Search
Metrics Across the Human Capital Life Cycle

Download your list of the comprehensive list of metrics across the human capital life cycle.

Conference Feedback Survey
How did we do?
References are the New Referrals for Finding Job Candidates
For a lot of organizations, employee referrals are desirable sources of hard-to-find job candidates. Why referrals? For starters, referrals come recommended as a good match for your posting—having a little knowledge about and an employee’s recommendation for a possible applicant is better than starting out with zero information.
You should also think of references as the new referrals – potential candidates hand-picked by applicants to vouch for their abilities, knowledge, and soft skills. They worked with or managed your candidate, and they’re respected enough to be listed as references. This makes them highly targeted mostly being in the same industry or job role as the candidate. At this stage, you can have at least some degree of confidence the applicant’s reference is a potential good fit.
Many of the same pluses apply if you consider referrals when you’re checking your job applicants’ references. Absent expenditures for advertising and job board fees, it costs less for employers to hire an employee referral. Also, it takes less time to hire a referral versus prospects from other sources. And, after coming on board, studies show employee referrals stay in their positions longer than other new hires. It stands to reason that references may have been through same training, same management and same industry expertise as the candidate that could lead to stickier hires.
As an added bonus, references represent an exponentially growing source for referrals. If you’re checking 3 to 5 references for every candidate – which is simple when you’re using digital reference checking solutions – and some 20-30 percent opt-in to your talent pool when invited, you have a steady growing pipeline. And, with effective communications, references can be a very willing audience, whether they’re potentially thinking about making a switch, or open to hearing about your organization’s opportunities. Lever’s Recruiting Benchmark Report notes that, when approached about a new career opportunity, 90% of people currently in jobs are willing to at least have a conversation with a recruiter to learn more.
There are great cost-savings that come with hiring references, too. A direct hire from your own internal talent database can save thousands versus hiring via an agency or spending on job listings, advertising costs and paying agencies fees, among other expenses.
To successfully recruit, hire and on-board references, it’s important to create processes for identifying, easily communicating with and then nurturing your passive candidates until they’re ready to make a switch to your organization. Here are five suggestions to help you find passive candidates from your pool of candidate references:
1. Make it easy to engage. With digital reference checking and sourcing technology, you can build references’ interest in working for your organization as you’re requesting feedback on your applicant. In your emails, use simple, clickable opt-in links to make it as easy as possible to invite references to check out your company’s career site, social media (According to SHRM statistics, “recruiting passive job candidates” is the top reason (82%) organizations use social media for recruiting.), social professional networks (like LinkedIn) and other avenues. Bear in mind: The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) says 79% of candidates use social media, such as LinkedIn, Facebook and other sites, during their job search. Best of all, with reference checking technology, you’re automatically building a talent database that is up to date with potential candidates' latest job role and contact information.
2. Shine up your employer brand. First impressions are extremely important if you’re hoping references (or any potential new candidates) will investigate a new job at your company. That’s why your employer brand needs to be top-rate. (A Glassdoor U.S. Site Survey found that 69% of active job seekers are likely to apply for a position if an employer does a good job managing its employer brand.) Keep your brand front and center in every communication – including reference reach-out. When was the last time you created new content or updated existing content showcasing your employer brand? Is it time to polish your career page, job listings, statements on corporate culture and values, company reviews, and employee profiles?
3. Nurture new passive candidates. Once you make contact and your references and other potential candidates opt-in, you’ll increase your chances of hiring an interested individual if you keep the relationship alive. No ghosting here! Use effective, creative and engaging content to keep them interested in your website and potential employment opportunities over the long-term. After sending an initial welcome/thank you email and introducing your career page, create a series of subsequent, scheduled emails (spaced reasonably apart, e.g. monthly, bi-monthly or quarterly to avoid creating spam vibes) that discuss your company’s values and culture; highlight specific employees, divisions or teams; describe new job openings; explain your organizations products or services; and any news about product or company milestones, industry awards and other kinds of recognition. The idea is to help them answer their own question: “Why do I want to work here?” Of course, these emails should include links to your career site, videos, corporate blogs and customer testimonials.
4. Let technology handle the logistics. The best way to stay on top of managing your passive candidate relationships is with interactive technology and professional pipeline-level email campaigns that can be automatically scheduled. Also helpful is automation to track the history of outgoing and incoming emails for passive candidates and manage bounced emails and opt-outs. Tying it all together, look for tools that feature a cloud-based dashboard to monitor feedback and other results. Simplify administration and management by integrating with your ATS and CRM technology.
5. Let passive candidates decide when to interview. Remember: these folks are busy working their current jobs. Once you get interest from a passive candidate to interview, don’t scare them off with your hurried timeline for an interview. If it’s forced and candidates don’t have time to prepare or they aren’t yet sure about coming in, you may lose your prospect. In LinkedIn’s 2017 Inside the Mind of Today’s Candidate survey, 65% of 14,000 professionals polled said a bad interview made them lose interest in the position. Why let your eagerness risk it all? One suggestion: Invite your passive candidate to an introductory telephone or video conference call and then, when they’re ready, schedule an in-person interview.
Today’s super-low unemployment rate is making it exceptionally challenging for HR professionals to find and retain good talent. By seeking new channels to recruit effectively and applying an ‘always on’ approach to building your own talent network, you can expand your reach. Luckily, passive candidates from your existing applicants’ references are often a rich source of prospects. Smart marketing strategies and technology to help nurture resulting relationships can make it easier to hire the best and brightest passive candidates.
Read more about how one company saved nearly $39,000 in recruiting fees by hiring passive candidates developed from references.

