06. Talent Acquisition & Talent Management
Large
IT organizations every year rent tens of thousands of employees through
multiple sourcing channels for their growth and talent replenishment. Assuming
that for each hire at least ten potential profiles are scrutinized and
evaluated, the Talent Acquisition (TA) personnel ends up processing half a
million-candidate profiles having multiple technical and domain skills. The
scale and tight timelines of operations lead to possibility of suboptimal talent
selection due to misinterpretation or inadequate technical evaluation of
candidate profiles.
Many business executives have rightly said that talent
is more critical factor in both domestic and global front. Talent acquisition
is the long-term strategic approach to Recruitment. It includes identifying,
attracting, developing, engaging & retaining qualified workforce. Talent
acquisition involves all the sub processes around finding, attracting and
engaging highly talented individuals into your organization. Today more
organizations have identified Talent acquisition as a strategy to align with
organizational goal. The need for qualitative recruitment has become the
essence of Talent management strategy. As per the survey conducted by Deloitte
Consulting in the year 2007, the biggest challenge for organization was hiring
the right people to meet their strategy objective and retaining them. Acquiring
the right talent is always difficult. Talent should match job requirement and
must be possible to achieve strategic goal of organization. Today world job
market is facing problem of “Talent Shortage” [i.e., talent not matching job’s
skill set and requirement]. No proper match between demand and supply of right
talent. Today’s corporate requires a person with multitasking skill.
Organizations have developed more specific and refined skill set for different
positions.
KNOWLEDGE BASED TALENT ACQUISITION
The central theme of knowledge management is to
leverage and reuse the organisation’s intellectual capital to maximum effect.
Similarly, the main theme of organisational talent acquisition is to get the
right number of people with the right set of skills at the right time in the
right place to do the jobs. Organisations can do this by aligning the knowledge
management strategy with its employee recruitment and of The Business Review
(ISSN: 1996-3637), Vol: 1, No: 2 selection process. In a nutshell, this process
can be easily described by the following simple equation:
Organizational
Practice of Knowledge Management |
Employee Hiring (Recruitment & Selection) |
Knowledge Based Strategic Talent Acquisition Technique |
=
Figure 1: The Equation of Knowledge based Talent Acquisition
Technique Generation
KNOWLEDGE BASED TALENT ACQUISITION STRATEGIES
Talent acquisition had traditionally matched
‘people-skills’ to specific job requirement. By concentrating on the previously
discussed paradigm shifts, organizations today are facing an increased demand
to acquire knowledgeable and competent people, who match the wider context of
working within the organization. Terms like ‘person-job fit’ are transforming
into ‘person-organization fit’. Even though high-performance organizations are
emphasizing more value on their ‘recruitment and selection’ processes, majority
of the small and medium enterprises (SME) as well as other local conglomerates
(large or small) attach low criticality in developing a strategic
knowledge-based talent acquisition process. (Haas 2008), (Hubbard 2007), (HR
Practices Survey Bangladesh 2007). The need of strategically designed talent
acquisition format has more keenly felt than ever before. Following are the
articulation of crucial ideas and advice from the industry experts,
researchers, policy shapers about the trends in, and challenges to conducting
knowledge-based talent acquisition strategies in the climate of the recent
competitive global business environment.
Talent Management
Talent
management is the pool of activities which are concerning to attracting,
selecting, developing and retaining the best employees in the strategic roles
(Scullion & Collings, 2011). They further point out that talent management
recognizes people who excel at particular activities and performance upon whom
support is offered to enable them to 'push the envelope' while capturing and
sharing what they do differently so as colleagues can emulate them (Scullion
& Collings, 2011).
Organization
should have ability and capacity to recognize the people and the capability
that may create value and deliver the competitive advantage for the
organization; in addition, talent management also aims at developing and
deploying the right people at the right job on the right time and providing
them the
right environment to show off their abilities in a best possible way for the
organizations (Uren & Jackson, 2012)
Talent management has become a challenge to all the
organizations in a global context irrespective of the country (Gardner, 2002).
Furthermore, the anxiety for the scarcity of the talent is a universal issue.
All organizations around the globe are competing for the same talent. Global
integration trend shows the standardization in talent recruitment, management
and development to make sure their competitive advantage in the market.
Therefore, organizations are adopting best global and local talent management
practices (Stahl et al., 2007) There are several benefits of talent management
such as employee engagement, retention of employee, increased productivity,
culture of excellence and much more (Ballesteros & Inmaculada, 2010).
Critical factors of TM that must be considered
Coleman
(2008) suggested certain factors which can help the successful implementation
of talent management strategy. The talent management strategy should be
integrated and aligned with organizational strategy and it is also of vital
importance to articulate the talent management strategy. Talent management is
linked to culture and people of the organization. People and culture are the
heart of the organization for creating the successful talent management
strategy. The biggest challenges for the managers to manage talent is not the
technical one, it’s the cultural one.
