18 Tips to Turbocharge Your Candidate Sourcing Strategies

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Need tips to improve your candidate sourcing strategies? You’re in good company—candidate sourcing is the top priority for staffing firms. In fact, sourcing tips are so in-demand right now that we developed an entire hub to help you step up your sourcing efforts. In the meantime, explore these top candidate sourcing strategies.

LinkedIn Hacks

  1.       Short and Sweet

To increase response rates on LinkedIn InMails, keep your message to under 500 characters. Candidates don’t want to be bombarded with extensive messages from recruiters.

  1.       Group Think

Want to get around common InMail limitations? Connect with groups that might be interesting to your target candidates. By connecting with a LinkedIn Group, you can send a message to a member regarding a job opportunity or simply expand your network.

  1.       Also Known As…

When performing searches on LinkedIn, experiment with different ways to spell titles. For example, engineering might be listed as eng, engnr, or engineer. Also, experiment with different titles like “Leader of Engineers” or “Team Lead, Engineers” instead of the typical “CTO” or “VP of Engineering.”

  1.       Diamonds In the Rough

When you search through candidates on LinkedIn, start on page 30. The people on the first three pages will be constantly inundated with recruiting emails. You’ll still find candidates that meet your search requirements — they may not have all the keywords you’re searching for listed in their profile.

  1.       Search, Modify, Repeat

For your candidate searches, start with the top keywords you’re targeting. As you begin to find good candidates, search for other keywords in their resume (similar skillsets, different spellings, same company, project names). This helps to expand the search beyond the information provided by the client to target candidates you might not have brought up in the initial search.  – Wendy Kennah, Director of Recruiting, Procom

Engaging Passive Candidates

  1.       Mind the Gap

Don’t focus solely on the monetary gap between a candidate’s current job and the new job opportunity. To increase a candidate’s interest, tell them that the definition of a career move is a minimum 30 percent non-monetary increase. This consists of some combination of a bigger job, a job with more impact and visibility, a job doing more satisfying work, and one that’s growing faster in terms of more upside potential.

  1.       Social Hour

Don’t shy away from growing your network and connecting and building relationships with candidates. Attend professional meet-up groups that would be interesting to your target candidates. People are far more likely to respond to you if you’ve built a relationship with them.

  1.       Forget Me Not

For your specific candidates, it’s important to have a quarterly outreach. Stay in contact with placed candidates and keep track of how they’re doing at their companies. If they seem unhappy and are looking to leave their current jobs, keep them on your radar when similar jobs open at another client’s company.

Sourcing Through Social

  1.   Be a Twitter Heavy Hitter

Are you still using Twitter’s basic search to find candidates? Upgrade to Twitter’s free advanced search tool. Use it to find people who are talking about a particular subject in a specific location.

  1.   Picture Perfect

When you connect with your target talent pool on Twitter, the first thing they notice is your profile picture and your bio. Make sure you create these wisely. Although you only have 160 characters for your bio, include your profession, interests, and something that’ll make you stand out.

  1.   Be a Social Butterfly

Engage with professionals in your area via social media. Whether commenting on an article they have shared, wishing them good luck on a new role, or simply saying happy birthday, engage with these professionals to build strong connections. When you have your own positions to share, you’ll have a greater response from the candidates you have built these connections with. – Kristyn Harris, Technical Recruiter, Procom

Candidate Outreach Done Right

  1.   Looking for Candidates in All the Right Places

Are you adjusting your outreach strategies based on the type of candidate you’re recruiting? Generally, active strategies such as job ads, career site listings, social media, and job fairs work well for entry-level positions, while strategies for passive candidates (direct calls and emails, networking, and referrals) work best for professional-level talent.

  1.   What I Like About You

When you’re reaching out to candidates about a new job opportunity, don’t lead with it. Introduce your company and ask about their current job and career goals. People are more willing to respond to an email if it’s about them.

  1.   But Wait, There’s More

Your message shouldn’t include all the information about the job opportunity. Provoking curiosity prompts candidates to respond and learn more about openings.

  1.   Calling All Candidates

Give your candidates a call! You’d be surprised how few recruiters call candidates for their first outreach. Building relationships over the phone will set you apart from other recruiters.

Free Sourcing Tools

  1.   Hunter and Gatherer

Use the Email Hunter extension to view the email addresses from any company website or LinkedIn profile. Now you’ll have your top candidates’ key contact information at your fingertips!

  1.   Prophet Margin

While on a candidate’s social media profile, the Prophet extension will provide you with more ways to connect with the candidate, such as other social sites, blogs, email addresses, and phone numbers.

  1.   Testing, 1, 2, 3

Go to mailtester.com to test the accuracy of different email addresses before you reach out to your candidates. Mailtester will tell you whether the domain and prefix are correct.


Want to take your candidate sourcing strategies to the next level? Find all our great sourcing content and candidate sourcing strategies in one place in our guide to candidate sourcing.

 

Sources:

  1. InMail Character Limits.” LinkedIn Recruiter Help. (2015).
  2. Russell, Chris. “Update: New Limits On Messaging LinkedIn Group Members By @ChrisRussell.” SourceCon. (2015).
  3. Bullhorn Talent Acquisition Team
  4. Bullhorn Talent Acquisition Team
  5. Bullhorn customer Wendy Kennah, Director of Recruiting, Procom
  6. Adler, Lou. “8 Do’s and Don’ts for Your First Conversation With a Passive Candidate.” LinkedIn Talent Blog. (2016).
  7. Zapar, Stacy. “The Future of Sourcing: 10 Tips for the Forward Thinker.” Smart Recruiters Blog. (2013)
  8. Bullhorn Talent Acquisition Team
  9. Cathey, Glen. “How to Search Twitter for Sourcing and Recruiting.” Boolean Black Belt-Sourcing/Recruiting. (2009).
  10. Cathey, Glen. “How to Search Twitter for Sourcing and Recruiting.” Boolean Black Belt-Sourcing/Recruiting. (2009).
  11. Bullhorn customer Kristyn Harris, Technical Recruiter, Procom
  12. Firms Share Their Best Recruitment Strategies.” Bullhorn Blog. (2015).
  13. Candidate Sourcing: Get More Replies to Your Contact Emails.” Recruiting.com.
  14. Candidate Sourcing: Get More Replies to Your Contact Emails.” Recruiting.com.
  15. Reilly, Kate. “14 Out-of-the-box Sourcing Tips for Finding Top Talent.” LinkedIn Talent Blog. (2014).
  16. Bazinet, Erin. “Top 10 Google Chrome Extensions for Recruiters.” John Leonard Blog. (2015).
  17. Bazinet, Erin. “Top 10 Google Chrome Extensions for Recruiters.” John Leonard Blog. (2015).
  18. Bullhorn Talent Acquisition Team

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