Dec 17, 2014

New assignment - focused on employer branding leveraging social media

Here's an update - I have joined Flipkart as Director - Talent Branding. In this role, I would be driving the Talent Branding initiatives of Flipkart across various talent segments. I would also be responsible for creating, enhancing, maintaining virtual presence of Flipkart's Talent Acquisition team through channels like career site, job portals, and social platforms

Here's the coverage on Social Samosa
And yes, I have relocated to Bangalore and looking forward to my third stint in the city :)

Dec 12, 2014

HR Director salaries in India

So I was poking about the Payscale site yesterday and discovered this chart about HR Director salaries in India reported by 260 individuals apparently with that designation.



My first thought, some thing is wrong.

Yes, it is a crowdsourced report and there can be people overstating their designations (and as someone pointed out) maybe smaller firms gave fancier designations and low salary.

But the low end and the median look too low - or maybe the data is skewed. What do you think?

Dec 11, 2014

"Like" my Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/HR.Blogger - 2000 and counting

In case you don't know, I operate a Facebook page called, er, quite unimaginatively "Gautam Ghosh" where I share interesting news and updates linked to HR, the future of work and careers.

So if you want to be updated about what I am reading and finding interesting these days - just head over to that page and "like" it :)


At the most I post twice a day - and with Facebook's algorithms working the way they are, it's likely you might not even see an update :) 

Top 50 HR Blogs to read in 2015

The folks at HR Software Insight compiled a list of top 50 HR Blogs to read in 2015 and this blog was listed there :)

Yeah, that makes me happy :)

Go ahead check out the list - there are many high quality blogs that you might love subscribing to ! 

Dec 3, 2014

The collaboration code. #ihrchat in the news

If you're in HR and active on Twitter then you know that there's an active Twitter chat called #ihrchat moderated by Tanvi Gautam. Last week the topic was on collaboration and the guest was Essar Group's HR Head Aadil Malia.

Tanvi then also wrote an article recaping the chat for Mint. And yours truly is quoted :)

Gautam Ghosh (@GautamGhosh), a social media HR leader, noted how the archetype of the lone creator was a myth, yet organizations often didn’t reward collaboration.
Ghosh shared the way to an information and image management model that lays out the life cycle of collaboration: 
  • Awareness: We become part of a working entity with a shared purpose
  • Motivation: We drive to gain consensus in problem-solving or development
  • Self-synchronization: We decide as individuals when things need to happen
  • Participation: We participate in collaboration and we expect others to participate
  • Mediation: We negotiate and we collaborate to find a middle point
  • Reciprocity: We share and we expect sharing in return through reciprocity
  • Reflection: We think and we consider alternatives
  • Engagement: We proactively engage rather than wait and see.

Nov 27, 2014

Lessons in Failure in #HRTech and #SocialRecruiting

I somehow missed this news. Remember BranchOut, which was touted as the LinkedIn for Facebook?

Well looks like the company is dying (or is already dead). According to TechCrunch:

The company’s assets have been acquired by 1-Page, an HR software company based out of San Francisco but listed on the Australian stock exchange. Based on today’s stock price, 1-Page is paying around $5.4 million — $2 million in cash and 7.5 million in 1-Page shares.

The lesson? Don't build your product on someone's proprietary platform.

My friend Maren Hogan has a useful blog post for people who are too much in love with their HR Tech product the above being one point. It's useful if you are developing any product for any B2B market. One point that I resonate and see many startups who approach me is that they think "like a disgruntled customer" - now that might work in the B2C market but usually fails in the B2B product market, specially if you have never worked on the other side of the stakeholder equation.

As my friend and ex-colleague Dave Martin says "Recruitment is a multi-dimensional sell full of waste"

Lots of Indian HR/Recruitment startup examples too that have shut shop or have had to "pivot" to entirely new areas. 

Getting the Distinguished Alumnus award from XLRI

This month I was humbled and honored when my alma mater XLRI said they wanted to give me an award for being a Distinguished Alumnus - Young Achiever.

