Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Required - Unix/Linux Engineer


This is with our direct client

Contract to Hire
Location:        NJ - Clinton, GA - Alpharetta
Duration:        6-12 months
Hours:             8:00am to 5:00pm

Job Summary:
The System Architecture and Engineering Unix/Linux Engineer provides technical and engineering support to the A&E organization and SD operations partners in a timely, collaborative and effective manner. The Unix/Linux Engineer role is for an experienced Engineer with highly technical competence and proven customer handling skills. Candidate will be working closely with NYL CI enterprise technology Unix/Linux Hardware and operating systems Platform standards; related Unix Platform technology product vendors and CI Service Delivery operations group for problem resolution, project planning, 3rd level engineering support and collaborative solution recommendations. Engineer will be working in a team environment contributing technical expertise to the design, build, testing delivery, installation and commission of larger complex systems. Candidate will also review hardware and workload capacity recommendations, establish operating system security standards, roadmaps as well as Unix virtualization best practices and patterns.

The candidate should have proven experience in excellent technical troubleshooting skills, customer communications skills, setting customer expectations, handling internal stakeholder in the service chain and situations pertaining to Unix platform related products and technologies. An enterprise level systems engineer position with a focus on Solaris, Linux, AIX, UNIX and virtualization technologies from an installation, configuration, administration, and security perspective. The individual in this position is knowledgeable in all aspects of designing and supporting a UNIX infrastructure. A solid understanding of clustered environments; understands principles of application resource management within clustered environments. A solid understanding of Solaris Zones and contains, LDOMs/LPARs, ZEN/XEN and hyper-visor would be preferred. Additionally the candidate should have a solid foundation on performance benchmarking best practices as well.

Education:
Bachelor Degree in Systems Engineering

Skill/Role                                            Level              Years  Preference
Security Standards/Procedures          Intermediate   5.0       Required
HP Proliant Servers                            Expert             5.0       Required
UNIX                                                  Expert             7.0       Required
Financial Analysis                              Intermediate   5.0       Required
System Design                                    Expert             7.0       Required
Technology Delivery                          Intermediate   5.0       Required
Engineer                                             Expert             7.0       Required
Sun Hardware                                     Expert             5.0       Required
AIX (UNIX)                                        Intermediate   4.0       Required
UNIX Shell Scripting                         Expert             5.0       Required
Linux                                                  Expert             3.0       Required

Surya
HCR Group, Inc.
38 West 32nd Street, Suite #1208
New York, NY 10001
302-766-7564
surya@hcrgroup.net
www.hcrgroup.net 

Req: Database administrator / VBA programmer


This is with our direct client. Already we closed one position. Client is looking for to fill one more. So sure we can expect an immediate action. 

Duration:         12 month(s)+
Location:         Tarrytown, NY or New York City
Hours:             9:00am to 6:00pm

Description/Comment: Database administrator / VBA programmer – Maintain and develop SQL server database used for application testing. Maintain and develop MS Access front end. Will be involved in test process automation feeding data from SQL Server to spreadsheets, and reading results back into the database in batch. Fast-paced environment.

Requirements: Experience developing/maintaining a SQL server database, strong VBA programming skills, detail-oriented, analytical, result-oriented; experience in the financial industry a plus.

Skill/Role                                            Level                           Years
Analytical                                            Intermediate                2.0
Detail Oriented                                   Intermediate                2.0
Database                                             Intermediate                2.0
VBA (Visual Basic for Applications) Intermediate               2.0
SQL Server                                         Intermediate                2.0
Programmer                                         Intermediate                2.0

Surya 
HCR Group, Inc.
38 West 32nd Street, Suite #1208
New York, NY 10001
302-766-7564
surya@hcrgroup.net 

www.hcrgroup.net  

Monday, March 28, 2011

How to Translate Business Speak (Hint: “Maybe” Means “No Way”)


I’ve been struck recently by just how nuanced our business language has become. In grim times - like the ones we’re living through - nobody really wants to face up to the actual horrors, never mind potential horrors, of events around us. So we find ways of talking about our woes without actually, well, talking about them.

