In today’s job market, organizations struggle to attract, recruit, and retain top talent. A strategic talent plan is not just about filling open positions. It ensures that hiring efforts align with long-term business goals and workforce needs.
Andy Gill, strategic talent acquisitions lead at MetroStar, calls talent plans a “blueprint” for recruiters.
“Building a talent plan requires more of a ‘cradle to grave’ perspective than just the action of recruiting people,” said Gill. “It involves how you’re attracting talent, how you’re engaging with the workforce, and retaining your employees.”
Here are three steps to successfully implementing a talent plan that strategically aligns with organizational goals.
Step 1: Bring Your Recruitment Team into the Conversation
Executives set business objectives, but without recruiter input, can fall short. Leadership and hiring teams must work together to ensure support business growth, said Gill.
“Are you objectively thinking through how this trickles down to what you will ask your talent team to do? If there isn’t a clear connection with the overall broader business goals in the recruiting team, there’s no alignment there.”
The key is to ensure that your recruiters have a voice in discussions. Recruiters and hiring managers should be given access to conversations about business goals and encouraged to speak about recruitment strategy.
“You need to be able to speak into that,” Gill said. “Not to say that we can’t go that direction, but if we go that direction, we need to think through what our team looks like, their training, and what tools we have.”
Step 2: Identify Talent Gaps — Within Your HR Department
Once you’ve ensured that your recruitment team is not just reacting to hiring needs but proactively contributing to business strategy, the next step is to identify talent gaps.
Even the best talent plan can fall short if your recruitment team lacks the necessary skills and strategic insight to execute it effectively. For example, your recruiters and hiring managers may have experience picking up the phone or reaching out on LinkedIn. However, they may not have the strategic background of a talent advisor, workforce market analysis experience, or a clear understanding of retention and training tools.
Your company needs a recruitment team familiar with candidate experience and employee lifecycle, which may require hiring to solve those knowledge gaps.
Step 3: Strive for Continous Improvement, Continous Delivery
Talent plans must account for many facets of the employee lifecycle, from shifting workforce expectations to fostering a company culture that prioritizes employee growth and satisfaction.
Delivering on these objectives consistently requires an approach Gill calls “continuous improvement, continuous delivery,” or CI/CD, a term from the iterative world of software development. According to Gill, the approach applies to all HR departments.
“Constantly integrating your process, monitoring how it’s doing, and then adjusting the strategy based on the results is just as important as implementing and building that strategy,” Gill said.
Build an ongoing auditing process for your talent plan to help you monitor:
- Metrics such as time-to-hire and employee satisfaction.
- Successful (and not-so-successful) implementations and processes.
- Whether your talent plan continues to align with organizational needs.
A Cohesive Talent Plan
A well-executed talent plan is more than just hiring. It is a blueprint for long-term workforce success.
By integrating these three steps into your talent strategy, your organization can proactively attract and retain top talent in a competitive market. Begin by auditing your existing recruitment process and identifying key areas where strategic adjustments could improve alignment with business goals.
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