Fix your Broken Team

How replacing your staff one at a time can rejuvenate your business

Are your results being hampered by lazy employees? Those employees that do just enough to get by and no more. If your business has good market share, potential and a good strategy but you are still getting poor results then it’s likely the cause is ‘coasting’ members of your team. Sometimes management can see this but often it takes someone else to point it out. But what can you do about these bottom-feeders who are holding your business back? How can you get quality personnel to fill their place? The answer is to rebuild your team employee by employee. Read on to find out how.

Firstly, it’s important to remember that unless you are in a position to close down business while you rebuild your team, this will be a gradual process and will not happen overnight.  However, it will be worth it.  Rather like repairing a plane in flight, you will be able to make changes that will improve your business without slowing down. Unproductive colleagues can cause problems right across your team, hampering motivation and productivity in even your most committed.  With this step-by-step guide you will be able to perform a complete redress of your staffing without interfering with your trading.

1. Identify your ‘Bottom-Feeders’
Review your staffing at least once a week.  Look at each team member and determine his or her appropriateness for the business. Use a spreadsheet to keep notes and strategies current so they can be continuously reviewed. Star any employees that are ‘on the bubble’ or are delivering questionable value.

Find out if the poor producers have potential. It’s incredibly common for management to want to replace without looking at an individual’s potential. Sometimes they are amazed when they see a minimal employee blossom. Do you know what their skills or interests are?  It could be that they are better suited to a different job within your organisation. It is usually better to give the minimal employee a chance or opportunity – if they do not want it they will often resign.

Deal with one employee at a time and you may find that existing under-performing team members become happier and more productive in their roles now that they are not being dragged down by others.

2.  Refresh your contractors continually
Remember the reasons you chose to hire contract workers.  Contract workers are a high value choice as they are often highly specialised and skilled, with a wide breadth of experience and bring a fresh perspective into your business.  However, after 12 weeks they are entitled to the same benefits as your permanent employees.  In addition to this, the freshness they originally brought to your organisation will begin to stale as they stagnate in an aging project.

Solve these problems by ensuring you are constantly assessing the type of contractors you need in your team and that they work no longer than 12 weeks with you, in order to ensure compliance with the Agency Workers Regulations (AWR).  Continuously assessing your contractors will allow you to constantly bring in a fresh stream of new talent with no hard feelings when the time comes to ‘part company’.  Here at Langley James we can find you the very best contractor talent to help your business grow.

3.  Who to hire next
When you have looked at your team and identified where replacements need to be made it is vital to source the best possible people to rejuvenate your company.  View employees as resources and profit centres – not just expenses. Minimal employees are usually cheaper but deliver much less value.

The key to building a successful team is to make sure each new hire is an improvement on what you have already.  At Langley James we can assist you to find IT professionals who fit all your exacting criteria. Look at work ethic, values, maturity, drive and creativity… truly amazing things happen when you replace a ‘bad apple’ with a quality member of staff.  Look for ‘breakthrough’ employees that can bring high value quickly. This is usually a factor of skill, experience and work ethic. This can bring a corresponding sharp spike in performance.

Make sure you are hiring to meet the demands of your business.  Constantly monitor the market and what needs to be delivered to your customers.  Think about this on a daily basis and it will become second nature.
4.  How to keep your team performing
Create a culture of delivering.  Annual reviews are not enough!  Measure and evaluate your workforce on a weekly basis.  This is not putting your staff under undue scrutiny if done properly and it is well worth the time and effort.  Make sure each member of staff has specific criteria to measure themselves against, specific to their job description.  Self-evaluation is as important (if not more so) than the evaluation you deliver.  After all, it is the employee’s job to be accountable, not management’s.  It is management’s responsibility to do something about the lack of accountability if it is not there. This makes it much easier to deal with those tough decisions if the time comes.

Whilst, those ‘bottom-feeding’ employees may do everything they can to avoid the attention those who want to do well will welcome the direction and opportunity to improve.  Your star employees will relish these meetings as a way of furthering their career and celebrating their achievements.

Have a career and training plan for each employee.  These weekly meeting are a fantastic way of keeping on track with these and ensuring they are still relevant.  Be approachable: when your staff and contractors are at ease with these weekly communications you will find they start to bring issues to your attention rather than you spending time and effort investigating who isn’t performing.

