Like many law enforcement agencies, the Topeka (Kansas) Police Department has been fighting an uphill recruiting and retention battle.
After failing to meet a 2017 goal of hiring 36 police officers, the agency implemented several outside-the-box recruitment initiatives detailed in this article. We are happy to report that two years later, those initiatives have proved successful: 86 applicants completed for 15 spots in the January 2020 Academy and our summer 2020 Academy is almost full.
We have learned many lessons on our journey that we would like to share here:
- There are only two barriers to recruiting and hiring: your imagination and the budget.
- Policies are not recruiting barriers. If strict residency, facial hair and tattoo policies were barriers, how has the Kansas Highway Patrol hired 125 since 2017?
- The 10% vacancy most agencies are experiencing may be the new normal. Fully staffed should be everyone’s goal, however, don’t let it break your heart if it remains out of reach. The only way to be fully staffed is to hire more than your authorized strength.
- Your agency needs a consistent recruiting and hiring message that employees know by heart. This should include a two-minute elevator pitch, an hour-long presentation and everything in between.
- Don’t give presentations on your agency’s disqualifiers. Tell stories, discuss benefits and working conditions, talk about the family they’ll be joining, the community they’ll be serving and what makes your agency great. Potential applicants should be captivated and inspired. The vision and hearing requirements won’t give anyone goosebumps.
- If your agency’s recruiting and hiring flyer looks like an IRS audit letter, it’s time for an update. Research the recruiting flyers from the most successful companies in the world. You won’t find one with 800 words in a bulleted format with intermittent bold, underlined and highlighted content.
- Obscurity is the enemy of successful recruiting and hiring. You have to generate buzz. Find ways to tell your story and engage potential applicants.
- Implement results-driven recruiting. Start tracking the success of your recruiting and hiring initiatives. Allocate more resources to what’s working; have the courage to cancel initiatives that aren’t.
- Diversify your applicant pool by traveling with your physical and written entrance tests. Choose applicant-rich environments such as colleges and military bases.
- Recognize that it costs money to recruit talent and diversity and set your budget accordingly.
- Add up the years of experience your entire recruiting team has. Cross that number out and write “three.” Any recruiting and hiring experience more than three years old is no longer relevant.
- You will struggle to fill your ranks if your recruiting methods are the same as 20 years ago, as 600 applicants aren’t competing for 12 spots anymore. Things are different now; your recruiting strategies should be too.
- Stop blaming millennials for your recruiting and hiring problems. Millennials are now chiefs, sheriffs, administrators and supervisors. If no one is applying to your agency and everyone is leaving, it’s not a generational thing.
- Is your recruiting and hiring website user-friendly? Mobile friendly? Does it look like a Fortune 500 company jobs page or a neuroscience research paper? Your home or landing page should be easy to navigate with “Apply Now” and “Get in Touch” action buttons. No one should have to scroll nine times to register for your test.
- How to engage a potential applicant: gather intelligence by asking questions about her situation, family life and interests. Use this opportunity to also build rapport. Now tailor your recruiting and hiring message to her wants and needs. “After talking with you, our agency is going to be a great fit because…”
- How to recruit at a military base:
- Develop relationships with the Transition Assistance Program (TAP) personnel as this is the program members must attend before separating.
- Most members joined out of high school, meaning most get out May-August.
- Set up recruiting and hiring presentations during the spring TAP classes.
- Return in a couple of weeks with your written and physical entrance tests.
- Congratulations, you have qualified applicants in your hiring process.
- Do your homework before giving a recruiting presentation. Tailor your message to the audience. At a military base, discuss how overtime works, the extra pay incentives and that they don’t have to get permission to go out of town. Don’t focus on how much they’ll pay for medical, dental and vision care.
- Get 50 cops in a room. Ask who got hired at a career fair; you’ll see two hands or less. Ask who got hired after meeting a cop or going on a ride-along; half the hands will go up. Why do we keep going to career fairs while shying away from engaging people we meet and getting them in cop cars?
- It’s time to start recruiting like college coaches. Gone are the days of running out of applications at the front desk. If you hear about a squared away kid with a clean background working road construction, someone needs to go ask him what he’s doing with the rest of his life. And please schedule him for a ride-along.
- What happens when someone searches “law enforcement jobs” on Google? Does your agency appear? Research Google AdWords and search engine optimization. Did you know your agency can create digital boundaries and deliver your recruiting message to users based on their location and demographics? It’s called Geo-targeting and geo-fencing. Partner with a digital marketing firm to find out more.
What recruitment best practices are working for your agency? Share in the comments box below.
ADDITIONAL POLICE RECRUITMENT TIPS AND RESOURCES FROM POLICEONE
- 6 best practices that should be part of every agency’s recruitment strategy in 2019
- 5 police recruitment videos that think outside the box
- What law enforcement recruiters can learn from the military
- Readers respond: Strategies to combat the recruitment & retention crisis
- 5 ways police leaders can recruit and retain millennials
- A profession in crisis: Proactively recruiting in schools and minority communities
- A profession in crisis: Addressing recruitment and hiring practices in law enforcement