wo years ago, senior management at Continental Airlines announced that the
company would have to turn to international markets to survive. Executives
outlined a plan to expand on five continents--immediately.
Within two months, the company moved from an antiquated, labor-intensive
domestic recruiting process to a global Web-enabled and paperless approach that
allows it to staff any location worldwide with half the number of recruiters and
at half the cost of the old system. Continental launched 10 new international
destinations in 2005 and used the new technology to recruit 3,200 new hires for
locations ranging from Argentina to India.
More than one-fourth of all employees of U.S.-based multinationals now work
outside the United States, and that portion is growing far more rapidly than the
domestic workforce. With many industries facing the same globalization
imperative that has hit the U.S. airlines, the recruiting function must be
prepared to staff new destinations with unprecedented speed.
Within the past few years, Web-enabled systems have created the potential to
source the global workforce with the same flexibility and technological
sophistication that multinational companies use to source other materials and
components. A major prerequisite for this achievement is the consolidation of
information so that workforce planning and recruiting decisions can occur on an
international scale.
Instant gratification
When the mandate to expand globally came down, Continental was swimming in
the paper generated by an inefficient recruiting process. Under the old system,
the airline advertised jobs in U.S. newspapers and then flew recruiters out to
do open calls for hundreds of candidates at hotels in major cities.
"We had nine full-time employees just scanning in paper résumés or cleaning
electronic résumés," recalls Kimberly Paul, manager of global recruiting. With
the mandate to expand internationally, Continental faced the decision of
expanding recruiting departments in each territory or adopting a Web-based
approach. "The directive came from corporate that we had to go paperless," she
says.
Continental tapped iCIMS’ iRecruiter to create a Web-based operation so that
candidates and recruiters could access the system from any of Continental’s
international flight destinations while still maintaining the company’s unique
screening and interviewing procedures. "We started fresh and did not migrate old
information," Paul says. "We rolled the system out first for the United States
and then went global, all within two months and in a very seamless process."
Continental no longer uses any newspaper advertising in the United States,
and very little elsewhere. Successful U.S. candidates are flown into Houston or
Newark, New Jersey, for interviews with a recruiting staff that no longer
travels. "I’m not a technical expert, but I was able to train our recruiters
onto iRecruiter in a matter of hours," Paul says. "They love the system." Now
Continental handles 80,000 applications a year with an exceptionally lean staff.
When Continental enters a new international destination, it does a full
launch with announcements in the local media about the start of service. "This
drives people to the Web site, where we have posted the open positions," Paul
says. "Résumés arrive electronically in Houston, and we e-mail the candidates
information for on-site interviews."
In July 2005, Continental posted 30 positions to staff the new location in
Delhi, India, and received thousands of applications.
Full-strength screening
One of the biggest advantages of the Web-based system is the automatic
screening process that culls unqualified candidates before they proceed to the
application. Continental’s flight attendant candidates, for example, move
through 41 questions before the formal application. New screening enhancements
will be added in 2006.
Using the Web-based system is a prescreening process in itself and has
generated significant quality-of-hire improvements, Paul says. "When we
installed iRecruiter, we had some resistance from hiring managers with line
positions or entry-level openings," she says. "They believed that candidates for
dining services and ramp jobs, for example, would not have sufficient access to
or knowledge of computers to use the system. We told them that the entire
company runs on computers and we want a candidate pool that reflects that."
The hiring managers pushed back, but the company moved ahead with posting all
positions on the Web site, including relatively low-skill jobs. Despite the
hiring managers’ initial concerns, large numbers of applications roll in for
every job.
"The quality of hire is now so much better because managers don’t have to do
basic training and hand-holding for employees who need to use online employee
services or who may need to use computers at some point on the job," Paul says.
"Even ramp agents, who have a primarily physically demanding job, may need some
computer skills."
Staged approach
Colin Day, president and CEO of iCIMS, which produces iRecruiter, recommends
that companies take a staged approach to installing a global system. "Part of
the process of moving to a global recruiting system is overcoming perceptions
about the difficulty of recruiting in different languages and complying with
local laws and EEO regulations," he says. "Companies have questions about the
speed of the system and whether local recruiters will be needed."
