Remove 2016 Remove College Recruiting Remove Culture Remove Diversity
article thumbnail

The 7 Biggest Mistakes College Recruiters Make

CareerBuilder

2016 has arrived. The long-expected retirement of baby boomers means tremendous opportunities for graduating college students looking for work, as well as companies looking to find top talent. So, where can companies go wrong when recruiting college students or recent grads? Treating seniors as a monolithic group.

article thumbnail

College Dropout: Why We Need To Rethink College Recruiting.

Recruiting Daily

Benefits and compensation, similarly, were significantly more attractive than the archetype of altruism commonly misattributed to Gen Y workers: turns out, very few really gave two s s about “company culture” or “perks” or “social responsibility” when assessing job opportunities. All Falls Down: The College Recruiting Disconnect.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Recruiting Sales Leaders and 9 More of the Biggest Challenges Startups are Facing

Linkedin Talent Blog

It also reveals founders perspective on the root causes and possible solutions for two significant and ongoing conversations in today’s workforce: diversity and inclusion and sexual harassment. The majority of founders (53%) are also concerned about their company culture , and nearly a third (29%) consider work-life balance an issue.

article thumbnail

10 Best Practices for Recruiting Interns (+ideas)

Hundred5

College job portals — In addition to traditional job boards, you can use the likes of Handshake and College Recruiter that specifically focus on helping students find jobs. Though, the latter two may be better used to show off your company culture. Research pop culture trends and draft SoMe posts 2.

article thumbnail

The Most Popular Companies for College Graduates (and What They’re Doing Right)

Linkedin Talent Blog

And, to find out which companies are doing it right, we analyzed the LinkedIn profile data of millions of students in the US to find out the most popular companies that college graduates went into in 2016. Here’s what they said, in order of importance: Company culture and values. Employee perspective of the company.

article thumbnail

The Most Popular LinkedIn Recruiting Articles of 2016

Linkedin Talent Blog

It seems like 2016 has gotten a bad rap (deservedly or not) and everybody is looking to 2017 with anticipation. For recruiters 2016 has been a busy one -- hiring volume was up for many companies and (not a shocker) most of you had to face this with flat budgets. Richard Branson’s Secrets to Recruiting the Right Personality.