very single day
very
single day, Booz Allen Hamilton, based in McLean, Virginia, finds itself in the
alarming position of losing money. The strategy and technology consultancy
logged $2.2 billion in sales in fiscal 2003 and employs 13,000 worldwide. It’s
watching the dollars slip away because one group of must-have employees is
excruciatingly difficult to find: workers with a security clearance issued by
the Defense Department.
Debra Loreilhe serves as recruiting manager in the
company’s national security business segment. She says that Booz needs these
so-called "cleared" workers for projects that it’s handling for the federal
government. The positions range from engineering to clerical. "Demand for these
workers far exceeds supply," she says. In fact, of the 500 to 700 positions that
the company currently has open for employees with security clearance, some 400
are considered "sold and funded." In other words, Booz needs these employees for
projects already under way. The company has boosted its recruiting team for
cleared employees by 25 percent simply to try to get those positions filled,
Loreilhe says.
Big spending means more demand
Booz isn’t the only company relentlessly stalking
security-cleared employees. As the Defense Department’s budget climbs--President
Bush has requested $401.7 billion in discretionary budget authority for fiscal
2005, a 7 percent increase from 2004--Uncle Sam is doling out private-sector
contracts like candy on Halloween. With many of these contracts, the work is
sensitive, involving homeland security or national defense. When the federal
government needs someone to work on the Pentagon computer system, it wants
assurance that it’s not letting any bad guys in, explains Bradford Rand,
president and CEO of TECHEXPO Top Secret, a division of TECHEXPO USA. The New
York City-based firm stages large job fairs for applicants with security
clearance.
It’s no simple matter for a private company to get staff
cleared. The process can take years. It also costs contractors anywhere from a
couple thousand dollars to more than $20,000, depending on the complexity of the
process, such as the number of places the candidate has lived, and the level of
clearance. Employees who already have an active clearance are highly valuable to
companies like Booz, and also to the IBMs, Ciscos, AT&Ts and Lockheed Martins of
the corporate world, which do a lot of business with the federal government.
Jason Medick, marketing director for online tech recruiter
Dice, fields requests from job-seekers and employers alike. Both parties often
wonder why it’s so hard to get clearance. "Job-seekers think it’s just another
credential they can add to their résumé," he says. Recruiters who are not in the
know often think that adding the clearance is a matter of a simple background
check.
In fact, the process is intimate, to say the least. First,
the only people who are eligible to apply for security clearance are those who
are working in or with the military, with a federal agency, or with a
private-sector contractor that requires access to sensitive information. The
Defense Security Service (DSS), an agency of the Department of Defense, conducts
the investigation, which involves a check into all of a person’s files held by
the federal government, including criminal history in every place that a person
has ever worked, lived or gone to school. It also includes comprehensive
financial checks; interviews with coworkers, employers, personal friends,
teachers and neighbors; and a personal interview, which includes questions about
family background, past experiences, health, alcohol or drug use, foreign travel
and even sexual behavior. (Red flags include bestiality, "swinging" and obscene
phone calls. Celibacy, on the other hand, is not considered a threat.)
There are several levels of security clearance, and that
determines the scope and depth of the DSS investigation. Security-clearance
categories are based on the damage that leaked information could cause to the
nation. The categories range from "confidential," which allows access to
information that, if disclosed, would cause measurable damage to national
security, through "secret," which allows access to information that could cause
serious damage. Secret clearances must be renewed every 10 years. People with
access to "top secret" information can come in contact with materials that if
leaked could cause "grave" danger, and such clearances must be renewed every
five years. Clearance for "SCI" or sensitive compartmented information, allows
access to information so sensitive that it is severely restricted. For some
levels of security clearance, a polygraph test is required.
