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Casual Articles - Filling The Talent Pipeline in 2007
Maryland Legislators and Lawyers Propose Franchise Rule Change s taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days.Recently the Maryland State Legislature thought it prudent to require more disclosure than is already required by law and a complete audit of each franchisee of every company, which was franchising in their state and providing jobs and tax base. It is the typical thing dumb politicians do when they have no clue as to how free enterprise models work. There ought to be a test for all Maryland State legislators and lawyers on the reality of the market place. The entrepreneurs cannot build as fast as the lawyers and bureaucracy is stealing from us. Caesar was right, maybe we should follow his thought process on this one. Here is an excerpt of a letter, I, an entrepreneur had to write the legislature to get that A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. How to Pick the Best Career For You , Part 2: From Exposure-to-Opportunity “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future,” Yogi Berra once said.Gain an audience by recognizing opportunity There’s a sexier method to salsa into a great career with less tripping and more flair. Look for problems to solve and create a personalized solution. Find those challenges by spotting company movement of any kind, whether the change is good, bad or ugly. If you do this, you’ll capitalize on an opportunity to be heard and get that coveted invitation to dance in the king’s court.Hot career tip: If you want to infiltrate an intended employer fortress, a feat that other job seekers assume impossible, remember that it’s much easier if the inhabitants on the other side open the door for you.Here are three things that you need to But here are a few things to consider as you start the new year. If tightness in the job market continues, wages will drive upward, economists say. With unemployment so low—the 4.4 percent reading in October was the lowest in five years—businesses have found themselves having to bid up pay a bit to fill vacancies. People in their 20s change jobs every 18 months and 75% of all workers are job hunters—stats recently reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Wall Street Journal’s executive career site, CareerJournal.com. Reducing costs without reducing offerings and services is the top management issue, according to the recent 2006 Multichannel Merchant’s Benchmark Survey on Critical Issues and Trends. Which of these major workforce management issues concern you most? Rising costs of benefits? Economic uncertainty? Retention? Growing Demand Ignites New War For Talent. I’m being told what you already know: It’s becoming increasingly difficult to recruit highly qualified individuals to fill key positions. I’m talking mostly leadership roles—senior level, managerial positions—but I can assure you, the problem exists at lower levels as well. I’m hearing it everywhere. From the latest surveys, people I meet at conferences, other recruiters, from corporate hiring officers at catalog, online, retail, and B-to-B merchants. Multichannel merchants are finding it hard filling key positions in just about every functional area: in general management, merchandising, marketing, e-Commerce, IT, operations. Along with reducing costs without reducing offerings and services, finding first-rate, experienced talent has become a top management issue. On The Ground: 10 Emerging Trends In The Talent War Okay, you know how tough it is recruiting new people to fill key positions, and how hard it is to hold on to your top performers. But here are 10 emerging trends this year that could test your leadership skills even more—in good times or bad. And if they don’t concern you now, there’s a good chance they will later: 1. You need a large employee and executive pool. This is emerging as the single most important aspect of the success of any global enterprise. So what’s needed to drive any multichannel retail business forward is to attract, develop, and retain the highest quality talent. 2. Can’t find quality people to come to you? Go to them. Many technology-related firms move their businesses to where the brainpower is. Yes, it’s hard for Blair to get people to move to remote Warren, Pennsylvania, population 10,000. Not an option for you? Then continually network the industry—turn your employees into headhunters—offer referral bonuses, team interviewing. Train your own—set up co-op student internships at local area high schools, vocational and technical schools, community, and two and four-year colleges. 3. Be creative. Tap into social networking sites, like LinkedIn and ZoomInfo. Consider recruiting overseas; take advantage of the mature workforce through websites like RetirementJobs.com. 4. Lift Outs. Hiring a star from a competitor is great, but hiring an entire star team is even better. The trend is particularly prevalent in professional services such as law, advertising, investment banking, consulting, general management, and medicine. 5. Partner with trade groups. Get national and local trade associations: the DMA, US Internet Industry Association (USIIA), Shop.org (online National Retail Federation) to help establish and support college-level scholarships, promote study of direct marketing and multichannel retailing. 