Showing posts with label CENTRO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CENTRO. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2015

1871 CEO HOWARD TULLMAN MODERATES HRMAC HIRING PANEL WITH CENTRO TEAM






         I moderated a HR panel last week with Shawn Riegsecker, the CEO-founder of Centro (http://www.inc.com/profile/centro) in Chicago, and two of his senior tech talent recruiters. Centro is an ad-tech firm which already has over 700 employees in some 37 offices spread across the country. They’ve been ranked as the city’s Best Place to Work for 4 or 5 years running in the Crain’s Chicago survey; they’ve almost doubled their headcount in the last 18 months; and they don’t see any end in sight. Like everyone else, the team at Centro is trying to hire all of the top tech talent they can get their hands on in order to support their continuing growth and the expanding demand for their services.  And, of course, they’re competing for that A-level talent with 100-plus other Chicago-based technology companies which are growing just as fast or even faster. Great news for the city’s tech scene – not so much for the recruiters on the hot seats to get the job done.

But even considering how much pressure they’re constantly under to grow, and as crazy as the talent competition all around them is, their strategies and the ideas that came through in our discussion were extremely thoughtful and long-term. The four main concepts - which I think are relevant to any fast-moving and fast-growing business today - were: (a) their personnel energies are primarily  focused inside their business – they believe that building and maintaining their company culture is the key to recruiting and retaining the best people – not worrying about the competition; (b) they’re in a hurry, but not hurried – they have a lengthy, multi-person, and quite diverse interview process and they’re sticking to it - especially because it sends the right messages to their current employees and to prospective hires as well; (c) they understand that the things that worked for them in the past and got them this far (like a hugely impactful internal cash bonus program for new employee referrals) aren’t sufficient to keep them moving forward and ahead of the pack, so they’re constantly looking for new tools and better ways to get the job done; and (d) they’re struggling – right along with every other tech firm – with how they can make their workforce more diverse even though – in terms of gender – they’re already as diverse as any firm in the city.

(1) You Didn’t Find Me, I Found You

The only thing better and more rewarding than finding and recruiting a super-talented new employee is learning that the prospect in question actually sought out your company and found you. Forget that this is highly efficient and cost-effective, it tells you that your culture is spreading beyond your four walls and that you’ve succeeded in developing an authentic, word -of-mouth (not manufactured) reputation as the one of the right places to be. You can’t make this stuff up – you’ve got to live it every day and model the behaviors that matter. But as you do and as the critical attitudes and actions spread from the CEO throughout the entire company, you’ll quickly learn that nothing is more contagious than a shared vision and a set of sincere and compelling corporate values. In the best companies, people don’t come for the job, they come to be part of the vision and to spend their time in a place that values and appreciates them doing work that makes a difference.

(2) If I’m Not Growing, I’m Going

A definite key to successful retention was the idea that all of the employees needed to feel cared about and listened to by the company’s senior management and especially by the CEO. An important part of all great companies’ cultures are the (sometimes apocryphal) stories passed down over the years of special efforts, extraordinary gestures, and honored commitments by the founders and senior management as well as instances where they put the welfare and concerns of the employees ahead of their own. Centro has plenty of those tales especially during the 2008 recession when the first people to take pay cuts were the senior executives. But, even more important, has been the ongoing need for each employee to feel and believe that the company was committed to their own continued education and growth. Centro pays 100% of its employees’ tuition costs for educational courses each year. Bottom line: if your key employees don’t see a commitment, a path and a future full of promise, they’re unlikely to be sticking around.

(3) Doing Things the Same Way Doesn’t Make for Better Results

Centro has a reputation for promoting from within and it’s another important element of the overall company culture. But if you’re looking only at your existing employees for new management, you’re not likely to be introducing the numbers of change agents and alternative thinkers that you’ll need to drive real innovation. Companies and systems get stale without new blood and people with different perspectives being added regularly to the mix. Similarly, Centro has an amazingly successful employee referral system which pays their team members a cash bonus for each new hire they refer. This in-house program has historically accounted for well over 50% of their new employees and it’s working like a charm, but it’s not sourcing a diverse enough population of leads because the vast majority of the folks the employees know tend to be like them and look like them and that hasn’t helped the company identify the kind and number of qualified minority candidates that they need to broaden their overall workforce. So they’re looking into other channels including outside recruiters. But the most important thing they are doing is focusing on rapidly advancing their qualified minority employees into higher levels of management so that there’s increased visibility and concrete demonstrations of the company’s commitment to this goal.

