Archive for the ‘Employers’ Category

Unemployment down, job ads up in August

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Unemployment Rate Down

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publication Labour Force, Australia shows that the Unemployment rate fell from 5.3% to 5.1% in seasonally adjusted terms, and remained steady at 5.2% in trend terms in August. The Participation rate also fell from 65.5% to 65.4% in seasonally adjusted terms, while remaining constant at 65.4% in trend terms over the month. In seasonally adjusted terms full-time employment increased 53,100 to 7,920,400 and part-time employment decreased 22,100 to 3,351,600. The number of persons looking for full-time work decreased 17,600 to 429,300 and the number of persons looking for part-time work decreased 4,900 to 178,400. In the ACT, the unemployment rate fell from 3.2% to 3.1%, while the participation rate also fell from 72.7% to 72.5% in August.

For more information click here

Job Advertisements Rise

The ANZ Job Advertisements Series shows that the total number of jobs advertised in major metropolitan newspapers and on the Internet rose by 2.6% in August, to an average of 176,239 per week (seasonally adjusted), following a 1.4% increase in the previous month. Newspaper job ads rose 1.5%, while Internet job ads rose 2.6% in August. The series is now 36.1% higher than it was a year ago, and just short of the historic annual high of 40.2% that was achieved in May 2007. However the total number of job advertisements remains 36.6% below the all-time peak reached in April 2008. In the ACT the average number of newspaper job advertisements per week fell by 7.3% in seasonally adjusted terms, but was still up 0.4% in trend terms in August.

For more information click here

Leading Indicator of Employment Up

The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) Monthly Leading Indicator of Employment has risen for the fifth consecutive month to stand at -0.028 standard deviations from the cyclical trend in September 2010. However this is still one month short of the number of rises needed to confirm that a trough has occurred in the Indicator. If confirmed, this would mean that, in the months ahead, employment would be predicted to grow more quickly than its long-term trend rate of 2.1% per annum.

For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here:http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






15 things that you might not know about the Australian job market

Monday, August 30th, 2010

In InSight Issue 82 (20 May, 2009), I wrote about the various interesting labour market facts that I had discovered in reading the DEEWR publication, Australian Jobs 2008.

Earlier this month, the most recent edition, Australian Jobs 2010 was released, so I thought it was opportune to provide an updated list of various facts that recruiters might be interested in. All figures quoted are as at February 2010 unless otherwise stated.

In the past 5 years the fastest % state or territory employment growth was recorded in the NT (24.6%), followed by WA (15.8%), then Qld (13.8%).

Tasmania has the oldest workforce with 43% of workers aged 45 or older. Next is SA (41%) then NSW (39%).

Over the past 5 years the largest employment growth (by raw numbers) was in Health Care and Social Assistance (up by 210,300), Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (189,500), Education and Training (136,000), Construction (135,800) and Mining (64,900).

The three largest employers of part-time workers, by sector, were Accommodation and Food Services (58% of the total workforce working part-time), Retail Trade (48%) and Arts & Recreational Services (45%).

The most female-dominated sectors were Health Care & Social Assistance (79% of the workforce are female), Education (69%), Accommodation & Food Services (56%) and Retail Trade (56%).

By industry, the most new jobs in the next 5 years are projected to be created in Health Care & Social Assistance (211,500), Construction (120,100) and Education and Training (119,000).

Mining gains plenty of publicity due to the wages, conditions and skills shortages but it only employs 2% of Australia’s workforce (172,500 people), which has it 17th out of 19 sectors in terms of workforce size. However in terms of projected percentage employment growth over the next five years, Mining (17.5%) ranks second to Health Care & Social Assistance (17.6%).

Employment declined in four industries over the past five years. These industries being Manufacturing (down by 47,400), Information Media and Telecommunications (25,800), Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing (3,500) and Rental, Hiring and Real Estate Services (1,200).

In the next five years the Top 10 growth occupations are predicted to be Registered Nurses (35,800), Accountants (30,800), Aged and Disabled Carers (29,600), Sales Assistants, General (29,400), Child Carers (25,300), Retail Managers (25,000), Nursing Support and Personal Care Workers (23,100), Accounting Clerks (20,500), Electricians (20,500) and Waiters (20,400).

