Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Those Crazy Things Companies Do To Recruit Top Millennials
Those Crazy Things Companies Do To Recruit Top Millennials by: Nathan Allen on October 26, 2015 | 0 Comments Comments 2,266 Views October 26, 2015Juhyun Kwon, a marketing major at Minnesotas Carlson School of Management tries out General Mills Oculus Rift at a recruiting event. Photo courtesy of Carlson School of ManagementAs Juhyun Kwon walked through a September recruitment event on the campus of Minnesotaââ¬â¢s Carlson School of Management, the General Mills table caught her eye. A box of Lucky Charms or Honey Nut Cheerios didnââ¬â¢t draw her inââ¬âbut a large set of goggles did. Kwon tried on the goggles and was soon on a virtual realty tour of the companyââ¬â¢s Golden Valley, Minnesota, campus. She was able to visit everything from the company gym to executive officesvirtually, of course.ââ¬Å"I loved the experience because it was something completely different from what you normally see,â⬠says Kwon, a junior majoring in marketing. Kwon and her fellow st udents are used to showing up atà information sessions, corporate presentations, and networking events from top corporate recruiters. ââ¬Å"It can be very similar from all of the different companies,â⬠she admits, speaking of the monotony of on-campus recruiting.Not General Mills. The companysà goggle tours use GoPro footage to take a creative look at what itââ¬â¢d be like to work for them. The technology, dubbed Oculus Rift, sounds just as much like itââ¬â¢s from a Transformers movie as it does a futuristic recruiting tactic.à ââ¬Å"It was fun. They used their cereal mascots like the Lucky Charms guy and the Cheerioââ¬â¢s bee,â⬠Kwon explains. ââ¬Å"Personally, I havenââ¬â¢t seen any other tools like this from other companies yet.â⬠LONG-WINDED POWERPOINTS NO LONGER CUTTING ITThe unique tactic comes at a time whenà companies are trying to differentiate themselves in the eyes of millennialà business students.à Nowadays, students have been inu ndated in messaging and technology and are comprised ofà aà generation wired since birth. Many companies that donââ¬â¢t have immediate tech street-credââ¬âsuch asà the Apples, Googles, and Amazons of the worldââ¬âare coming up with some creative and tech-savvy ways to get the attention of top talent. In addition to General Millsââ¬â¢ Oculus Rift, Goldman Sachs is using Snapchat to recruit college students, and PwC is even offering to pay back student loans for its junior employees.Its a sign of the times, according to Susie Clarke, director of the undergraduate career services office at Indiana Universitys Kelley School of Business.à Before the web, long presentations were OK, because it was the only way to get information about the companies, Clarke explains. Now its so readily available to these students. They dont need that. Its all online.Carlsons Career Center Director Maggie Tomas concurs.à ââ¬Å"Companies are getting creative and going beyond the typi cal campus info session that is usually just sharing some slides and thatââ¬â¢s it,â⬠she says.Among the stunts in recent years, companies have brought sports cars, ATVs, burrito trucks, ice cream trucks, coffee trucks, and personalized baseball cards. Theres always someone looking for an edge to brand themselves with our students and get their attention, Clarke adds, notingà shes been seeing it happen for a while.Susie Clarke, director of Indiana Kelleys Undergraduate Career Services Office. Photo courtesy of Indiana KelleyCOMPANIES COMPETING FOR STUDENT MINDSHAREClarke says Polaris, a snowmobile and all-terrain vehicle (ATV) manufacturer brought ATVs to the doors of Kelleys campus. General Motors recentlyà took it a step further atà the University of Michigans Ross School of Business. The Detroit-based car manufacturer parked cars on the schools stoop and invited students to take test drives. And of course they didnt bring the latest line ofà Buick LeSabresââ¬â they brought Camaros and Corvettes.ââ¬Å"Every year, some company will do something that makes us sit around the career services office and say, ââ¬Ëthat was really clever,ââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ explains Damian Zikakis, the director of career services at Michiganââ¬â¢s Ross School, adding that companies are constantly competing with one another for student ââ¬Å"mindshare.â⬠ââ¬Å"What Iââ¬â¢ve seen is that the stunts are different attempts to try to capture mindshare or standout from the company that was here the day before or is coming the day after,â⬠Zikakis continues. ââ¬Å"Like everything else, students are paying attention to so many sources of input and the companies are all trying to stand out and be different.â⬠Clarke is seeing the same atà Kelley, saying the unique strategies are definitely about marketing and differentiating themselves in our students eyes. Page 1 of 3123à »
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