At first I thought someone was playing a joke on me. But after some digging around I found that the email was legit. The Director of XLRI, Fr. E. Abraham had actually emailed me.

So on 8th November I walked up to the stage of the Tata Auditorium at XLRI (where I last collected my MBA diploma)

Collecting the award from Rana Sinha, Fr. E. Abraham and Prof. Sharad Sarin

Lifetime Achievement award was given to B L Raina, CEO of Tinplate Company of India, David D’Costa, Founder of Pure Water House, Mario Lobo, Founder of Personnel Search Services.

Distinguished Alumnus Award was divided among the categories of Practicing Manager, Academician, Young Achiever, Entrepreneur, Public Service, Communication & performing Arts.

The recipients of this award in various categories were

  • Madhukar Kamath MD of DDB Mudra 
  • Rekha Menon Managing Director for Geographic Operations for ASEAN, India & APAC Delivery Centers at Accenture 
  • Johnson Alexander irector, Human Resources and Quality,Health, Safety & Environment at Dulsco
  • Dr. N S Rajan CHRO of the Tata Group
  • S V Nathan, Director of Talent at Deloitte
  • Sandeep Bakshi, MD and CEO of ICICI Prudential
  • Ajay Kaul, CEO of Jubilant FoodWorks
  • Dr. Girish Punj, Marketing Professor at University of Connecticut
  • Kannan Srinivasan, Prof of Marketing at Carnegie Mellon University
  • Sanjeev Kapoor, Chief Marketing Officer & Country Head - Customer Franchise Management at Citi
  • Kumar Ankit, Co-Founder and Executive Director, Green Leaf Energy Pvt. Ltd
  • Ronald D’Costa, ‎Owner, The Boulevard Hotel
  • Vivek Das, Advertising Photographer
  • Ashraf Patel, Founder of Pravah and the Youth Collective
  • Vikram Misri (IFS), Currently the Ambassador to Kingdom of Spain
  • Ankur Gupta(IAS)
  • Ministhy Nair IAS
  • Mohan Raman, Actor
  • Akash Khurana, Actor and Screenwriter
  • Gargi Banerji, Co-Founder of Pragya




It was fascinating to talk to the students and see how many things (student batch size, new courses, the institute logo and branding) have changed and yet the core values of the institute remain the same.

We had a semi structured interaction with the students on HR as a career and what is the future of the function. Dr, Jitu Singh brought up Ram Charan's article recently and a lively debate ensued. The increase in importance of Industrial Relations after incidents in NCR over the last few years was also discussed.



Some more pics from the event:



(Above pics are courtesy the XLRI Alumni Committee)

Nov 26, 2014

The Dichotomy of Silicon Valley

Two news items over the last day caught my attention. The startups in Silicon Valley, flush with VC funding and scrambling for talent are creating a new role, a person specially to look after "employee perks"! And I don't think it's an HR role.



Skeptics say the return on investment from bending over backward to meet employee demands and whims is mixed.
Workers enthralled by a blowout summer picnic might not be the ones a company most wants to keep, says Iwan Barankay, an associate professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School who has been a corporate consultant on non-monetary workplace incentives.
In addition, “frustration can set in quickly” if freebies abound but the company won’t hand out raises, he says.
Another problem: At companies where pampering employees has always been part of the culture, it is hard to stop if business turns sour. Zynga Inc. shares have fallen more than 80% since 2012 as the game maker struggles to find a follow-up hit to “Farmville.” Before going public in 2011, Zynga began serving lunch and dinner daily to its employees, using specialty ingredients like Japanese Kewpie mayonnaise and pinecone syrup.
On the other hand there are Facebook shuttle bus drivers who get paid $18/hour and are unionizing to get more wages to live in one of the most expensive places in the world.

San Jose State University sociology professor Scott Myers-Lipton said he thinks the joining of a union by the 84 full- and part-time drivers could signal to other lower-wage workers that union representation may be a way to narrow the income gap in the Valley.
"Wages have remained stagnant while these top tech icons are booming and showing record profits," Myers-Lipton said. "Average Americans are saying that they just want to share in the growth that's going on around them, especially here in Silicon Valley."
For some activists, the shuttles that transport thousands of city workers each day to Silicon Valley have become a symbol of economic inequality, rising housing costs and evictions in San Francisco and they have targeted them while protesting gentrification in the San Francisco Bay Area.

