In my business consulting practice there has been quite the uptick recently of business owners struggling to find the right talent. It sure is tough to start the new year off with a charge when you’re so completely frustrated from the paltry results of your people. It is a painful feeling to see that you have poured so much of your time, money and energy trying to improve the performance of employees who you now realize just aren’t the right fit.

If this is you:

RESIST the urge to throw in the towel only to revert to being the one-man show (or one- woman-show).

REFOCUS on your big picture vision of scaling your business growth.

REMEMBER this simple principle for recruiting success.

- Get the right people on the bus
- Get the wrong people off the bus
- Get the right people in the right seats

Recruiting the right talent is critical for business owners to quickly scale your business growth. So, how do you go about finding top talent?

The following is a reprint from an article I wrote for the Philadelphia Business Journal where I shared top 7 recruiting tips:

Many companies are trimming down on payroll to weather today’s tough economic storm. But, staffing decisions affect both budget and revenues. While high turnover certainly bleeds resources, low turnover can also inhibit a company’s growth if that staff has gone stale. Seniority should not win over stagnant.

In either case, recruiting the right talent will be vital to survive tough economic times and to thrive in years to come. Although more people are out looking for work today, business owners will still have to compete to attract and recruit top level talent.

Here are seven steps and reminders for effective recruiting.

Step 1: Identify your company’s ideology.

Before you start looking outside for who you need, you have to first look inside at who you are. More than your company’s mission statement carefully think through what your company’s ideology is. A greater purpose — a greater cause will sustain your people and challenge them to perform at higher levels. What is the one thing you stand for? What one core value are you most passionate about? How clearly is that message communicated throughout every aspect of your company?

Step 2: Dream plan your trophy employee profile.

Most hiring managers and business owners are not specific enough as to who they are looking for to fill needed roles in the company.

a. Write down the top five skills needed for the bench you are trying to fill.

b. Rank the top five personal qualities you can not live without.

c. Rank several characteristics you know you can not live with.

d. Rank top three factors that your trophy employee is motivated by.

Have exact written profiles not just for the upper level positions, but also for entry-level positions like receptionists, assistants, and even the interns. Poor performance at any level can clog up the whole system. Conversely, exceptional entry-level teams add tremendous value to your company’s growth. And, don’t just keep this information in your head. A written list will help you from not compromising on those things you already established as critical and important.

Step 3: Do your research.

You need conviction in the interview when you sit eyeball to eyeball with the potential trophy person you want to recruit. You may be your applicant’s first interview or your interviewee may have been on 14 other interviews prior to yours. Knowing your top three competitors’ pay packages, benefits, culture, advancement opportunities and what their ideologies are will help you when you do steps four through eight.

Step 4: Have a USP for each of your job openings.

As a small business owner you may not be in the financial position to out bid all of your competitors in order to attract the best staff. But, knowing what everyone offers can help you leverage your company’s best qualities. Each of your job openings should be presented in print and in the interview with its USP — unique selling position. Contrary to common beliefs, money is not the primary motivator in recruiting the best talent. Also, a job opening isn’t just a bench that is empty. Include those weak-performing benches as well in your interview process.

Step 5: Search and find your draft picks.

Don’t just rely solely on a staffing agency. Open the nets much wider to find your diamond-in-the-rough. Have a staff meeting and brainstorm a list of where to find these draft picks. If you want the best players on your team you need to engage other people’s ideas, resources and creativity. Success is never accomplished alone. Make sure your USP is clearly communicated in each of the recruiting strategies.

Step 6: Stage your company.

If you wanted to sell your home to the highest bidder you would pay careful attention to how you stage your home. As a business owner or hiring manager you need to stage your company to help you recruit the highest talent. Pay careful attention to all the details that contribute to communicating your company’s ideology. Is the physical space and work flow aligned with your core values? Is your existing staff a strong reflection of your company values? Effective business-staging will articulate your company’s core ideology. Like pieces of a puzzle you will know when you meet the right candidate — and they will too.

Step 7: Create competition in the interview process.

You do not need to conduct group interviews to create a competitive atmosphere among your potential candidates. But your attitude of competition does matter in not just recruiting someone, but in recruiting them right. The person whom you hired may have turned out to be your only applicant, but they do not need to feel that way.

The goal to win the competition makes people work for the job. It’s important to set the tone that the applicant wants you more than you need them. When they are recruited right, they arrive wanting to be there, grateful to be there, and work hard to stay there.

We’re not the only ones to experience a storm. Animals have an innate sense when a storm is approaching. While the turkey will hide to weather the storm, the eagle will fly to a high spot and wait for the winds to come.

When the storm hits, it sets its wings so that the wind will pick it up and lift it above the storm. While the storm rages below, the eagle is soaring above it. The eagle does not escape the storm. It simply uses the storm to lift it higher. As business owners you can use recruiting strategies as wind to lift your company to higher levels of success above this economic storm.

Don’t simply read and run.

My intent is that reading my blog post will create a change in your business. So, my simple 4-step call to action to you is this:

1. Share your comments on how these 7 strategies has changed the way you think about recruiting.

2. Apply these 7 strategies.

3. Bookmark this blog page so you can come back and report your results.

4. Share your results and questions from implementing.

Here’s to your success in scaling your business!

Author's Bio: 

Business Growth Expert, Yoon Cannon has helped hundreds of CEO’s, Entrepreneurs & small business owners gain dramatic results in your sales, marketing & strategic planning. Yoon’s mission is to encourage, equip and empower Entrepreneurs, so you can accelerate explosive business growth!

Having started, built (and sold) 3 other companies, Yoon offers a fresh, outside perspective from a seasoned entrepreneur. Yoon’s clients represent B2B, Direct Sales industry, Family-Run Businesses, Franchises, Healthcare/BioTech, Law Firms, Manufacturing & Small Business Owners.

Yoon Cannon has been published in The Philadelphia Business Journal, JP Morgan Chase Ink Magazine, ASI’s Counselor magazine, W4 magazine and many others. Yoon is also a frequent guest expert on radio show programs throughout the US. Yoon Cannon continues to be in demand as the featured speaker for many corporate and industry Association conference events.

For receive Yoon’s free 80 min. video training on How to Find Your WOW Factor just click LIKE at http://www.Facebook.com/YoonCannonParamountBusinessCoach To speak to Yoon direct call (215) 292-4947 EST.