Modèle de processus de recrutement Diapositives de présentation PowerPoint

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Caractéristiques de ces diapositives de présentation PowerPoint :

Vous offre la liberté de modifier les diapositives à votre guise. L'option de téléchargement instantané permet d'économiser beaucoup de temps. Comprend un total de 41 diapositives uniques. Compatibilité standard et grand écran pour tous les appareils. Conceptions compatibles avec Google Slides. Convient pour une utilisation par les responsables RH, les cabinets de recrutement, les consultants en emploi. Support client Premium. Il s'agit d'un processus en une étape. Les étapes de ce processus sont le modèle de processus de recrutement, le modèle de processus d'embauche, le modèle de processus de recrutement.

Contenu de cette présentation Powerpoint

Diapositive 1 : Cette diapositive présente le modèle de processus de recrutement. Indiquez le nom de votre entreprise et commencez.
Diapositive 2 : Cette diapositive présente l'affichage des grandes lignes : résumé, nos services, sources de recrutement, suivi du recrutement, gestion des clés, postes vacants actuels, description du poste, budget de recrutement, départements et équipes, processus de recrutement, entonnoir de recrutement.
Diapositive 3 : Cette vidéo présente l'affichage du résumé analytique : antécédents, capacités, accréditation, vision de l'entreprise, promoteurs et actionnariat, bénéfice net, chiffre d'affaires, EBITDA, faits saillants financiers, résumé analytique.
Diapositive 4 : Cette diapositive présente la gestion avec des zones d'image pour indiquer les informations.
Diapositive 5 : Il s'agit de la diapositive Départements et équipes présentée sous forme de hiérarchie/organigramme.
Diapositive 6 : Cette diapositive présente nos services fournis.
Diapositive 7 : Cette diapositive montre les postes vacants actuels pour différents départements.
Diapositive 8 : Cette diapositive présente l'affichage du processus de recrutement - Comprendre les exigences du client, la recherche de candidats, les candidats présélectionnés, le premier entretien, l'envoi pour l'entretien final, l'offre d'emploi.
Diapositive 9 : Cette diapositive montre les sources de recrutement affichées : annonces, candidats volontaires, placement scolaire, agences de placement, recherches internes, recommandations d'employés.
Diapositive 10 : Cette diapositive montre la description du poste : profil souhaité, qualification, compétences requises.
Diapositive 11 : Cette diapositive montre l'entonnoir de recrutement : candidat potentiel identifié, candidats contactés, réponses des candidats, soumissions, invités à un entretien, offre.
Diapositive 12 : Cette diapositive présente Recruitment Tracker sous forme de tableau.
Diapositive 13 : Cette diapositive montre le budget de recrutement sous forme de tableau.
Diapositive 14 : Ceci est une diapositive Pause-café pour arrêter. Vous pouvez modifier l'image selon les exigences/besoins.
Diapositive 15 : Cette diapositive s'intitule Graphiques et graphiques pour avancer. Vous pouvez modifier le contenu de la diapositive selon vos besoins.
Diapositive 16 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique à colonnes groupées pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 17 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique à barres groupées pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 18 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique à barres. Indiquer les spécifications, la comparaison des produits/entités ici.
Diapositive 19 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique en nuage de points pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 20 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique en courbes empilées pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 21 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de graphique à secteurs en beignet pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 22 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de diagramme de zone de pile pour montrer la comparaison produit/entité, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 23 : Cette diapositive s'intitule Diapositives supplémentaires. Vous pouvez modifier l'image selon les exigences/besoins.
Diapositive 24 : Ceci est la diapositive Notre mission avec la vision et les objectifs et les zones de texte qui vont avec. Indiquez-les ici.
Diapositive 25 : Ceci est la diapositive de notre équipe avec les noms et la désignation pour lesquels remplir les informations.
Diapositive 26 : Ceci est une diapositive À propos de nous. Indiquez ici les spécifications de l'équipe/de l'entreprise.
Diapositive 27 : Ceci est la diapositive Notre objectif. Indiquez ici les objectifs, les cibles, etc.
Diapositive 28 : Ceci est une diapositive de comparaison pour montrer une comparaison, des informations, des spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 29 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de pointage financier. Indiquez ici les aspects financiers, etc.
Diapositive 30 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de citations. Transmettez le message, les croyances, etc. ici. Vous pouvez modifier l'image selon les exigences/besoins.
Diapositive 31 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'emplacement de la carte du monde montrant le marketing mondial, la croissance, la présence, etc. Adaptez-la à vos besoins et captez l'attention de votre public.
Diapositive 32 : Ceci est une diapositive cible. Indiquez ici vos objectifs.
Diapositive 33 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'image circulaire. Indiquez ici les informations, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 34 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'image du diagramme de Venn pour afficher des informations, des spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 35 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'image de carte mentale pour afficher des informations, la ségrégation, les spécifications, etc.
Diapositive 36 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive Idée avec ampoule pour énoncer une nouvelle idée ou mettre en évidence des spécifications/informations, etc.
Diapositive 37 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'image en verre Magnify. Spécifications d'état, informations ici.
Diapositive 38 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive d'image d'entonnoir pour présenter les aspects de l'entonnoir, etc.
Diapositive 39 : Il s'agit d'une diapositive de tableau de bord pour indiquer les métriques, les kpis, etc.
Diapositive 40 : Cette diapositive présente une chronologie. Notez vos faits saillants, ou présentez des jalons, etc. ici.
Diapositive 41 : Ceci est une diapositive de remerciement avec le numéro de rue, la ville, l'état, les numéros de contact et l'adresse e-mail.