So for those who still fondly imagine that what they hear is what they get, here is a translation guide:

“I have an issue with him”
Translation: Issues means problems. “I have an issue with him”‘ means “I really can’t stand this employee and think termination is the only solution, but I don’t have the authority required.”

“We have a problem”
Translation: Problems are disasters, as in “Houston, we have a problem.”  Understatement is supposed to convey cool in a crisis, but it doesn’t really work any more because everyone’s trying so hard to understate everything that no one believes any of it.

“Status Update”
Translation: Uh, oh. This meeting is normally held for senior managers, behind closed doors. It is the first meeting at which you will learn that the company has been bought/is merging with a rival/is moving to North Dakota/is being down sized or shut down. No, you can’t do this one from home on the speakerphone.

“Yes”
Translation: This really means “maybe.” Why? Because management today is so profoundly risk averse that no one person has the power to approve anything. So if someone says yes, don’t break out the champagne yet. At the very least, you need the yes-person to stay in their job long enough to come through for you.

“Maybe”
Translation: This really means “no way.” Since anyone you deal with is, or feels, on the brink of termination or resignation, they know better than to annoy anyone. They want to keep as many people on their Facebook pages and LinkedIn networks as they can. That means that they never want to be caught absolutely turning anything down.

“No”
Translation: This really means “get out of town!” If anybody feels confident enough to say ‘no’ to your face, it is because your idea is such a stinker that even imminent downsizing can’t disguise the fact.

“Let’s Be Honest”
Translation: This means let’s not be honest; instead, let’s forget the gloom and imagine everything in the garden is rosy. After all - if we can’t cheer each other up, we’ll never hang in long enough to change the future.

There is a lot to be said for euphemisms.




Thursday, March 24, 2011

Why You Aren’t Happy, and How to Make Things Better

Perhaps it’s no surprise to you that survey after survey finds many people are dissatisfied with their jobs. A Conference Board survey last year reported that only 49% were satisfied with their jobs, the lowest level in 22 years since they began their survey.

But let’s think about that 49%: what made this group satisfied? How do people attain contentment at work?

As we noted in a previous post, we’ve undertaken a survey to find the answer to this question. The way we’ve tackled it is by asking people what gives them short-term gratification (happiness) and long-term benefits (meaning)–at work, and at home. Our respondents–some 3000 of them– are highly educated professionals, with 60% having graduate degrees. (You can look at our survey here.)

We are still analyzing the data, but among our preliminary findings:

Compartmentalizing doesn’t work. People who are dissatisfied with their work also tend to be unhappy at home, and vice versa. There is a very high correlation between people’s happiness and meaning at work and at home.

The company you keep matters. Spending time with people we love, both at work and at home, is highly correlated with overall satisfaction.

What gives people fun and meaning is highly variable. There is nothing inherently satisfying in an activity. Some people see gardening as a sacrifice that brings them some long-term benefit; others think it is light fun–but essentially meaningless.  So if you’re dissatisfied with your job, the reasons have as much to do with you as they do with the actual responsibilities.

You can’t achieve overall life satisfaction by being a sacrificing workhorse, or by being “fun loving.” Just being engaged in stimulating activities doesn’t make people satisfied.  Likewise, sacrificing to achieve meaning also doesn’t make people content. Those who were satisfied felt both short-term gratification and deep meaning from their work and home lives.

Nobody can define happiness for you. Every company has a plaque on a wall, which eloquently expresses the corporate values. This finding is based on the ground-breaking research by Jim Kouzes. It simply doesn’t matter if individual employees believe in the company’s corporate values. What matters is if their work in the company reflects their own values. You must feel you are living your own values.

But what about all those people who toil long hours? Doesn’t overwork lead to unhappiness? No, we didn’t find the hours spent working correlated to happiness or meaning, or lack thereof. Nor did we find more hours spent outside of work in “fun” activities produced higher levels of satisfaction.

In other words, if you want to discover how to be more satisfied with work and home life, look nowhere else than within. You are the key to your own happiness and meaning, no one else.

