Healthcare has become one of India's largest sectors, both in terms of revenue and employment. Apart from a significant growth in job opportunities, talent challenges have intensified. Add to it another layer of complexity i.e. an increase in automation and work becoming increasingly specialised. To sustain and enable industry growth, there is a need for a pipeline of capable people, who can effectively perform specialised and niche functions. The need for different skills calls for hiring strategies to be innovative and predictive. As skill sets like medical coding, alternate medicines, physical sciences, and pain management are becoming more coveted in the healthcare services industry, the approach to acquire them is also becoming more personalised. According to a recent media report, job opportunities for Artificial intelligence and Robotics experts is all set to grow at a very high rate pertaining to the demand of these skills across industries. In healthcare too, the demand of skilled experts will increase considering how IoT and telemedicine services take an upward leap. To mitigate the challenge of hiring the right talent, it is important for organisations to understand potential candidates in a much-better way and design their recruitment strategies accordingly through introduction of new age hiring tools.
Campus recruitment programmes: Companies concentrating on campus recruitments have dedicated teams that work on sourcing and managing promising contenders. Premium talent from the campus is tagged, vetted, and nurtured for future roles. This practice proves very effective to a company’s talent sourcing strategy and provide access to a broader talent landscape. Healthcare companies hire graduates from leading campuses and train them for medical coding certifications through in-house academies. Generally, the intake from campuses is based on a strong selection mechanism mapped to skill and competency matrix. This selection framework consists of two filters –gauging the reasoning, numerical and language capabilities of applicants, and second, evaluating selected candidates for their cultural fitment. Deploying social gaming recruitment solutions such as hackathons, which challenges programmers to test themselves against their peers, is another valued selection program at campuses.
Bridging the experience gap: Besides employers’ preference for physicians with two to five years of field experience, fresh medical talent has become a chief recruitment pipeline. To bridge this experience gap, organisations are creating robust physician referral programmes to reward existing employees for referring a physician for an open position. This programme highly improves the chances of an experienced physician joining the organisation since their colleague is already an employee there.
Moving beyond the mundane: With the fast changing job scenario, employee referrals may simply not be enough to acquire quality hires. Employers are engaging extensively with millennials through new age social networks, and offering them incentives like company leases for house/car, ample relocation assistance, and sign-on bonuses etc. These added benefits to the base salary give the organization a competitive advantage in medical recruitment.
Replacement to recruitment mode: No matter how novel the hiring strategy is, it will not come to life unless there is a shift from ‘replacement’ to ‘recruitment’ mode. Talent acquisition and retention have become all-encompassing. This means that companies that evolve with better people culture and practices are sustainable overall and can retain employees. Being in the healthcare sector, there is a need for companies to extensively promote wellness at work and encourage employees and their families to maintain healthy lifestyles. It is a value proposition that contributes greatly to talent attraction and retention.
Analytics is now driving recruitment strategies across industries. Individual-specific insights, salary trends, identification of talent pools and new age knowledge sharing through data mining which helps organisations in decision-making. Utilizing analytics to make the recruitment process more contextual, proactive and predictive. Companies are also extensively bridging the gap for new talent with company leadership for sourcing specialized skills. These opportunities not only help candidates to understand the culture, strategy and vision of the organisation but also facilitate their assessment by employers in informal settings. Other niche skills where hiring is witnessing a peak are in the areas of analytics, data sciences and machine learning which will gain higher momentum in 2018.
Is your organisation post-COVID-ready?
Trending
-
SBI General Insurance Launches Digital Health Campaign
-
CredR Rolls Out 'Life Happens' Leave For Its Employees
-
Meesho Announces 30-Week Gender-Neutral Parental Leave Policy
-
Microsoft Unveils Tech Resilience Curriculum To Foster An Inclusive Future
-
60% Indian Professionals Looking For Job Change Due To COVID: Survey
-
SpringPeople And Siemens Collaborate For Digital Transformation Push
-
86% Professionals Believe Hybrid Work Is Essential For Work Life Balance: Report
-
Almost 1 In Every 3 People's Personal Life Affected Due To Work Stress
-
Meesho Rolls Out Reset And Recharge Policy For Employees
-
80% Of Talent Leaders & Academics Say Pandemic Changed Skill Needs For Youth: Report
-
Hero Electric Rolls Out 'Hero Care' Program For Employees
-
Human Capital In Collaboration With ASSOCHAM Hosts Virtual Conference
-
IKEA India, Tata STRIVE Collaborate To Create Employability And Entrepreneurship Opportunities
-
SAP India, Microsoft Launch Tech Skilling Program for Young Women
-
DXC Technology, NASSCOM Collaborate For Employability Skills Program
-
Lenskart To Hire Over 2000 Employees Across India By 2022
-
Mindtree Launches Learn-and-Earn Program
-
Tata AIA Extends 'Raksha Ka Teeka' To Its Employees
-
Swadesh Behera Is The New CPO Of Titan
-
NetConnect Global Plans To Recruit 5000 Tech Professionals In India
-
Hubhopper Plans To Hire 60% Of Indian Podcasters By 2022
-
Corporate India Needs More Women In Leadership Roles: Report
-
Aon to Invest $30 Million and Create 10,000 Apprenticeships by 2030
-
Tech Mahindra Launches ‘Gift a Career’ Initiative for Upskilling of Youth
-
40% Women Prefer Flexible Working Options in Post-COVID World: Survey
-
3 out of 4 companies believe they can effectively hire employees virtually: Report
-
Vodafone , CGI and NASSCOM Foundation launch digital skills platform
-
Odisha: Bank, postal employees to deliver cash for elderly, differently-abled persons
-
Skill India launches AI-based digital platform for "Skilled Workforce"
-
Hiring activity declines 6.73% in first quarter: Survey
-
70% startups impacted by COVID-19 pandemic
-
Bajaj Allianz Life ropes in Santanu Banerjee as CHRO
-
Over 70 Percent MSMEs look at cutting jobs to sustain businesses
-
93 Per Cent employees stressed about returning to office post-lockdown
-
Johnson & Johnson India announces family benefits for same gender partners
-
Indian firms turning friendly towards working mothers
-
Welspun India names Rajendra Mehta as new CHRO
-
Wipro partners with NASSCOM to launch Future Skills platform
Human Capital is niche media organisation for HR and Corporate. Our aim is to create an outstanding user experience for all our clients, readers, employers and employees through inspiring, industry-leading content pieces in the form of case studies, analysis, expert reports, authored articles and blogs. We cover topics such as talent acquisition, learning and development, diversity and inclusion, leadership, compensation, recruitment and many more.
Subscribe Now
Comment