How to Write a High-Performance IT Recruitment Job Description

1st Class Interviewing: Part 1 of 12

How to Write a High-Performance IT Recruitment Job Description

The Job Description is the cornerstone of every effective recruitment process. It serves as a blueprint for every role in your business and collectively, they form a complete operational architecture of your entire organisation. It is that important and an IT Recruitment Job Description requires more detail than others with technical objectives as well as broader commercial role objectives.

It is common for historic job descriptions to be passed on and reused resulting in something that is out of date from the start of the process.

The value to your business of having properly defined job descriptions is huge; by offering comprehensive, organised, and easily understood parameters in the form of a job description to guide the candidate and their line managers clarity for the candidate’s responsibilities and accountabilities. To improve on this, a ‘High Performance’ job description will in addition help to inspire a potential candidate to want the role and to understand how they can enjoy it by mapping out career progression and opportunities

In this blog by Langley James IT Recruitment we will present the essentials required to create a “high-performance job description” designed to increase recruitment results and help with the interview process and employee achievement.

What is a Job Description and What Value Does it Offer?

Put simply, the Job Description, or JD, is the foundation upon which your entire recruitment and subsequent management process is built. It is an extremely important document and well worth significant investment from you in both time and resources to get right. 

Recruitment

A properly written JD clearly describes the role’s purpose, context, core and secondary role responsibilities, and the skills, experiences and attributes required. IT Recruitment requires more specific technical skill and experience requirement. 

A good JD will help Langley James to write an advert and it will attract far more relevant candidates. 

 

Interviewing

A quality JD gives a clear structure for your candidate interviews and will keep the process honest, it will assist in structuring the questions to help you and Langley James to recruit the best people for your role and  help you to focus on what is important giving you a ready made script to how present the job and opportunity. 

 

Management

When a new recruit starts the JD will form the backbone of your management plan. Appraisals, KPIs, objectives, goals, training, and progression all stem from an accurate JD to match your expectations with their performance. Getting it right will ensure it serves as a reminder to help you deliver on the promises made during the interview. 

 

Purpose & Goals

The JD should be designed to attract candidates, the initial purpose of the JD is to pitch the opportunity to prospective candidates in a way that clearly communicates your needs while inspiring them to commit to an application, interview or job offer with a compelling and interesting presentation.

The goal is to create as much candidate interest as possible to ensure your vacancy is high on their wish list of applications.

Knowing that, do you think a job title, a list of responsibilities, and skill requirements is enough to compete with other companies fighting to secure the same talent?  

 

The Opportunity

The best way to achieve candidate interest is to sell them the benefits of joining your business focusing on what they will get out of the deal. This is what ‘The Opportunity’ really is. The trick is to focus on the likely motivators of your ideal candidate and speak to them directly, matching their needs to your offering, reinforcing it all with your brand values, culture and company story to convince them of your sincerity and authenticity.

Most candidates are looking for the following from their role

 

  • Life and Career Fulfilment
  • Power, Advancement, and Responsibility 
  • Respect (friends, family, colleagues, management, other professionals)
  • Good Health (reasonable stress, positive experience, regular/quality breaks)
  • Personal Development (new skills and experiences)
  • Family (to look after or to start one)
  • Wealth (salary, bonus, benefits)
  • Social Interactions (learning opportunities, friends, career advancement, etc)

 

This is the “what’s in it for me” piece, ensure you review your company and departmental culture and work out how you can deliver on each of these points. 

 

Tone & Style

Getting the tone right is fundamental when you speak to the candidate you want, in the first person, and appeal to their nature. You will be interested in what happen, rather than passive applications, it is more likely to attract applicants who want the job for the right reasons. Global taxi giant Uber absolutely nail this approach:

Uber Needs Partners like you. 

Drive with Uber and earn great money as an independent contractor. Get paid weekly just for helping our community of riders get rides around town. Be your own boss and get pad in fares for driving on your own schedule. 

 

Nowhere does the initial JD statement mention anything about Uber as a business or attempts to offer a list of requirements. Instead, it speaks directly to the people they want and clearly tells them what the basic life benefits are in taking the job. 

 

 

Key Role Responsibilities & Objectives

This section is simple but very important to get right. Accuracy and concise language it essential, focusing on the core objectives and tasks only. Be sure not to go off on tangents detailing the skills and requirements.

Start with the key objective(s). For example, The IT Support Engineer will deliver first class IT services to all users in the business ensuring BAU continuity, reliability, and fast action.  

Then list the most important, day to day tasks that will add up to meet the objectives. Outline the most important responsibilities of the job first. 

 

Qualification 

With the opportunity piece completed and a well-described vacancy, your interested candidate should be keen to read on and find out if they have the ‘right stuff’ to get the job that they are attracted to. To ensure maximum interest, clarity is key. 

Understand the difference between what you want and what you need and stick to the latter. The easiest way to get this right is to write a list and split it into two, detailing what is truly essential (needs) and what is desirable (wants). Then, split the list again into the following categories:

 

  • Skills
  • Experience
  • Qualifications
  • Attributes

 

This action is key to ensure candidates can accurately self-assess their suitability while also giving you valuable insight into specific candidate strengths and development areas. 