So what does that say about "the market"? What could this huge disparity lead to? Your thoughts?

Nov 5, 2014

Enterprise Social Networking - the focus on collaboration and driven by HR

So yesterday I gave a talk to 12 HR heads at Bangalore which was organized by Microsoft on my thoughts on enterprise social networking in organizations. I was surprised to discover that many HR leaders were looking at driving it for their organizations

Here are some points I made

  • Enterprise Social helps to make implicit knowledge explicit
  • Focusing on communities rather than networks is key
  • Sharing within the enterprise is a test of vulnerability - and is dependent on community management and organizational culture and ecosystem
  • Every organization will need to discover its own "use case" for enterprise networking
  • Only when employees discover that it helps them get their work done better and faster that its adoption will skyrocket - so key skill of community manager is to help employees discover that
  • Social recognition and adoption by leadership drives engagement and adoption
  • Organizations need to listen and "discover" their experts that they don't even know they have

My friend Sheel shared how Microsoft used Yammer internally to have difficult conversations and the culture was key to having open conversations. I was also fascinated to learn about how United Breweries HR team led by my friend Suvro had spearheaded Yammer adoption (75% of employees including blue collar workers are on Yammer)- take a look at the video below :)



United Breweries Limited: Brewing up enterprise social success from Yammer on Vimeo.

Update from Suvro: "what we do is that we publish on behalf of our associates (workmen) anything worthy of publishing....but from an access level, it is only for white collared ones"

Oct 29, 2014

On demergers -quoted in the Business Standard @bsindia

The folks at Business Standard did a story on demergers and asked me for an opinion on how organizations could do it better, some excerpts:


According to independent HR consultant Gautam Ghosh, "A corporate spin-off is not necessarily bad news for employees. The problem is that many organisations do not communicate a demerger strategy to their employees proactively. In fact, in my experience, even some MNCs, known otherwise for their professional management practices, fail to share a clear roadmap with their country or regional offices making the whole process painful and fraught with risks." Ghosh warns communication that is one-way is not good enough. "A company that runs a global business should consult the leaders of all the countries to assess the HR implications of tough business decisions. This will help them avoid bad press," adds Ghosh.

Oct 17, 2014

Some Twitter conversations on Social Media, Job Hunting and HR

Today was an interesting day - I was invited by Tech Mahindra to be a guest on their #TechMChat on Social HR. 
So here are some thoughts I shared and the questions I answered

Earlier in the day I also jumped into CareerBuilder's tweet on Social Media for job search. Some tweets are here:


Sep 28, 2014

Looking for my next gig

So after one and a half years with Philips in two roles I am ready for the next challenge. What can I do?


  • I can help HR teams leverage social technologies for employer branding, social recruiting, social recognition, internal communications and social learning
  • I can help HR technology vendors craft their marketing strategy, find partners and get to the right decision makers
  • I can connect vendors and clients to influencers in the media and social media world to make an impact
Interested in what I can offer? Email me at gautam dot ghosh at gmail dot com 

Twitter and Blogging for Learning & Development Leaders

Last week I was invited to present to a group of global learning leaders of a BPO/KPO firm on my Twitter and Blogging journey.

This is the presentation I made.

Looking forward to your feedback


Sep 1, 2014

Indian HR is ready for the Tech Revolution - thoughts from #TechHR14


Around 10 days ago I attended India's first ever Tech HR conference organized by People Matters in Gurgaon. I was privileged to be invited to speak at the unconference track in the event and host a Google Hangout with analysts Alan Lepofsky and Holger Mueller. It was also an opportunity to listen to industry leaders like Abhijit Bhaduri, Frank Ricciardi, Debjani Ghosh, Anand Pillai and Sameer Patel. I was also looking to catch up with innovative learning professionals and friends Kavi Arasu and Sunder Ramachandran.