Few companies do a full global rollout right from the start. Instead, they
run a U.S. pilot program and then extend it. "Companies commonly take a regional
approach, setting up career centers in specific locations and then moving on to
the next," Day says. "We believe in doing it in steps. The solutions are
relatively simple, but they may seem complex to the client."
Once the decision has been made to go global, the timeframe for a full
implementation may be as brief as a few weeks, or several months for the more
complicated models. "Continental moved very efficiently," Day says. "It was
really a process of looking at the markets it wanted to attack, which was a
function of the routes that it was winning. Then we set up career centers for
those markets, with local job openings and applications. It was all very fast."
Significant cost savings come from bringing recruiting into a central
location and eliminating the need for local recruiters. Continental’s global
hiring is centralized at its Houston headquarters. "The automated global system
is far more efficient and allows companies to keep a much leaner staff than they
would if they attempted to roll out a global campaign with recruiters," Day
says. "Domestically, companies have been able to cut staff by 50 percent, and
the same applies globally. You’re on the same platform and using the same
method, but just expanding out."
Decision-making process
Installing a global Web-enabled recruiting system entails company-specific
considerations. First, the company must determine whether the site will be
multilingual or English only. "Continental decided to keep the entire system in
English because it needed employees, particularly flight attendants, who could
speak English," Day says. "Companies can also choose to go with the local
languages in the front end or candidate-facing parts, including the career
center, the job listings, the screening questions and the application, but
remain in English for the back end."
Also, companies can set up local-language career centers that incorporate
local equal employment opportunity policies. "The information may come in local
languages, but then it resides within a system where the field names may be in
English," Day says. "Some companies chose to segment, so that recruiters can log
in to user groups that reflect their territory, and then open up the parameters
to search outside their territory if needed."
Companies must also decide whether they want a centralized or decentralized
system. Centralization means that they do all hiring, including international,
through one location. A decentralized system puts local recruiters on the ground
and requires a larger staff. "We are sometimes shocked to see some very large
organizations running with an extremely lean HR staff, and relatively small
organizations with a huge recruiting staff," Day says. The only industry-based
trend he reports is in retail, where companies commonly install a decentralized
system to accommodate point-of-sale hiring.
Data-protection considerations continue to preoccupy some organizations, but
perhaps unnecessarily so. "We have to work with companies to help them achieve a
level of comfort with data-protection laws such as Europe’s safe harbor
provisions," Day says. The provisions, approved in 2000, allow U.S. companies to
simply certify that they provide "adequate" privacy protections as defined by
the EU directive on data protection.
"It’s as big an issue as companies want to make it," Day says. "In reality,
there’s a lot of bark but not as much bite as you might think. The core is that
you have to show that you have a strong and consistent security policy for your
data center and that the policy is published and available to the customer
base."
EEO concerns have moved to the forefront. Applicant tracking systems have
made it easier to track EEO data, so there’s more pressure to perform up to
standards. "And because it is now possible to track EEO data on every candidate,
enforcement has stepped up," Day notes. "The United States remains one of the
most difficult locations in terms of the reporting procedures."
Web-enabled systems allow companies to track source effectiveness, time to
hire, cost per hire and customized effectiveness measures. "Companies can decide
how to advertise for positions and then test different sources and see immediate
results for each source," Day says. "The systems track employee performance, so
quality of hire can be tracked against expectations. Companies are right on the
cusp of adding detailed quality-of-hire metrics."
Some companies that have turned to Web-enabled global recruiting are staffing
locally for their international locations. Others are sourcing from a global
talent pool. "We expect to see more of the second model in the future," Day
says. "We’re just beginning to tap into the power of these global talent
systems. To be able to search your global database for candidates who have
expressed an interest in working in a specific location is an amazing resource."
Continental plans to launch six new international
destinations in the first quarter of 2006 and will hire 3,500 new employees
during the year. This next stage of global growth will be fully supported by a
recruiting system that links Houston to candidates in Sweden or South Africa
with equal ease and low costs.
Workforce Management, February 27, 2006, pp. 34-37
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