 

Other Parts of the Job Description Process to Get Right

Job Titles

 

Use the most common, universally recognised job title possible and keep it short. Anything less and you run the risk of confusion at the first hurdle. Avoid unique, playful job titles at all costs. Not only are they often judged negatively, but they completely fail to perform online. Data is searched with common keywords, not your own invention. 

 

Location

We advise that you are very clear on where the role is based, what flexibility exists for remote working, and, if appropriate, where else the candidate may need to travel and if those expenses will be covered by the company.

Eg. IT Managers will be based in our Head Office in Manchester but can work from home up to 3 days per week, expenses are not paid by the company for attending meetings at Head Office as this is not a home-based role.

 

 

Remuneration 

We advise that companies are completely open about the salary. Believing vague detail will somehow broaden the number of applicants is a common and costly mistake. In reality, candidates are likely to assume the salary to be low. Further, list every single benefit on offer. If you are unsure on details, find out. These details really do and will make a huge difference and form a key part of “The Opportunity” piece. (Follow our IT salary guides for more information)

 

Organisation

Describe where the role features in the company organisational structure, who the role reports to, and other key interactions or stakeholders. This helps the candidate imagine being in the role and suggests the job’s importance. 

 

A Few Final Tips…

  • Ensure all stakeholders have some input into your JD, especially if they are part of the interview process and management setup. Failing to do so may result in conflicts of interest and disagreements that will hinder your recruiting process. 
  • For obvious reasons – Do not use internal terminology or acronyms. 
  • Be realistic in your people expectations think what you need and be specific on IT skills and experience but some things will need to be compromised Langley James will always aim to find you the best person available at the time you are recruiting.  Being inflexible will reduce your options and delay your recruitment success. 
  •  Where possible get a colleague to assess the JD before using it to ensure it is compliant with the law. Check for discrimination, gender biases, prejudice, employee rights and employment law and remember this is continually changing. Use a reputable source such as The Chartered Institute of Personnel Development CIPD for up to date advice.
  • Reduce the language complexity to make it fast and easy to read. 
  • Be clear, open and honest 
  •  A powerful, multi-functional job description will help you at every stage of your talent attraction, recruitment and management processes. Langley James IT Recruitment can help you form your Job description, give Langley James a call today to help you find someone worth recruiting for your next IT vacancy.

Once completed, it will pave the way towards the next step: The Agency Vacancy Briefing

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“Act Now for 2021 IT Recruitment”

An economic boom is on the horizon. Don’t delay your recruiting plans – act now or risk being left behind. 

A little direct? Perhaps, but it is all too common at this time of year for businesses to start planning for the New Year, instead, take action now and start your recruitment campaigns now putting you ahead in January when many more businesses will then begin their recruitment campaigns.

2021 is set to be one of, if not, the most competitive years, when many projects that had been delayed will be caught up with. Morgan Stanley projects strong global GDP growth of 6.4% for 2021 while the excitable mainstream media predicts the start of a “roaring twenties” era for us all. With so many sectors expected to rebound at the same time, never, in modern times at least, has the commercial playing field been so level for so many. Titans will fall and minnows will rise as our riled and turbulent economy starts to settle into a fresh new order. 

The question is, are you ready for the most aggressive commercial race of our age?

A Level Playing Field Means Fierce Competition for Talent and Resources

If most markets are set for simultaneous phases of rapid growth – being first having never mattered more. In critical areas of the IT recruitment market, COVID-19 has had little effect on talent shortages and so, come 2021, after the initial feeding frenzy is over, do not expect IT recruitment to be easy or less time-consuming. The best advice is to act now and get in touch with us before the frenzy begins.

career growth

Rising National Unemployment Rates Won’t Mean More IT Candidates

Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security believing that rising unemployment means it’s a talent buyers’ market. Sure, if you are recruiting a team of production operatives or account managers, then yes, you’ll be able to simply post an advert and watch the CVs flood in. However, if you are chasing a first-class .Net Developer, BI Analyst, or Cloud Infrastructure Engineer you’re in for a shock. In 2021, demand for niche talent will rise sharply making it even harder to attract and secure the best people. Even if you are not quite ready to recruit, act now, and start the process. Contact Langley James in advance to start building talent pools and setup some early conversations to get ahead of the game.   

 

Review Your Recruitment Process ASAP

2020 has caused hiring freezes, multi-signature procurement decisions, and cautious, fear-driven process extensions. In short, current business action is slow. Most recruitment assignments that do make it past the ‘sign-off’ stage are faced with increased process stakeholders, extended candidate interview hurdles, and general hesitation. Given what we have discussed above, how competitive do you think your recruitment process is? 

Let’s be clear – you are competing with Hiring Managers with flexible budgets and the power to offer a candidate a job during or immediately after an interview. In talent, short areas such as IT, skill assessments, psychometric testing, and 3+ interview stages are luxuries that will slow you down and significantly reduce your chances of securing your candidate. We’re not saying make knee-jerk, ill-informed decisions. Far from it. Instead, be very clear on what you need, what you’re able to compromise on, invest time into creating a robust, high value but lean interview plan, and prepare to make offers quickly should you need to. 

