LinkedIn - Workers of the world, log in

2014-08-19 07:01:34

The social network has already shaken up the way professionals are hired. Its

ambitions go far beyond that

Aug 16th 2014 | MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA

A LOT of room in an office is a sign either of a blossoming company or a

shrivelling one. Happily for Frank Han, the empty space at Kenandy, a

cloud-computing company in Redwood City, a few miles south of San Francisco,

indicates the former. As manager of talent acquisition , he is busy filling

it. Since he joined Kenandy last October, Mr Han has recruited 32 of the nearly

80 staff. At some point when hiring half of them, he used LinkedIn.

LinkedIn, based a bit farther south in Mountain View, had its origins in 2002

as a network of people , says Allen Blue, one of its founders. We had in mind

a tool for ourselves, he explains, and we were entrepreneurs. People

starting a business may have a little money, but no office, no team and no big

institutions behind them. So much of what entrepreneurs need is about

interrelationships.

Since then LinkedIn has spread far beyond Silicon Valley. It is an online

contact book, curriculum vitae and publishing platform for anyone wanting to

make their way in the world of work. Its membership has almost trebled in the

past three years, to 313m (see chart 1); two-thirds of them live outside

America. Most are professionals, mainly graduates, neither at the apex of the

corporate pyramid nor at its base. It s a presence in your life that wasn t

there a few years ago, says a member who works for a firm of accountants. You

can t walk into a room without everyone having looked everyone else up on

LinkedIn.

Most members pay nothing to list details of their education and career, to be

told about jobs, to endorse each other s skills, to read recommended articles

and to be annoyed with endless requests from people wanting to connect with

them. Some pay a premium subscription for a customised profile, a bigger

photograph, and the right to send 25 e-mails a month to other members (even if

they are not connections already). Premium subscriptions bring in one-fifth of

LinkedIn s revenue, which amounted to $534m in the second quarter, 47% more

than a year before. (It reported a small net loss, largely because of a charge

for share-based compensation.)

Yet LinkedIn is more than just a means for aspiring professionals to make

friends and influence people. It has changed the market for their labour how

they find jobs and how employers find them. By bringing so many professionals

into one digital place, it has become a honeypot for folk like Mr Han. One

corporate recruiter after another calls it a game-changer .

But LinkedIn s ambitions do not end there. They are limited only by the size of

the world s labour market. Its chief executive, Jeff Weiner, envisions what he

calls a vast economic graph , connecting people seeking or starting work or

wanting more from their careers. That implies an eventual membership of 3

billion Mr Weiner s estimate of the global labour force. In other words,

LinkedIn wants to change not only the business of recruiting, but also the

operation of labour markets and, with that, the efficiency of economies.

The 60% solution

Recruiters are LinkedIn s main source of revenue. They pay for licences to

trawl for likely job candidates and to e-mail them about vacancies, as well as

for placing advertisements on the site. This business called talent solutions

accounts for about three-fifths of sales. It allows recruiters to be more

precise about the groups to search in order to find people to hire people who

attended certain universities, say. Rajesh Ahuja, the senior recruiter in

Europe and Asia at Infosys, an Indian software company, focused a recent effort

to hire 200 MBA students on graduates of several hundred colleges.

LinkedIn s main benefit to recruiters has been to make it easier to identify

people who are not looking for a new job, but who might move if the right offer

came along. These passive jobseekers, says Dan Shapero, head of sales in the

firm s talent-solutions business, make up perhaps 60% of the membership (active

jobseekers make up 25%; those who will not budge for any money make up the

rest).

LinkedIn has made it easier for companies to identify such people themselves,

rather than rely on recruitment agencies. In that sense, it represents a

challenge to the agencies. Mr Ahuja says that two years ago he used external

agencies to fill 70% of open positions in Europe. Now their share is 16%.

Steven Baert, head of human resources at Novartis, a pharmaceuticals firm, says

he hired at least 250 people through LinkedIn last year when we might have

used executive search in the past.

The agencies have not been put out of business, but they have to do more than

just compile a list of names, which in-house recruiters can now do for

themselves. Agencies will still be used in the later stages of hiring working

out who is likely to fit in, for instance. Since LinkedIn greatly increases the

number of potential candidates, there also is more sifting to be done. Some

recruiters say they are spending as much on agencies as they used to.

For the top jobs, LinkedIn is still too public. Denizens of the executive

suites often expect a discreet tap on the shoulder from a bespoke headhunting

firm. That is why Korn/Ferry, one of the biggest headhunting firms, reported

record revenues and profits last year. Even so, LinkedIn is working its way up

the greasy pole. Hubert Giraud, head of human resources at Capgemini, a French

consulting firm, reports that last year he used it in the hiring of 33 managers

in India. I don t have to pay headhunters hefty money even to reach out to

senior people, says Mr Ahuja.

Even outside the executive suite, LinkedIn is not ubiquitous. A French rival,

Viadeo, is bigger in France and China (see article) although LinkedIn launched

a site in simplified Chinese in February. In Germany recruiters are more likely

to use Xing.

