Employee Relationship ManagementHRMTalent ManagementWork Environment

Developing Recruitment Strategies That Foster A Strong Organizational Culture To Attract Top Talent

Developing a well-defined, positive organizational culture helps attract more qualified candidates, streamline operations, reduce employee turnover, and increase productivity. Strong Organizational culture refers to the attitudes and behaviors shared by an organization’s employees and management and is often an essential factor in the job search process. While business leaders and management can direct organizational culture, the employees you hire will also have an impact. When done strategically, as an outstanding leader, you can develop recruitment strategies that foster a strong organizational culture that attracts the best talent you want to hire.

An essential part of inclusive hiring and a strong organizational culture is offering fair and just compensation and pay packages. It is, therefore, necessary to regularly evaluate key compensation-related metrics in an organization by gender and race. A more rigorous pay equity analysis can be conducted to ensure all employees are compensated fairly.

As a successful business leader, to avoid unconscious bias that can lead to skewed judgments and reinforce stereotypes, you should conduct training sessions for hiring managers and employees to recognize and combat unconscious biases in the workplace.

Many managers use cultural fit to describe the good vibes or positive feelings they get from a potential employee. The problem is that they are likelier to feel this way around people like them. Furthermore, assessing cultural fit is essential, but training hiring managers to use more precise language to describe potential employees’ feelings is even more critical.

When conducting the recruitment process, it is essential to consider diversity, equality, and inclusion and develop a comprehensive recruitment strategy that gives equal opportunities to every candidate. Moreover, it is not about considering characteristics that could run against discrimination laws, such as sex, race, or national origin. It’s about assessing an organization’s strengths and weaknesses and then identifying candidates with strengths it doesn’t have or who can fill those cultural gaps between where the organization is now and where it wants to be.

Organizational culture permeates almost every aspect of work and every employee’s daily experience. As a leader, you must clearly understand your organizational culture versus the organizational culture you aspire to if there are any gaps.

Sharing an organization’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, for example, through a diversity and inclusion onboarding session, can let new employees know that this is important and that the attributes that make them unique are essential to the organization.

Implementing a mentor or buddy system is one easy way to build support and make new employees feel welcome. So having a friend, in addition to their manager, can help new employees ask questions of their peers and spend the first week more comfortably.

Part of creating a comprehensive onboarding experience is realizing that new employees receive information similarly. Therefore, they should be given access to presentation decks and information so that they can review them at their convenience. In addition, each new employee must be given time and space to absorb all the further details about their role.

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Dr Atef Awad

Dr Atef Awad is a university professor specializing in human resources management at Abu Dhabi University. More than 25 years of experience in academic and administrative work. Consultant in developing innovative HR policies and strategies. Extensive experience in developing future practices, including career development strategies, talent management, development programs, and integration strategies. Ability to direct complex projects from concept and ideas to fully operational state. He is a Certified international trainer in human resource development and organizational development.
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