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On-Boarding

How Culture Affects Onboarding

By Michael Rosenberg

I read on the Internet that 80 percent of all new employees decide within the first six months if they are going to stay with their current employers or begin looking for “new opportunities.” Whether this figure is the result of research or not (or simply overblown), it does point out the importance of quickly incorporating new hires into the workplace. Onboarding, or the formalized process of incorporating talent into the organization, is the hot topic right now in human resources. From a strategic view, it makes a lot of sense. You go through a long, formalized hiring process that takes months (far too long in my opinion—but that’s the subject of another column). You have hired the people whom you think are the best fit for the organization. It only makes sense to ensure that you can fit them into the organization and “ramp them up” as quickly as possible. We also know the other reasons why onboarding them into the organization is important—they become quickly become engaged and productive and the time for return on investment in those employees is greatly enhanced. Hey, you hired them for a reason!

All Aboard - On Boarding

by Paul Hamilton and Marianne Carruthers

Market research indicates that the turnover cost per hire is as a high as 14x the base pay rate for employees who earn up to $100,000 per year. A major contributor to turnover is lack of organizational readiness. Rogers realized this as a growing concern and developed a new onboarding program designed to increase productivity, reduce early attrition and improve new hire engagement. Come out and hear the strategy behind the onboarding transformation that has changed the Rogers recruitment model into a world class program.

What is the career path for a recruiter?

Many occupations have a clearly defined career path. Recruiting does not seem to have a career path in most organizations. Having lunch with a Director of Resourcing from a bank he mentioned that a 1.5 year tenure is all the could expect for most recruiters. This tenure is even shorter in many agencies. The Conference Board of Canada has recently stated there will be a shortage of 90,000 IT professionals by 2010.

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