Are you happy at work? What do you think is the reason for your happiness–or unhappiness?

Leave us your comments and send your suggestions at recruiterbook@yahoo.com

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The Cold-Call Hater’s Guide to Better Business Leads


I hate cold-call prospecting almost as much as I hate networking.

Seriously, I have always thought that there has to be a better way to get business leads than ambushing people. And I have found a few. The most valuable strategy is to be in the right community with the right expertise to attract decision-makers. So, the big insight here is “Be a widely recognized expert and people will seek you out.” Duh! That’s like Steve Martin’s old joke on how to become a millionaire — “First, start with a million dollars!”

So, what do you do to get connected to people and put yourself in the position of an expert? Remember my advice on networking for schmooze-haters last week? Maybe you’re not the best networker or sales person, but you are a great problem-solver. Lean on that strength as a way to grow your prospect base.

Try these 3 simple steps:

STEP #1: Find people with problems and help solve them. The beauty of the Internet is that it’s where more and more people turn when they need to find a solution. They have a dilemma, and so they blog about it, they fire off a tweet, or they pose questions about it to their online communities. One of the easiest — and perhaps most underrated — ways to plug into communities specific to your industry is LinkedIn. LinkedIn Groups connect people who want to solve problems and share resources. Join the ones that are relevant to your business.

The key is to become a frequent and useful contributor to a group’s discussions. A few guidelines:

  • Remember, it’s not about you. Focus on being valuable, authentic, and focused on helping — not selling.
  • Don’t argue. If someone has posted a response with which you disagree, frame your response as a “different way to look at this.” Internet fights are entertaining, but do not advance your cause.
  • Be a resource as well as a solver. It’s great when your answer includes links to other resources besides just you and your company. It provides credibility and expands the value to other people who are following the posts beyond just the initial author.

STEP #2: Don’t just respond to discussions; initiate them. Posting up your own questions, alternatives, and market observations gives you the opportunity to interact and create great connections. Let the community discuss, and then provide your own perspective/solution. Again, follow the guidelines above. One thing you do not want is to develop a reputation as a prospecting pig. At best, you’ll get a lot of incendiary emails and responses, and at worst you’ll get thrown out of the group.

STEP #3: Be a resource clearinghouse. If you become known as the person in the group who has a resource for everything — links, articles, white-papers, vendors and so on — you will generate a lot of inquires and prospecting opportunities. I have seen this work for a number of people and it is great for those people who do not necessarily feel that they are either great writers or credentialed experts. That’s OK — if you are a person who can connect people and resources. You are a different kind of expert and still highly valued.

Last week’s networking post got a tremendous response, with all kinds of people posting their own resources and recommendations. That’s how it works. Some of the people posting were making a case for different approaches. Some have their own books and groups that they want to attract people to. Some responders were just grateful. That’s how a community group is supposed to work. I don’t have all of the answers, and last week some great authors and readers filled in extra details for which I am grateful.

So, readers, I am looking forward to the same kinds of responses this week. There are lots of us who want to know better ways to prospect besides just cold calling and email blasting. Post up your favorites here — who knows, one of the readers may just be a great prospect for you.

Leave us your comments and send your suggestions at recruiterbook@yahoo.com

Monday, March 21, 2011

OMG!!! Txt Speak Is the Future of Biz Email :)


Have multiple exclamation points, smiley faces and text-speak abbreviations like “gr8″ and “2mro” been increasingly creeping into your email inbox at work? Are you annoyed by this influx of excessive punctuation and silly abbreviations? If so, at least one HR pro thinks you should stop being stodgy and get over it, arguing text speak is an elegant solution to our modern, fast-paced communication style and the way of the future.

Speaking to Entry-Level Rebel, Kathy Kane, SVP of talent management at HR firm Adecco, weighed in on the increased prevalence of “text language” in professional emails. And surprisingly, she’s not too bothered by young people’s increasing unwillingness to write in standard English or the way their writing style is seeping into the emails of older business people. She says:

This is a generation that grew up texting and IMing, so they created their own language to make that more efficient and that facilitated them communicating more significant messages in fewer characters. I think it’s taken hold even in the corporate world because it is a quicker way to get a message across. The language has a brilliance to it because we’re all trying to do things so fast today.

