Thursday, January 2, 2020

The Race to Recruit STEM College Graduates

The Race to Recruit STEM College GraduatesThe Race to Recruit STEM College GraduatesThe Race to Recruit STEM College Graduates DeZubeIts a good year to be graduating from college, but a tough year to be recruiting college graduates especially STEM college grads (science, technology, engineering and math.)Data from Michigan State Universitys College Employment Research Institute shows companies of all sizes are responding bystepping up their recruitment of STEM college graduates.The CERI survey found on-campus recruiting exploded between 2013 and 2016. Companies responded to the increased competition byEstablishing internships and co-ops well before senior yearRecruiting throughout the entire academic yearSponsoring campus events to gain the inside lane on student recruitmentWe have more employers on campus and theyre here more often and theyre here earlier, says CERI Director Phillip D. Gardner, Ph.D. Even the small companies are more active in the internship and co-op space. Theyve already extended job offers to people theyve known over the past three of four years rather than showing up on campus senior year.The robust economy and low unemployment have forced companies to compete for STEM graduates, who comprise only 1% of the U.S. labor pool.Staffing firm Robert Half has seen an uptick of hiring nationally across the finance sector, including entry-level financial analysts, staff accountants and accounts payable roles, says Regional President Katie Essman.There just arent enough graduates out there to fill the roles companies are hiring for. The flow of graduates is not as good as the flow of positions, Essman says.Small Companies Are AppealingSmall-geschftslebenes and startups may have a recruiting edge over big companies this year. Only 15% of graduates want to work for a large organization, and another 45% prefer a midsize employer, according to the Accenture Strategy 2015 U.S. College Graduate Employment Study.In large measure, this is an issue related to organizational culture, the Accenture report found. New grads appear to be apprehensive about being lost in the shuffle of a large company.Todays students value innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship, characteristics associated with small businesses and startups, Gardner says.Know your Local Recruiting MarketWhile national trends are informative, local market conditions also influence graduate hiring. Organizations that lack the bandwidth to do recruitment research can reach out to a specialized staffing service, Essman says.The market is vastly different than it was even a year ago, she says. Whether you do your own hiring or use a service, reach out for advice on salary trends, what people are looking for, and to find out what you can do to make your role more attractive.Student Recruiting TipsTo compete effectively for 2016 graduates, try these tips1. Make every job posting an advertisement.Job descriptions present an opportunity to sell both the position and the organiza tion, so be descriptive about why your company is a great place to work.Include a paragraph on the vision of your organization at the top of the page, says Sam McIntire, founder of the Deskbright online learning platform. This will orient readers to your management philosophy while emphasizing the fact that you care deeply about the business global impact.In the skills and responsibilities sections, highlight the soft traits your company values in outstanding employees, including a passion for your mission and enthusiasm for making a positive impact in the world, he says.Location is an important selling point in the job description, especially for recent grads. The temperature here in Colorado is 75 and if I were a recent grad, Id love to leave the office at 3 and go mountain biking, Essman says. So, a flexible schedule and a quick exit on Fridays would be fantastic to include in your job posting.2. Include your mission on your website.To appeal to Millennials, put a mission stateme nt on your website emphasizing why your company is in business rather than what it does, McIntire says.Focus your employer brand messaging on the core set of values and beliefs that motivate employees to go to work every day, rather than the products and services that your organization offers.Google, for example, is an excellent case study in messaging done right. Rather than advertising a search engine that will help you browse the web, explains why search matters because everyone around the world deserves access to useful information, McIntire says.3. Create a social atmosphere.Millennialswant great employment experiences, says Judy Fisher, director of career services at Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, California. If you have social groups that get together or identify groups based on gender or activities, that will help them, she says.One employer that recruited at Harvey Mudd used poker to differentiate itself. They had a poker championship once a year where they pulled people i n from all their affiliates, Fisher says.4. Send alums back to campus.Match employees who are close in age to college career fairs where theyre likely to know students offer incentives for referring potential hires.5. Consider less polished applicants.Technology graduates are in short supply, but there are always some kids that dont make it past the first round of interviews due to a lack of polish and social skills, Gardner says. Companies ignore them and they sit, he says.Those students, when paired with the right mentor, can pick up soft skills on the job.Another group that employers sometimes overlook Chemistry, physics and biology majors who anticipated moving on to graduate or professional schools, but didnt make the cut.Theyre out there with no lab or pre-professional work experience and those are smart kids, Gardner says. Companies with time to devote to on-the-job training will find they make great hires.