FAQs for Recruitment Process Model

So basically you've got job analysis and planning first, then sourcing candidates, screening and shortlisting, interviews, making your decision, and onboarding. Honestly, that first step is make-or-break though. If you don't know what you actually want, everything else turns into a disaster. Screening's where you'll either save tons of time or completely waste it - I've seen both happen way too often. Oh, and each stage builds on the last one, so don't try skipping around. Creates more headaches than it's worth. My suggestion? Write down your process for different role types so you're not starting from scratch every single time.

Look, your recruitment approach totally makes or breaks team performance. When you're scrambling to fill roles (been there), you end up with mediocre hires. But if you build talent pipelines early? You'll grab the best people before other companies even know they're looking. I've watched businesses completely turn around just by ditching panic mode for actual strategy. The stuff that really matters is how fast you hire, quality of candidates, what it costs you, and whether people stick around long-term. Pick whatever model fits your company's stage and don't keep switching it up.

Dude, employer branding is like having good candidates come to you instead of the other way around. Your best people become walking advertisements - they're out there telling friends how awesome it is to work for you. Companies like Google don't even need to recruit hard because everyone already wants in. It shows up everywhere too: Glassdoor, social media, whatever your team says about work. Honestly, if you're having trouble finding decent candidates, just ask your top performers what they'd brag about to their buddies. That's your starting point right there.

Oh man, there's honestly so many metrics you could track but don't go crazy with it. Time-to-fill and cost-per-hire are the basics everyone watches. Quality-of-hire matters way more though - like do people actually stick around and perform well after you hire them? Candidate experience scores are huge too because people talk, especially in smaller industries. I'd also check which sources actually bring you decent candidates (some job boards are total garbage). Offer acceptance rates tell you if you're being competitive. Pick maybe 3-4 that actually align with what you're trying to achieve rather than drowning in data.

Oh man, tech totally changed how we hire people. AI screening saves me from reading through hundreds of terrible resumes - game changer. Video interviews mean you're not stuck with local candidates anymore. The scheduling bots alone are worth it because honestly, who has time for email tennis about meeting times? ATS systems keep everything organized so applications don't disappear into the void. Chatbots handle those basic "what's the salary" questions. Assessment tools give you real data instead of just gut feelings. My advice? Don't go crazy and buy everything at once. Pick whatever's driving you nuts right now and start there.

Honestly, just start by actually communicating with people - seems obvious but most companies suck at this. Let candidates know what's happening, when they'll hear back, and don't ghost them even if it's a no. Your application shouldn't feel like filing taxes either. Make it mobile-friendly and stop asking for info that's already on their resume (seriously annoying). Train interviewers to have real conversations instead of just interrogating people. Oh, and give actual feedback when you can - candidates remember that stuff. Walk through your own process like you're applying somewhere. I bet you'll immediately see what's broken and want to fix it.

