Private sector steps in to help agencies with hiring
Three federal agencies are undergoing extreme hiring makeovers, thanks to the Partnership for Public Service, a Washington nonprofit that has convinced private and public sector hiring experts to donate their services to help agencies attract top applicants and bring them on board quickly.
The three agencies, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the National Nuclear Security Administration and the Education Department, will rely on the firms to diagnose problems in recruiting and hiring processes and implement solutions. Agency representatives expect to start seeing results by the end of the year, and hope that the hiring makeovers will yield significant benefits by the end of 2005. The partnership, funded by New Jersey businessman Samuel Heyman, encourages Americans to consider careers in public service and helps agencies extend their outreach efforts.
Partnership Executive Vice President Kevin Simpson said that historically, government has "done a poor job of selling itself." Managers, he added, are "too removed from the process... [and] need to take ownership and partner with [agency] human resources staff," rather than rely on the HR office completely.
The organizations that have volunteered their services include Monster Government Solutions, ePredix, AIRS, CPS Human Resource Services and Brainbench.
Surveys of graduating college seniors have shown that even as new graduates are eager to work in public service, most are reluctant to wait more than a few weeks to receive a government job offer when they already have a private sector offer in hand.
"My big 'ah-hah' moment came 15 days into the job," said Terri Shaw, head of the Education Department's Office of Federal Student Aid, who spent 22 years in the private sector before joining the department two years ago. "The time it takes from A to Z is incredibly too long," she said. "We don't have that kind of luxury.... You lose so many talented people."
Shaw is working with CPS Human Resource Services to diagnose the department's problem. The firm is holding focus groups with managers, applicants and new hires to identify bottlenecks.
John Dyer, chief operating officer at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said his agency was looking to hire about 200 people as it rolls out the new prescription drug benefit program for seniors. "Our managers were complaining that they couldn't find [qualified] people," he said. As a result, the firms have assisted CMS in designing job fairs, and are in the process of developing assessment tools to help the agency evaluate candidates for information technology positions.
The volunteers are helping the National Nuclear Security Administration spice up unappealing job announcements. After years of downsizing, the agency -- which oversees U.S. nuclear stockpiles -- began recruiting again and found that it would only get a handful of applicants for openings. "We were not reaching the marketplace, or we'd forgotten how to reach the marketplace," said Associate Administrator Michael Kane.
According to Roger Campbell, Monster's director of human capital strategy, the expert team hopes to help the agencies put in place "repeatable processes and programs" that would outlast the makeover and provide future benefits.
COMMENTS
- After being stuck in a dead-end GS-5 job for 4 years and applying for several positions, I have come to the sad conclusion that it's not what you know, it's who you know. Tired of sending applications into a black hole and wasting my time. I am totally turned off with the process, and am setting my sights on the private sector, local or state govt, or even a contractor. As for the contractors, if you can't beat them, join them, right? GovExec.com reader Posted December 6, 2004 9:01 AM
- I have tried for many years to join the federal government in IT management role and it comes down to the mountains and mountains of forms, questions etc that you must fill out and submit to even be considered. It's also trying to understand the questions and qualifications section of the job announcement, it's a puzzle in and of itself. Then it's not what you know, it's who you know and whether or not you are already a government employee. It's beyond stupid and it makes anyone turned off to the whole notion of government service. Anyone you talk with who has tried to get their foot in the door will tell you the same thing! Tom Gainer Posted September 21, 2004 3:46 PM
- I joined the government 12 years ago after retiring from the private sector. I have better experience than most of the SESers in the government. The government does not count that experience as being of value because it is not government experience (heaven forbid they change anything so it is better run). In government you get paid and promoted for having a large number of people and/or a large budget (guess what government people do ?). They try to take over people or hire them and they spend money like it is going out of style! Finally, they work to keep their job - everything is important and they are busy all the time - BS. Here is a big hiring problem - I have applied for three jobs since I joined the government. I heard absolutely nothing on every application. The application was not acknowledged and there was no information about what happened. It is like sending information into a black hole! I have stopped applying even though I know I can do many of the jobs better than those hired! Also, the managers hire their friends and not applicants that are qualified. If no friend applies you might have a chance at a position but that assumes that hiring is the manager's top priority at the time you information gets there. Now I do not have to hire anyone because I can get a contractor to do the work - that way I get people (the contractor) and money (the amount showing on the contract). The amount on the contract looks far better to everyone evaluating me than does civ pay if I hire a government employee. Go figure. tax payer Posted September 16, 2004 7:50 AM
RELATED STORIES
- Senate panel approves military-civilian pay parity 09/09/04
- OPM official cites ongoing concerns over use of hiring flexibilities 08/12/04
- Study shows human resources outsourcing on the rise 08/11/04
- OPM studies show heightened interest in federal careers 07/01/04
- Committee approves workforce flexibility bill 06/25/04









