Apr 12, 2020
The Right Talent – Recruiting, Training, and Retaining
with Ryan Schreiber
Ryan
Schreiber and Joe Lynch discuss
what it takes to recruit the right talent in the transportation and
logistics industry. While Ryan is very much a techie, he believes
that people are the ultimate competitive advantage. In the
interview, Ryan shares his perspective on recruiting, training and
retaining the right talent.
About Ryan Schreiber
Ryan is the Director of Engagement at CarrierDirect in Chicago.
Ryan was born and raised in Tampa Florida. Ryan earned a degree in
History from the University of South Florida and then a Law degree
from Michigan State University. Prior to joining
CarrierDirect, Ryan worked at a variety of logistics companies and
even started and exited a few tech-enabled freight brokerage
start-ups. Ryan is a skilled technologist and strategist who has
helped transform many leading transportation and logistics
companies. In Ryan’s experience great technology is important but
finding and keeping the right people is the key to success in the
3PL business.
About CarrierDirect
Since 2011 carriers, 3PLs, shippers, and logistics technology
vendors have looked to CarrierDirect to deliver the
efficiency, strategy, go-to-market plans, and technology that will
elevate their business above their competition. CarrierDirect
builds organizations and relationships, providing strategy and
technology designed to maximize efficiency, reduce cost and make
your business stand out. CarrierDirect advises clients on the
elements of their business most vital to success: strategy,
organizational structure, compensation, technology, training,
recruiting, workflows, processes, and more. CarrierDirect clients
include Werner, J.B. Hunt, Covenant, CRST, and FedEx.
The Right Talent
- The right talent is the talent that will succeed in your
organization, not just look good on a resume. To recruit the right
talent, recruiters must understand the organization, industry, job
responsibilities, and company culture.
- Turnover is very high in the transportation and logistics
industry, which indicates that the people that get recruited to the
company are not the people who ultimately succeed at the company.
High turnover is demoralizing, upsetting to customers, costly, and
negatively impacts company culture.
Recruiting the Right Talent
- Many companies in the logistics and transportation business are
“winging it” when it comes to recruiting and it shows. This is
particularly true with start-ups where the founders and early hires
do most of the work. The informal recruiting process works well
when the company is new, and the founders hire their contacts and
friends, but the informal process breaks down as the company grows.
Just as the company is scaling, they realize that their recruiting
process isn’t working anymore.
- Ryan compares the recruiting process to the sales process and
believes the right candidate can be hired by following a sales
process:
- Lean generation: Target and attract the right talent. Make sure
your recruiters really have their finger on the pulse of the
organization and the industry. They should also do their homework
so they know exactly the type of person they would like to
interview and eventually hire.
- Qualifying: Standardize the interviewing process and develop
interview guidelines so there is consistency. In order to develop
the guidelines, you must understand what type of people succeed in
the organization.
- Closing: Recruitment is the precursor to the experience a
candidate will have with your organization. Provide the candidate
the best experience possible so that when you find the right
talent, you get them.
- Design a recruiting process much as
you would design a customer’s experience. Consider each step in the
process to ensure the candidate is treated properly. Communication
throughout the process is crucial. Don’t oversell, keep your
commitments and treat the candidate like you would treat your best
customer.
Training the Right Talent
- Ryan believes that many logistics companies do a poor job of
training and development. The nature of the industry makes it
difficult to pull employees away from day-to-day operations. While
this may be true, the lack of training becomes evident in the
business. Untrained and under-trained employees are not performing
at their highest levels and they may never completely understand
the job they were hired to do.
- Training is not just for new hires, everyone in the
organization should be trained, coached and developed to ensure
that everyone is getting better at their job. The right training
will have a good return on investment, improve customer
satisfaction, and deepen the ties to the employees who get
trained.
- Companies should have the following training: 1. New hire
training and development. 2. Ongoing training to reinforce learning
while incorporating new software features, new processes, and
lessons learned. 3. Developmental training for employees who are
promoted into leadership positions and or lateral moves to expand
their knowledge.
- People in leadership positions should be coaching their people
on a regular basis. To ensure that the coaching is constructive and
positive, leaders should be training in effective coaching
techniques.
- Training should include supply chain topics, so employees learn
about the whole supply chain, from end to end and not just their
small piece of the process.
Key Takeaways
- Even in the technology-obsessed logistics industry, people
matter. The talent war is real. To succeed companies, need to:
recruit, train, and retain the right talent.
- Invest in the right talent and build a culture that attracts
the right people to your company.
Learn More
Ryan
Schreiber LinkedIn
CarrierDirect
CarrierDirect Office
Hours (please subscribe on Youtube)
Understanding Your Sales Personality with Ryan Schreiber and Ann
Holm (podcast interview coming soon)
The Logistics of Logistics Podcast
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