Join Newton Co-Founder, Joel Passen for a free webinar devoted to recruiting performance metrics. During his web-based presentation, Joel will present a guide to assist HR practitioners and recruitment outsourcers in making sense of recruiting analytics and the steps to take to get started capturing your own valuable recruiting performance metrics. With a focus on best practices, Joel will highlight the vital metrics that must be gathered as part of any successful corporate recruiting program and how to get started in your own environment.
Joel Passen is the Head of Marketing and a Co-Founder of Newton Software, a company developing corporate applicant tracking software that helps organizations improve hiring. A self-described recovering corporate recruiter, Joel has been involved in the talent acquisition industry for the past 15 years. When Joel is not thinking about recruiting, he’s either thinking about food, cooking or pretending to write a food blog. Check out Joel’s profile on LinkedIn.
Since its inception in 2009, Newton has been the innovator in recruiting analytics offering customers the most advanced real-time recruiting analytics feature available. Now, we’re happy to announce the availability of Newton’s custom reporting engine. You’ll still be able to intuitively dive into anything you want from your real-time analytics dashboard. But, for those of you that want to build, save and share customized reports, we’ve designed the applicant tracking software industry’s most powerful, easy-to-use custom reporting engine.
Report on candidate pipelines, user activity, requisitions, job postings, candidate sources, hires and more.Have a custom report that your company likes to use? Build it with Newton’s drag and drop interface, save it and run it anytime!
Reporting has traditionally been one of the biggest resource hogs. Knowing this, we created a reports-specific database in the Cloud just to run reports so crunching large data sets won’t slow you (or anyone else) down. Share recruiting metrics with anyone on your team. with one-click and you can export production quality reports to Excel.
More than ever before, human resources professionals are scrambling to collect and provide quantitative metrics to substantiate all sorts of initiatives. Many HR professionals spend time preparing analytics for the sake of being prepared with ‘data’ – metrics for the sake of metrics.
Dr. Steve McElfresh, our guest on NED this month, presents a compelling case that the real value of metrics is only achieved when combined with analytic, business oriented thinking. The development of HR Metrics can enable and support that approach to HR. But Metrics also can be, and too often is, delivered bereft of such thinking, in which case it is an empty suit, a façade that detracts from rather than enhancing HR’s credibility. What’s more, solid analytic, business-oriented thinking can be applied to great effect without formal metrics.
Join us on NED for an HR Metrics sanity check with Steve McElfresh
Dr. McElfresh is the Principal and Founder of HR Futures. He was also the President and CEO of Saratoga Institute, the leading organization providing HR-related benchmarking and performance analyses. Before Saratoga, Steve was the chief HR officer for SRI International (formerly known as Stanford Research Institute), Failure Analysis Associates, and Friden Alcatel.
He is a member of the Society for Psychologists in Management, the Academy of Management, the Forensic Expert Witness Association and the American Psychological Association. In addition, he is a moderator/facilitator for two HR YahooGroups (ROI Net and VPHR Forum) and has written editorials for the Business Journal. He is certified by SHRM as a Senior Human Resource Professional and was a charter member of SHRM’s National Panel for Human Capital Measurement and HR Metrics. He is in his eight year as Conference Chair for the Conference on Strategic HR Analytics and Metrics.
Steve has taught at the School of Management at Boston College and the Department of Psychology at the University of Massachusetts. He has served on the Boards of Directors or Advisory Boards of the Bay Area Executive Council, Pacific Graduate School of Psychology, the Forensic Expert Witness Association, and the Bay Area Organizational Development Network. He earned a Ph.D in organizational psychology from Boston College and a JD from the Santa Clara University School of Law.