Solving Skilled Labor Supply Chain Shortfalls

Hiring good people is hard. Hiring good people with specific skills, or credentials is harder. Hiring good people with specific skills, or credentials, in an industry where the demand is outgrowing the available labor pool, well, that is nearly impossible.

While it may sound like a glass-half-empty view on the economics of labor this is the exact, and unfortunate, a situation that many leaders in some of America’s largest, and most crucial, industries are facing every day.

Companies operating in the health care, transportation, trades and wellness sectors, to name a few, report significant shortages in qualified staff to support their company’s mission. For these folks, the need for qualified employees, necessary to meet demand, has far outgrown the pool of available employees, with the appropriate qualifications, and it is causing a real mess.

If you find yourself operating in a world where you need more credentialed people than you can hire, you know all too well the effect it can have on your organization’s success. There are significant, measurable issues associated with being understaffed and companies in this boat most likely suffer from some, if not all, of these interrelated trickle-down effects:

• Increased cost: Dedicating additional resources to HR; paying overtime and using staffing agencies to cover gaps; getting into a wage and benefits “arms race” with your competitors. These things all come with a substantial price tag.

• Poor quality: HR staff and hiring managers are human. When their back is against the wall to fill open positions and there aren’t enough qualified candidates to fill them, they will often lower hiring standards and/or tolerate unqualified, or underperforming, staff. This has a direct impact on the quality of goods and services your organization can provide.

• Lower revenue: Without appropriate staffing levels, you may find yourself unable to realize available opportunities. There is a prominent belief, in business, that revenue can solve all problems. Unfortunately, the opposite of that is true as well. Fewer available resources will further inhibit your ability to address the problem.

• Decreased morale: Being perpetually understaffed puts an additional strain on your existing team. Your most qualified, in-demand employees will quickly get fed up with being stretched thin and often get lured by your equally understaffed competitor’s increasingly attractive attempts to poach them. Sure you could probably do the same, but this is just a vicious merry-go-round of staffing that exacerbates these issues without solving the root issue.

If you are a leader of an organization that has trouble staffing certain, credentialed positions because of a limited candidate pool, what should you do?

Solution: If there aren’t enough good people in the qualified candidate pool, take control of your staffing supply chain and build a bigger pool.

This is easier said than done, but agencies, such as mine, work with forward-thinking leaders in the health care space to do this very thing. For example, many of our clients have historically struggled filling open CNA positions because of a lack of available candidates. The position typically requires a level of education and licensure, and while the training is not overly difficult there are nowhere near enough candidates proactively enrolling in these programs. For purposes of context, if our clients hired all of the candidates coming out of these programs (regardless of quality), it would still not be enough.

The key for us, and our clients, is to shift focus from finding the best people available with the required qualifications, to finding the best people available and then get them qualified. In its simplest form, it works like this:

1. Find: Deploy in-depth, multi-channel marketing plans designed to capture the interest of the “right” candidate (again, based on character, not credentials).

2. Screen: Work with the employer to screen these candidates to the best possible options (having more quantity to choose from almost always leads to higher quality).

3. Train: Train chosen candidates who go to work for the sponsoring employer partner upon graduation.

If you are facing a similar challenge in your business, consider an aggressive, innovative approach to growing the pool of qualified individuals. If it can be done in the CNA field, it can be done in many others. ♦

Chris Palevich is the founder, and president, of Premier Nursing Academy, located in Pinellas Park. Premier Nursing Academy, is a CNA training provider that partners with local health care companies to recruit, and train, the next generation of frontline health care workers. Contact him via email at [email protected] or by telephone at 260.202.2530.

You May Also Like

Navigating the Waves of Change: The Silver Tsunami’s Impact on Real Estate and Elder Care

The demographic landscape is undergoing a seismic shift as baby boomers reach retirement age—often called the “Silver Tsunami.” As of the 2020 census, one in six people in the United

Navigating the Waves of Change: The Silver Tsunami’s Impact on Real Estate and Elder Care
Avoid These 4 Common Investing Mistakes People Make in a Slow Economy

You probably remember hearing all about the Titanic in great detail during history class. You might remember how this ship was described as the epitome of luxury and had been

Avoid These 4 Common Investing Mistakes People Make in a Slow Economy by Dr. David Phelps
Where ‘Smart’ Money Is Going As the Economy Declines

Despite most TV pundits loudly proclaiming over the last few years that the US economy is strong, inflation is just transitory, and capital is plentiful, they’ve finally started to admit

Where ‘Smart’ Money Is Going As the Economy Declines - Dr. David Phelps
Ask the Experts: Beware of the underdog

Underdogs are highly regarded, and celebrated, throughout history and sports. Think JK Rowling, Robin Hood and King Arthur. The “Cinderella team”— Miracle on Ice.  Underdogs are legendary because they defy

Other Posts

Vincent Celano is capturing the St. Pete ‘vibe’ at 400 Central Avenue (RENDERINGS)

When the 46-story Residences at 400 Central Avenue, in St. Petersburg, is completed, in about a year, it will be the tallest residential structure on Florida’s west coast. But if

How to Raise Financially Literate Children

I vividly remember being a teenager, and some of the things I believed back then, frankly, many more years ago than I like to admit.  One of the things that

How to Raise Financially Literate Children
Habitat Pinellas and West Pasco expands its reach to Hernando County 

Habitat for Humanity International has selected Habitat for Humanity of Pinellas and West Pasco Counties to expand its service area to include Hernando County. “Given our organizational growth, coupled with

Provost of Clearwater campus of SPC selected for the Aspen Institute fellowship

The Aspen Institute College Excellence Program has selected Dr. Tashika Griffith, provost of the Clearwater Campus at St. Petersburg College, as one of 40 leaders selected for the 2024-25 Aspen