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How to Build a Candidate Pipeline That Cuts Your Cost and Time to Hire 1. Build a standout employer brand that attracts the kind of candidates you want Before you start building out your pipeline, it’s worth taking a second look at your employer brand. This can help draw the right candidates into your pipeline, doing a lot of the hard work for you. And as you start building and nurturing relationships with candidates, your employer brand may be the thing that keeps them interested and invested in your company — or turns them away. 2. Focus on skills your business recruits for repeatedly and roles that are hard to fill  The key to good pipelining is thinking strategically about which roles actually need a pipeline. This will help you avoid wasting time or resources on roles that don’t really demand a long-term strategy.  You’re likely to get the greatest return on investment from talent pipelines that focus on hard-to-fill roles or positions you hire for frequently, like those with high turnover. 3. Set clear and realistic targets for your team, based on real data Without firm targets in place, it can be hard to measure how successful your pipelining efforts have been. Setting targets also allows you to make a more compelling case for the resources you need — and helps business leaders grasp the true value of your efforts.  Hiring expert Glen Cathey recommends turning to data to calculate your team’s capacity, understand what’s realistic, and discover where your bottlenecks lie before you set your targets. Using his handy calculator, you can quickly figure out the size of the recruiting team you’d need to meet a target of, say, 20 hires per month. 4. Make sure your pipeline is filled with a diverse slate of candidates As your pipeline starts filling up, be careful to assess whether it reflects the diversity of your talent pool. A homogeneous pipeline can hold back your company’s DEI efforts, so keeping an eye on the breakdown of your candidates can help you course-correct as you go.  To diversify your pipeline, consider sourcing from schools that have focused more on students from historically marginalized communities. You can do this by building Boolean strings using a list of Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, Tribal Colleges and Universities, and women’s colleges. Add the search operator OR between each school’s name and parentheses around the list. But also note that this should merely be a first step. The U.S. Department of Education reports that about 9% of Black college students attend an HBCU while 53% attend a predominantly white institution, or PWI in educational jargon. 5. Engage your pipeline and stay in touch to keep candidates warm One of the benefits of talent pipelining is that it lets you stay in touch and build relationships with people who aren’t necessarily looking for a job right now but might be open to opportunities down the line. 

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