Plan for Competition with a Strong Offer Strategy 

Before the sign off stage, talk to us at Langley James about the market and local talent competition. In skill short, high demand niche areas, failing to plan for recruitment competition is foolish. Assuming that going back to your management team, post-signoff, for more money is undesirable, pre-empt the inevitable with an offer strategy that includes an ability to negotiate and raise offers. In 2021, competition is going to be fierce.

To ensure your salary budget is in line with the market have a look at our salary guide which we publish monthly, these are the average salaries of what candidates are seeking and roles are advertised, you may need to consider paying more that the average, but we understand that is easier said than done as it may knock out the whole IT department salary budget.

Expect Attack

While you read this, your employment competitors are already plotting to attack the talent market, which will include them trying to entice your staff. They too have powerful recruitment partners with extensive candidate networks and persuasive pitches. Putting off your battle plans until the new year gives them the advantage. By the time you’re ready to hire, they will have already engaged the market and may have already met many candidates some of which may be your own staff. Our advice is to start planning today and start taking decisive action.   

Bottom Line – It’s December 2020 right now with plenty of working days until the 24th so, get ahead of the rat race and meet some candidates while they are available. With digital interviewing, it has never been so easy to put an hour aside to talk, so call Langley James and make a start. You will not regret it.

Give real thought to your existing processes and talk to us about them. They are meant to make your business run smoothly and efficiently so if your recruiting process is slowing you down causing a commercial disadvantage, consider changing it. The process is not law and is yours to change! 

Speed is of the essence. Take action today. 

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All You Need To Know About IT Contractor Interviews

The Difference Between an IT Contractor Interview Vs Permanent Employee Interview

IT Contractor interviews are different than interviews held for a permanent employee. Generally, line managers will not be carrying out psychometric tests, or second and third interviews. As a line manager, you may only have an hour to assess whether to hire the contractor.

In the interview, the IT contractor is likely to sell their skills, professional contractors are normally well prepared, knowing they have about an hour to win the contract.

As a line manager, you will be analysing if the IT contractor has the right skills, experience, attitude and personality to fit with the existing team and whether they have sufficient skills and experience to warrant their fee.

If a line manager invests time in getting the most out of the contractor interview, and remember that they are not recruiting an employee, they are probably more liking to make more effective contractor recruiting decisions.

Before the interview – preparation

The IT contractor has been invited to interview because their CV ticked all the boxes, but CV’s can be misleading by asking the right questions a line manager can identify if the IT Contractor is right for the project, recruiting the wrong IT Contractor can be an expensive mistake.

career growth

 IT contractor interview Questions

Line Managers should consider asking the following questions during an interview with an IT Contractor

  1. Talk to me about when you have used these skills in another project, what went right and what could have gone better
  2. Give me an example of when you have used your own initiative to make a different to a previous project?
  3. How do you feel about working alone or with a team?
  4. What is your expectation on being managed?
  5. Talk to me about different business cultures you have worked in during previous contracts and what have you done to ensure that you fitted in to the team.
  6. Tell me how you ensure you achieve your deadlines
  7. How have you made a difference to a project you have previously worked on.
  8. How do you ensure you understand the projects requirements fully?
  9. Tell me about a time when  a project you have worked on has gone wrong and how you have overcome it.
  10. What do you know about this organisation?
  11. What do you know about this project?
  12. Do you have any evidence of your impact on a previous projects profitability and how it impacted on the business.

IT Contractor and their Communication Skills

During the interview, a line manager will also establish if the IT Contractor has strong communication skills. The main factors they will look for include;

  • Do they have good eye contact?
  • Do they answer the question that was asked or do they go off on a tangent?
  • Do they listen or do they justify what they want to say?
  • What is their body language saying?
  • Do they ask questions that are relevant?
  • Do they use silence?
  • Is the contractor skilled for the position? Can they achieve what we need them to?
  • Can they work on their own and use their initiative?
  • Are they likeable and will fit into our organisation’s culture?
  • Are they clearly focused on project delivery?
  • Do they have good communicate skills?
  • Can they offer some added value, more than the other candidates, which could help give the organisation an edge?
  • Do they try hard to understand the project requirements, by asking lots of questions?
  • Do they seem keen and a hard worker and prepared to get really stuck in?
  • Do they appear to be genuinely interested in the project?
  • Are they a positive person who will motivate others or a negative merchant of doom?
  • Are they a good listener?
  • Do they know anything about our business/organisation and the market sector?
  • Is the contractor commercially aware?

A good IT contractor will have the same checklist to work through from their perspective and will be trying to reassure the interviewer that they are the best person for the job.

What sends alarm bells ringing?

