Oddly, I fall somewhere in-between – I’m not over 55 and I
work with a lot of the Millennials. I understand
where the Millennials are coming from – we all want a great job with great
benefits and flextime. I also understand the 55er’s – they just want you to
work and not complain. They made it thought the recession/depression and don’t understand
why you need more –you have a job darn it and we still need to make a profit!
Splitworld is full of career advice, articles, and insight into my world of recruiting and being a mom.
Monday, October 12, 2015
The Old People vs. The Millennials
I’ve been writing a lot about Millennials lately because
there is a significant problem between the over 55er’s and the Millennials according
to most of my clients. The over 55er’s think the Millennials are flaky, don’t
want to work for a boss, want extra special benefits - matching 401K,4 weeks’
vacation, lunch daily, flex time etc. They want a lot but don’t want to work for it –
they want it NOW. The Millennials think
the 55er’s are old, slow, don’t understand new technology, don’t get social
media, they are not flexible, they don’t give them freedom to learn and grow
quickly. (I’m just basing my opinion here on all the complaints I have been hearing for
months now from both sides.)
Is there a happy medium between pleasing your employees with
amazing benefits and still making profit? I’m sure there is for larger corporations but
for smaller entrepreneurial companies it seems to pose a problem. Most of my smaller under 200MM clients can’t
provide the same benefits as a large corporation. Maybe we need to start
looking at corporate environments that fit most of your requirements instead of
all of your requirements? Maybe a bit of flexibility from both parties the old
and the new will make it easier to meet in the middle?
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Shut Up About Free Lunch
-they want more vacation time
-they want matched 401ks
-they want open communication
-they want free thinking
-they want 'horizontal
atmospheres', whatever that means
-they want a homey atmosphere at
work
-they want 'work-life-balance'
*All within work week that's less
than 40 hours
I have always said that work in
moderation is the best kind of work. Pick something you love and try to make a
living at it. I tell our intern that she may be at a desk for the next forty
years so she might as well be comfortable with it. But these kids are asking
for too much. They want the benefits of being retired without ever having to
really work for any of it.
All of the benefits can be
achieved, but not without hard work. Disclosure. The word 'millennial' seems to
have become more synonymous with lazy and less associated with the year in
which someone was born. Which was of course the original intention.
If you are numerically a millennial, you may not be one in attitude. There's a
difference.
Now go find something you love and
make some money at it!
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
What Makes a Candidate Not Place-able
When trying to work with a search firm you may hear, “I
can’t place you.” There are a variety of reasons why that may be true. Keep in
mind that it’s not personal and you can still find a job but that specific
recruiter can’t help you. Bottom line: the client is paying the recruiter a fee
so they get exactly the person they want.
- You are out of the recruiter’s specialized field
- You want to move into a new job or industries – most of our clients want people straight out of their industry – they want the industry expert
- You’ve job hopped too much. Clients don’t like to pay a fee for this type of background
- You have no degree. In tech recruiting and some project manager jobs degrees don’t always matter but most of our clients want that basic skill
- You have a very unusual background/skill sets that are niche
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Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Tips from Bill "The Old School HR Guy"
Advice on how to manage Millennials from Bill M. the “Old
School HR Guy”. Bill comes off super old
school but then has some amazing nuggets of advice for the future generation.
Seriously, this is some good advice -
2. If you are reviewing them praise them a lot and
give only one (1) negative. Yup, limit yourself please. If you give too many negatives they dwell on that
instead of the positive.
3. Make work a fun place – they want fun at work. Put in a pool table or a ping pong table for them to blow off some steam and let them socialize a bit. They like work to be social.
4. Speaking of being social, you need to plan employee activities outside of the office for them to do after work or at lunch. They love free lunch, drinks out and fun bonding activities.
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
A PSA on Professional Profile Pictures

1. No bathroom 'selfies'. Please, for the sake of my sanity and your integrity, do not post pictures of yourself in the bathroom on any social media sites. Or - as a rule of thumb - avoid taking pictures of yourself in the bathroom period.
2. No visible phones or cameras. It's unprofessional and, really, no one cares to see what model phone you have. It's quick and easy to ask someone to take a picture of you and the result will be received much better.
3. Ladies - NO cleavage. Sit up straight and wear a sensible and work-appropriate shirt in your picture. Unless you're being considered for a position at Hooters, employers do not need to see that.
4. No props. Played football in high school? Great - ditch the ball in the picture. Caught a prize winning bass? Good for you we don't need to see it unless you are a boat captain. When it comes to posting on a platform for professionals, those sort of accomplishments do not need to be highlighted in your profile picture.
5. Look happy. People respond well to smiling. Companies want content and fulfilled people working for them. Find or take a picture with something you love - your kids, you pets, your partner - and crop them out. The picture will convey genuine happiness while maintaining professionalism.
Labels:
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Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Hugely Annoying Words: A Cease and Desist
*Disclosure - I am not a master at grammar nor do I profess to
be an exceptional writer and a detailed communicator at all times or even at
all! What I do propose is I’m a bit nit-picky about these words and phrases.
1. Literally – the use of literally drives me literally nuts. Adults and kids use it
constantly and in the most annoying ways. Can we all try to quit, literally,
using it?
2. Just say’in - It is the way to say something
negative and get away with it because you were just say’in? How about owning up to what you said instead of just say’in?
3. It’s all good! –When did you’re welcome turn into it’s all good? Are people embarrassed to just say you are welcome when someone says thank you – is it too formal? It’s all good seems to me like they are being put out with whatever they did for you and by saying it’s all good makes them feel better. It’s like they really weren’t happy when they held that door open for you or possibly helped you with a project but no really, it’s all good – just say’in.
Monday, May 11, 2015
Chapman People
I’m a graduate of Chapman University and have had the
opportunity to volunteer for the Chapman MBA program as a mentor since 2010. It
surprised me that I've been participating in the program for so long; the time has really gone by fast! I think one of the reasons the time has flown
by is because of the amazing people I have met.
Ralphie (far left) calls all my mentees my “Chapman Children”.
When my Chapman crew gets together it does feel like one big family and they
have become a great part of both my professional and personal lives. Over the last 5 years, I've had the privilege
of placing a few Chapman grads. I've also become good friends with a few of my
mentees. They've showed me support when my husband battled cancer, they've hung
out with my boys, counselled me in business matters, and most often, keep me
current with new trends. It’s been fun to see babies born, people getting
married and careers taking off! It’s really a true “win-win” situation. I
teach them a few things from my years as a recruiter and I get their new
and innovative perspective on business.
So I guess this post is to say thanks to Chapman University
and all my Chapman people!
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