The document discusses the various costs associated with recruiting and hiring employees for companies and consultants. It outlines internal and external recruitment costs for companies, which include the costs of recruiters, hiring managers, candidate screening, testing and travel. It also discusses recruitment costs ratios, bad hire costs including lost productivity, training costs and termination costs. Bad hire costs can be substantial and include the initial recruitment costs plus lost knowledge and customers. The document provides formulas for calculating many of these costs as a percentage of compensation.
2. Prologue
The main focus on this presentation is on
various recruitments costs to the companies and
consultants.
Recruitment Cost Ratio.
Bad hire cost
4. Costs for the companies
Let me take you to various costs incurred for recruiting talents to the organisation.
Internal Costs
1. The cost of the internal recruiter's time to understand the position requirements,
develop and implement a sourcing strategy, review candidate’s backgrounds, prepare
for interviews, conduct interviews, prepare candidate assessments, conduct reference
checks, make the employment offer.
2. Calculate the cost of a recruiter's assistant who will spend 20 or more hours in basic
level review of resumes, developing candidate interview schedules and making any
travel arrangements for out of town candidates.
3. The cost of the hiring department (immediate supervisor, next level manager, peers
and other people on the selection list) time to review and explain position
requirements, review candidates background, conduct interviews, discuss their
assessments and select a finalist. Also include their time to do their own sourcing of
candidates from networks, contacts and other referrals.
4. Calculate the number of hours spend by the internal recruiter interviewing internal
candidates along with the cost of those internal candidates to be away from their jobs
while interviewing.
5. Calculate the cost of reference, educational and criminal background checks, especially
if these tasks are outsourced.
5. 6. Calculate the cost of the various candidate pre-employment tests to help assess a
candidates' skills, abilities, aptitude, attitude, values and behaviours.
7. Staff travel for onsite interviews
8. Administrative expenses at onsite interviews
9. Sourcing costs (like job portals)
10. Technology cost(Telephonic interviews, video conferences)
11. Infrastructure and stationary
12. On the top of this, if the position cross SLA, the loss to organization due the position is
open is also comes under recruitment cost.
13. RPO
External Costs
1. Advertising
2. Cash awards to employee referrals
3. Job fairs
4. Consultant fee
5. Internet posting
6. Travel reimbursements to candidates
6. Costs for the consultants
The costs incurred with consultants is the opportunity costs and will turn up into
revenue generation only by fulfilling the staffing needs of their clients.
The cost of the consultant time to understand the client, position requirements,
develop and implement a sourcing strategy, review candidate’s backgrounds,
schedule interviews.
The cost of the team supporting consultant. Calculate the number of hours spend
by them.
Rent of the office space
Administrative expenses
Sourcing costs (like job portals)
Technology cost
Infrastructure and stationary
Internet posting
Cost incurred in building database and professional network
At the end, revenue generates only when a consultant place a right candidate who
meets the client requirements.
8. It may be useful for organizations to analyze these costs not by the number of hires
recruited and staffed, but by the total compensation of the hires that have been placed
in the organization. This Recruitment Cost Ratio(RCR) formula normalizes recruiting costs
based on compensation as a proxy for the relative value of the new hires.
Along with the Internal and external costs to the organization there are other costs
also…
1. Joining bonus
2. Relocation expenses
3. Travel expenses
4. Initial stay
RCR = (total recruitment costs / total compensation recruited)*100
A lower percentage value indicates the efficiency of the recruiting function.
10. A person who leaves the organisation within a year will be considered as a “BAD HIRE”
The following costs are incurred
1. Recruitment costs
2. Introduction costs
3. Training costs
4. Lost productivity costs
5. Added support costs
6. Loss of business costs
7. Wasted salary costs
8. Termination costs
9. Re-recruitment costs
Calculate the cost of the person who fills in while the position is vacant. This can be either
the cost of a temporary, or the cost of existing employees performing the vacant job as
well as their own.
Calculate the cost of lost productivity at a minimum of 50% of the leaving person's
compensation and benefits cost for each week the position is vacant, even if there are
people performing the work. Calculate the lost productivity at 100% if the position is
completely vacant for any period of time.
Calculate the cost of conducting an exit interview to include the time of the person
conducting the interview, the time of the person leaving, the administrative costs of
stopping payroll, benefit deductions, benefit enrolments and the cost of the various forms
needed to process a resigning employee.
11. Calculate the cost of the manager who has to understand what work remains, and how to
cover that work until a replacement is found.
Calculate the cost of training your company has invested in this employee who is leaving.
Include licenses or certifications the company has helped the employee obtain to do their
job effectively.
Calculate the impact on departmental productivity because the person is leaving.
Calculate the cost of lost knowledge, skills and contacts that the person who is leaving is
taking with them out of your door. Use a formula of 50% of the person's annual salary for
one year of service, increasing each year of service by 10%.
Calculate the cost of loosing customers that the employee is going to take with them.
Training Costs
Calculate the cost of orientation in terms of the new person's salary and the cost of
the person who conducts the orientation.
Also include the cost of orientation materials.
Calculate the cost of departmental training as the actual development and delivery
cost plus the cost of the salary of the new employee.
Calculate the cost of the person(s) who conducts the training.
Calculate the cost of various training materials needed including company or product
manuals, computer or other technology equipment used in the delivery of training.
12. Calculate the cost of supervisory time spent in assigning, explaining and reviewing work
assignments and output. This represents lost productivity of the supervisor.
Lost Productivity Costs
As the new employee is learning the new job, the company policies and practices, etc.
they are not fully productive.
Upon completion of whatever training is provided, the employee is contributing at a
25% productivity level for the first 2 - 4 weeks. The cost therefore is 75% of the new
employees full salary during that time period.
During weeks 5 - 12, the employee is contributing at a 50% productivity level. The cost
is therefore 50% of full salary during that time period.
During weeks 13 - 20, the employee is contributing at a 75% productivity level. The
cost is therefore 25% of full salary during that time period.
Calculate the cost of co-workers and supervisory lost productivity due to their time
spent on bringing the new employee "up to speed."
Calculate the cost of mistakes the new employee makes during this elongated
indoctrination period.
Calculate the cost of lost department productivity caused by a departing member of
management who is no longer available to guide and direct the remaining staff.
Calculate the impact cost on the completion or delivery of a critical project where the
departing employee is a key participant.
13. Calculate the cost of reduced productivity of a manager or director who looses a key staff
member, such as an assistant, who handled a great deal of routine, administrative tasks
that the manager will now have to handle.
New Hire Costs
Calculate the cost of bring the new person on board including the cost to put the person
on the payroll, establish computer and security passwords and identification cards,
business cards, internal and external publicity announcements, telephone hook-ups, cost
of establishing email accounts, or leasing other equipment such as cell phones,
automobiles.
Calculate the cost of a manager's time spent developing trust and building confidence in
the new employee's work.