At the more disaggregated industry level, the top 6 industry subdivisions projected to provide the most new jobs in the next 5 years are expected to be Hospitals (70,500), School Education (65,300), Cafés, Restaurants and Takeaway Food Services (64,700), Supermarket and Grocery Stores (46,400), Building Installation Services (44,300) and Residential Care Services (38,000).

Apprentices in training has increased only 6% (400,000 to 425,00) in the past five years. This is half the rate of increase in tertiary study enrolments over the same period (11.7%).

In the 10 years between 1998 and 2008 the number of students enrolled in tertiary study has increased 37% from 675,000 to 925,000. The gender difference in the student population is almost unchanged with female enrolments increasing slightly from 54.3% in 1998 to 55.6% in 2008. Non-Australian residents comprise 16.5% of the tertiary student population.

Mature age apprentices-in-training have shown a dramatic increase in numbers between 1999 (80,000 aged 25 and over) and 2009 (182,000 aged 25 or over). These mature age apprentices represented 55.8% of all apprentices-in-training in 2009, up from 35.5% in 1999.

By qualification level, no Post-School qualification is held by 38.6% of the total workforce, followed by Bachelor Degree (18.6%), Certificate III/IV (18.4%), Advanced Diploma/Diploma (9.6%), Post Graduate Degree (4.7%), Certificate I/II (4.3%), Graduate Diploma/Cert (2.9%) and Certificate Undefined (1.6%). In the past ten years the proportion of the workforce holding any form of post-school qualification has grown from 51% to 61%.

In 2009, the median annual starting salary for all Bachelor degree graduates aged less than 25 years and in their first full-time job in Australia was $48,000, up by $3,000 from 2008. The five highest starting salaries were for Dentistry ($70,000), Optometry ($64,500), Engineering ($57,500), Earth Sciences ($54,000) and Medicine ($54,000).

Oh, and in case you go looking for any mention of our profession in Australian Jobs 2010, don’t bother. Apparently recruiters aren’t significant enough to have their own job category in the 9 pages devoted to rating the ‘future prospects’ of hundreds of individual occupation job categories.

Nurserypersons, Boat Builders, Caravan Park Managers, Stock & Station Agents, Indigenous Health Workers and Upholsterers, all manage to claim their own category but Recruiters, along with Sex Workers are left to lobby for their own stand-alone category in the next edition of Australian Jobs.

This article is reproduced with permission from Ross Clennett’s blog – http://rossclennett.blogspot.com/2010/08/fifteen-things-about-australian-job.html

As a professional recruiter, between 1989 and 2003, Ross screened over 80,000 resumes, interviewed over 3,000 people and successfully placed over 500 people in work. Over this time he worked in London, Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne. Ross now works as a speaker, trainer, coach and recruitment industry commentator.

In 2009 Ross launched Australia’s first professional development website for recruitment company owners and managers which provides a variety of training and strategic resources in various multi-media formats. For more information visit www.rossclennett.com






Job ads up and down, unemployment up

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publication Labour Force, Australia shows that the unemployment rate increased by 0.2 points to 5.3% in seasonally adjusted terms, but remained constant at 5.2% in trend terms in July. The participation rate also increased by 0.2 points to 65.5% in seasonally adjusted terms, and remained at 65.3% in trend terms over the month. Employment increased 23,500 (0.2%) to 11,235,700. Full-time employment decreased 4,200 to 7,866,400 and part-time employment increased 27,700 to 3,369,400. In the ACT, the unemployment rate remained at 3.4%, while the participation rate dropped by 0.1 point to 72.9% in July. For more information click here

Job ads very reported as both up and down by the major indexes:

The Advantage Job Index slipped 1.30% in July, further evidence of a slowing job market. Historically the job market falters at election time. It will be interesting to see to what extent the market picks up again post election. Ironically, irrespective of which party wins, we believe the employment market will recover.  The fall this month was unusually unevenly split with Building and Construction and Human Resources taking significant hits.  Read the full report here…

The ANZ Job Advertisements Series shows that the total number of jobs advertised in major metropolitan newspapers and on the Internet rose by 1.3%, to a seasonally adjusted average of 171,685 per week in July. This monthly rise follows strong 2.8% and 2.7% increases in June and May respectively, meaning the series is now 36.1% higher than it was a year ago (at its cyclical trough). However total job advertisements remain 38.2% below the all-time peak reached in April 2008. In the ACT the average number of newspaper job advertisements per week increased by 1.4% in seasonally adjusted terms, and by 0.7% in trend terms in July. For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Skills Shortages May Drive Up Average Earnings