Make sure that in addition to weekly evaluations you perform formal reviews at least twice a year, preferably quarterly.  Think of the weekly meetings as a GPS system, ensuring that your staff are heading in the right direction and making good progress whilst avoiding obstacles, but the formal reviews are for taking stock of where the team member has arrived.  How much progress has been made?  Where are they heading next?

Make sure every member of your team understands other people’s roles.  Lack of understanding of what others bring to a company can cause friction and resentment.  In addition to this, create a culture where colleagues can train, support and mentor each other.  This can go a long way towards raising standards.

Make sure you include your contractors in your weekly evaluations: 12 weeks is an absolute maximum for keeping a contractor on and if your business needs require a different skill-set to that which your existing contractors can provide then it is only fair for both you and your contractor to have a change and get the best out of your staffing.

5:  Be persistent
The key to maintaining a high performing team is consistency.  Continual evaluation of what your team members deliver will keep their motivation high and you informed.  You will become aware of any weaknesses in your team so you are able to hire to fill a skills-gap rapidly.

Always be in recruitment mode: as you know, things can change rapidly in business.  With persistence you can be in a position to immediately know exactly the sort of person you need to hire in order to react to these changes. When it comes to contract workers you are in a position to assess their value on a daily basis should you choose in order to get the maximum value from these precious resources.  Of course, if you need help or advice we at Langley James are happy to use our wealth of experience to help you find the perfect IT employee.

Has your business been affected by poor employee performance?  We’d love to hear about your experiences or any advice you have to give other managers and business owners.  Tweet us @ITRecruitment or visit us on Facebook

3 Simple Ways To Speed Up Your IT Hiring Process

3 Simple Ways To Speed Up Your IT Hiring Process

Your IT hiring process, if lengthy, may be preventing you from securing the best staff.

Whilst we’ve always recommended working quickly when it comes to recruitment, it’s now more important than ever, great candidate are few and far between.

There’s something in common with the companies who are still able to recruit great IT &Tech staff in 2026. Their IT hiring process. Our team share their insights on how to speed up your IT hiring process. We’ve taken best practice and combined it with what’s working in the real world.

Follow our advice and you can ‘recruit someone worth recruiting’.

Start your IT & Tech hiring process with a great job spec

Job specs used to simply be a long list of expectations and demands. If yours are still like this, then it’s time for a change! Yes, it’s still important to have a list of desired skills and experience. However, it’s how, and where these are listed in your spec. The best specs when it comes to attracting candidates all follow a similar structure.

Start with details about the company. What is it that makes you attractive to a potential employee? When it comes to IT hiring, candidates are most interested in technology, upcoming projects and more. But don’t forget the bigger picture too. A lot of candidates, particularly generation z are looking for purpose to their roles. A purpose doesn’t have to be saving the planet or ending world hunger. A purpose can be something as simple as making life a little easier for a certain group of people. Think about your company’s purpose and highlight this in your spec. Or failing that, what about your values? If you have clearly defined values, sharing the in a job spec will help you to attract candidates who share the same values.

It’s also key to highlight the benefits in a job spec. Dedicate an entire section to all the benefits on offer for the role. Whether hard or soft benefits, showing them in a spec will again help to attract more candidates.

Getting your job spec right will undoubtably speed up your IT hiring process.

Engage a specialist IT & Tech recruiter

We’ve written many times about the benefit of working with a specialist IT recruiter. With a market like it is, it’s not as easy as it used to be to recruit, Job adverts aren’t working as well as they did and it’s a specialist recruiters’ network that the candidates are now coming from. Be sure to choose carefully. But getting it right will most definitely speed up your IT hiring process.

hiring in IT

Getting from CV to offer

This is the most crucial part. You need to be able to react quickly to a CV. Don’t want until you have 5-6 CVs to sift through. Doing this will mean that you are likely to lose your element of choice. If you receive a CV from someone who has the skills and experience you need, interview them ASAP! And by ASAP, we really do mean 24 hours if possible. Now that 98% of 1st and 2nd stage interviews are held via Teams or Zoom, it easier than ever to be quick.