As a line manager, you will be likely to recognise during the interview that the contractor might not be the right person for this particular contract, or that they might not fit in with your organisational culture. Common warning signs include:

  • The IT contractor focuses too much on how the role would be good for them rather than the client
  • The IT contractor does not really address the organisations problems or explain how their skills and experience will solve them
  • The IT contractor may exaggerate or boast.
  • The  IT contractor is a bad listener, talks too much, and doesn’t directly answer questions
  • The IT contractor interrupts the interviewer 
  • The IT contractor has obviously not prepared for the interview and lacks understanding
  • The IT contractor demonstrates a lack of commercial awareness 
  • The IT contractor lacks interest in the organisation and project and demonstrates poor knowledge.

Making your IT Contract Recruitment decision

IT contractors that have long term successful contracting careers will also have good selling skills in addition to their core expertise. 

At the end of the interview, an experienced and prepared IT contractor will normally ask for the business and attempt to close the deal, assuming of course that they want to work on the project.

As a line manager if you are not ready to make a decision at the interview you can schedule a time to get back to the, however, remember that a good contractor, even in depressed market conditions, will almost certainly have other options. So, do take time to deliberate over the decision, but do not prevaricate.

Once the contract offer has been made, the negotiation stage begins once again preparation is very important.

Langley James IT Recruitment has been established since 1999 and specialises in recruiting IT Contractors throughout the UK across all business sectors contact Langley James on  0207 788 6600  

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How to Retain Your IT Staff Before It’s Too Late

Act Now to Retain Your IT Staff Before its Too Late

As we race towards the end of a somewhat eventful 2020, we’ll soon be bracing ourselves for the annual surge in people all over the country reflecting and deciding to change jobs. Twice a year, in January and September (ish), people return to work following a break with new-found and ambitious plans to further themselves and their careers. With less than a month to go before Christmas, here are some immediately actionable IT staff retention ideas highlighting what to address before it’s too late. 

Job Role Growth and Progression

It is human nature that we want to better ourselves. The strive for growth is a natural progression all employees go through during their careers.  It would be unrealistic to expect an employee not to toy with the idea of moving on to a better position, whether it be within your company, or elsewhere, no matter how loyal they are. Internal flexibility is a favorable attribute that, if you have the means to implement, is likely to enhance employee retention.

This is the idea of being open to moving employees around and letting them find their talents and discover what they are best at. You may find that an employee you originally placed in one role, finds their niche and performs to a higher standard elsewhere just by giving them some flexibility to try their hand at new projects. Obviously, it is not always possible to offer that level of flexibility to employees, depending on the size and scale of the business. In this case, challenge your staff, and provide them with a higher level of responsibility. This will alleviate the tedium and create a feeling of purpose and worth.

career growth

Work-Life balance

Although it may be frowned upon by some employers, it should come as no surprise when people say they would prefer to work only standard or flexible hours so that they can spend more time focused on other commitments.

It can be easy for employers to overlook the bigger picture – a poor work-life balance will not only impact employee but their spouse, family and many other aspects of their life. According to the Mental Health Foundation, over a quarter of employees in the UK feel depressed due to their work-load, and a further 58% feel irritable because they struggle to maintain a healthy work-life balance.

Workload plays a significant part in employee satisfaction and ultimately can influence an employee’s decision on whether they stay or leave. Projects are often time-oriented, do not assume that if an employee continues on with tasks beyond scheduled working hours that it is because they love their job and want to be there, which of course can be the case, but not in all instances. A feeling of pressure will profoundly impact upon an individual and force them into working beyond their contentment. If an employee is showing signs of stress and continue working beyond what is expected of them, then perhaps it is time to discuss with the individual ways to manage their time more effectively. 

lack of recognition

Lack of Recognition 

Measuring how appreciated an employee feels is one of the most difficult things to gauge, but one of the most important. According to a recruitment survey conducted a few years back, a simple “thank you” to your employees is worth £1,608 a year. Lack of recognition or appreciation can cause an employee to feel undervalued and unsure of how they are performing, which can ultimately lead to anxiety and stress. People perform to a much higher standard when they feel valued and a boost in confidence can have a staggering impact on the standard of work produced by your employees. If you are finding that employees are disengaged, yearly appraisals simply will not suffice. Higher engagement levels will greatly benefit both you and your employees. Making small alterations such as implementing an open door policy, and setting goals and targets for your staff to reach, will get conversation flowing, and feedback and recognition can be easily carried out. 

“The Job wasn’t what I expected”

This is the age-old tale of someone who has taken a job with certain expectations, and has been left feeling disappointed, or worse, misled when the role they undertook was not as it was expected to be.

As a recruitment agency, when we ask why people are looking to move, a large number respond with “the job didn’t meet my expectations”. Often the problem is that the job description that was presented to the employee doesn’t match the role. The ambiguity of a role prior to an employee starting with your company can be far more critical than you would anticipate. People place a large amount of trust in the employer to provide them with the most accurate depiction of what they will be undertaking as part of their new role. Often it can simply be that the employee has misunderstood the job role, however, sometimes the employer has deliberately misled them into a job.

To prevent your employees from making a move, take measures to ensure that they have a clear picture of what is expected of them. If you have a resentful employee, address it now before the situation becomes irreversibly toxic.    

