Friday, May 8, 2020
The NFL Draft The Perfect Hiring Process
The NFL Draft The Perfect Hiring Process 1 Flares 1 Flares This is a guest post from Matt Charney, a former corporate recruiter turned social media manager. He wants you to know that these opinions are his own, not his employerâs. Find him on Twitter @mattcharney or connect with Matt www.linkedin.com/in/mattcharney. Thereâs nothing like the NFL Draft, when the eyes of the nation tune in to watch an event which, at its core, consists of 255 verbal offer extensions. Kris Dunn recently wrote the NFL Draft represents a âtest tube for the Talent Management game as a whole.â Itâs the perfect search, really, one thatâs almost unfair to employers watching the prime time spectacle unfold. Consider: 1) All candidates are all interested and available. Additionally, they must all formally register with the NFL and declare for the draft. Fortunately, no front office executive passes, saying, âHow good can they be if they apply?â 2) Thereâs a fixed pool of incoming talent, all of whom can be easily located on whatâs referred to as the âBig Board.â There are no sources of hire metrics or tracking for NFL players, so personnel offices donât have to justify their existence by taking candidates from the âBig Boardâ and saying they discovered them, you know, on a social network or something. 3) The candidates arrive pre-slated, and diversityâs never an issue (unless youâre looking for a woman or a player from a non-BCS conference). 4) The search ends at a specified time and date. Period. Other than the team with the first pick, hiring decisions must be made within the matter of a few minutes. Thereâs no, âwell, Iâd like to see at least a couple more options before moving forward. 5) All offers are eventually accepted, and thereâs no chance of a counteroffer or the player deciding to wait around for another few months in college because the timingâs just not right to make a move. If only talent acquisition were really this easy. Of course, even in the âtest tubeâ environment of the draft, thereâs one critical lesson to be drawn: knowing if the hireâs going to work out is impossible. The NFL has one of the most rigorous prescreening processes of any corporation, involving skills testing (the Scouting Combine, the Wonderlic, etc.), references (game footage, character interviews), succession planning (depth chart, roster). Each player probably receives more scrutiny in the weeks leading to the draft than most boards ever give to potential CEOs. So why for every Tom Brady (fifth round pick) is there a Ryan Leaf (#2 overall selection)? Because quality of hire, in the NFL and in talent management, has proven nearly impossible to ascertain during the selection and hiring process, a long term metric to a short term process. The most important skills in the draft, and in business, are the ones that arenât on a resume, or even ones that can be easily defined. It boils down to organizational fit; historically, the most successful picks (and employees) have been those with shared values and vision. How does the NFL assess something so amorphous? âIt came down to a gut feeling that he was the right guy for us,â said Denverâs Josh McDaniels of his decision to stake his franchiseâs future (and millions in guaranteed money) to Florida QB Tim Tebow, sounding like most hiring managers. Maybe the NFL Draft isnât that different from other hiring processes, after all. Only in this one, someone other than the recruiter gets to play the role of âMr. Irrelevant.â
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