The Search Plan: Your Road Map to the
Candidate Pool
by Laura Gassner Otting,
President, Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group
(This article is reprinted with the permission of
www.ExecSearches.com, for whom it was
originally written.)
An executive search can be a harrowing
endeavor. In fact, filling a job often becomes a full time job in itself.
But, like any overwhelming project, this one can be made less so by dividing
the project into smaller tasks, with the most important coming first. The
search plan is the foundation upon which your search will be built and
therefore, must be given due time and thought before the search is begun in
earnest.
Job Descriptions that Sell
Job descriptions that merely
laundry list responsibilities do a great disservice to the organization that
wrote it. Larry Slesinger,
a Washington, DC, based nonprofit management consultant with 21 years of
experience explains that “Job announcements are marketing pieces that need to
both accurately describe the job AND motivate good candidates to apply AND
help potential sources to recommend the right candidates.” In order to set
your job description multitasking, you’ll need to follow a couple of Larry’s
tips, such as “Don't make it an exhaustive and exhausting list of duties and
tasks,” and “Make sure that the description outlines why this particular job
is important for the organization and its future.”
A job description should be written
after consultation with all the relevant stakeholders to an organization,
including key staff, board members, funders and clients. This process, almost
a mini-strategic planning session, brings consensus to an organization at a
time of transition, and more often that not, becomes a stabilizer in a
leadership vacuum. The job description, when complete, should describe the
organization’s history, where it imagines its future, and the kind of personal
and professional characteristics that will bring it there.
Finding the Candidates
Once you’ve gotten your job
description finalized, accepted and owned internally, it’s time to show it to
the world. Each of your stakeholders in the job description writing process
should have been asked for ideas for candidates and sources of potential
candidate names, as well as organizations in which your candidates might be
lurking or websites, listservs or newspapers that they may be reading.
Use the Internet to conduct
research on the best places to post your job description; it’s fast and easy
and renders fact-finding phone tag obsolete. Worthwhile sites allow multiple
pages of text and the ability to choose more than one of each of industry,
function and geographic region categories. Equally important, make sure the
site factors both the active and the passive job seeker into their service,
i.e., they should have an easy to navigate database used by daily surfers as
well as a newsletter which can be read casually by those who are only
beginning to explore.
Gather the prices, traffic and
niche data for all of the potential sites before placing job announcements
online. Most websites offer an option of a simple online form or an e-mail
address to which postings may be sent. Keep in mind that website postings
tend to be cheaper and faster than print, although some of the industry papers
have web components as well.
Finally, any headhunter will tell
you that networking is an essential way to reach prospective candidates.
Create master lists of industry leaders and other sources of ideas from
colleagues; develop a plan for contacting these people in a systematic
method. Be prepared to share your job description with them through snail
mail, e-mail, on the Internet and by fax. Follow up on every good lead; some
of the best candidates are often within a few degrees of separation from you.
Should you hire a professional?
Most search firms present a final
pool of 6-8 qualified, interested candidates from which the search committee
may choose to interview. Typically, these candidates come, in equal thirds,
from advertising, their database and from new networking. Not using a search
firm may limit your pool by one to two thirds.
“An executive search consultant
proactively recruits the most talented professionals, extending a non-profit's
pool of potential candidates far beyond inbound applicants,” according to Mary
T. Wheeler, Consultant with the Development
Resource Group, an executive search firm based in New York City which has
worked exclusively with nonprofit organizations throughout the United States
since 1987. “Many of these candidates,” she continues, “are professionals
fruitfully working and developing their careers. And, as a result, the type of
candidates generated through a consultant's proactive search process includes
those who, although content, are willing to entertain a new opportunity.” It
is specifically these individuals, those who could be tempted but not reading
the classifieds or surfing the job posting sites, that will extend your pool
to its full potential.
Organizations looking for
executives in specific functions, development for example, may also benefit
from utilizing a combination of advertising outreach and a headhunter’s
savvy. Katina Leodas of Leodas
Solymar, a Boston-based national firm specializing in advancement touts, among
a search firm’s merits, “a nationwide network of contacts in the field; the
ability to successfully market positions to high quality prospects and
candidates; time and willingness to make literally hundreds of cold calls;
excellent interviewing and deep reference checking skills; a ‘sixth sense’
about character and integrity; and the kind of attention to detail that leaves
candidates feeling that they have been communicated with honestly and treated
fairly.”
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When
creating your search plan, make sure it encompasses ideas from each of
these avenues of outreach:
-
Organizations
and associations of organizations within the same industry area
-
Niche online
recruiting sites
-
Referral
network: Social, board, staff, funder and academic connections
-
Membership
associations and trade groups of those within the same functional area
-
Industry or
regional newspapers
-
Niche web
sites, listservs, forums, news and discussion group threads
-
Alumni and
membership directories
-
Mailing lists
-
Conferences
programs with presentation descriptions
-
Master e-mail
announcements to internal/external constituencies, clients, customers,
partners
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