Here's my takeaway:


  • HR Technology is simplifying. The large players are moving to the cloud from on-premise and HR's dependence on the IT function is reducing. Most of this tech even between solutions by different vendors is becoming easy to integrate.
  • HR leaders are increasingly seeing technology not with the earlier view of "eliminating inefficiencies" but understand that tech will transform HR and the workplace.
  • There was a lot of talk about big data and analytics - but I missed the sessions. However I believe that soon we will see a lot of different kinds of people working in HR, like data scientists. 
  • Employees will expect technology to be easy to use, intuitive and not go through a learning curve to use it, and for it to work across devices.
  • There are quite a few HR Tech startups in the Talent Acquisition and Employee Engagement space. Some that caught my eye were Jombay, Talent Auction. Now it is incumbent on HR leaders to try out such innovative Indian startups.
Do check out the PDF report put together by the People Matters team about the event. Also read Sameer Patel's perspective on difference between the HR conversation in India with the US. A post by Rakshita on my session.

Aug 26, 2014

Panel on Social HR at @SMWMumbai on 23rd Sept #SMWMumbai

So I'll be speaking on a panel discussion on "Social HR" at Social Media Week Mumbai 2014.
My fellow panelists would be:


  • Heather Saville Gupta - Chief Talent Officer, 120 Media Collective (Moderator for the panel) 
  • Madhur Ramani - Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Stratum Consulting 
  • Ranjit Nair- Founder and CEO, Germin8 
  • Suveer Bajaj - Co-Founder and Director, FoxyMoron
Do check out the other panels and talks here, and the list of speakers here. If you are in Mumbai do try to join us!


Aug 24, 2014

Hangout with @alanlepo and @holgermu on "Emerging Trends in HR Tech & the Future of Work"

During the recent TechHR Conference organized by People Matters I had the pleasure of interviewing Constellation Research's analysts Alan Lepofsky and Holger Mueller

Here's the Google Hangout video of the conversation with Alan and Holger

Aug 20, 2014

Attend the #TechHR14 expo and Unconference for free on 22nd Aug at Gurgaon

Am so excited that the People Matters' team is organizing India's first conference focused on HR technology called The Tech HR Conference on 22nd August at The Leela Gurgaon.

If you're in the Delhi/NCR area and can't pay for the conference don't fret! You can still attend the Expo and the Unconference for free! Details here

I would be doing some stuff in the unconference :) For one I would be moderating a Google Hangout with Constellation Research Group's Alan Lepofsky and Holger Mueller and we are going to discuss about the Global emerging trends in the area of HR Technology and how future of work is going to look.

In addition I would be also giving a talk on how HR and other professionals can leverage emerging social technologies for their own professional development and success.

And there's going to be lots of other fun stuff too :)

Jul 30, 2014

Apps to get the best Twitter experience

Getting to understand Twitter and using it well is not easy, since it is not a "social/professional networking site" but rather an "information stream". Here are some of the tools that I use along with Twitter to have a great Twitter experience.

1. Tweetdeck

Tweetdeck was one of the third party clients which got acquired by Twitter. And it is the primary interface by which I use Twitter on the desktop. As you can see it makes your different streams visible on the same screen and you can add various columns to make twitter work most usefully for you. Tweetdeck also helps you post from multiple accounts, schedule posts, and mute and filter tweets. Go head over to http://tweetdeck.twitter.com and sign up for a better Twitter experience.











2. Mobile Apps for your Smartphone

Twitter has its own apps for the major smartphone platforms - and one of the real time feature of Twitter is most useful on the mobile. These apps are connected to camera and therefore make easy sharing of pics on to Twitter. Very useful when you are stuck in traffic or see something interesting :) Go here and download

3. Content sharing apps

Buffer and Klout are two applications I use to share and schedule content to Twitter. Both are also great content discovery platforms. Install their browser extensions and when you come across a great article you want to share click on the extension. If you use a RSS Feedreader like Feedly you will also see icons to share posts via buffer and other apps.