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

The Clarius Skills Index, prepared by KPMG-Econtech, measures the underlying demand and supply of skilled labour. A score of 100 indicates equal tension between labour supply and demand, while anything greater than 100 indicates a skills shortage. The overall Index for 20 categories in the June quarter was 99.6, compared with 98.5 at the same time last year. The eight categories where there were shortages were: Building and Engineering Professionals (101.1), Computing Professionals (100.2), Building and Engineering Associate Professionals (100.8), Chefs (105.3), Metal Tradespersons (104.5), Automotive Tradespersons (101.5), Construction Tradespersons (101.7) and Wood Tradespersons (101.8). Clarius believes that the skilled labour shortage is expected to drive a 5.4% annual increase in earnings over the next three years, and see unemployment rates drop below 5% by early 2011.

For more information click here

Meanwhile, the latest Housing Industry Association (HIA)-Austral Bricks Trades Report shows a shortage of skilled tradespeople in 8 of the 13 skilled trade categories, including bricklaying, carpentry, ceramic tiling, electrical, general building, joinery, landscaping, and plumbing. The HIA also notes that there is a growing rate of attrition of first year apprentices – currently at 33% – as well as a high number of apprentices who fail to complete their apprenticeship.

For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Michael Page releases salary and employment forecast

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Michael Page has just released their 2010 Salary and Employment Forecast report.

The employment market has strengthened during the first half of 2010 with increased hiring activity across all white collar professional occupation groups. our annual employment survey, which this year includes responses from over 800 senior managers from Australia’s corporate sector, reveals 33% of employers anticipate an increase in staff numbers over the next six months. Some 56% believe their staffing levels will remain stable, with only 11% saying a reduction in headcount is likely.

The vast majority of hiring activity is occurring on a full-time basis and reflects growing confidence in the long term business outlook. Employers are showing a willingness to invest in their workforce to secure business critical skills before the job market tightens. Despite being temporarily obscured by the global financial crisis, the professional skills shortage remains fresh in the minds of corporate Australia. Some 41% of employers surveyed believe a skills shortage will become an issue for their business during the next 12 months.

Download the 2010 MP Salary and Employment Forecast here…






A third of candidates happy to be scrutinised online: Hays

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

More than a third of all job seekers accept that employers are entitled to check out their social media profiles when assessing them for a role, according to a new poll from Hays.

However, while 34% of the 900 candidates surveyed expected employers to check their social media profile and found this acceptable, a larger group – some 46%, felt employers were invading their privacy by screening them on social media.

The remaining 20% of candidates didn’t think employers were checking them out online.

Hays director Grahame Doyle said the majority of job seekers seemed to feel that “their personal life is their personal life, and their social media profile should not be used as part of the [recruitment] decision-making process”.

However, he noted there was a a sizeable group who believed that any actions that took place in the public domain were open to public scrutiny and assessment.

“In our experience, most employers do not leap to check a candidate’s online profile.

“It is far more common that an employer will extend their vetting process to include social media only if they feel a candidate might not be what they are portraying themselves to be in their face-to-face interview.”

In any event, he said, it was common sense for people searching for a job to change their privacy settings so not all of their posted content was shared.

He noted that it wasn’t just the main social media sites that candidates should be worried about, as employers that were using the internet to research candidates “will not stop at Facebook”.

Employers were also looking at content uploaded to video-sharing sites like YouTube, online forums and blogs, comments on social bookmarking sites (like Digg and Reddit), and much else, Doyle said.

Shortlist has covered the legal ins and outs of candidate privacy and social media previously. 


This article appeared in Shortlist News, an email service providing the latest news and analysis on recruitment and human capital management






Skills Shortages: The Sequel (Part II)

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

In last week’s InSight lead article, ‘Skills Shortage: The Sequel’, I highlighted the recent flurry of publicity in the mainstream media about the skills shortage. Contrary stories have also made the news. Recruitment industry veteran, Bob Olivier, made headlines in the AFR (Friday 23 July, 2010, page 46) by stating he believed the skills shortage was ‘overplayed’ due to ‘quality candidates being unwilling to move jobs’  and industry news service, ShortList quoted ICT Training Executive Clinton in’t Veld as saying;

“Generally speaking, when an environment starts to pick up economically, there is this sort of knee-jerk reaction to think that given the increase in economic activity, we don’t have enough skills.”

