Headhunter specialising in Product, Design, and Digital Transformation | Executive Search | Global Network | Berlin based
Designing Recruiters
How Design Thinking can change Recruitment
You would be forgiven for never mentioning design and recruitment in the same conversation. But, for a while now, I’ve straddled both sectors and the crossover is indispensable. As a design leader and now as a talent strategist, my approach to problem-solving has always been the same – people first.
Digital has blurred the lines and requirements for many of today’s roles and also our own tasks and roles in recruitment are changing dramatically. Understanding and applying design processes is of huge importance for digital transformation and innovation. It focuses our attention on customer experience and helps us to stay future fit. If we understand ourselves as problem solvers, creating service experiences, then we can learn from current design methodologies. Therefore I'd like to invite you to think and act more like Designing Recruiters.
Why apply design processes?
A CareerBuilder study gathered data on negative candidate experiences while applying for jobs, and the overall quality of their experiences was low. Historically, recruitment has had a negative reputation, which needs to shift, and I am sure that the lack of attention on ‘experience’ is a key contributor to this.
Human-centric recruiters
To create a positive service experience, the focus should always be on the candidate – client relationship. This is a human-to-human sector and our aim should be to improve the lives of those we touch. To make a true impact, we need to deeply understand the psyche of the individuals we speak to and the experience we give them. Design processes do a great job of enabling this. They allow you to define, disrupt, and rebuild processes in a human-centric way. By applying these structures and methodologies, we are all forced to think differently.
Designing Recruiters
How Design Thinking can change Recruitment
You would be forgiven for never mentioning design and recruitment in the same conversation. But, for a while now, I’ve straddled both sectors and the crossover is indispensable. As a design leader and now as a talent strategist, my approach to problem-solving has always been the same – people first.
Digital has blurred the lines and requirements for many of today’s roles and also our own tasks and roles in recruitment are changing dramatically. Understanding and applying design processes is of huge importance for digital transformation and innovation. It focuses our attention on customer experience and helps us to stay future fit. If we understand ourselves as problem solvers, creating service experiences, then we can learn from current design methodologies. Therefore I'd like to invite you to think and act more like Designing Recruiters.
Why apply design processes?
A CareerBuilder study gathered data on negative candidate experiences while applying for jobs, and the overall quality of their experiences was low. Historically, recruitment has had a negative reputation, which needs to shift, and I am sure that the lack of attention on ‘experience’ is a key contributor to this.
Human-centric recruiters
To create a positive service experience, the focus should always be on the candidate – client relationship. This is a human-to-human sector and our aim should be to improve the lives of those we touch. To make a true impact, we need to deeply understand the psyche of the individuals we speak to and the experience we give them. Design processes do a great job of enabling this. They allow you to define, disrupt, and rebuild processes in a human-centric way. By applying these structures and methodologies, we are all forced to think differently.
Designing Recruiters
How Design Thinking can change Recruitment
You would be forgiven for never mentioning design and recruitment in the same conversation. But, for a while now, I’ve straddled both sectors and the crossover is indispensable. As a design leader and now as a talent strategist, my approach to problem-solving has always been the same – people first.
Digital has blurred the lines and requirements for many of today’s roles and also our own tasks and roles in recruitment are changing dramatically. Understanding and applying design processes is of huge importance for digital transformation and innovation. It focuses our attention on customer experience and helps us to stay future fit. If we understand ourselves as problem solvers, creating service experiences, then we can learn from current design methodologies. Therefore I'd like to invite you to think and act more like Designing Recruiters.
Why apply design processes?
A CareerBuilder study gathered data on negative candidate experiences while applying for jobs, and the overall quality of their experiences was low. Historically, recruitment has had a negative reputation, which needs to shift, and I am sure that the lack of attention on ‘experience’ is a key contributor to this.
Human-centric recruiters
To create a positive service experience, the focus should always be on the candidate – client relationship. This is a human-to-human sector and our aim should be to improve the lives of those we touch. To make a true impact, we need to deeply understand the psyche of the individuals we speak to and the experience we give them. Design processes do a great job of enabling this. They allow you to define, disrupt, and rebuild processes in a human-centric way. By applying these structures and methodologies, we are all forced to think differently.