Using Employee Survey Questions To Support A People Analytics Practice
Are your employee surveys giving you the information you need to take meaningful action in improving your organization?
If the answer is no, you’re not asking the right questions.
Employee survey questions can generate insights for addressing your business’ biggest challenges—but only if you design the survey purposefully. This free guide summarizes what you should be asking to get the information you need to support your company’s strategic goals. You’ll learn how to extract valuable data around these critical aspects of the employee experience:
- Employee engagement
- Company culture
- Management and leadership
- And more!
Download this free guide today to learn more about the questions you should be asking to gain insight into your company’s biggest challenges—and how you can solve them.

The Employee Experience Playbook
Engagement is an outcome. A good employee experience is how you achieve it.
To increase engagement, you’ve got to go beyond measuring and make a plan to create a positive work experience.
Use this free guide as an outline for enhancing the employee experience at your company. Following these best practice guidelines, you can develop a plan that fits your company and culture. The guide covers the complete employee experience from beginning to end, and includes:
- Candidates & New Hires—How to set up new employees for success
- Annual Employee Engagement Surveys—The foundation of your listening strategy
- Continuous Listening—Measuring the moments that matter
- Transitions & Exits—How to manage change
Download this free guide today to learn more about how you can improve the culture in your company - and help your people thrive.

The Power of People Analytics
This report is a guide for HR Directors to fully leveraging people analytics to have a greater impact on business success.
What you will learn:
- 5 questions to leverage HR analytics
- Turning people insights into business growth
- How to predict people problems and retain talent
- Why technology will convince the C-Suite of HR value
Download this free report today to learn how analytics and new technologies are allowing HR leaders to become better consultants and strategic partners to their businesses.

Continuous Listening: Developing The Right Strategy For Your Organization
Continuous listening is a strategy for listening to your employees across the moments that matter throughout the employee experience.
When aligned to business objectives, the right questions at the right times can help you collect data critical to business performance.
A continuous listening strategy can help you keep your finger on the pulse of your business—but only if it’s designed to capture the right information. So, what’s the “best” way to listen to your employees? This free guide examines how to craft your own unique strategy for continuous listening, including:
- What to measure—and why.
- Which tools to use for measuring.
- How often to measure, and more!
Download this free guide today to learn how employee surveys and the right listening program can be the engine of your HR analytics strategy.

People Analytics & Workforce Planning Conference | 2020 Resource Center
Watch The Keynote Videos!

Three Sessions in One: Workforce Planning, Analytics, and Change Management
While we can’t give you the full HCI conference experience, we are hoping to give you a little taste of it. Join Jenna Filipkowski and Alan Mellish of HCI for a very special, very free, super-sized webcast that combines three full keynote videos recorded at last year’s conference. Learn from three of our favorite 2019 keynote speakers as they discuss topics that are even more relevant today.
People Analytics Resources
Strategic Workforce Planning Resources
Bad Job Postings Are Costing You Great Candidates
When's the last time you read an inspiring job posting? We'll wait. While we were waiting, we recorded this episode of Nine to Thrive HR with Katrina Kibben about the importance of job postings as a way to increase the quality of your recruiting pipeline.