But many companies were only considering the primary, formal skills of their IT staff – in essence their current job title – rather than looking at all of the other skill sets they had picked up along the way, he said.”So who is right? Is there a skills shortage or not?

As you would expect, the answer is not definitive. It depends upon who you are and what you are measuring.

Let’s look at some typical reasons why a skills shortage might exist.

One dimensional sourcing: If you are an employer and all you do is run a job ad in the local paper or online and from that process you aren’t able to hire the ‘ideal candidate’, then you are likely to scream ‘skills shortage’.

No development of employees: If you are an employer who doesn’t invest in building the skills and motivation of their employees because ‘all that happens is that people leave to get a better job, with more money, elsewhere’, then you are likely to believe there is a skills shortage.

Geographically isolated: If you are a Council in a regional or rural area, desperate to find a doctor for your area, then you know there is a skills shortage. This topic was recently given excellent coverage in the SBS documentary Desperately Seeking Doctors.

Low pay: The maximum base pay for classroom teachers in any state of Australia does not exceed $85,000 p.a. The baby boomer wave of teachers are now retiring, creating concerns about the likelihood of the higher paying careers in the technology, finance and resources sectors, luring away potential teachers from undertaking (arguably) the most important paid job in any community.

Unsociable hours: Would you like a job whose core hours are when 99% of your friends and family are asleep? Try a career as a baker.

Dangerous and dysfunctional work environment: Forget all the faux glamour of Masterchef. The reality of life as a chef is a combination of unsocial hours and a work environment combining flames, heat, sharp knives, slippery surfaces and ‘tired and emotional’ colleagues. No wonder the most recent Clarius Skills Index rated chefs as the #1 ranked job where demand exceeded supply in Australia. Let’s hope all those Masterchef-inspired enrolments in hospitality colleges around the country stick with their choice.

A skills shortage is not just a function of the things I have listed above, it’s a function of expectations; the expectations of employers of being able to hire exactly what they are looking for at the price they want to pay.

Training of employees has traditionally been seen as a function of the education system, funded and supplied by the government. Once a ‘trained’ employee started their job, the typical employer took little, if any, responsibility for the further development of that employee. If the employee somehow managed to pick things up as they went along then they were a ‘good’ employee and if they didn’t, they were ‘no good’.

Unfortunately, investing in the ongoing training and development of employees has not been a key feature in the history of Australian organisational life. Too often, training and development has been provided only to those employees who are not meeting performance expectations and therefore needed ‘fixing’.

High performing organisations understand how important a culture of ongoing learning and development is in avoiding the worst of a skills shortage by:

  • Not having to purchase ready-to-go skills at a premium from the open  employment market
  • Lower staff turnover costs
  • Higher innovation
  • Higher morale
  • High productivity
  • Better bottom line results

I wrote in detail about this sort of high performance culture in March 2009 in a feature article What Australia’s Champion Cricket Coach Can Teach Recruiters for recruitment extra.

I think an excellent corporate example of what is possible, is evident at Australian publicly listed travel company, Flight Centre.

Travel agencies were commonly regarded as a dying sector and choosing a career as a travel agent was seen as a dead-end option, primarily due to the internet being able to provide instant self-service for travel bookings as well as  destination information and recommendations.

Flight Centre has been very pro-active about the recruitment and development of their people in an industry that has been traditionally characterised by low margins, low pay and high staff turnover.

Flight Centre own 50% of high-volume recruiter, Employment Office. They invest heavily in training and development, reward their staff with many non-monetary benefits and provide many opportunities for career advancement, both domestically and internationally.

The result? Flight Centre are consistently listed in the Hewitt Associates list of Best Australian Employers To Work For (four of the past five years) and earlier this year, Flight Centre forecast a pre-tax profit for the 09/10 financial year of between $180 million to $200 million, representing a doubling of the 08/09 full year profit result.

Clearly, Flight Centre has taken responsibility for their own supply of required skills and they are reaping huge benefits, culturally and financially, from this approach.

Yes, there is demonstrably a skills shortage in this country in many areas but before too many employer groups start bleating at the Federal Government to issue more Class 457 Visas, they might want to look at their own industry’s record of providing high quality, ongoing training and development programs for all their employees.

