely found that Twitter gives you more insight into what candidates are
really like.
A quick look
through a candidate’s recent tweets and the accounts they’re following will
give you a great idea of their interests and whether they might be a culture
fit for your company.
Keep an eye out for ‘retweets’ (tweets that users have forwarded on to their followers). This is a neat way of seeing the kind of people that candidates respect and the ideas that they’re enthusiastic about.
It’s easier
to start a conversation on Twitter than LinkedIn. You don’t have the barrier of
in mail acceptance; you can just go ahead and reach out to relevant talent.
Now bear in
mind that if you just spam candidates with information about your role you’re
unlikely to hear anything back! Make sure you personalize your tweets and
reference information you’ve found in the candidate’s profile.
In fact, it’s often better to follow candidates for a while before you reach
out. This lets you see the style of their interactions and helps you understand
what kind of outreach would work best for the initial connection.
If you take this approach I’d recommend’ re-tweeting’ some of the candidate’s tweets after you start following them – everyone likes a little flattery!
Authenticity
is the key to winning the trust and attention of candidates on Twitter. People
are usually pretty wary of corporate slogans and looking to make a human
connection.
These doubts
mean that your employees are your secret weapon. They’re the most trusted
influencers when communicating to candidates about their company, and can be
the key to a successful Twitter strategy.
In many
roles, workers end up spending more time at the office than they do with their
families. Can you blame them for wanting to know what the people they’ll be
sitting next to at work are really like?
I know what
you’re thinking. My team is swamped, the last thing they’re going to have time
with is to start chatting to people on social media.
Well, you can
incentivize your top performers to engage with candidates on Twitter by
offering referral bonuses for people that apply after interacting with them.
You don’t
need any fancy referral software for this, just give each employee a unique
link to your open roles or careers page which they can share in their
interactions with candidates.
You can then
track this link to monitor how many candidates actually apply using it. This
can be done pretty simply using a tool like Bitly.
If you want
to start using your employees as a recruiting tool on Twitter, data shows that
you’re in pretty good company. After announcing job openings, highlighting
specific employees is the most common subject of Fortune 500 tweets.
AT&T, for instance, uses the #Life at ATT hashtag to feature employees who describe their responsibilities, dish out career advice and explain what it’s really like to work at the company.
Building your
employer brand is your best chance of turning your company into a talent
attraction magnet.
Every
touchpoint you have with a candidate is an opportunity to spread your message
and win more brand advocates, the fact that Twitter offers the opportunity for
thousands of these touchpoints each day makes it a great place to amplify your
brand.
There are a
key few tactics that you can employ to amplify your Employer Brand on Twitter.
If you’re
serious about using Twitter for recruitment, you might end up with a company
feed that’s pretty dominated by hiring-specific tweets.
As a result,
many companies create a separate recruiting Twitter handle to announce open
positions, post company culture videos and articles, highlight key employees
and advertise upcoming recruitment events.
This gives
job seekers a targeted stream that they can follow to stay in the loop with new
opportunities, ask career questions and learn about company culture.
This is
especially important for companies such as Disney, whose customer base, namely
children and families (@Disney), and target audience for recruiting (@TWDCjobs)
are very different. In fact, our of the Fortune 500, 174 companies have a
dedicated ‘recruiting account’.
If you’re
looking for an example of a company that really nails this approach, take a
look at Hootsuite’s #hootsuitelife account which shares anything from job
tweets to pictures of team events (they also have an awesome blog that does the
same).
Tools like
Buffer and Tweetdeck make managing multiple Twitter accounts pretty easy if
you’re getting worried by logistics.
You’d
probably rather watch House of Cards on Netflix than read the script right?
(Possibly a slightly unfair question)
Similarly,
most candidates would always rather watch short videos on your company or short
employee testimonial clips than read your company careers site.
Twitter now
lets you embed video directly into your stream, so candidates can watch entire
clips without ever leaving the platform.
This makes it
far easier to get important content in front of prospects. You don’t have to
rely on them clicking on links that you tweet out and navigating your website,
you just need them to hit play.
Nowadays, the
average attention span is terrifyingly short so the easier you make the process
the better.
Twitter can
be a pretty crowded space. With an average of 500 million tweets being sent per
day, it’s easy for information to get lost among the masses.
Hashtags make
it easy for Twitter users to cut through the noise and find exactly what
they’re looking for. Users can search for specific hashtags and then filter all
the tweets that fit the bill.
Companies can
use branded hashtags, like #GEJobs (jobs at General Electric), to make it easy
for job seekers to find out about open roles. No matter how many tweets come
after the initial job announcement, job seekers will always be able to locate
it.
Perhaps more
useful though, is the potential of hashtags to define a company audience.
For example,
organisations interested in reaching more veterans can use hashtags like
#veterans or #veteranjobs and companies who are only interested in hiring in
London can make their tweets location specific by including a #london hashtag.
There are
plenty of possibilities here. The key is narrowing your audience to make sure
your tweets appeal to your target candidates.
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