Finding the trustworthy
The in-depth nature of the investigation process ensures
that the supply of cleared employees isn’t going to increase anytime soon. And
thanks to the high level of demand, most professionals with a clearance are
employed, which means that they aren’t exactly eager job-seekers. At one popular
site for cleared employees, Intelligencecareers.com, only 2 percent of
job-seekers are unemployed. Companies that are pursuing these hot candidates
therefore must get creative and cast a wide net, says Jason Averbook, director
of global product marketing at PeopleSoft, which sells more human resources
software to the government than any other vendor.
Alex Baxter is managing partner at Transition Assistance
Online, a division of Lucas Group. The first place to look, Baxter says, is the
only truly deep source of potential employees with security
clearance--individuals who are just about to finish their tours of duty with the
military and are moving into the private sector. Many people in the military
have at least a "confidential" clearance, the basic level, and many more are
cleared for access to more sensitive information.
To be sure, the number of people leaving the military each
year is small. Only about 224,000 people left all branches of the military
combined in 2000, the latest year for which statistics are available. But what
this group lacks in size it makes up for in concentration. Until these future
job candidates are discharged, they’re all living on or near military bases.
Savvy recruiters are in touch with career offices on military bases, which
accept job listings from corporations, and with "transition assistance training
programs," which help military personnel to blend back into the civilian world,
Baxter says.
Online job boards have a bad reputation when it comes to
recruiting security-cleared candidates, says Baxter. In part this is because
many job-seekers without security clearance mistakenly believe that if they at
some point passed a background check, they have clearance. And in part it’s
because many who do have security clearance are reluctant to post the fact on a
job board that anyone can access, says Baxter.
Averbook says that mainstream job boards such as Monster
or HotJobs may represent too wide a net for such a rare credential. A better
choice, he says, would be any of the specialty job boards that are directed
specifically toward security-cleared individuals, such as
Intelligencecareers.com or ClearanceJobs.com, or those that are targeted at
former military personnel, like www.gijobs.net
or www.stripes.com. Many of these Web sites
take the extra step of getting in touch with employers to make sure that they
are, in fact, looking to fill a position and are not terrorists trolling for the
names of people with security clearance who are out of work. This piece of due
diligence can help ease the mind of a jittery security-cleared and -conscious
individual.
In the Washington, D.C., area, which is rife with
opportunities for security-cleared individuals, job fairs like TECHEXPO Top
Secret that are restricted to potential candidates with an active security
clearance are also a handy way to recruit. At the most recent Top Secret event,
nearly a third of the candidates who attended received job offers, says Rand.
Paying your own employees
By far the most effective way to recruit security-cleared
employees is to tap that all-important internal employee network, says Loreilhe
of Booz Allen Hamilton. About 50 to 60 of the 60 to 65 hires that the company
does make each month in the security-cleared arena, she says, come from
recommendations from security-cleared professionals on the payroll already. To
encourage employees to participate, the company holds regular "cleared
campaigns." For example, in December, any employee who had brought in the résumé
of a person with at least a "top secret" clearance received $100 per résumé. One
go-getter brought in 45 résumés, Loreilhe says. Other promotions have offered
heftier incentives for people who are actually hired.
"Referral networks are the best way to get to the passive
job-seeker," Loreilhe explains. In fact, even if applicants’ credentials and
experience aren’t quite right, but they have that clearance, Booz is willing to
train. Building internal networks also helps with retention, particularly for
cleared employees with a military background, who can act as mentors for new
employees fresh from the military, she says.
While Booz is aggressively seeking candidates from the
outside, it’s also hedging its bets and getting employees started on the long
process of clearance. For example, when it recruits college interns, it starts
them in their sophomore year. The company will begin the security-clearance
process as soon as it has a start date for the 20 to 25 that work on the
national security team, says Loreilhe. "During the course of their academic
period, we get them processed with their clearances."
Assuming that the interns come back to work for Booz after
they graduate, the company has trained and security-cleared employees ready to
hit the ground running--an asset that’s likely to be worth even more tomorrow
than it is today.