Designing Recruiters
How Design Thinking can change Recruitment
You would be forgiven for never mentioning design and recruitment in the same conversation. But, for a while now, I’ve straddled both sectors and the crossover is indispensable. As a design leader and now as a talent strategist, my approach to problem-solving has always been the same – people first.
Digital has blurred the lines and requirements for many of today’s roles and also our own tasks and roles in recruitment are changing dramatically. Understanding and applying design processes is of huge importance for digital transformation and innovation. It focuses our attention on customer experience and helps us to stay future fit. If we understand ourselves as problem solvers, creating service experiences, then we can learn from current design methodologies. Therefore I'd like to invite you to think and act more like Designing Recruiters.
Why apply design processes?
A CareerBuilder study gathered data on negative candidate experiences while applying for jobs, and the overall quality of their experiences was low. Historically, recruitment has had a negative reputation, which needs to shift, and I am sure that the lack of attention on ‘experience’ is a key contributor to this.
Human-centric recruiters
To create a positive service experience, the focus should always be on the candidate – client relationship. This is a human-to-human sector and our aim should be to improve the lives of those we touch. To make a true impact, we need to deeply understand the psyche of the individuals we speak to and the experience we give them. Design processes do a great job of enabling this. They allow you to define, disrupt, and rebuild processes in a human-centric way. By applying these structures and methodologies, we are all forced to think differently.
“We live in an era where all can become Designers. In the sense that anyone who influences what the Design becomes is a Designer.”
Jared Spool, UIE Founder
“We live in an era where all can become Designers. In the sense that anyone who influences what the Design becomes is a Designer.”
Jared Spool, UIE Founder
Consider yourself a designer
Applying a ‘design-thinking’ framework enables transformation and evolution. Some people may prefer to call this ‘process ownership’, where they look at the end-to-end processes that influence customer decisions – before and beyond the physical design itself. At Cogs, we’ve started to think about design as a process rather than a skill. It utilises a systematic approach with several participants, all sharing the common goal to deliver the best possible service experience.
Consider yourself a designer
Applying a ‘design-thinking’ framework enables transformation and evolution. Some people may prefer to call this ‘process ownership’, where they look at the end-to-end processes that influence customer decisions – before and beyond the physical design itself. At Cogs, we’ve started to think about design as a process rather than a skill. It utilises a systematic approach with several participants, all sharing the common goal to deliver the best possible service experience.
Consider yourself a designer
Applying a ‘design-thinking’ framework enables transformation and evolution. Some people may prefer to call this ‘process ownership’, where they look at the end-to-end processes that influence customer decisions – before and beyond the physical design itself. At Cogs, we’ve started to think about design as a process rather than a skill. It utilises a systematic approach with several participants, all sharing the common goal to deliver the best possible service experience.
On a practical level, we have started to apply visual management processes adapted from Kanban. It supports decisions on what, when, and how we operate. It’s a visual interpretation of the pipeline but also of all things that need to be done, making the process tangible, observable, and transparent. By creating a visual model of our work and workflow, we are also more sensitive to potential bottlenecks. Ultimately, it increases velocity and flow from briefing over placement to retention and therefore success.
What drives me
The Evolving Design Hiring Landscapemuse case labs Interview
Full-time, part-time, free-timeInterview for PAGE Magazine
Design in a Post-COVID Worldmuse case labs Sessions
Executive Search demystifiedBuilding a Minimal Viable Recruiting Brand
Agile by DesignCollaborative Workspace Design
Mindset is EverythingSOULWORX ENERGIZER
Leading TogetherBlog Post
Unicorns, Hybrids and other fantastic beastsIronhack Workshops
Embrace VarietyBerlin Dribbble meetup
Is flatter better?Blog Post
Tech-Speed-DatingVolunteering at ReDI School
Cogs CrunchKnowledge Sharing Format
Headhunter SecretsUXcamp Europe, BarCamp
DECODERInnovation Platform
Humanizing OrganizationsBlog Post
Service and selected CasesPDF Download (PW required)
© 2023 Jan Pautsch
© 2023 Jan Pautsch