6. It’s not only harder, it’s taking longer. In many cases, the average executive search is taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days. A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. A How to Setup an Office Anywhere in the U.S. with Just a Briefcase and a Laptop Growing Demand Ignites New War For Talent.Travel a lot on business?Wish you could breeze into a town with a briefcase and laptop and have an office ready for you? That’s not as farfetched as it sounds. Not if you know about executive suites and how they operate.Executive suites is a term used to describe rental offices in cities all over the U.S. and abroad. They are also referred to as ‘shared office space’. However, neither the term ‘executive suites’ or ‘shared office space’ really describes what this unique form of office space is all about.To begin with, executive suites are not the domain of CEO’s or top corporate executives. Nor is the term ‘shared office space’ intended to suggest that you will actually be sharin I’m being told what you already know: It’s becoming increasingly difficult to recruit highly qualified individuals to fill key positions. I’m talking mostly leadership roles—senior level, managerial positions—but I can assure you, the problem exists at lower levels as well. I’m hearing it everywhere. From the latest surveys, people I meet at conferences, other recruiters, from corporate hiring officers at catalog, online, retail, and B-to-B merchants. Multichannel merchants are finding it hard filling key positions in just about every functional area: in general management, merchandising, marketing, e-Commerce, IT, operations. Along with reducing costs without reducing offerings and services, finding first-rate, experienced talent has become a top management issue. On The Ground: 10 Emerging Trends In The Talent War Okay, you know how tough it is recruiting new people to fill key positions, and how hard it is to hold on to your top performers. But here are 10 emerging trends this year that could test your leadership skills even more—in good times or bad. And if they don’t concern you now, there’s a good chance they will later: 1. You need a large employee and executive pool. This is emerging as the single most important aspect of the success of any global enterprise. So what’s needed to drive any multichannel retail business forward is to attract, develop, and retain the highest quality talent. 2. Can’t find quality people to come to you? Go to them. Many technology-related firms move their businesses to where the brainpower is. Yes, it’s hard for Blair to get people to move to remote Warren, Pennsylvania, population 10,000. Not an option for you? Then continually network the industry—turn your employees into headhunters—offer referral bonuses, team interviewing. Train your own—set up co-op student internships at local area high schools, vocational and technical schools, community, and two and four-year colleges. 3. Be creative. Tap into social networking sites, like LinkedIn and ZoomInfo. Consider recruiting overseas; take advantage of the mature workforce through websites like RetirementJobs.com. 4. Lift Outs. Hiring a star from a competitor is great, but hiring an entire star team is even better. The trend is particularly prevalent in professional services such as law, advertising, investment banking, consulting, general management, and medicine. 5. Partner with trade groups. Get national and local trade associations: the DMA, US Internet Industry Association (USIIA), Shop.org (online National Retail Federation) to help establish and support college-level scholarships, promote study of direct marketing and multichannel retailing. 6. It’s not only harder, it’s taking longer. In many cases, the average executive search is taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days. A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. Demo Website: An Alternative to a Business Plan y positions, and how hard it is to hold on to your top performers.If you are attempting to start a venture that will require some sort of internet presence you may be able to find a way to impress potential investors without the need of an in depth business plan.How do you do it? It is pretty simple. Just buy a professional looking website template and logo template that goes along with the theme you are envisioning. Customize the text as if this was the fully running website. Include links to the future functional areas just do not activate them. Take this site and begin showing it to select individuals, they will think you are farther along than you may really be and it is easier to show someone a prototype than a 50 page business plan.How much wou But here are 10 emerging trends this year that could test your leadership skills even more—in good times or bad. And if they don’t concern you now, there’s a good chance they will later: 1. You need a large employee and executive pool. This is emerging as the single most important aspect of the success of any global enterprise. So what’s needed to drive any multichannel retail business forward is to attract, develop, and retain the highest quality talent. 2. Can’t find quality people to come to you? Go to them. Many technology-related firms move their businesses to where the brainpower is. Yes, it’s hard for Blair to get people to move to remote Warren, Pennsylvania, population 10,000. Not an option for you? Then continually network the industry—turn your employees into headhunters—offer referral bonuses, team interviewing. Train your own—set up co-op student internships at local area high schools, vocational and technical schools, community, and two and four-year colleges. 