Because email has replaced so much verbal communication, there needs to be a way to communicate the meaning and emotion behind a message. Sometimes in a short email, the wrong kind of feeling behind the message is conveyed, so I like the use of emoticons as a way of letting someone know how you feel, for example, when you’re giving direction to someone but also want to allay their fears.

But watch out veteran texters, Kane isn’t giving text speak enthusiasts free rein to skip learning basic grammar or go wild with their punctuation — at least not at first. She warns that too many emoticons or exclamation points too early in a business relationship can have negative consequences:

It can tend to seem more juvenile or peg someone as less experienced. If a younger person is communicating with someone who is at a much higher level in the organization or someone that they don’t know very well, they probably have to be pretty careful about their use of text language or emoticons.

I advise younger people to take the opportunity now and then to show that they actually do have good communication skills, so if you’re sending an email to your boss, put together good, complete, well thought out sentences that show you have these skills. When you’ve established that, you’re much more free to send shorter messages containing shorthand language.

For those of you hoping for a backlash against abbreviated email language, Kane points to the increasing number of CEOs, celebrities and high-profile journalists on Twitter, straining to get their message out in only 140 characters. With this sort of training in concision and grammatical corner cutting, Kane sees a bright future for text speak in the corporate world.

What’s your opinion of text language — brilliant and creative or completely aggravating?


Leave us your comments and send your suggestions at recruiterbook@yahoo.com

Friday, March 18, 2011

Top Ten Ideas for Recruiting Great Candidates


Looking for talent? The smartest employers, who hire the best people, recruit a pre-qualified candidate pool of potential employees before they need to fill a job. Or, as Harvey Mackay, well-known, irreverent, author and speaker, says about networking, Dig Your Well, Before You're Thirsty (Compare Prices).

You can develop relationships with potential candidates long before you need them. These ideas will also help you in recruiting a large pool of candidates when you have a current position available. Read on to discover the best ways to develop your talent pool and recruit employees.

The earlier you adopt these practices, the better your organization will do in the upcoming war for talent. (And, trust me, you will experience wars for talent as the baby boomer generation retires.) Read on to discover the best ways to develop your talent pool.

Recruiting Your Ideal Candidate
A job description that tells potential employees the exact requirements of the position is useful. Even more useful is the process you use to develop the job description internally and the behavioral characteristics of your ideal candidate. Assemble a team of people who represent the best qualities of the people who currently hold the same or a similar position. Include the hiring manager.

Develop a job description that delineates the key responsibilities and outputs of the position. Then, define the behavioral characteristics of the person you feel is your ideal candidate. Finally, list your five - ten key responsibilities and characteristics you will use to screen resumes, perform phone screens and eventually, establish the questions for the candidates you interview.

Sound like a lot of effort? It is. But, you'll have a much better idea about the characteristics of the ideal candidate you want to attract to your company when you do this planning via email or a recruiting planning meeting.

Tap Your Employee Networks in Recruiting Candidates
Spread word-of-mouth information about the position availability, or eventual availability, to each employee so they can constantly look for superior candidates in their networks of friends and associates. In this age of online social and professional networking, the chances are, you and your employees are instantly connected to hundreds, and even thousands, of potential candidates. Tap into this potential audience on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, to name just a few.

Use trade show booth time to meet and get to know potential candidates as well as customers. Encourage employees to gather business cards from, and develop relationships with, high potential possible employees. And, don't stop with employees alone; tap the networks of your social, board, funder and academic connections, too.

In a client company, the sales manager referred a childhood friend, who was moving back to our state, for a position. Out of touch for several years, the now new employee had contacted all of his friends when he needed to relocate from Chicago to the Detroit area. My client benefitted from the sales manager's network and hired an outstanding employee.