Then, should you like the candidate after the 1st interview, get them booked in for the next stage within 2-3 days. Again, this can be remote if it makes things easier. If after that stage, you are wanting to make an offer. Invite the candidate into the office. Again, do this within 24 hours if possible. If this isn’t possible then we strongly advise to get the offer out with 24 hours to start the ball rolling.

How Langley James can help speed up your IT hiring process

We are not ‘yes men or women’. We are here to make sure that you get to meet the best possible IT candidates for your role. We will advise you on the things you need to do to achieve this. We want you to be successful when it comes to hiring in IT and we will do everything possible to help you. Wouldn’t you want to work with an agency like that? Get in touch with our expert team today and experience the difference of working with a true specialist.

Technology Leadership – What you really need to know

Technology Leadership – What you really need to know

 Taken from a recent survey conducted, the following stats highlighted some very interesting trends relating to employees within the IT/Technology sector…

  • 33% of IT professionals have moved jobs during the last 12 months
  • 25% of your team will change jobs in the next 12 months
  • 33% of your team are actively looking for a new role
  • 80% will answer the phone and listen to what a recruitment consultant has to say
  • 72% of IT professionals believe that they need to leave in order to progress their careers
  • 32% of people who had a pay rise last year believe that there is still opportunity to progress with their current employer
  • 22% of IT professionals have felt let down by their employer in the last week
  • 47% of IT professionals work 5 hours more than their contractual hours with 22% working 10 hours or more above their contractual hours per week.

 The Good News

  • Keeping your staff happy is not all about money
  • The 3 most effective methods of retaining your team are –
    • Giving them interesting and challenging projects to work on
    • Making sure they are surrounded by good people
    • Ensuring there is open, honest and regular internal communication
    • Innovation is the most important factor in retaining your team.  Allowing your team time to innovate will make them want to stay.
    • 80% of IT professionals who are not allowed time for innovation believe that they need to move on in order to progress their career

Source: computerweekly.com

Despite best intentions to give what you can, it is almost inevitable that at least 2 members of your current IT team will move on within the next 3 months and that’s when the fun really begins!  Finding the time to read through CV’s and conduct interviews can be a tough call on top of your already busy workload.

As the news reports unemployment levels dropping, the old age topic of skills shortages raises its ugly head yet again – only this time it’s worse.  For many years, we have dealt with this within the IT sector but due to the recent recession, other industries were also beginning to feel the pain.  This situation was mainly due to very few graduate/trainee roles being created in the last 5 years.  A lost generation?

And now, at least you have the green light to recruit, so you need someone to hit the ground running, a few years’ experience, someone to bridge the gap between entry level and ‘experienced’, not quite a manager, someone who can be molded into your way, but someone who doesn’t need to have their hand held every minute of the day.

With the competition really heating up, strong candidates in the £30-70k bracket are getting 3-5 interviews within a week and most are receiving multiple offers within a fortnight.

So, the burning question is “how do I get them?”

Money is still a motivation, but it’s worth noting that most will not move for money alone.

Speed is important – many great candidates are lost between CV to interview.  However, speed is not the only answer as candidates are waiting for the right opportunity.

The one most common thing missing of late is Attractivity.  To get the right people, you really need to shout about what’s in it for them.  You may have been through a tough patch with redundancies, pay-cuts and working harder than you’ve ever worked before or even been scared for your own job security, but think back to what attracted you to the role.  So many hiring managers are still making the common mistake of thinking that people are just grateful for a job as this is definitely no longer the case in over 80% of the IT market.

Consider future projects that are in the pipeline.  Candidates really want to know – whatever they are.

What about new technologies?  So many of your competitors never tell of new technologies and something as simple as this can give you the competitive advantage.

Where did you start in your current organisation?  Where have others moved to within the organisation?  What are the opportunities for career progression?  Share some success stories.

And last, but by no means least, training.  Even if it’s on the job training or mentoring it is worth noting.

Here at Langley James, we are passionate about recruiting – that’s why we do it!  We love getting to know you and getting to know our candidates resulting in the right person for the right role; something we have done over 3,000 times in the last 15 years.  We are experts at attracting the best calibre of candidate for your role, not just skills wise, but that all important personality too.