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Episode 2: How to get your recruiting metrics right in 2020 ft. The Crown

Episode 2: How to get your recruiting metrics right in 2020 ft. The Crown

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Soumya Chittigala
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February 6, 2020
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3 min read
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Welcome to the second episode of #NetflixandHire where we learn some great ways on how you can get your recruiting metrics right!

For this, we’ve chosen a TV show we LOVE and we can all learn from—The Crown.

Why? Because Queen Elizabeth sums it right—“In an increasingly complex world, we all need certainty.”

P.S. If you haven't already gone through our previous episode, here you go! - Episode 1: How to drive inclusive hiring in tech ft. Orange Is the New Black

#NetflixandHire - The Crown

Source: Pop Culture Times

The show delivers an important message on how, as a leader, you are responsible not only for the well-being of yourself but everyone else around you, and that it never hurts to be informed. Through the seasons, you realize that as a constitutional monarch, Queen Elizabeth, though not having any political power, is always in a position to advise the Government. You can also see how she strives to be informed—by hiring a private tutor and staying on top of official documents—just so she can keep things in check.

Now, being a tech recruiter is no less than being a monarch. You’re tasked with connecting with the right developers, bringing in the right talent, and making sure your kingdom, (ahem) organization, flourishes. But can you be so sure of doing these things without the right metrics? We think not! In fact, the Recruitment Operations benchmark report by Yello vouches for the same.

The key takeaway—Recruitment operations is all about streamlining hiring processes, cutting costs, and driving greater efficiency.

Top 3 tracked recruiting metrics
Source: Yello

Now, let’s look at how you can measure and tackle each of the above metrics, ‘The Crown’ style:

1) Reducing your time-to-hire

“There is one thing I’ve learned in 52 years of public service is that there is no problem so complex, nor crisis so grave that it cannot be satisfactorily resolved within 20 minutes.” — Winston Churchill

#NetflixandHire - The Crown

Source: Pinterest

Did you know that 52% of the recruiters take more than 3 hours to actually make a hire! Hence time-to-hire is the first recruiting metric that we will cover.

Honestly, if Churchill could solve political emergencies in a matter of minutes, we could surely solve the time-to-hire problem with a little help.

The 2 biggest pitfalls that recruiters face when it comes to closing positions are:

  • Screening candidates
  • Scheduling interviews

How can you screen developers and schedule interviews better?

Use personality tests

From Minna’s 16 developer profiles to Hackernoon’s 9, developers exhibit a myriad of profiles. Different projects need different behaviors and value profiles apart from skills. Hence, it’s important to get to know prospective employees and their work ethic to understand if they would be the right fit for your organization. Here are some questions from Alistair Doulin’s programmer personality test that you could use.

Use skill-based assessments

Using skill-based assessments to test technical competencies is a great way of making sure that you only have the right candidates in the interview stage. It gives both recruiters and hiring managers enough bandwidth to concentrate better on testing candidates in the later stages of the interview. It is no wonder that skill-assessments can bring down your time-to-hire by 50%.

Create a take-home coding test for free

Use live video interviews

An easy and time-tested method for scheduling interviews better is to use a live video interview tool. Some cool benefits of using such a tool:

  • Scheduling interviews gets a lot simpler when assessing remote developers.
  • You can watch candidates as they code and evaluate them for job readiness.
  • With access to interview history, you always have data on hand to make the right hiring decision.

Did you know that by adding a live video interview tool in your hiring process, you can bring down your average time to hire to 10 days!

2) Decreasing your cost-per-hire

Season 3 sees Prince Charles’s investiture as the Prince of Wales and the demands of the royal family for the deployment of 15,000 troops, 21 gun salutes, and a battery of Royal Field Artillery among other things. However, the then Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, understands that a penny saved is a penny earned and he advises Charles to “Go and study there and address the country in Native Welsh” to make a more meaningful impact on the people of Wales.


Source: The Digital Weekly

It’s time we took a leaf out of Wilson’s book and saved some money by cutting down unnecessary hiring costs.

How can you reduce your hiring cost?

Did you know that recruiters spend 35% of their annual recruiting budget on external agencies to hire 10 technologists! No wonder this recruiting metric is really important to recruiters. Here are some ways on how you can reduce your hiring costs by minimizing your dependency on external agencies:

Leverage social media to build a developer brand

Prospective employees would like to know all the cool things that your company has been up to and see the kind of work culture in store for them. Setting up live Q&A sessions, building a talent pipeline using your company’s Linkedin profile and attracting Gen Z developers through Instagram, Snapchat and Pinterest could be some ways in which you can gauge their interest.