(4) I Can Make You Better, But I Can’t Make You Care

Centro prioritizes skills and character in their hiring. You’ve got to have the right skills to make the cut, but you’re not really welcome if you don’t have the character and the values that the company was built on from the beginning. I don’t care how much you know until I know how much you care. You can fix a bad fit by changing someone’s position or responsibilities or upskill a motivated and committed worker so he or she can do a better job and that’s the kind of commitment that a great business makes to its people; but there’s no cure for a crappy character except the door as soon as possible. Keeping someone around who’s destructive or corrosive (however productive or talented they may be) is a cancer for the company and it’s never too soon to tell these folks to take a hike. Hire slow, fire fast.


Thursday, April 03, 2014

1871 Hosts Campus 1871, A Three-Day Cross Campus Hack-A-Thon Focused on Entrepreneurship

1871 Hosts Campus 1871, A Three-Day Cross Campus Hack-A-Thon Focused on Entrepreneurship

1871 Pairs University Students with Entrepreneurs, Challenges Teams to Ideate, Create, and Bring to Life Their Own Startups in One Weekend

Chicago - April 4, 2014 – Today 1871 announced Campus 1871, a three-day cross-campus hack-a-thon where students will meet and create their own startups with the support of Chicago’s most prominent business leaders. Throughout the weekend nearly 100 students from The University of Illinois, Northwestern University, The University of Chicago, and The Illinois Institute of Technology will team up and collaborate to bring to life their own startups.

Not only will students be able to build their own startups from the ground up with mentors from local businesses, they will be able to foster their entrepreneurial spirit with Startup 101 crash courses, advice from keynote speakers, and participate in pitches while having the the opportunity to capture the grand prize for Campus 1871.

"We're excited about hosting Campus 1871 and bringing together the best and brightest from four top-tier universities," said Howard A. Tullman, CEO of 1871. "Through programs like Campus 1871 and our university partnerships, we're able to give these students exposure to the thriving tech community in Chicago. Our goal is to educate and immerse students in tech entrepreneurship, and show them why Chicago is the best place to start and build a business and to have a long and fruitful career with a wonderful quality of life."

What:            Cross-Campus hack-a-thon focused on entrepreneurship
When:            April 4-6, 2014
Where:          1871
222 W. Merchandise Mart Plaza, 12th Floor
Chicago, IL


"There is no better introduction to entrepreneurship than the intense experience of the Campus 1871 Hack-a-thon,” said Raju Malhotra, SVP of Products at Centro and a mentor for Campus 1871. “As a company that was founded in Chicago, Centro is proud to support the university students driving the next generation of innovation in one of the largest business centers in the U.S."

Several companies and leaders in the community will be lending their time and resources for the weekend activities including:

·               Google for Entrepreneurs– Summa Cum Laude Sponsor, enabling the event & providing 30 volunteer mentors to advise each startup as they build from the ground up.
·       SingleHop – Exclusive hosting sponsor, SingleHop, will provide the server infrastructure that will support each team’s startup idea.

“From the inception of SingleHop, giving back to the community by being involved with local startups has been deeply engrained within our culture,” said Zak Boca, CEO and co-founder of SingleHop. “Working with college students takes this to the next level for us and we can’t wait to see what they build.”

“The economy of the future is increasingly about ideas and technological skills. Nothing demonstrates Illinois’ commitment to lead that economy better than 1871,” said Adam Pollet, director of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. “I hope the students here today will see that Illinois is a great place to start and grow a venture."

About 1871
1871 is an entrepreneurial hub for digital startups. Located in the famed Merchandise Mart, the 50,000-square-foot facility provides Chicago startups with programming, access to mentors, educational resources, potential investors and a community of like-minded entrepreneurs that help them on their path to building successful businesses. 1871 is the flagship project of the CEC.




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