LinkedIn makes planning ahead easier: firms know whom to approach before they

start a recruitment drive. When we re expanding, we ve already identified

them, says Mr Baert. It improves certain kinds of specialist recruitment

because, when trawling for scarce skills, it is better to fish in a bigger

pool. Glenn Cook, director of global staffing at Boeing, says LinkedIn is a

good source of specialised aircraft mechanics. You wouldn t necessarily think

these folks would be on LinkedIn, but they are. He reckons it is easier to

fill posts that used to be vacant for six or eight months .

It is true that LinkedIn makes it easier to lose people as well as to find

them, because they are on permanent display to competitors and headhunters. But

companies see this glass as half full, not half empty and, anyway, their

employees have joined in large numbers whether they like it or not (see chart

2). Mr Giraud says that when he ran Capgemini s business-process outsourcing

unit he encouraged all his 15,000 staff to join. I thought it would be

fantastic to have a nice profile to make sure our business partners had a clear

view of who we were.

LinkedIn also helps recruiters scour their own companies for talent: firms are

often poor at spotting what is right under their noses. Marie-Bernard Delom,

who has the task of identifying high-fliers at Orange, a French telecoms

company, is using LinkedIn for that reason. She has commissioned software that

combines LinkedIn profiles with internal data.

Companies can also see how they measure up against others trying to hire the

same people. They can do so using LinkedIn in combination with other sites such

as Glassdoor, where people anonymously rate the places where they work or have

been interviewed. Mr Shapero calls this a sales and marketing process , in

which companies treat their reputations as employers like brands. They can

track how many staff have quit to join the competition, as well as how many are

coming the other way. LinkedIn members can follow companies they do not work

for, another loose indicator of potential interest in a job: both Novartis and

Infosys boast 500,000. American tech giants have many more (see chart 3).

As LinkedIn attracts more members in more countries and industries, its data

will become richer. Put another way, the lines in Mr Weiner s graph will become

more numerous and more useful. He thinks that if you trace the connections

between workers, companies and colleges, and if you map people s jobs,

qualifications and skills and plot these against employers demands, you will

end up with a step-change improvement in information about labour markets: big

data for the world of work.

The world s labour exchange

And that, in principle, should help labour markets work more smoothly,

potentially reducing Europe s youth unemployment rate, for example; or matching

some of America s 20m underemployed with its 4.7m vacancies; or helping the

millions of Chinese expected to migrate from the countryside to cities to find

work.

Such hopes are remarkably ambitious. They amount to a gargantuan exercise in

eradicating the mismatch between the skills people have and those employers

want, or between the places jobs are on offer and those where people live.

As Mr Blue concedes, there are real barriers that we haven t even begun to

face yet. LinkedIn is only starting to reach beyond professionals, for

example. Eventually it may have even to think, as Amazon, Facebook and Google

are doing, about providing internet access in remote parts of the world; but

that is far ahead.

Still, LinkedIn is starting to do more than just find and fill professional

jobs. Undergraduates can see how many of their predecessors have ended up in

given companies or professions, to help them plot their own paths. (Those who

graduated years ago can do the same for their classmates, and laugh or weep

accordingly.)

Some companies have begun to use LinkedIn s data to help them decide where to

open new offices and factories. By looking at the skills on offer at least

among the network s members and demand for them in different parts of the

United States, LinkedIn s data scientists can identify hidden gems where

there are plenty of potentially suitable employees but little competition for

their services.

Perhaps most significant, LinkedIn has started to feel its way beyond

professionals. Since early June the number of jobs on its site has jumped from

350,000 to about 1m. As well as openings for software engineers at IBM can be

found jobs as delivery drivers for Pizza Hut or on the tills at Home Depot

which until now no one would have expected to find there. This is because

LinkedIn has added jobs from employers websites or human-resources databases

to its existing paid advertisements.

Unlike paid ads, the new ones are seen only by members who are actively seeking

jobs. The idea is being tested only in America so far. But if delivery drivers

and checkout clerks start to look for and find jobs on the site, LinkedIn will

have taken a step towards becoming a much broader job shop.

It is hard to know what its eventual effect might be. Even if Mr Weiner s grand

vision were realised, it could not cure global unemployment on its own, though

richer data ought to make a difference. In explaining high unemployment rates

in Western economies, many economists would put more weight on weak aggregate

demand than on a mismatch of location or skills.

It is even difficult to quantify the impact of LinkedIn on labour markets so

far. In theory, making it easier for people to find better jobs could affect

the rate of job turnover within firms: recruiters say they have noticed little

impact, and that other factors (such as the economic cycle) seem to matter

more. But no one really knows.

As LinkedIn s data pool deepens, its value to researchers as well as its

members and corporate customers will increase. Pian Shu, an economist at

Harvard Business School, points out that you could compare the career paths of

those who graduate in recessions with those who graduate in booms: do the

former, as you might suppose, fare worse?

Aiding academic research is not LinkedIn s priority. But its interest to

economists is a sign of how pervasive it has become. I m on there until

midnight a lot, says Mr Han, of his quest to find the right people for

Kenandy. I m hooked.