Attend local meetups

Look for local developer meetups and conferences. You can find a lot of free events in your locality on Meetup. Shortlist for events that align with your recruiting goals. You could make some connections a couple of days before the event so you know whom to spend time with on the day of the event.

Make your tech team your brand advocate

Your tech team is first-hand proof of what you stand for as a developer brand. Hence, it is very important that your developers are your strongest advocates. Try incorporating a referral program and encourage developers to share their experiences working with you to ensure a greater recall.

3) Boosting your retention rate

“Keep one eye on the future. The distant future” - King George VI

The series portrays King George VI as the monarch who rose to the occasion at the expense of his physical and mental health. You can clearly see his preparedness when he urges Churchill to let Elizabeth undertake the commonwealth tour to ease her into her future role as Queen in order to keep the monarchy standing in the case of his demise.

#NetflixandHire- The Crown
Source: Business Insider

It’s time we channeled our inner King George and thought about the future of our workforce. Is all that sweat and blood that went into recruiting your dream tech team going to waste? This brings us to our 3rd recruiting metric: retention. Taking some steps to retain your tech team for the long run is the only way forward.

How to increase retention in your tech team?

We had recently written this detailed article on how to ensure your tech talent pool is poaching proof. Here’s the gist:

  1. Provide autonomy and purpose to your developers
  2. Develop a community internally
  3. Provide perks and privileges your developers can’t say no to
  4. Have an open discussion with your employees in the incentive process
  5. Provide creative freedom and growth opportunities

There you have it—our royal advice on how to get your tech recruiting metrics right this year. Let us know if any of these solutions have helped better your hiring process in the comments below. See you soon in the next episode! Until then, #NetflixandHire 😎

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Author
Soumya Chittigala
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February 6, 2020
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3 min read
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What Gen Z Expects From HR Leaders in 2026

What Gen Z Expects From HR Leaders in 2026

Introduction

Gen Z is entering the workforce with a very different perspective on work, leadership, and career growth.

Unlike previous generations, they are not just evaluating salary packages or job titles. They are paying closer attention to workplace culture, flexibility, transparency, learning opportunities, and overall employee experience.

For HR and Talent Acquisition leaders, this shift is changing how organizations attract, engage, and retain talent.

Having entered the workforce during a period of rapid workplace transformation, Gen Z values authenticity over polished corporate messaging and meaningful experiences over traditional corporate structures.

Employer Branding Is Now About Experience

Employer branding today is no longer defined only by career pages or company values.

Gen Z pays attention to how recruiters communicate, how transparent the hiring process feels, and how employees speak about the company publicly.

For Talent Acquisition teams, recruitment is no longer just a hiring function. It has become a reflection of workplace culture itself.

Candidates today value clear communication, transparency, honest conversations around growth, and personalized experiences throughout the hiring journey.

This is also why skill-based hiring and fair evaluation processes are becoming more important for modern organizations.

Gen Z Values Authenticity

One of the biggest shifts HR leaders are noticing is that Gen Z values honesty far more than polished corporate narratives.

They want realistic conversations around career growth, workplace expectations, compensation, and learning opportunities.

Interestingly, they do not expect organizations to be perfect. What they expect is transparency and authenticity.

Younger employees quickly recognize when workplace messaging feels disconnected from reality. Organizations that communicate openly tend to build stronger trust and credibility with Gen Z talent.

Career Growth Looks Different Today

Traditional career growth models were designed around long timelines and annual reviews.

But Gen Z expects growth to feel continuous.

Instead of waiting for yearly discussions, employees want faster feedback, ongoing learning, mentorship opportunities, and clear visibility into growth from the beginning of their journey.

This means career development is no longer just part of appraisal cycles. It is becoming an everyday part of the employee experience.

Organizations investing in learning, internal mobility, and skill development are more likely to keep younger employees engaged.

Flexibility Is About Trust

For Gen Z, flexibility is no longer viewed as a workplace perk.

It is an expectation.

But flexibility goes beyond remote or hybrid work. It also includes autonomy in how employees manage work and productivity.

At its core, flexibility has become a question of trust.

Gen Z values workplaces where managers focus on outcomes instead of constant visibility or monitoring. For HR leaders, this means flexibility cannot exist only in policies. It must also exist in leadership behavior and workplace culture.

Well-Being Is Part of the Work Experience

For Gen Z employees, mental well-being is not a separate HR initiative.

It is part of the everyday employee experience.

They are quick to notice the gap between organizations talking about wellness and employees actually feeling supported.

This means HR teams need to think beyond wellness campaigns and focus more on how work itself is designed and managed.

Because employees do not experience policies. They experience culture every single day.

