how to attract the best retail candidates

How we Attract the Best Candidates to our Retail Roles

Recruiting the best candidates for retail roles is essential for the success of any retail business. Having the right team in place can make a significant difference in customer satisfaction, sales, and overall store performance. Below is a guide that you may find helpful to structure your recruitment process in order to attract and hire top-notch talent for your retail positions.

Write Your Job Spec 

Creating a comprehensive job specification is the first step in attracting the right candidates. It ensures that both you and the candidates share the same expectations about the position. Your job spec should include the job title, general duties, day-to-day responsibilities, a brief company overview outlining your company’s culture and values, job location, and working hours, including likely shift patterns and contracted hours. Including these elements ensures candidates have a clear understanding of what the role involves and whether it aligns with their expectations and career goals. 

List Your Must-Have Skills and Attributes 

Identifying the essential skills and attributes for the role is critical. These should be based on the duties listed in your job spec and the characteristics of successful past hires. Some examples of “Must have” skills might include the ability to work certain shift, a particular visa, command of the English language and some customer-facing experience. Your “would like to have” attributes could range from previous experience in a deli or food retail store to experience using a particular POS system, or leadership potential.  

Compile Your Questions to Reflect Your Desired Attributes 

To effectively assess candidates, develop a set of questions that reflect the skills and attributes you are looking for. For example, if Customer Service Skills is high on your must-have list perhaps you include a question such as  “Can you describe a time when you turned a dissatisfied customer into a happy one?”. You can choose the skills that are most valued by you and compose a question on each topic.  By scoring each answer, you can objectively compare candidates and ensure you are making the best hiring decision. 

Prepare Your Pitch 

The interview is a two-way process.  While an interview is an important opportunity for you to fully screen candidates, it’s equally important to sell the role and your company to them. The second half of the interview should involve: 

→ Detailed Role Explanation: Clearly explain what the job entails, including tasks, responsibilities, and expectations. 

→ Benefits and Opportunities: Highlight the benefits of working with your company, such as employee discounts, health benefits, training programs, and career progression opportunities. 

→ Success Stories: Share examples of employees who have thrived in your company, demonstrating the potential for growth and success. 

This not only gives candidates a clear picture of what to expect but also gives you the chance to portray your company as an attractive place to work.  

Reply to Each Candidate Promptly 

Prompt communication is crucial. Whether you are offering the job, rejecting a candidate, or inviting them for a second interview, timely responses are essential. News travels fast, and a local store that doesn’t respond to applications or inform candidates of their status after an interview will likely see a drop in applications as word spreads. Additionally, as a retailer recently pointed out to me, these job seekers are often our customers first. Therefore, it’s crucial to protect the store’s reputation, regardless of the interview outcome! Clear and respectful communication enhances your company’s reputation and ensures candidates are not left in limbo. 

Job Offer 

When making a job offer, be enthusiastic and positive. Outline all benefits, big or small, to show the full value of the offer. Follow up verbal offers with a detailed written offer letter which includes; job details, salary, all immediate or long-term benefits, acceptance deadline, start date, and next steps.  

Call for Backup 

For junior roles, having a second opinion in the same interview can be beneficial. For more senior roles, conducting a second interview with another interviewer helps ensure a well-rounded assessment of the candidate. 

Trust Your Gut 

While structured interviews and scoring matter, trusting your gut is important too. If a candidate feels like a great cultural fit and matches your company values, that’s a strong sign they are right for you!  

For more information call us on 01 814 8747 or email nikki@excelrecruitment.com.

Benefits when attracting and retaining staff

Benefits when attracting and retaining staff

Most retailers are facing a significant increase in their wage budget from this January. This increase, coupled with additional sick days, the upcoming new February bank holiday costs and imminent pension auto-enrolment is forcing employers to look at more creative ways of attracting and retaining staff that won’t break the bank. We have seen that whilst staff won’t stay in a job where they feel undervalued or underpaid, money is not the main driving factor most employees consider when making a move.

With this in mind, we have reached out to various retailers and retail managers across the grocery industry to provide a list of bonuses and benefits you can consider adding to your package which may help when it comes to attracting new staff as well as retaining your current team.

