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Optimization of job boards and the graduate recruitment process: Advancing HRM strategies for the acquisition of early career talent

Optimization of job boards and the graduate recruitment process: Advancing HRM strategies for the acquisition of early career talent
Optimization of job boards and the graduate recruitment process: Advancing HRM strategies for the acquisition of early career talent
This chapter aims to enable organizations to optimize their use of job boards and the graduate recruitment process based on feedback from university students and recent graduates of their lived experiences. A theoretical framework of signaling theory is applied. A sample of 321 university students and recent graduates in Australia completed an online survey incorporating quantitative and qualitative elements during the COVID-19 pandemic. Opportunities for job board optimization include increasing the relevance of search results, providing metrics about the company, and increasing integration between applicants and organizations to facilitate communication. Opportunities for optimization of the recruitment process include the removal of unnecessary stages to reduce time investment of applicants, increasing clarity of requirements and providing timely and constructive feedback. Implications come from informing the human resource strategy for early careers talent acquisition. Optimization of the process can offer competitive advantage, cost savings, and organizational sustainability.
47-66
IGI Global
Donald, William
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Pychtin, Peter
1dcc12ba-a12a-4854-aef6-7cd163d0a628
Mentor, Dominic
Donald, William
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Pychtin, Peter
1dcc12ba-a12a-4854-aef6-7cd163d0a628
Mentor, Dominic

Donald, William and Pychtin, Peter (2022) Optimization of job boards and the graduate recruitment process: Advancing HRM strategies for the acquisition of early career talent. In, Mentor, Dominic (ed.) Handbook of Research on New Media, Training, and Skill Development for the Modern Workforce. IGI Global, pp. 47-66. (doi:10.4018/978-1-6684-3996-8.ch003).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

This chapter aims to enable organizations to optimize their use of job boards and the graduate recruitment process based on feedback from university students and recent graduates of their lived experiences. A theoretical framework of signaling theory is applied. A sample of 321 university students and recent graduates in Australia completed an online survey incorporating quantitative and qualitative elements during the COVID-19 pandemic. Opportunities for job board optimization include increasing the relevance of search results, providing metrics about the company, and increasing integration between applicants and organizations to facilitate communication. Opportunities for optimization of the recruitment process include the removal of unnecessary stages to reduce time investment of applicants, increasing clarity of requirements and providing timely and constructive feedback. Implications come from informing the human resource strategy for early careers talent acquisition. Optimization of the process can offer competitive advantage, cost savings, and organizational sustainability.

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Published date: 13 May 2022

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Local EPrints ID: 483002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483002
PURE UUID: 32c613a3-338d-40cd-9052-e58f90c41f9f
ORCID for William Donald: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3670-5374

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Date deposited: 18 Oct 2023 16:51
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: William Donald ORCID iD
Author: Peter Pychtin
Editor: Dominic Mentor

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