Final Thoughts

Gen Z is not simply changing workplace expectations. They are challenging organizations to rethink how modern work should actually function.

For HR and Talent Acquisition leaders, this creates an opportunity to build more transparent, flexible, and people-focused workplaces.

The organizations that will attract and retain Gen Z talent successfully are not necessarily the ones with the loudest employer branding or trendiest benefits.

They are the ones building cultures based on trust, authenticity, flexibility, growth, and meaningful employee experiences.

Remote, Hybrid, or Office? What Actually Works and Why

Remote vs Hybrid vs Office: What Actually Works in 2026?

Introduction

Somewhere between “you’re on mute” and badge-swiping back into office buildings, work didn’t just change, it split into choices.

Remote work. Hybrid work. Office-first culture.

Policies were rewritten again and again, but one question still dominates HR and Talent Acquisition conversations:

Are organizations building work models that genuinely improve productivity, employee experience, and retention, or simply reacting to pressure from leadership, candidates, and competitors?

The truth is, there’s no universal answer.

The Myth of the Perfect Work Model

Over the last few years, companies have learned that no single workplace model works for everyone.

Organizations that embraced fully remote work gained access to wider talent pools and improved flexibility. But many also struggled with collaboration gaps, communication fatigue, and weaker cultural connection.

Meanwhile, strict return-to-office policies brought structure and in-person collaboration back, but often at the cost of employee satisfaction and retention.

Hybrid work quickly became the middle ground. Yet in practice, hybrid is often the hardest model to execute well because it demands balance, consistency, and intentional leadership.

The real question isn’t whether remote, hybrid, or office is better.

It’s: What outcome is the organization trying to optimize for?

What HR Leaders Are Seeing

HR teams across industries are noticing a shift in how people work and what employees value.

Remote hiring has dramatically expanded access to talent beyond geographical boundaries. Talent Acquisition teams can now hire specialized talent faster and from more diverse locations.

At the same time, office environments still play an important role in onboarding, mentorship, and early-career learning. Informal conversations, quick collaboration, and day-to-day exposure are still difficult to replicate virtually.

Hybrid models try to combine both advantages, but they also introduce challenges like proximity bias, where employees who spend more time in the office often receive greater visibility and growth opportunities.

This raises an important question for HR leaders:

Are workplace policies rewarding performance or simply physical presence?

What Candidates Actually Want

Candidates today are not just choosing jobs anymore. They’re choosing lifestyles.

For many professionals, remote work represents flexibility, autonomy, and better work-life balance. For others, especially younger professionals, office environments provide structure, mentorship, and stronger human connection.

What’s interesting is that candidate preferences are becoming more nuanced.

Someone may prefer remote work but still choose a hybrid role if it offers stronger career growth. Another candidate may prioritize flexibility over compensation altogether.

For Talent Acquisition teams, this changes everything.

Work models are no longer just operational policies. They’ve become part of the employer value proposition.

Culture Is More Than a Workplace

There’s a common belief that culture only exists inside offices.

But culture isn’t tied to a physical location. It’s shaped through communication, trust, leadership, and shared experiences.

Organizations that succeed with remote work usually focus on clear communication, strong documentation, and outcome-based performance management rather than constant visibility.

Meanwhile, companies succeeding with office-first models are redefining what offices are actually meant for: collaboration, creativity, and connection instead of simply showing up at a desk.

Because if employees are commuting only to spend the day on virtual meetings, the office experience loses its purpose.

What Actually Works?

The organizations getting workplace strategy right are not obsessing over whether remote, hybrid, or office is superior.

Instead, they are focusing on intentionality.

They listen closely to employee behavior and outcomes, not just survey responses. They treat work models as evolving systems instead of fixed policies. Most importantly, they align workplace strategy with business goals and employee needs simultaneously.

That’s where the real difference lies.

Final Thoughts

The future of work isn’t remote, hybrid, or office-first.

It’s intentional, adaptable, and human-centered.

The companies that understand this won’t just attract better talent, they’ll build stronger cultures, healthier teams, and more sustainable workplaces for the future.

5 Habits That Make You Stand Out at Work

5 Habits That Make You Stand Out at Work

Standing out at work is not always about doing more. In many cases, professional success comes down to how you think, communicate, and respond under pressure.

Employees who consistently stand out in the workplace are often the ones who remain calm in difficult situations, communicate with clarity, and bring thoughtful input into conversations. These workplace habits build trust, improve leadership presence, and create long-term career growth opportunities.

The good news is that these are not natural talents reserved for a few professionals. They are habits that can be practiced, improved, and strengthened over time.

For professionals looking to improve workplace communication skills, leadership qualities, and career development, the following habits can make a significant difference.

