High on their list of concerns
is difficulty finding qualified applicants, according to that report
from the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB). Another
recently released report, this one from Babson College,
a private business school in Wellesley, Mass., found the No. 1
challenge business owners face when hiring qualified applicants is
finding employees with the appropriate skills.
The Babson survey looked at a pool of 1,800 small business owners across the US, which included owners from the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses program and a comparative random sample of businesses, and found the so-called skills gap was their biggest hiring challenge.
Meanwhile, the NFIB report
analyzed 700 responses from small-business owners, 48% of whom said they
could find few or even no qualified applicants for the jobs they were
trying to fill.
The skills gap is one of the paradoxes of post-recession America,
as Jordyn Holman noted on “Marketplace” back in April. While businesses
might have laid people off during the recession, now many say they
can’t find any good people to hire. However, some economists say
businesses can’t find workers with the right skills because they’re
simply not offering enough money, as Jonathan House noted in the Wall Street Journal last year.
One small-business owner who spoke with Yahoo Finance said qualified
applicants are out there but that small businesses don’t have the
resources to recruit them.“The qualified and talented candidates are out there but the noise makes it hard for us to find them and for them to find us,” Shawn Askinosie, founder & CEO of Askinosie Chocolate, a small chocolate manufacturer and one of Forbes’ America’s top small companies.
Askinosie added: “In other
words, the battle for attention on most social media channels (including
job boards) is so overwhelming that it's a significant challenge to be
seen and heard by great candidates. The only way over the noise is money
and we don't have the budget to turn up the volume on our search
objectives."
In the Babson report, almost
half of the respondents said hiring and keeping good employees is one of
their top two growth challenges. That report also found that 72% of the
respondents had difficulty hiring qualified employees in the last two
years. Owners of companies that provide construction services and
transportation cited the most difficulty hiring qualified workers.
It’s not surprising that
construction businesses have such a hard time hiring skilled employees.
Chris Terrill, the CEO of HomeAdvisor, recently wrote in Fortune that a “skills gap is hobbling construction.”
“Without skilled workers to
replenish a diminishing skilled labor workforce, housing prices will
continue to rise, housing inventories will continue to fall,” Terrill
wrote, “and we’ll pay a growing premium for even the smallest home
repairs (until there’s nobody left who knows how to complete them).”
Culled from yahoo finance
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