The effect of long-term hiring freezes is particularly damaging to the recruiting function, because “no hiring” generally means that a majority of recruiters will be laid off. Historically, budgets for recruiting have been cut so low that the function is literally decimated, making it rather difficult for companies to resurrect a decent function when the economy swings up.
Many executives think that the decision to institute some sort of resource freeze is one that helps the organization because it contains costs; however, the opposite is more often the case. Poorly thought-out freezes that impact talent acquisition and other talent-management activities may actually harm the organization by:
- Driving increases or vacancies in revenue producing/impacting roles that decrease revenues beyond any cost savings.
- Driving increases in employee burnout/turnover.
- Missing out on new talent opportunities (i.e., not be able to hire a superstar that becomes available).
- Decreasing an organization’s capability/capacity to innovate.
- Damaging the employer brand making hiring more difficult when the economy returns.
Rather than waiting for the inevitable announcement of a freeze, recruiters need to be proactive and preempt any such silliness long before it occurs by making the business case for leveraging this time to re-architect the talent acquisition function, upgrade its strategic programs, and trade up the talent population while salaries and vendor costs can be negotiated down significantly.
Source: The Economic Downturn Means That Hiring Freezes Will Soon Decimate Recruiting
by Dr. John Sullivan, Oct 13, 2008, 6:28 am ET
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