4. URL Shortener - Bit.ly

Yes Twitter has its own URL shortening system - but Bit.ly is when you want to keep a track of stats of the links you have shared. Specially useful if you are using Twitter for business reasons.

5. Searching Twitter Bios - Followerwonk

Twitter's own search is quite effective - however there is one thing it can't do very well - searching Bios on Twitter. For that there's Followerwonk.

6. Comparing common followers and following - Twiangulate

Twinagulate makes it easy for you to track the common followers and common followers between two accounts.

7. Managing very active and inactive accounts - ManageFlitter

ManageFlitter has lots of great tools like knowing what time you should post, whom to follow and unfollow - from the very active to the inactives. It also tells you which time you should post for maximum visibility. And like Followerwonk has a great Search for Bio capability.

Jul 27, 2014

What I learned after twelve years of blogging :)

So this month I completed 12 years of blogging on - well- my blog :)
It has been quite a roller coaster ride with 2964 blog posts over these 12 years. The real "golden age" of blogging was in the 2004-2007 era before the arrival of social and information networks like Facebook and Twitter.
So what did I learn during these 12 years of putting my thoughts out for faceless readers. Here are some thoughts

1. It's a global world

When I started blogging about HR issues I had no idea who all were blogging about the area. I discovered the ability to find out who was linking to your blog and realised that some recruiting and HR bloggers were linking to my blog from Canada and US. After that I discovered bloggers in the UK, Singapore, Australia. Over the last few years the readership of the my blog has been quite global - see these stats! Indian readership is actually second after the US!

2. It takes a community to succeed

Carried on from the first point - it is vital to find a group of like minded innovators to form a community and connect with each other and support. Without the community one would also run out of things to blog about - and learn new things. A blog is basically a many to many conversation and other bloggers are key to making a blog vibrant and sharable.

3. Give first, expect nothing

A blog is about sharing without the expectation of getting anything in return. My personal experience is akin to sharing half-formed thoughts - like a pot made fresh of clay - and putting it out in the baking heat of public commentary. The feedback only makes the thought better.

4. Find a personal "voice"

Since a blog is conversational - don't make it sound monotonous and "corporatese". Finding a "voice" that is typically you is key for blogging. It could be humour, a sardonic style or straight talking. It humanises the blog, makes the reader aware - even if he/she can't see you that there is a person behind that content and not a "content churning machine".

5. Attention does not scale

I read this statement in Clay Shirky's book "Here comes everybody" - and it's true. When you start out blogging you respond to every comment, every visitor who connects with you. However as the number of visitors and commentors increase it gets very difficult to maintain that human touch. On top of that your blog is being shared on Facebook and Twitter and multiple other networks.

Here's why you should become active on Twitter

Among Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter the three big "social networks" I spend the most amount of time on Twitter.
And I think you should too.
Many people who have tried Twitter can't carry on and abandon it. It's not easy and intuitive to understand as Facebook and LinkedIn. Both of these networks have language we can understand - friends and connections. Both parties must agree before they are friends or connections. However Twitter has "followers" and "following" (I follow 500+ people while 15,300+ follow me) which don't make sense to many people. We are not used to non-reciprocal relationships in real life usually.
But if you persist Twitter can be an enormously useful tool for networking and learning. Here is how:

1. You can interact with Thought Leaders

I don't mean the garden variety of thought leaders. I mean the real deal. People like Tom Peters. Yes, I've had conversations with Tom Peters on Twitter. 10 years ago I would have had to pay a hefty fee to just listen to Tom Peters if he was visiting my country to listen to him. Where else can you do that, eh? There's Ken Blanchard, Clayton Christensen, Robin Sharma all active on Twitter.

2. You can follow experts in your industry

You know that picky guy who won't accept your LinkedIn connection request. Well, if he's active on Twitter you can follow his updates without waiting for his "permission" (unless he's kept his account protected - in which case he doesn't get the point of Twitter anyway) It's a great tool specially if you are exploring business partnerships or pitching to him to be a client.

