That dinner was one of many highlights for me during a few days spent speaking at HRevolution and covering the HR Tech 2011 Conference.
I was very impressed with the unconference conversations and sessions at HRevolution. The planners did a great job, and it was an excellent way to kick off the week on Sunday.
Monday and Tuesday, at HRTech, I did briefings with sixteen HR technology vendors, and chatted with several more. I found some really cool tools and ideas that are helping me to shape an opinion of the future of candidate experience and employee engagement.
In spite of a slightly dry “Awesome Tools” presentation to close out HR Tech 2011, I came away inspired and impressed with the conference and many of the vendors involved. Check the #HRTechConf hasahtag for the tweets from the event.
First, some thoughts:
1. Everything will be scored. Soon. When we first started thinking about how Klout and other social influence measurements could effect hiring, there was a great deal of skepticism. But Klout is now a major factor in many ways. I think we will see scoring for everything from culture fit to skill set in the near future.
Think about it. We already have the assessments. But now candidates and employers alike will be given scores and matching numbers for each job. And most of it will be candidate self-service style on the front end of the application process. A candidate will know, before he even fills out an application, if the job and company are a good fit, and how much he or she is worth in the organization. I think we will even be able to give the candidate what their career trajectory within the company will look like based on their history, social influence, etc.
Link your job board profile to the assessment, answer a few culture questions, and, BOOM, you have a score that includes social influence, culture fit, skill level, salary worth, and probable career trajectory, laser targeted for each applicant.
No one is quite there yet. But the pieces are there, or getting there, in several tech firms I spoke with. When someone puts it all together we are in for a major shift.
2. You can’t create culture with technology. There is a great deal of focus on employee engagement right now. I am a fan of the concept. I also think applicants should be treated the same as if they were already in the organization. The “candidate community” should be the same as the “employee engagement” platform. There should be no surprises once an applicant is hired.
But I don’t believe you can create culture with technology. And that seems to be what tech firms are implying is possible. I still believe that if you want to engage employees, give them interesting work, reasonable pay, and good feedback.
Enterprise-wide engagement, collaboration software, fitness programs, etc. all help to create a good story. And they are generally appreciated by employees. But not having those things doesn’t equal boredom or dissatisfaction in your job.
I would love to hear your thoughts on my thoughts…comment if you have some please!
Some companies I talked with that piqued my interest:
* Halogen Software – very innovative in Talent Management
* SHL – interesting direction for assessments
* OneWire – Pretty amazing overlay for your existing ATS that helps source and sort candidates in your system for precise matching
* HireVue – Think interviews on-demand. A hiring manager can now have interviews queued up in a DVR-like system with candidates answering key questions in short videos. Check, check, check. New CMO, Kevin Marasco, is doing a superb job of positioning HireVue with this concept.
* TALX – Employment verification and new workforce analytics with the help of newly acquired eThority
* Monster – The SeeMore semantic search technology is really cool. And Monster continues to position itself as thought leaders with the MonsterThinking blog and the best marketing team in the recruiting industry.
* HR Marketer – If you are a vendor in the HR space, just watch their demo. Great stuff.
* The Star Conspiracy – aka Starr Tincup pre 10/11. There is something fishy going on there, as their fun re-branding suggests. If you need marketing, call them and demand full disclosure. They rock.
* Jobs2Web – Excellent talent management and analytics tools, and new talent community marketing platform. I am keeping a close watch on this. Really interesting.
* Jobsite – The UK’s leading job board (and owner of one of my fav job posting distribution platforms, Broadbean) is an idea factory that has had projects incubating for years, that they keep rolling out, and which keep impressing me. How do you pronounce Mojave?
* Branchout – With their recently announced partnership with CareerBuilder, and some expected new releases, Branchout is making the job board / social candidate platform landscape very competitive. Expect big things here.
* CubeVibe – I know I said you can’t create culture with technology. But CubeVibe is doing some fascinating work in measuring employee sentiment and contribution.
* iCIMS – Reduce cost-per-hire and time-to-fill. Solid talent management platform continues to get better.
* JSTN – Branded, search engine optimized, highly mobile, employmer and job description videos. CNBC for employers. The Job Search Television Network is pretty darn cool. I’m hosting the next TalentNet Live at their studios in Chicago on 12/5.
Pronunciation courtesy of Wikipedia: “The Mojave Desert ( /moʊˈhɑːvi/ or /məˈhɑːvi/; High Desert)”
Synopsis courtesy of Craig Fisher: “It’s not all dry.” Congrats to the HRevolution team on a great kick-off to the week, and to Bill Kutic and company on a great HR Tech 2011.
On Wednesday, I joined Bryan Wempen for a post-conference wrap-up show on DriveThruHR Radio. Check it out below.
This is a great list of new HR tools. I think it is going to be difficult for larger organizations to adopt SaaS HR tools because they like to build everything in house. Employee scheduling software, however, seems like a no brainer to do in the cloud.
HR is such an important factor when it comes to running a business. There is a small streetwear shop located near by that i have talke dot the owner about and he always tells me that it is one of the most challenging tasks. Its goog to see that there is some new technologies coming onto the scene that can help to make the process better.
Its great to see someone who is talking about technology and how it will impact human resources and everything to do with business. It will be interesting to see how long it takes the larger corporations to start adopting social media and other technologies in their daily practice. As a manager i just dropped the old excel spreadsheet I use to schedule my employees with for this new employee scheduling software.