Training and Development 

If someone is feeling dissatisfied with their ability to complete their duties due to lack of knowledge, satisfaction levels will suffer and you are likely to lose them from your team. Providing training and development at work poses great benefits to both you and the employee. It is crucial in keeping your employees engaged while, at the same time, benefiting you with duties and tasks being completed to a greater standard. Enhancing knowledge through the appropriate training will increase confidence, and ultimately help you to retain staff. It will give the employee the opportunity to address weaknesses and to improve on those weaknesses before they make the decision to leave on their own accord.

The bottom line – ignore these things at your peril. It can be easy to miss the red flags, especially if you have a large team, however, staff job satisfaction is an emotional issue and requires an emotional, empathic response. Best advice would be to assume that everyone might be dissatisfied and to explore everyone’s situation equally. Tackle it now and you stand a good chance of cooling your staff’s motivations to leave. 

Soft Skills Gaining Importance in IT Recruitment

Soft Skills gaining importance in IT Recruitment

 

Adaptability is a priority in IT Recruitment…

IT Recruitment experts have been persuading employers to weigh a candidate’s soft skills over their hard skills when recruiting. Employees can learn technical skills on the job, while things like collaboration or creativity are often more challenging to nurture.

Until recently, there has been little focus on soft skills. Plus, in a pre- Covid candidate-driven market, it was difficult to find good candidates without adding more requirements

Now mid pandemic, the stakes could not be higher. In no time at all,  the lowest unemployment rate in recent history transform into one of the highest as the pandemic runs rampant through the economy.

The impact on recruiting has been high. Most companies are recruiting on more restricted budgets with fewer resources. Suddenly, a soft skill like adaptability is one of the best qualities a candidate can have.

Employers’ priorities have changed. Maybe it took a pandemic to finally prioritize soft skills.

Leading up to the pandemic, soft skills were always a factor for recruiting decisions, but they were not essential requirements. Traits like adaptability and flexibility have always been requested in a candidate, but not necessarily compulsory.  

In this current market, employees who are not adaptable or flexible, open to frequent changes in priorities, and can demonstrate a history of that, are not being offered the job!

So what does adaptability look like?

  • Willing to help with tasks as needed, even if someone was hired for something different
  • Taking over a colleague’s role 
  • Working on a different project than qualified for.

In today’s new paradigm, flexibility, strong communication skills, and the ability to adapt as working conditions evolve are the most important qualities a candidate can have. This is a shift in priorities that we at Langley James IT Recruitment are seeing across many sectors.

A survey carried out in July 2020 of 700+ recruiters on everything from how they were using their time during COVID-19, to whether or not they were on a hiring freeze. The results demonstrated a resilient picture during this crisis. When it came to skills prioritised in recruiting, over 60% of respondents agreed that they will need to recruit employees with skills that were not necessary pre-pandemic. These included: 

  • Adaptability (68%)
  • Communication (60%)
  • Technology proficiency (58%)
  • Resilience (47%)
  • Change management (28%)

 Why are these skills considered “new” by recruiters in 2020? Experts have been practically screaming this to employers for years to prioritise such skills.

Maybe it took extreme external pressure to change old habits and priorities. With Businesses across all sectors are facing new levels of uncertainty, we are seeing soft skills come into their own. The challenge going forward, though, will be how to screen for them.

The Impact on Screening

Perhaps another reason why recruiters have been slow to prioritise soft skills is that these skills can be tricky to measure. Employers need to standardise screening for soft skills through a mixture of behavioral interviewing and automated assessments during their hiring process to help recruit managers address and measure capabilities accordingly. Here are three best practices we at Langley James IT Recruitment have found can help:

  • Apply empathy. It’s important to screen for adaptability, but you also have to show candidates your business is adaptable and empathetic, too. While the pandemic has resulted in a plethora of candidates to the market, that doesn’t mean recruiting will be easy. Most employees want to feel safe in their place of work and know that their employer will look after them if they get sick.
  • Apply behavioral interviews. Communication is part of daily work, and the best way to know if a candidate has good communication skills is to understand how they handled situations in the past. Behavioral interviewing allows you to do just that and role-play to understand those experiences.
  • Apply automation. Automated assessments allow for reduced bias and the ability for recruiters to cast a wider net. 

It is difficult to predict whether the prioritisation of soft skills will become normalised after COVID-19, . The workplace is changing and the things that make people human —  empathy, creativity, resilience, and emotional intelligence — will always remain the greatest assets as employees.

 

KPMG & REC UK Job Market Report

KPMG & REC UK Job Market Report

Hiring Activity Remains Weak as Uncertainty over the Outlook Intensifies in October

Key Findings:

– Solid drop in permanent staff appointments, temp billings rise only slightly
– Vacancy growth eases to 93-month low
– Pay continues to rise as candidate availability falls again

 

Commenting on the latest survey results, James Stewart, Vice Chair at KPMG, said:

“Businesses are still waiting to hear that starting gun, and until there is some certainty
around Brexit and now the election, employers continue to stall on creating vacancies and
making permanent hires.
“It’s not just businesses that are being cautious, however, and over October we’ve seen jobseekers
become increasingly nervous about making a career change. The lucky few that do
find jobs are continuing to demand higher pay as reflected in the rise in starting salaries and
temp pay.
“The IT and computing sector threw caution to the wind last month as the best performer in
vacancy growth. Meanwhile, the medical sector is not far behind, and we also saw a sharp
increase in the demand for temp staff in this sector.”