This article is reproduced with permission from Ross Clennett’s blog – http://rossclennett.blogspot.com/2010/08/skills-shortage-sequel-part-2.html

As a professional recruiter, between 1989 and 2003, Ross screened over 80,000 resumes, interviewed over 3,000 people and successfully placed over 500 people in work. Over this time he worked in London, Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne. Ross now works as a speaker, trainer, coach and recruitment industry commentator.

In 2009 Ross launched Australia’s first professional development website for recruitment company owners and managers which provides a variety of training and strategic resources in various multi-media formats. For more information visit www.rossclennett.com






Small Business Fair Dismissal Code and Checklist

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

The Federal Government has announced improvements to the supporting documentation and Checklist accompanying the Small Business Fair Dismissal Code to clarify the obligations of small business employers. The Code provides small business employers with best practice procedures to follow when dismissing an employee. The Code itself has not been changed, but the supporting information and Checklist that employers can use to assist them in complying with the Code have been revised. The revisions encourage small businesses to become familiar with their procedural obligations under the Code before they complete the Checklist.

For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Job Vacancies Up in July

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) Vacancy Report shows that the Skilled Vacancy Index (SVI) increased by 0.3% to 46.4 in July. Vacancies fell for two of the three occupational groups: Associate Professionals (-1.4%) and Professionals (-1.1%) while Trades increased by 1.0% over the month. In annual terms, the SVI is 22.7% higher than in July 2009 with Trades up by 51.4%, reflecting very strong growth for Construction Trades (+119.3%) and Metal Trades (+101.2%). The Internet Vacancy Index (IVI) increased by 0.9% to 80.3 in June, and in annual terms is 11.5% higher than in June 2009. In the ACT, the IVI fell by 1.8% in June, the only jurisdiction to record a drop in vacancies over the month.

For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Skills Shortages in Australia – the sequel…

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

The June 2010 unemployment rate in the United States was 9.5%. In the UK the ‘headline’ unemployment was 7.9% and two weeks ago, the OECD reported that the unemployment rate in the world’s 31 leading industrialised economies averaged fell to 8.6% in May, 2010.

These rather bleak figures from elsewhere around the globe (although improving from earlier in the year), compare starkly with the very sunny outlook in this part of the world. Falling unemployment figures coming out of Australia (5.1%) and New Zealand (6%) are predicted to maintain their downward momentum.

Although the new (Australian) financial year is not yet a month old, we are already seeing the unmistakable signs of a very quick return to the desperate times of 2007 when the words ‘skills shortage’ seemed to appear as regularly as ‘NRL in crisis’ or ‘Wallabies optimistic for new season ahead’.

On 6 July in the SMH article ‘Unqualified used to fill persistent job vacancies’, the Australian Government admitted that jobs were being filled by unqualified candidates simply because there were not sufficient skilled applicants available to fill the vacant roles.

This was most often the case with special needs teachers. The SMH reported that teachers with no expertise in teaching special needs children were being hired because teachers with the necessary specialised skills were not being trained quickly enough to meet demand.

On 7 July ABC1′s 7.30 Report ran a segment on how the acute shortage of doctors for rural and regional areas in Australia is being somewhat overcome by New Zealand locum doctors flying across the Tasman to plug the gaps, sometimes just for a weekend.

On 9 July, in The Australian article ‘If you want work, the west wants you’, it was reported that in response to the West Australian unemployment rate plummeting to 4%, the State Government announced that they are, next month, launching a massive recruitment campaign aimed at luring skilled east coast workers to WA.

The WA State Training and Workforce Development Minister released a list of 348 priority occupations, including carpenters, vets, midwives, optometrists, social workers, lift mechanics, butchers, bakers, prison officers, plumbers, architects, pilots, accountants, nurses, chefs and locksmiths.

On 14 July the Victorian Premier launched a new $6 million dollar campaign to recruit nearly 1700 new police officers for the state over the coming five years. Accompanied by a slick TV commercial, the Premier and the Chief Commissioner of Police clearly recognise that to win the hearts and minds of the desired talent pool, you have to make policing both a sexy and genuine career option for skilled young Victorians.

The next day, 15 July, the Australian Industry Group-sponsored Deloitte survey of CEOs was released.