3. Participate in Tweetchats for Learning

A tweetchat is a series of tweets - in which many people post about a pre-decided topic and moderated by a moderator using a "hashtag" - which is like an anchor text to find tweets about that topic. For example I participate in HR oriented Tweetchats like #IndiaHRchat #HRtrends and #chrdx. There are chats about customer service, PR and every industry. Participating in tweetchats can be an incredible learning opportunity as well as networking.

4. Get to know what's happening around you

The real-time nature of Twitter makes is a fertile ground for breaking news. It helps that many journalists and editors are active on Twitter and you get to know things before the mainstream media does. The most useful accounts in that respect for me are the Traffline accounts that share which roads in which city are jammed due to traffic and which roads to avoid.

5. Utilize non-productive time in Tweeting

Many people who join Twitter say they don't find time to tweet. However using Twitter apps on the phone can make many non-productive/frustrating time (like being stuck in traffic or waiting in a queue) very productive.

6. Whom you follow defines what your twitter experience is like

You might follow someone because they tweet interesting stuff but after sometime you can look and see that that they are no longer very interesting. Don't feel shy about unfollowing people who tweet a lot or tweet stuff that is no longer interesting for you. Also stay away from people who are regularly whining and negative.

7. Share interesting content

After a period of time you will find people following you. Understand their interests and interact with them. Share content that you come across on the internet that they might find useful. Use browser extensions from Buffer and Klout to easily schedule content at specific times.

8. Use Twitter lists to find people to follow

Many people have curated lists of people on twitter. For example I have a list of 525 Indian HR professionals on Twitter and 60 Social Media professionals. In fact you can find every kind of list on Twitter. Use them to find relevant people to follow.
So what are you waiting for, join us on twitter! Happy tweeting :)

Jun 30, 2014

How to become a Billionaire by Selling Nothing by Aditya Magal @jhunjhunwala : Book Review

how to become a billionaire by selling nothing
I have "known" Aditya Magal for many years - in a strange way. We are blogging and later Twitter buddies. But till a year or so ago I only knew him by his online personal "The Fake Jhunjhunwala" (Blog, Twitter) - where he took on the persona of the famed stockbroker Rakesh Jhunjhunwala. With that hilarious take on not just the capital markets but current affairs too, the blog and then the twitter account were runaway hit (currently he has 81k followers on Twitter) In fact the Forbes India magazine was confused if the man and the persona were indeed different.

And then two years ago, the cat was out of the blog. The blog was started by my friend Mark Fidelman who after he left India handed over the blog to Aditya to run. And Aditya got to meet the real RJ as well :)



With that context (and disclaimer that Aditya is an online friend) - when Aditya said he was writing a book and wanted to send me a copy I readily agreed.

The premise of the book is that a seemingly crazy person approached Rakesh Jhunjhunwala saying he wants investment to create a company that will manufacture and sell "Nothing". Convinced that the fellow is mad Jhunjhunwala writes him a cheque of Rs. 1 lakh to see a good psychiatrist. However the entrepreneur says that Rakesh Jhunjhunwala has invested in his company and then lists the company - and everyone wants to buy shares in the company making the entrepreneur a billionaire.

What happens after that is the crux of the story and Aditya uses "Nothing" as a metaphor to make acerbic and insightful comments from the state of marketing and sales, our preoccupation with greed and material wealth, the politician-business nexus, the way pricing is done to manipulate sales, how customers are hoodwinked, how meaningless movies are made, how litigation is manipulated etc.

Which is not to say the book is great. There are passages that get repititive include Jhunjhunwala repeating how awesome he is (the persona being brought from the blog), a foray into Davos which could have been shorter and some others. These make the book painful to read sometimes. There are also some passages that are in Hindi and might be irritating to read for non-Hindi speakers.

But overall, a great first attempt - transitioning from writing a blog to a book is never easy - and I think Aditya's next book is going to be way better.

Jun 12, 2014

Using Talent Communities #socialmedia for Employer Branding

Organizations face two big challenges in the context of two ever-changing realities -  key talent is hard to find and job seekers look to peers and the collective wisdom of the social web to decide on what firm to join.

