By Scott Erker, Ph.D.
If the staffing function were a fighter in a boxing match, it has just taken a series of one-two punches and is leaning on the ropes. However, there are signs that staffing is coming back into the fight which I saw last week at the 2009 SHRM Staffing Management Conference. While attendance was down from last year’s record numbers, there was buzz about a few significant topics.
First, companies are buckling under the weight of too many candidates for too few jobs, causing manual staffing processes to break under candidate volume. Pressure to hire the right person is extremely high and fear that an eventual turnaround in the economy will drive massive turnover from employees that accepted a ‘placeholder job’ to pay the bills. This fuels interest in ways to find candidates who are invested in the culture of the organization–long term.
Second, legal issues got a lot of attention as the number of grievances filed with the EEOC and OFCCP has increased for two consecutive years and this is likely to continue as this recession drags on. Social media is another legal concern – the temptation to use easy access people searches (thank you Google) to gather information about job candidates is tremendous, yet they risk crossing legal boundaries protecting applicants from discrimination.
While staffing may be down, it’s certainly not out. How is your company hiring for critical functions and preparing for the turnaround?
Scott Erker is the senior vice president of Selection Solutions for Development Dimensions International (DDI).


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