Neil Carberry, Chief Executive of the Recruitment & Employment Confederation, said:

“These figures underline why this needs to be a jobs election. The labour market is strong,
but permanent placements have now dropped for eight months in a row, and vacancies
growth has fallen to its lowest level since January 2012. One bright spark is the temporary
labour market, which continues to provide flexible work to people and businesses that need
it during troubled times.
“Ending political uncertainty and getting companies hiring again is vital – but we must
also look to the long term future of work. Jobs must be front and centre during this election
campaign, and we will be launching our REC manifesto for work next week. We will be urging
all political parties to run on policies which support and enhance the UK’s flexible labour
market – allowing businesses to create jobs, employees to build careers and the economy to
grow.”

 

The main findings for October are:

Quicker fall in permanent staff appointments.

As has been the case throughout the majority of 2019, the number of people placed into permanent job roles fell during  October, and at a solid rate. At the same time, temp billings growth weakened to only a marginal pace. According to panel members, political and economic uncertainty continued to dampen hiring activity.

Vacancy growth weakest since start of 2012

October data signalled only a modest upturn in overall demand for staff across the UK. Notably, the rate of vacancy growth was the slowest seen since January 2012, with both permanent and short-term worker demand increasing at historically weak rates.

Candidate supply deteriorates at a steeper pace

An uncertain outlook also weighed on candidate availability during October, as people were reluctant to seek out new roles. Total candidate numbers fell at the sharpest pace for four months. This was largely driven by a steep fall in permanent labour supply, as the availability of temporary staff declined at a softer pace.

Starting salaries and temp wages both rise further
Salaries awarded to newly-placed permanent staff continued to rise sharply in October, despite the rate of inflation easing from the previous month. The average pay for short-term staff also rose markedly. Increased pay offers were widely linked to a shortage of suitably skilled candidates.

Our expert IT recruitment consultants are here to take the pressure off you when recruiting someone new, permanent or contract. We liaise with candidates with the utmost care to ensure that their candidate experience is a positive one. Call us on 0207 788 6600 and let us help you Recruit Someone Worth Recruiting.

 

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IT & HR Recruitment Market Review- December 2015

Stressful people waiting for job interview

Key points:

  • Slower rises in both permanent and contract staff appointments
  • Permanent salary growth moderates to 26-month low
  • Candidate availability falls at weaker, but still marked, rate.

Growth of staff appointments eases

Although permanent staff placements continued to rise in December, the rate of growth cooled since Novembers seven-month peak. Contract staff billings also increased at a slower pace, with the latest rise also slower than the previous month.

Stronger rise in demand for staff

Vacancies increased at a sharp and accelerated rate in December. Demand for permanent staff continued to rise at a faster pace than signalled for short-term workers.

Decline in candidate availability eases but still sharp

The availability of staff for both permanent and contract roles fell further in December. Although rates of contraction were slower than in November, they remained marked.

Pay pressures ease

Salaries awarded to staff placed in permanent jobs increased further in December. However, the rate of growth was the slowest in over two years. Contract staff hourly pay rates increased at the weakest pace in 21 months.

Staff Appointments

Growth of permanent placements eases from seven-month high:

The number of people placed in permanent jobs continued to increase in December. After accounting for expected seasonal factors, the index signalled that the rate of expansion remained solid, albeit slower than in November. Panellists commented on rising demand for staff and robust client confidence as factors underpinning the latest increase in permanent volumes. The south posted the fastest growth of permanent staff placements in December, while the slowest rise was seen in London.

Temp billings growth eases slightly:

Agencies’ billings from the employment of contract staff rose further in December. The rate of expansion eased slightly from Novembers five-month high, but remained marked overall. Anecdotal evidence from the survey pane linked higher temp billings to rising activity levels at client companies. Growth of short-term appointments was strongest in the midlands during December, while London-based agencies noted the weakest rise.

Vacancies

Further marked rise in demand for staff:

The report on Jobs Vacancy Index posted 62.2 in December, up from 61.2 in November. The latest reading pointed to a strong and accelerated rate of expansion. Permanent staff continued to record sharper growth of demand than contract workers as has been the case throughout the past ten months.

Public and private sector companies:

Demand for staff remained considerably stronger in the private sector than the public sector during December. The fastest overall increase was signalled for private sector permanent workers. In contrast, demand for public sector permanent staff fell further.

Other vacancy indicators:

Latest official data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) signalled that vacancies rose 6.4% on an annual basis in the three months to November. That was up slightly from 6.3% in the three months to October. Meanwhile, internet-based recruitment spending was up 4.6% on a year-on year basis in the second quarter of 2015. This was down from 5.9% in the first quarter.