Work Life Balance

This comes in the form of advanced rotas, flexible shifts, remote or hybrid working patterns, scheduling weekend off rotations, reduced contract hours, or job sharing. The focus on Work-life balance has never been higher – with more and more candidates citing this as their main motivating factor when looking for a move. Whilst remote working is often not a viable option in our sector, many retailers have been working to improve contracted hours or offer a little more flexibility to their teams, and have been reaping the rewards of lower staff turnover as a result.

Travel

Company car and fuel allowance are not always viable benefits you can offer. But the bike to work and the Annual Tax Saver Travel schemes are benefits most businesses can offer at a relatively low cost which add real value to their workforce. I’ve seen roles that require travel advertised without the mention of a car, mileage or fuel allowance. Only to find out these roles offered fully expensed company vehicles, but they had not thought to include this as a perk in their job ad. I’m confident this would have deterred numerous suitable candidates from applying.

Discounts

Many retailers offer in-store staff discounts, ranging from free or subsidized lunches or coffees to 20% off their weekly shop. However, these discounts are often only disclosed when a new employee starts – rather than as part of the advertising campaign or even offer letter. Another great and highly valued perk comes in the form of group discounts. It is often worth reaching out to local businesses and asking if they will offer a small discount for your staff in return for the same for theirs. Many local gyms will also offer discounts when approached and being able to offer discounted or subsided gym membership is a substantial perk to many. I have seen discounts on everything from childcare and chemists to driving lessons and bakeries – it takes a little leg work but definitely worth the effort!

Annual Leave

Annual leave can be a deal breaker for many candidates when it comes to accepting a new role. Increasing annual leave with length of service is a wonderful way of rewarding and retaining those with the most experience in your business. “Birthday days off” is another benefit that has a significant impact on culture and retention. A number of retailers give their staff one additional day’s leave to be taken on their birthday. Obviously this incurs a cost to the store, but this novel incentive has such a positive impact on staff that I think it’s a worthwhile one to consider.

Employee Engagement Initiatives

These are less tangible and usually less costly, but that’s not to say they are any less impactful. Arranging initiatives or small incentives to keep employees feeling appreciated or part of a team goes a long way. Ideas here range from birthday cakes and celebrations to involving store staff in charity walks, fundraising drives, or community clean-ups. Employee recognition schemes – from €5 store vouchers for “staff member of the day” to employee awards events add to the sense of accomplishment and teamwork in most businesses and are a great way to build a positive culture in which people are reluctant to leave! Perhaps include Christmas parties or team bonding events to your list of benefits, if this is something you offer. Or maybe something to consider if you don’t.

Statutory

Don’t forget to include all those benefits employees can now avail of – regardless of whether they are something your business started or which is now mandated, such as sick pay, upcoming pensions, maternity leave, paternity leave, or parental leave.

Employee wellness

Many employers are offering Employee assistant programs or mental health days. Others offer discounts on doctor’s or dental visits. Healthcare insurance can be an overburdening cost to many retailers, but you may find – with a little research – a health insurer willing to offer a small discount to your staff.

Training

Nearly all the retailers I speak with offer excellent training and development as well as ample opportunities for growth and career development. This is certainly a perk worth shouting about as it is one of the highest-ranked benefits cited by employees looking for a move. If you offer mentoring and coaching to new employees, access to e-learning platforms, or indeed the opportunity to avail of further education it’s definitely worth shouting about.

Every Little Counts

In my experience, it’s worth listing every benefit you can offer – it really may be the difference between someone accepting or declining your job, or indeed the difference in one of your team accepting or declining a job offer from a competitor! Feel free to list everything from “free parking” and “free uniform” to “great location” and “competitive pay rates” – as they say – every little helps!

Shout it from the Rooftops (or Store Fronts)

It’s worth noting that the retailers who are most successful at attracting talent directly are the ones who shout loudest about their benefits. If you go onto the website of some of the most well-known value retailers, you will see their benefits highlighted on every page. Yet many other retailers offer similar if not better benefits and they are nearly a secret! My advice, for what it’s worth, is to list every single benefit – from statutory sick days, training programs, and EAP to Bike to Work and free coffees. It makes potential new hires take notice and potential leavers think twice!

You can check out this feature in the most recent edition of ShelfLife Magazine here. For more information call us on 01 814 8747 or email nikki@excelrecruitment.com

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