Make sure you publicize your interest in employee referrals. In some companies, employee referrals, especially for hard-to-fill positions, are even rewarded with cash bonuses. Posting all open positions, announcing openings at the company meetings and sharing growth plans with company members will help spread your message.

Take Advantage of Your Industry Contacts, Association Memberships and Trade Groups for Recruiting Candidates
Pay for employees to participate in and network in industry groups, conferences and trade shows. Periodically, create master lists of industry leaders and other potential employees from customers, colleagues, coworkers and friends. Develop a plan for contacting these people systematically and regularly. Be prepared to share your job description with them through mail, email, on the Internet and by fax. Follow up on every good lead.

Use extensive telephone networking. Bring people in for interviews before you have an available position. You may even want to consider starting a periodic company newsletter to keep your master lists of potential employees, customers and interested others up-to-date about company progress and happenings. You can use online and/or mail distribution to send these out.

Looking for the "right" associations to join? Check out this resource: Find Associations, People, and Businesses from the American Society of Association Executives.

Use Your Web Site for Recruiting Candidates
Does your "Join Our Team" section of your company Web site tell and even, "sell," potential employees about the vision, mission, values and culture of your company? Do you present a message about how people are valued? Do you express your commitment to quality and to your customers? If not, you are missing out on one of the most important recruiting tools you have to appeal to prospective high-potential employees.

Instead of the typical, dryly-written job listings about available positions, your Web site needs to include this vision, this information that sets your company apart from others in your industry. Your job listings must sparkle with personality so a potential candidate thinks, "this organization is for me." And, now that you have their attention, you also need to provide a way for candidates to easily submit resumes for consideration for future positions.

One client Web site has a "Talk to the President" link and, believe me, people do. We receive a constant stream of resumes and contacts through this invitation and even hired a Director of Production who made his first contact here. Another posts generic position descriptions for positions that frequently need applicants. People respond. Web site recruiting works.Looking for additional ideas about recruiting candidates who are potential star performers? Here are several more of my favorite ideas for recruiting candidates.


Maintain Frequent Contact With Interested Candidates
Don't let these potential employees submit their resumes and never hear from you again either. You'd lose all the momentum you just spent time developing with the favored few. Just as I recommended earlier with employee networks and professional contacts, continue and nurture the relationship.

Enable interested candidates to subscribe to the company newsletter; consider writing a mini-newsletter just for them. Follow-up all website submissions with a greeting that thanks the individual for their interest in your company. Send a periodic update about your job openings. Invite the potential employee to visit your organization when they are in the area. Your professional, ongoing contact with interested people ensures recruiting success.

Become an Employer of Choice for Recruiting Candidates
Think about what a potential employee considers before agreeing to join your organization or business. Are you stable, making money and growing? Are you employee-friendly? Does your mission catch the mindshare and/or the heartstrings of the people you most want to recruit? Will a new employee feel part of something bigger than themselves if they join you? Will your organization nurture their talent and provide exciting opportunities for challenge and professional growth?

If you can answer these questions affirmatively, analyze every component of your recruiting process to make sure that you are sending these messages. If you want to be an employer of choice, you must act like an employer of choice. Further more, you must communicate this commitment to your prospective employees.

People look for little things - that are really big things - such as noticing whether you return phone calls promptly. They observe when all interviewers repeat the same questions. They are aware that you responded to acknowledge receipt of their resume. They appreciate a phone call when someone else is picked for the job they wanted. (Yes, you still need to send a letter to the people you interviewed, but the more informal follow-up is appreciated.) They feel welcomed when they can communicate with you via email.

In addition, being an employer of choice is a reputation you build in your industry that is a powerful tool in attracting top talent.

Recruit Using the Internet
The Internet, in addition to your own organization Web site, is in its infancy in terms of its usefulness to employers, potential employees and society, in general. Learn how to use the Internet to find and attract great candidates. These are options you can currently consider.


  • Post your positions on professional association Web sites. This includes local chapter Web sites or professional associations related to the job. (This is an excellent method for finding local talent.)