Staff availability

Availability of permanent staff:

The availability of candidates to fill permanent roles continues to decline in December, although remaining sharp, the rate of deterioration eased since November. Lower permanent staff availability was recorded across each of the four monitored English regions, with the sharpest drop seen in the midlands.

Availability of contract staff:

Contract staff availability fell further at the end of 2015. Although easing from Novembers 18-year record, the rate of deterioration remained considerable. Mirroring the trend for permanent staff availability, the sharpest reduction in short-term candidate supply was reported by agencies in the midlands.

Remuneration

Permanent salaries:

Average starting salaries for candidates placed in permanent roles continued to rise in December. However, the rate of growth eased to a 26-month low. Around 21% of panellists reported higher salaries in the latest survey period, compared with approximately 6% that signalled a fall. Those panellists reporting higher salaries generally cited competition for scarce candidates, all four monitored English regions registered higher salaries, with the South and the Midlands posting the strongest growth.

Contract pay rates:

Hourly rates of pay for contract staff increased further in December. Although easing to a 21-month low, the rate of growth remained slightly sharper than the survey’s long run average. The Midlands led a broad-based rise in contract pay during the latest survey period.

Langley James IT & HR Recruitment Market Review – April 2015: London

Key points

  • Permanent placements growth accelerates to eight-month high
  • Growth of demand for permanent staff eases to weakest in nearly two years
  • Marked reductions in supply of both permanent and contract workers

 

Staff Appointments

Strongest expansion in permanent placements since last August
Our IT consultants in London continued to see a growth of permanent placements in April, extending the current sequence which began in June 2013.  Moreover, the rate of expansion was the sharpest among the UK regions, having accelerated since March to an eight-month high.

 

Contract billings rise more slowly
In contrast, contract billings in the capital increased at the slowest rate since the end of last year in April.  The slowdown in growth mirrored the trend observed at the UK level, with the latest expansion broadly in line with the national average.

 

Staff Availability

Permanent staff supply continues to fall sharply
The supply of permanent workers in London declined for the twenty-third consecutive month in April.  The rate of contraction was little-changed from the prior month and marked overall.  Across the UK as a whole, permanent staff availability fell at a similarly strong pace.

 

Contract supply declines at weakest rate in eight months
The availability of candidates for contract vacancies in the capital continued to fall in April, thereby making a 21-month period of contraction.  That said, the rate of decline eased to and eight-month low and was slower than the UK-wide trend for the first time since last September.

 

Remuneration

Permanent salaries
Permanent salary growth in the capital picked up to a three-month high in April, the great competition for candidates being cited as the main reason.  That said, the latest increase was the lease marked among the four English regions.

 

Contract pay rates
Meanwhile, contract rates rose for the twenty-sixth month running in April, albeit at the slowest pace since January.  Despite remaining strong in the context of historical data, the rate of inflation was weaker than seen elsewhere in the UK.

 

About Langley James
Langley James was founded in 1999 by James Toovey, a highly respected recruitment industry professional.  James wanted to provide something unique: a bespoke recruitment service which was founded on service excellence.  With offices in London and Manchester, we are now providing our recruitment services throughout the world and over the last 16 years have worked with some of the most respected companies in the world.

To find out why so many companies turn to Langley James for support in fulfilling their IT and HR recruitment needs, call and speak to one of our specialist consultants today on 0845 124 9555.

Langley James IT & HR Recruitment Market Review – April 2015

Key points

  • Strongest increase in permanent staff appointments in eight months
  • Contract billings growth eases to six-month low
  • Acceleration of pay growth for permanent and contract staff.

 

Permanent placements growth accelerates…
The number of people placed in permanent jobs continued to rise in April.  Moreover, the rate of expansion quickened to an eight-month high.  This reflected a stronger increase in demand for staff, with permanent vacancies rising at the fastest pace since October 2014.

 

…but contract billings rise at slower rate
Short term billings increased further in April, but the latest rise was the slowest in six months.  This corresponded with a moderation in the rate of growth of demand for contract staff to the least marked since January.

 

Pay growth strengthens…
Growth pf permanent staff salaries accelerated to a nine-month high in April, with our consultants highlighting a combination of strong demand and skills shortages.  Daily rates of pay for contract staff meanwhile increased at the fastest pace since July 2007.

 

…amid tight candidate availability
The availability of staff to full permanent roles deteriorated further in April, with the rate of contraction accelerated to the sharpest in five month.  Contract staff availability declined at a marked pace that was similar to that seen in March.

 

Staff appointments

Permanent placements rise at fastest rate in eight months
The number of people placed in permanent roles increased for the thirty-first consecutive month in April.  Moreover, the rate of expansion quickened to the fastest since August 2014.  Anecdotal evidence suggested that higher placements were reflective of strong demand for staff at employers.  In a reversal of the trend seen in recent months, London saw the sharpest growth of permanent placements during April, while the slowest expansion was seen in the Midlands.

 

Contract billings growth eases to six-month low
Contract billings rose further in April.  Although remaining marked, the rate of expansion moderated to the slowest since October 2014.  Where an increase in short term billings was seen, this was attributed to higher client activity levels.  The Midlands remained the strongest-performing region for contractors in April, with the slowest growth indicated in the North.

