Friday, May 22, 2020
How to Write an Enticing Job Description (Hint Get Emotional)
How to Write an Enticing Job Description (Hint Get Emotional) This article is written and sponsored by Breezy HR â" an intuitive, flexible and affordable ATS that thinks everyone on your team can get emotionally invested in your recruiting and hiring. Breezy â" A Breath of Fresh HR. Iâm begging you: if you want to write an ah-mazing job description, stay far, far away from the Google search bar. I love Google and all, but Iâm pretty sure the last thing a candidate-driven market needs is more job descriptions that âinclude an objective statementâ and âinclude a list of duties and tasks. You can do better, and if youâre looking for great applicants, you need to do better. Instead of starting with the template youâve been rocking since â08 , try starting with our old buddy Maslow and his hierarchy of needs. For the uninitiated, Abraham Maslow was a 1940s psychologist who spent the majority of his life trying to explain why people do what they do. He concluded that humans were motivated by hierarchy of needs, as outlined by his fairly-famous pyramid. Maslowâs theory states that we humansâ motivations move up the pyramid as each level of our needs are met. Got the warmth and rest covered? Now youâll want safety. Got safety? Now youâll want friendsâ¦and so on. I wouldnât suggest attempting to trigger the most basic needs in your job descriptions (âReady for a job that will provide your food and water? Weâve got the perfect role!â), but levelling up provides us an opportunity to leverage some pretty sophisticated emotional triggers. Below are 3 emotional triggers inspired by Maslowâs Pyramid, and some actionable ways to put them to work in your job descriptions. Emotional trigger 1: the need to belong Think about the last time you pumped some effort into a social post. Maybe it was a photo of the cake you made for your sonâs birthday, or the electric-blue car you decided to buy after months of debate. Maybe it was snaps from a concert that you knew everyone would drool over. You remember how gratified you felt when the likes came rolling in? Thatâs the need to belong at work. Itâs the primary logic behind social media (yes, there is logic behind social media). How to use the need to belong in your job descriptions Your candidates will be joining a team, right? Then letâs talk about the team! This is why group photos, talking about group outings, or pointing out your companyâs internal kudos system can be so effective in job descriptions (not just on a career page). Go over your language for inclusiveness. Sentences like âYouâll be joining us to plant trees on Earth Day!â push a candidateâs emotional buttons, while the bullet point âAnnual tree planting dayâ pushes them toward the back button. Leverage some social proof in your description. This can come from something like an Instagram feed that a candidate can browse (holiday party!), or â" better yet â" in the form of âproofâ they can succeed with your company, like noting the last person in the role was promoted. Emotional trigger 2: the desire for esteem Letâs go back to the social media example. While you were raking in the likes and hearts and smileys on your post, was there one person whose reaction you were waiting to see? Maybe an ex-boss, or ex-significant other whose singular âWowâ would have made your entire week. Thatâs the power of esteem giving the added emotional boost to the power of belonging. When youâre trying to motivate candidates in your job description, consider how you can not only make them feel welcome and part of the team, but also how you can make them fell respected, liked, and â" yes â" needed by your company. How to use the desire for esteem in your job descriptions If the position reports to the C-Suite, expound on why. Hereâs a pretty typical example, with an emotionally kicky redo: âAs the Sales Manager, youâll report earnings to the CMOâ versus âSales is an integral part of X Company Intâl, and as the leader for an exceptional team of sales professionals, your direct communication to the Chief Marketing Officer will be essential to business decisions.â Can you feel the difference? Instead of beginning your job description with âResponsibilitiesâ try âYOUR IMPACT.â Outline just how critical the candidateâs success will be to your organization. Think about what a candidate could do to stand out to you for the open role. Now relay it to them, framing a job application as their opportunity to be seen as one in a million. Phrasing might look like this: âShow us that youâre the Growth Partner we need by defining a prioritization framework for us, or by including an example case from a previous position in your application. We canât wait to see what you come up with!â Emotional trigger 3: the desire to grow as a person Raise your hand if you remember the movie As Good As It Gets (okay, Iâll settle for a slight head nod). At one point, over a cozy dinner, a romantically inclined yet ornery Jack Nicholson tells the hesitant Helen Hunt âYou make me want to be a better man.â Ms. Hunt, overwhelmed, sighs âThatâs maybe the best compliment of my entire life.â Everyone wants to be a better person. They want to be inspired, they want to grow, they want to be inspired to grow. Every applicant wants to be reassured that theyâre not a faceless cog in a giant machine. The need is right there at the very top of Maslowâs pyramid â" itâs the pinnacle of self-actualization. When you meet this need for job candidates, everyone wins. How to use the desire to grow as a person in your job descriptions Include the candidatesâ opportunities for on-the-job learning at your company in the description, not just as part of a career page. Tailor it to their position, so that the new HR Manager knows he could be attending HR Tech next fall, or leading the teamâs implementation of a new applicant tracking system. Tell the candidate what they can expect to accomplish in their first six months, and after their first year. Will they be in a position to hit unprecedented goals, to join a hiring team for another role, to onboard others? What tangible achievements will they be able to look forward to as a successful employee? Ask for candidates who want to grow! This can come off cheesy, (âDo you want to work and learn at the same time?â) but it gets easier to nail if you include a kind of âAbout Youâ section in the description. âAbout You: A curious sort, you relish the opportunity to learn by doing in a fast-paced and demanding environment.â Bottom line: Sprinkling emotional triggers into your job descriptions can give todayâs picky candidates the extra motivation they need to hit apply. And when your company makes good on its emotional triggers over time? Youâll have yourselves a dedicated, motivated employee for life. So go on â" get trigger happy! This is the one time itâs completely appropriate. About the author: This article is written and sponsored by Breezy HR â" an intuitive, flexible, and affordable ATS that thinks everyone on your team can be a part of recruiting and hiring ⦠and that you should love your job descriptions! Breezy â" A Breath of Fresh HR.
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