So companies are finally building diversity into their whole hiring process instead of just slapping it on at the end. They're rewriting job posts to cut biased language, using diverse interview panels, structured interviews - all that stuff. Tracking the actual numbers through each hiring stage too, which honestly can be a real wake-up call when you see the data. The whole mindset shifted from "let's hope we get diverse candidates" to actually designing your process to attract and fairly evaluate them. I'd start by running your current job descriptions through a bias checker - you might be surprised what pops up.

Honestly? Finding good people is the worst part - there's just nobody out there. Then when you do find someone, they'll ghost you right before the final interview. Meanwhile your hiring manager keeps moving the goalposts ("actually, we need React experience now"). Oh, and everyone has opinions about who's "perfect" for the role. Budget's always tight while competitors throw money around. Job descriptions are tricky too - you accidentally filter out solid candidates without realizing it. Write everything down from the start though. Trust me on that one. Set expectations early or you'll go crazy.

So you know all that hiring guesswork you've been doing? Data can actually fix that. Track which job boards send you decent candidates vs. the duds. Look at where people get stuck in your process - usually it's somewhere annoying you hadn't noticed. Compensation trends, diversity numbers, time-to-hire stuff... honestly you're probably already collecting half this data without realizing it. Oh, and see what skills actually predict who'll succeed in each role. My advice though - don't go crazy analyzing everything at once. Pick something simple like which sources work best and start there.

Look, job descriptions are literally the foundation of good hiring - they spell out what you want and keep everyone on the same page. Skip this step and you'll get random candidates who don't fit at all (learned this the hard way lol). A solid JD helps you write better job posts and actually screen people properly. Your interview questions will make way more sense too. Oh, and there's the legal protection angle - documenting required skills and duties covers you if issues come up later. Honestly? Just bite the bullet and write detailed ones upfront. You'll thank yourself when you're not drowning in terrible applicants.

Honestly, social media is a game-changer for finding candidates. LinkedIn's the obvious choice for professional stuff and job posts. But Instagram and TikTok? Way better than you'd think for reaching younger talent - seriously, don't overlook them. Twitter's solid for connecting with industry people and quick job announcements. The real trick is ditching those awful stock photos (you know, the fake handshake ones). Nobody buys that anymore. Get your actual employees to post behind-the-scenes content instead. Oh, and definitely check which platforms your ideal candidates are actually hanging out on first. That'll save you tons of time.

So internal recruitment is basically promoting someone or moving them around within your company. Way faster and cheaper since you already know they're not totally crazy, plus they get how things work there. But honestly, you might end up with the same old thinking. External recruitment means posting jobs and sorting through tons of applications - which is a pain and costs more. Takes forever too. The upside? You'll find people with completely different skills and fresh perspectives you'd never get internally. Really depends what you need for the specific role.

Honestly, it's all over the place depending on your industry. Tech companies will put you through like 5+ technical interviews (exhausting much?). Retail just cares if you're available weekends and won't be rude to customers. Healthcare takes forever because they're checking every credential you've ever had. Finance is nuts with compliance stuff. Startups? You might get hired after one coffee chat if they like your vibe. Some places move super fast, others drag it out for months with background checks. Really just depends what field you're in - don't copy someone else's process if it doesn't fit your industry's weirdness.

Send them a welcome email before day one with the basics - where to show up, what to expect, maybe some light reading. Most places totally drop the ball here, so you're already ahead! Map out their first few weeks covering culture stuff, job expectations, and who they need to meet. Don't dump everything on them at once though. Get them a buddy who isn't their boss for the random questions that always come up. Oh, and schedule check-ins at 30, 60, 90 days - catches problems before they become actual problems. You want them pumped to be there, not overwhelmed.

So basically you're turning recruitment into this feedback loop where you're always collecting intel from everyone - candidates, hiring managers, new hires, the whole crew. Track where your best people actually come from, which interview questions aren't total BS, how long stuff takes. Yeah it feels like more work upfront, but honestly? The patterns jump out at you pretty fast. Maybe your tech assessment is way too intense, or hiring managers keep leaving people hanging for weeks (classic). I'd just start by asking new hires what confused them most - you'd be shocked what comes up.

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