the social recruiting starter kit

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Social Recruiting Starter Kit

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Post on 02-Dec-2014

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Social recruiting doesn't have to feel overwhelming. Dice's Social Recruiting Starter Kit provides a summary of some of the most important channels for tech recruiting and offers principles to guide your status updates, replies and videos. For more on social recruiting, check out http://dice.com/openweb.

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Page 1: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Page 2: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

What is social recruiting?

A recruiting strategy that consistently incorporates

data from social networking sites to source, evaluate, and contact candidates.

Page 3: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

What goals should you focus on?Social recruiting is a great approach for improving three key recruiting metrics:

Canvasing social sites to find unique candidates

helps reduce your time-to-hire.

It gives you access to both active and passive candidates, increasing your quality of hires.

Knowing what makes your candidates tick

makes engaging them easier—lowering the

cost-per-hire.

TIME-TO-HIRE HIRE QUALITY COST-PER-HIRE

Page 4: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Start small

Take some time every quarter to meet with your team to discuss emerging social media trends — including what the competition is doing.

Pinpoint your company’s culture and what traits make up your ‘ideal’ candidate – don’t forget to include your hiring manager in these discussions.

Identify the social sites that are most important to your business. You don’t need to know the ins and outs of each one, but you should know the basics of a few key sites.

Page 5: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Let's take a tour of four popular tech hangouts.

Page 6: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Twitter is about sharing news and making personal connections in real-time.

Your company’s recruiting feed should enable current employees and candidates to connect to each other.

People expect consistency. Create and commit to a schedule for your tweets.

Need to set up a Twitter account? Check out. http://mashable.com/guidebook/twitter

Page 7: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

GitHub is a filing system for every version of a programming project, where programmers share advice and critique each other’s work.

Look for developers that regularly “fork” projects — adding on to them, or making them their own. This allows you to see their process and gauge their interaction with other developers.

You should also have your own developers refer candidates they’ve interacted with to you.

How to start using GitHub? Here’s a simple guide: http://lifehacker.com/5983680/how-the-heck-do-i-use-github

Page 8: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Facebook is a great way to get a more personal view of candidates, build communities, and interact with people.

Monitor and maintain your Career Pages daily. Using contests and quizzes can help keep it fresh and interactive.

Check out Facebook Groups for the niche tech professions you are focused on.

Want a Facebook refresher? Here you go: http://mashable.com/guidebook/facebook

Page 9: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Looking for a YouTube beginner’s guide? Just click here: http://mashable.com/2013/10/05/youtube-beginner-guide

YouTube may be known for its plethora of cat videos, but the site enables tech pros to visually showcase their portfolios.

Check out the producers of “how-to” videos for the types of applications and software your hiring managers prioritize in their business.

Maintain a Careers channel or playlist on YouTube that highlights your tech specific culture.

Page 10: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Listen more than you talkYou should spend as much time learning about candidates as you do sourcing them.

Use social media as an opportunity to learn more about your candidates. Find out what motivates them—what they love and what they don’t.

Tweak your recruiting strategies based on what you learn. For example, use keywords that relate to the passions and interests of your top performing hires to strengthen your sourcing and pipelining.

Page 11: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Keep it social

Social media is based on a simple concept: people expect to connect with other people.

Meet with your team to discuss how you can tell your brand story in 140 characters, pictures and short videos.

Remember to converse on social media as well as post original content.

Page 12: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Plan what to sayDon’t smother potential candidates with heavy-handed messaging. On average, your posts should be:

70% helpful, but non-promotional posts

20% promotional posts about open positions

10% fun posts that show the passions of your people

A

B

C

A

B

C

Page 13: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Take a visual approach

Visuals are a great way to capture people’s attention as they scroll through an endless sea of social media posts.

Meet with your team to identify visuals that support your brand message.

For example, @JoinTheFlock retweets images that help paint a positive company culture.

Page 14: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Scaling your approachMoving beyond the basics of social recruiting, think about how to scale your efforts:

Will your team engage through company social feeds, personal feeds, or a hybrid feed such as “@JohnDoe_Company”?

How often will you report on insights from the analytics behind your career pages?

How you will share social information on candidates with peers and hiring managers?

Page 15: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Keep it simpleApply basic conversational skills to the social media world:

Listen first

Reply when you can add value

Be kindand honest

Repeat

Page 16: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Visit www.dice.com/openweb today for a free demo of Open Web.

Ready to get started with social recruiting?Dice’s Open Web makes it easy. Open Web combines

information from 130 different social sites with Dice’s rich database of over 1.5 million résumés. You’ll spend less time

sourcing candidates and more time engaging them.

Page 17: The Social Recruiting Starter Kit

Join the Open Web community