The two objectives organizations will need to start thinking about are:
1.       How to Build an employment brand that is relevant to the needs of the key talented people and to monitor the conversations on the social web to understand how to join in the conversation
2.       Understand where these talented prospective employees are, what they talk about and how to engage them to attract them to consider you an employer.

Organizations will need to move away from building their presence from social networks and integrate them to build online communities for their talent pool.
When a person joins a talent community owned/ stewarded by an organization - he or she gives permission to the organization to have a conversation with him/her - and it is up to the organization to either mess it up by "pushing" its message or to take it to the next level by active engagement.

As this becomes more and more common - recruiters and hiring managers will move more and more into "community manager" roles and need to build and take on newer skills to augment their existing skill sets. The ability that will count will not be to tell their own stories, but encouraging participants to tell their stories.



Tomorrow’s organization needs to tap into the talent pool will need to move from step 1 to 5:

1.Listening & interpreting what your prospective talent desires –
1.       The employer brand is no longer in the organization’s control. Everyday, people are asking information about and reviewing what others have said about employers’ cultures, roles, career prospects – in sites like Glassdoor.com or even Google Places.
2.       What do your prospective employees really look for in their ideal workplace ?
3.       What’s the perception in the market about your company and it’s culture?
4.       What’s the perception about your competitors?
5.       Use “listening” tools (Radian6, Alterian SM2, Buzzstream). This will identify the social places where they “hang out”. Which will lead to step 2.

2. Find & attract good talent. Monitoring content that they create and queries they answer. Holding talent contests around the content they are looking in prospective candidates is a great way to finding talented people. If the organization builds virality in the contest it’s a great way to spread the word and engage a larger talent pool

3. Engage with active prospects. Engaging needs to be done in two places – the niche social networks they converse in – and the organization’s own branded social community – which could be a blog or a full fledged social network. It can be used to showcase organizational culture, with rich multimedia content like photographs, videos. Firms should encourage employees to participate in such forums – specially employees who are considered experts in their field. Both the employees and the organization benefit as both brands get built.
1.       Content can be curated on the corporate site from the social web around different axes : product, market, industry.
2.       Content can be created by the organizational employees on the organizational site too.
3.       Prospective employees could also be invited to contribute content and showcased in a leaderboard.
4.       Employee/ Team blogs serve two purposes specially for large organization – they act as communication vehicles with the media as well as engaging niche talent.
5.       HR and recruitment focused community platform like Microsoft’s http://www.microspotting.com/ also help give tips and tricks to prospective employees

4.Onboarding new recruits – While this is done offline, I feel a part of making initial connection could be done virtually even before people “sign up” and strengthen bonds between future employees.

Learning: Social technology can make learning more of a continuous process than the 2-3 day event it currently is. These tools can also be used by trainers to add more to the classroom and create a community of learners who can continue to share experiences and be a support group as they implement learnings in their workplace. Marcia Conner’s book “The New Social Learning” shows how various firms are using tools to augment employee training.
Recognition : Companies like Rypple, Globoforce have started the concept of social peer recognition and it can be a powerful factor to increase employee engagement. In the future look out for predictive analytics about engagement and attrition by analyzing how employees are being recognized by their peers.
Knowledge Sharing: Forget the idea of databases acting as “repositories” of knowledge, internal social networks can capture employees work activity as social intranets connect deeper into business applications – and team members can follow what others are doing on their activity streams. Newer tools like Opzi and MindQuilt can also emerge as a enterprise version of Quora, the popular Q&A site.

5. Alumni connect – Today’s employees can be tomorrow’s ambassadors if an alumni program is managed well and alumni see value being a part of the community.

In Conclusion

The vast majority of organizations and job seekers are stuck at the “salary” discussions as they don't think about the desire of an individual to make a difference and meaning to others. And unless you can connect with that innately human desire which are discoverable and engaged via social technologies  - recruiters and organizations will continue to judge a person by their current and future salary levels and they in turn will treat each firm as a mercenary would.

It’s about time organizations and job seekers got to know the human side of each other.