This survey reported that skills shortages were a high-to-extreme, business critical risk between now and 2015. The survey of 400 companies, employing over 30,000 people in the manufacturing, services and construction sector, reported the following research findings:

  • More than 4 in every 5 businesses believe there is a moderate-to-extreme risk that skills shortages will adversely affect them in 2010
  • 27.4% of all vacancies over the past 6 months remain unfilled
  • Almost two thirds of companies had difficulties filling vacancies over the past 6 months
  • As to the specific nature of these difficulties the reasons; ‘lack of specialised skills available’ was nominated by 59.3% of companies and ‘lack of applicants’ by 48.5% of companies
  • Companies are responding to the lack of skilled candidates by ‘upskilling existing staff’ (37.8%) and ‘outsourcing or subcontracting the work’ (31.2%)
  • 12.6% of companies report that the skills shortages are so significant as to ‘constrain production’
  • Over three quarters of the survey respondents expect to hire more staff in the next 12 months, including 53% nominating that they will be increasing their total number of staff

15 July also saw the Australian Computer Society release a report highlighting ageism as a prominent issue in the Australian IT employment market.

The conclusions of the report ‘Improving Age Diversity in the ICT Workforce’, were that ICT workers aged over 45 were more likely to be unemployed in Australia compared to their counterparts in Canada, the UK, New Zealand and the USA.

The unsaid implication being that the so-called ‘skills shortage’ of ICT workers was more accurately an ‘attitude issue’ of employers being reluctant to consider employing older workers and unwilling to invest time and money in providing the necessary training for the up-skilling to these workers.

The 15 July trifecta was completed when a Federal Government taskforce, set up to help secure the critically important resources sector, a skilled workforce for the future, handed down its final report.

The National Resources Sector Employment Taskforce Report, ‘Resourcing the Future’ recommends using skilled migrants to fill temporary shortages, graduating more engineers and geoscientists and increasing the number of skilled trade professionals.

All of these actions will need to be taken pronto as the Report predicts that the resources sector is heading for a projected shortage of 36,000 skilled trades professionals by 2015. The Report also concludes that the domestic supply of mining engineers and geoscientists will not be sufficient to meet demand over the next five years, with an expected shortfall of around 1,700 and 3,000 respectively.

So what does all this flurry of action mean for recruiters?

My view is that all these very clear signs point to the need, as trusted external recruitment advisors, to be assertive with our clients about the market for talent.

We need to be especially (respectfully) assertive to clients who are doggedly sticking to some outdated views such as ‘there’s plenty of candidates out there’, or ‘I’ll wait for the candidate who ticks all the boxes’, or ‘I can afford to take my time hiring’, or ‘I shouldn’t need to sell this job or my organisation to candidates, they should want to work here’.

Plainly put: Recruiters need to educate their clients about the current realities of the skilled employment market and that things will only get tougher in the months and years ahead.

Education of clients comes through various channels such as articles in email newsletters, blog posts on industry forum websites, sending relevant reports (such as the ones I have highlighted in this article) directly to clients, holding seminars on the issue and building it deliberately into face-to-face and telephone conversations with clients.

A single channel approach will not do the job. I recommend that you need to have a clear communication strategy about this issue across your whole organisation, no matter how big or small it is.

The consequences of not undertaking this continual education of your clients will be the inevitable frustration of attempting to find the ‘impossible’ candidate for your inflexible client. Also, the likelihood that you will be ‘out consulted’ by a competitor who is effective at educating the client and managing their expectations about candidates.

As recruitment professionals, I believe we have an obligation to undertake this education campaign with our clients because if we are not willing and able to do it, then who is?

This is a great opportunity to elevate our standing in the eyes of our clients. We may not be communicating a message that is popular or easy to deliver, but if we are effective at providing alternative ways of dealing with the skills shortage problem, then our future as an industry is more assured than ever.

What steps are you willing to take?

This article is reproduced with permission from Ross Clennett’s blog – http://rossclennett.blogspot.com/2010/07/skills-shortage-sequel_27.html

As a professional recruiter, between 1989 and 2003, Ross screened over 80,000 resumes, interviewed over 3,000 people and successfully placed over 500 people in work. Over this time he worked in London, Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne. Ross now works as a speaker, trainer, coach and recruitment industry commentator.

In 2009 Ross launched Australia’s first professional development website for recruitment company owners and managers which provides a variety of training and strategic resources in various multi-media formats. For more information visit www.rossclennett.com