3. Be creative. Tap into social networking sites, like LinkedIn and ZoomInfo. Consider recruiting overseas; take advantage of the mature workforce through websites like RetirementJobs.com. 4. Lift Outs. Hiring a star from a competitor is great, but hiring an entire star team is even better. The trend is particularly prevalent in professional services such as law, advertising, investment banking, consulting, general management, and medicine. 5. Partner with trade groups. Get national and local trade associations: the DMA, US Internet Industry Association (USIIA), Shop.org (online National Retail Federation) to help establish and support college-level scholarships, promote study of direct marketing and multichannel retailing. 6. It’s not only harder, it’s taking longer. In many cases, the average executive search is taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days. A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. Top Business Administration Schools s at local area high schools, vocational and technical schools, community, and two and four-year colleges.Top business administration schools offer their students advanced management education, including advanced knowledge relating to professional business designations. This essential objective is carried out by giving significance to the development of an individual's career. It also takes into consideration the functional business knowledge that is required by an individual to succeed in the management career. At the same time, students are given a chance to expand in-depth dedicated knowledge in any selected field.Many individuals after graduation prefer to earn a degree or masters in business administration (MBA) to enhance their managerial skills and increase business proficiency.According to 3. Be creative. Tap into social networking sites, like LinkedIn and ZoomInfo. Consider recruiting overseas; take advantage of the mature workforce through websites like RetirementJobs.com. 4. Lift Outs. Hiring a star from a competitor is great, but hiring an entire star team is even better. The trend is particularly prevalent in professional services such as law, advertising, investment banking, consulting, general management, and medicine. 5. Partner with trade groups. Get national and local trade associations: the DMA, US Internet Industry Association (USIIA), Shop.org (online National Retail Federation) to help establish and support college-level scholarships, promote study of direct marketing and multichannel retailing. 6. It’s not only harder, it’s taking longer. In many cases, the average executive search is taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days. A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. See The Benefits Of Welding Safety s taking 180 days or more, from a previous time of 90 days.Welding is much more than taking two joints and soldering them together. It's a precise trade that requires proper training and education to perform safely and accurately. There's nothing "simple" about welding and, in fact, it can be quite a dangerous undertaking. Considering this, welding safety, including proper gear such as welding helmets, is vital for getting the job done right.The process of welding is especially dangerous for the eyes. This is so for several reasons, including the brightness of the arc, the ultraviolet and infrared rays it emits and the fact debris can sometimes fly loose. Inasmuch, no smart welder gets started without a good helmet.Knowing you need a welding helmet an A recent CEO search we did for a mid-sized catalog and Internet retailer took nearly eight months. This, after a turn down offer from the first selected candidate, relaunching the search, and discussions involving family relocation with the second chosen candidate. 7. Workforce shrinkage. College educated young people are leaving high cost of living areas because they can’t afford housing there. But they’re not exactly willing to move to out of the way, culture-starved towns, either. 8. Competition. The competition for experienced, talented people has become so intense that many companies—in related and often totally different industries—are competing for the same people you are. And not just from other multichannel retailers. Some in more glamorous, higher paying fields like pharma/biotechnology, financial services, healthcare, life sciences, software and communications. And ad agencies, along with companies like Google, MSN, CNET, and Forbes.com are showing up on college campuses and going overseas to recruit technology geeks and individuals with sought after skills in database marketing and digital media. 9. Hire right the first time. Clarify your organization’s values, crystallize its vision, identify its mission, and define your talent needs. Late management guru, Peter Drucker, estimated that two-thirds of employee hiring decisions end up being hiring mistakes. 10. Retain the best, reduce turnover. At all times, you should be striving toward creating a positive, welcoming, inclusive work environment and culture. Cross-train, promote from within. Offer competitive and attractive salaries, bonuses, and perks.
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