1. Pause Before You React

One of the most important professional habits is learning how to respond calmly instead of reacting instantly.

When something goes wrong at work, the natural instinct is often to answer immediately. However, fast reactions do not always lead to effective communication or strong decision-making.

Taking a moment to:

  • Understand the situation
  • Gather context
  • Process information carefully
  • Think through your response

can help professionals communicate more clearly and avoid unnecessary confusion.

In high-pressure workplace environments, calm responses often leave a stronger impression than rushed reactions.

Professionals who stay composed during stressful moments are frequently seen as more reliable, emotionally intelligent, and leadership-ready.

2. Give Yourself Time to Think

Not every workplace question requires an instant answer.

Saying:

“Let me think about that.”

can actually make you sound more confident and thoughtful.

This simple communication habit shows that you value clarity and accuracy instead of speaking just to fill silence.

In:

  • Team meetings
  • Leadership discussions
  • Job interviews
  • Client conversations
  • Stakeholder presentations

taking time to think can improve both the quality of your response and the way people perceive your judgment.

Strong professionals are often recognized not for how quickly they respond, but for how thoughtfully they process information and communicate ideas.

This is a critical workplace communication skill that improves professional credibility over time.

3. Get Comfortable With Silence

Silence makes many people uncomfortable.

As a result, professionals often rush to fill every pause during meetings, interviews, or conversations.

But silence can actually improve communication effectiveness.

A short pause gives you time to:

  • Organize your thoughts
  • Deliver stronger responses
  • Improve clarity
  • Communicate with more intention
  • Reduce unnecessary overexplaining

Professionals who are comfortable with silence often appear:

  • More composed
  • More self-assured
  • More confident under pressure
  • Better at executive communication

especially in high-stakes professional situations.

Learning how to stay calm during silence is an underrated but valuable professional development skill.

4. Ask One Thoughtful Question

You do not need to speak the most to stand out at work.

Sometimes, one thoughtful question creates more impact than a long explanation.

Thoughtful questions can:

  • Reveal blind spots
  • Improve team discussions
  • Encourage strategic thinking
  • Demonstrate leadership potential
  • Show strong critical thinking skills

Employees who ask meaningful questions are often viewed as more engaged, analytical, and solution-oriented.

This is one of the fastest ways to leave a memorable impression in workplace conversations and professional meetings.

Strong leaders are not only recognized for giving answers.

They are also recognized for asking the right questions.

5. Keep Your Communication Clear and Concise

One of the most valuable workplace skills is clear and concise communication.

Overexplaining can weaken even strong ideas.

Professionals who stand out in the workplace are often the ones who communicate with structure, simplicity, and clarity.

They focus on:

  • What matters
  • Why it matters
  • What action is needed

without adding unnecessary complexity.

Clear communication improves:

  • Workplace collaboration
  • Leadership presence
  • Team alignment
  • Professional confidence
  • Decision-making conversations

In modern workplaces, communication skills are often just as important as technical expertise.

The ability to explain ideas clearly is a major differentiator for career growth and leadership development.

Why These Workplace Habits Matter

These habits sound simple, but they become difficult to apply when the pressure is real.

In:

  • Job interviews
  • High-pressure meetings
  • Leadership conversations
  • Workplace conflict situations
  • Client presentations

people often rush, overtalk, or respond before fully thinking through the situation.

That is why practice matters.

Professional communication skills improve through repetition, structured feedback, and realistic practice environments.

Employees who consistently practice these habits often become more confident communicators and stronger workplace contributors over time.

Practice Before the Pressure Is Real

If you want to improve how you think and communicate under pressure, you need opportunities to practice those moments before they actually matter.

HackerEarth OnScreen (AI Interviewer) helps professionals build workplace communication skills, interview confidence, and structured thinking through realistic AI-led interview experiences.

The platform helps professionals:

  • Practice answering questions clearly
  • Improve communication under pressure
  • Structure thoughts effectively
  • Build interview confidence
  • Develop executive communication skills
  • Get comfortable with pauses and silence
  • Improve professional speaking habits

It is not only designed for interview preparation.

It also helps professionals strengthen the workplace habits that improve career growth, leadership readiness, and communication confidence.

👉 Try HackerEarth OnScreen and practice the habits that help you stand out when it matters most.

Final Thought

Standing out at work is not about being the loudest person in the room.

It is about being:

  • Thoughtful
  • Clear
  • Calm under pressure
  • Confident in communication
  • Intentional in your responses

Professionals who consistently develop these habits often build stronger workplace relationships, better leadership presence, and long-term career success.

And the more you practice these habits, the more naturally they appear in the moments that shape your professional growth and career opportunities.

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