Overcoming the cultural hurdles is a very difficult
task especially when holding knowledge is considered more important than
sharing it with others (Cole-Gomulka, 2007). The reason of the sentiment is
that the nature of the employees is competitive and they are more tending towards
holding the knowledge than comparing because sometimes they don’t want others
to have the same competencies as they are having. Another important issue about
the talent management is the compensation, if the right incentive is given to
the people who share talent than the sharing of knowledge become effective (The
Banker, 2004). The compensation and reward system must support the sharing of
knowledge and talent. It is important to reward those employees who contribute
more in knowledge sharing in the organizations and on the same time it should
be made sure that employees understand the importance of talent management
(Cole-Gomolski, 2006).
References
Ballesteros, S. R., & Inmaculada, D. F. (2010).
Talents the key for successful organization. Unpublished thesis, Linnaeus
School of Business &Economics, Linnaeus University.
Coleman, D. (2008). Learning to manage knowledge.
Computer Reseller News, 775, 103-04. Davis, T., Maggie, C., & Neil, F.
(2007). Talent assessment, a new strategy for talent management. Gower, United
States
Cole, G. A. (2007). Management Theory and Practice,
6th Edition, Thomson Learning, London. Cole-Gomolski, B. (2006). Chase uses new
apps to ID best customers. Computerworld, 31(35), 49- 50. Coleman, D
Gardner, T. M. (2002). In the trenches at the talent
wars: competitive interaction for scarce human resources. Human Resources
Management, Wiley periodicals, 41, 225-237
Haas, M. (2008) ‘Know Better’, HR Monthly, (2): 40-43.
HR Practices Survey Bangladesh 2006-2007 (2007) Human
Capital Ernst & Young Private Limited India and Metropolitan Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, Bangladesh.
Hubbard, G. (2007) ‘Wheel of fortune’, HR Monthly,
(7): 30-32.
Scullion, H. & Collings, D. G. (Eds) (2011).
Global talent management routledges. New York & London.
Stahl, G. K., Björkman, I., Farndale, E., Morris, S.
S., Paauwe, J., & Stiles, P. (2007). Global talent management: How leading
multinationals build and sustain their talent pipeline. INSEAD Faculty and
Research, Working Papers, 2007/24/OB.
Uren, L., & Jakson, R. (2012). What talent wants:
The journal to talent segmentation, Jackson Samuel, www.jacksonsamuel.com.
Agreed. Talent acquisition is a recruitment strategy that focuses on identifying, attracting, employing, developing, and retaining elite talent inside a company. In other words, it is a planned and systematic set of measures that the HR department must take in order to hire the finest people.(Scullion, H. & Collings, D. G, 2011).
ReplyDeleteYes Menupa Talent management is the pool of activities which are concerning to attracting, selecting, developing and retaining the best employees in the strategic roles (Scullion & Collings, 2011)
DeleteAgreed. A study conducted by Chuai et al (2008)states, in well‐established and recognized multinational corporations in Beijing explores whether talent management (TM) practices are fundamentally different from traditional approaches to human resource management (HRM). It was revealed that TM emerges as being different from traditional HRM, incorporating new knowledge rather than being a simple repackaging of old techniques and ideas with new labels.
ReplyDeleteYes. management recognizes people who excel at particular activities and performance upon whom support is offered to enable them to 'push the envelope' while capturing and sharing what they do differently so as colleagues can emulate them (Scullion & Collings, 2011).
DeleteUnderstanding of talent management concentrates attention on differentiation and departing from classical – human resource management approach. That means that organization willing to actively engage talents in organizational life have to figure out ways of capitalizing on their competencies and prepare structures, strategies and climate to encourage their employees on pivotal positions to contribute to organizational success (Ingram, T. and Glod, W., 2016).
ReplyDeleteYes. Talent management also aims at developing and deploying the right people at the right job on the right time and providing them the right environment to show off their abilities in a best possible way for the organizations (Uren & Jackson, 2012)
DeleteHiring person with right skill & potential to grow with organization, will have future benefits to the organization. It reduce the cost of talent management process(Christina , 2019).
ReplyDeleteyes. Global talent management (GMT) is most frequently defined as the process of attracting, selecting, developing and retaining highly performing co-workers in the global, most central positions (Collings et al., 2019; Vaiman et al., 2012).
DeleteAgreed with your argument and same time in terms of Humana Recourses Management Talent Acquisition and Talent Management used interchangeably, despite being different functions. both factors interconnected. can’t have one without the other. Talent Acquisition is the process of attracting and hiring qualified people. Talent Management is how you develop and retain these skilled hires (Ana Pula 2019).
ReplyDeleteYes. Lahtukha (2015) highlights that TM is regarded as increasingly important since organizations are struggling to find talent and there is a shortage of qualified workers. Holland and Scullion (2019) argue that the war for talent increases the importance of focusing on the retention of talent within global companies and the psychological contract in regards to talent retention
Delete