Vacancies

Demand for staff rises at strongest rate in six months
April saw the fastest growth of demand for staff since October 2014.  Permanent staff saw demand for their services rise at the strongest rate in six months, whereas contract employees registered the lease marked increase since January.

Private sector demand for staff continued to rise at a stronger pace than that for the public sector workers in April.  The fastest rate of growth overall was signalled for private sector permanent employees.

 

Staff Availability

Availability of permanent staff
The availability of candidates to fill permanent job vacancies continued to deteriorate in April.  The latest fall was the sharpest since last November.  The Midlands registered the steepest reduction in permanent candidate availability.

Availability of contract staff
The rate of decline in contract staff availability remained marked in April.  Skill shortages were evident for a range of occupations.

 

Remuneration

Permanent salaries
Average starting salaries for people placed in permanent jobs continued to rise in April.  The rate of growth was strong, having accelerated to the sharpest since July 2014.  A combination of strong demand for staff and shortages of skilled candidates was cited as the driver of salary inflation.  The South led a broad-based upturn in permanent salaries during April.

 

Contract pay rates
Daily pay rates increased further in April.  Although less marked than the rise in permanent salaries, inflation was nonetheless strong and the fastest since July 2007.  The sharpest contract pay growth was reported in the Midlands. 

 

About Langley James

Langley James was founded in 1999 by James Toovey, a highly respected recruitment industry professional.  James wanted to provide something unique: a bespoke recruitment service which was founded on service excellence.  With offices in London and Manchester, we are now providing our recruitment services throughout the world and over the last 16 years have worked with some of the most respected companies in the world.

To find out why so many companies turn to Langley James for support in fulfilling their IT and HR recruitment needs, call and speak to one of our specialist consultants today on 0845 124 9555.

IT Market Summary – February

Langley James IT Recruitment Market Summary – February

Key points

  • Faster rise in permanent placements, but growth of contractor requirements eases
  • Salaries for permanent staff increases at sharpest rate since October 2007
  • Candidate availability declines at stronger pace

Permanent appointments rise at strongest rate in almost four years
Our IT consultants signalled the fastest growth of permanent IT staff appointments in almost four years during February.  However contractor requirements increased at the slowest pace in three months.

Demand for IT staff continues to grow strongly
February data from our IT consultants indicated a further market rise in vacancies.  The rate of expansion was only marginally below January’s 15½ year high.

Sharpest rise in permanent salaries since October 2007
Growth of permanent IT salaries accelerated in February reaching the highest rate in over six years.  Contract IT staff pay increased at the fastest pace since last July.

IT candidate availability falls at sharper rate
The availability of IT staff was reported by our IT consultants to have declined again in February.  In particular, the supply of permanent IT candidates fell at the sharpest rate since November 2004.

Permanent IT staff skills in short supply – C#, Digital Marketing, E-commerce, Java, PHP, SEO

IT Contractor staff skills in short supply – Java, PHP & general IT

Staff appointments
Our IT consultants signalled a further increase in the number of people placed in permanent jobs during February.  Moreover, the rate of expansion accelerated to the strongest since March 2010, and was the joint-second sharpest on record.  Improved client demand and confidence were principle factors underpinning the growth in placements, according to our IT consultants.

IT contractor placements continued to rise in February.  The rate of growth remained strong, despite moderating to a three-month low.  Rising business activity levels at clients were reported by our consultants as the main factor supporting higher contractor requirements.

Vacancies
Vacancy growth remains strong as demand for IT staff continues to rise at a marked pace in February.  Although easing marginally since the previous month, rates of expansion in both permanent and contract vacancies remained substantial.

Demand for staff by sector
Permanent staff – Growth of demand was broad-based across all key types of permanent staff with Engineering still in the top spot.  IT & Computing fell to fifth place in February.

Contract staff – Occupying top position in the contract demand rating was Nursing & Medical with IT & Computing falling to sixth place.

Staff Availability
Permanent IT staff availability fell further in February.  Moreover the rate of decline accelerated to the sharpest since November 2004.  The sharpest of these declines was indicated in the South.

Contractor IT staff availability fell for the eighth consecutive month running during February, and at a slightly shaper rate than January.  The South registered the fastest drop in contractor availability, closely followed by the Midlands.

Remuneration
Permanent salaries for IT staff rose at a strong and accelerated rate in February.  The latest increase was the sharpest since October 2007.  Higher salaries were frequently attributed by our IT consultants to competition for candidates.

Day rates for contract employment continued to rise in February.  Some of our IT consultants indicated that demand and supply imbalances in certain sectors has driven pay rates higher.

About Langley James
Langley James was founded in 1999 by James Toovey, a highly respected recruitment industry professional.  James wanted to provide something unique: a bespoke recruitment service which was founded on service excellence.  With offices in London and Manchester, we are now providing our recruitment services throughout the world and over the last 15 years have worked with some of the most respected companies in the world.

To find out why so many companies turn to Langley James for support in fulfilling their IT recruitment needs, call and speak to one of our specialist consultants today on 0845 124 9555.