  • Post open positions on Web sites that private vendors or your state and/or local government provide. In Michigan, positions can be posted at no cost on various websites including JobOpenings.net - Michigan, MLive.com - Everything Michigan and Michigan Workforce Development. (Search for your local job sites at America's Job Bank, About's Job Searching site and at Alison Doyle's Job Searching site for your state Workforce Development organization through your state department of labor. You'll find multiple options for both posting positions and searching for jobs.)


  • Post your classified ad on newspaper-related Web sites. Most newspapers have an affiliated Web site where you can post ads. These ads are either included in the price of a classsifed print ad or you can pay separately for online posting only. Make sure your recruitment ads "sell" the vision and the advantages of your organization. Effective ads portray your company as an exciting and rewarding place to work. Effective job postings make people want to apply to your firm.
  • Pay to post on some commercial Web sites.

Use Headhunters and Recruiters
Sometimes, it is worth your time to use headhunters, recruiters, and employment placement firms. The best firms have done much of this homework and candidate pool development for you. Expect to pay 20-35 percent of the cost of the new recruit's annual salary. But, for some positions, and in some industries, the cost in your department's time and the time invested in a possible failed search, are worth it.

Additionally, recruiters have an already-developed pool of candidates. They provide a second pair of experienced eyes to help you with your search. Some of them are very good. I met with a recruiter recently and offered him a sales job in a client organization on the spot. Believe me, he was that good - I can definitely see him finding great candidates for employers.

When you work in an HR role, calls from potential recruiters come several times a week. I ask for references and check them. I also talk with non-competing firms to get referrals of recruiters with whom they've been pleased. You can also research recruiters at the Recruiter's Online Network. Looking for additional ideas about recruiting employees who are potential star performers? Here are several more of my favorite ideas for recruiting employees.


Use Temporary Agencies and Firms for Recruitment
Consider using temporary staff as a solution to "try a person out in a position" or to staff a position you are not sure you need for the long haul. Temporary employees can also provide a useful buffer for the ups and downs of the business cycle so that you do not have to affect your core staff during down times.

Temp firms will recruit and screen to your specifications and guarantee your satisfaction. They save your staff immense amounts of time as they provide testing, drug screening, reference checking, background checks, and anything else you'd like, for a nominal fee. By the time I meet the selected group of candidates, most of the work, other than a personal job interview, has been completed for me.

Additionally, as the firms become familiar with your needs, just as headhunters and recruiters do, they will seek out and suggest talent they believe meets your criteria for star candidates.

I work with two or three agencies and my client company hires only the top five percent of temporary staff members, so we hire great people.

Find Out Where Your Ideal Candidates Live
Identify what your needed candidates read; notice the Web sites they visit; study the listservs on which they participate; determine the industry magazines and newspapers they read. Identify their favorite news sources, forums, discussion groups, and places to practice social networking. In other words, find out everything you can about the types of people who make up the top ten percent of your current employees and the best of your talent pool.

Use this information to screen resumes, of course, and to develop effective interview questions. Most importantly, use this information to develop creative, fun recruiting strategies for your potential openings. Sit with an interested group that includes members of the group you are trying to recruit and brainstorm other potential ways to locate a well-qualified pool of candidates for each position.

Some examples I've seen include a very funny ad in a staid newspaper. It literally jumped off the page because it stood out so strongly from the pack. (The ad was looking for a creative for an ad agency; I'll bet they found their perfect candidate.) I've been recruited as a potential staff member while browsing in a book store. People recruit at trade shows from the people visiting their booths.

Just One More Thought About Recruiting Employees - Publicity
Here's a bonus thought about recruiting great employees: The publicity your organization receives in the news media, in print, on television, on the radio and online is tremendously important for recruiting. A few good words, an interesting article or a piece about your mission that reflects your organization in a favorable light, will result in potential employees coming to you. And that, in my way of thinking, is the best way of all to find great potential employees for your candidate pool.

Ideas for recruiting are endless and endlessly challenging, but the time and effort you invest are worth it when they result in top talent for your organization.


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