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REPEAT: REALITY CHECK Part 2: Job Seekers Rule Roost in August

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 14:28 GMT Aug 31/10:28 EST Aug 31
--Recruiters, Employers More Creative in Talent Hunt
By Vicki Schmelzer
     NEW YORK (MNI) - Job seekers ruled the roost in August, much to employers'
chagrin, and this trend is likely to continue into year-end, according to
recruiters interviewed by MNI for this month's REALITY CHECK on the U.S. job
market. 
     "We haven't noticed any slowdown. We've noticed still a high momentum of
needs. Definitely, companies are anxious to find talent," said Janis Petrini,
business owner and manager of the Grand Rapid Express franchise in Michigan.
     "Our area is heavily geared towards office furniture, automotive, food
manufacturing, and all of them are very busy," she said. 
     Despite the low 3.2% (BLS June 2017) unemployment rate in the area, there
is concern about the labor force participation rate and the fact that some
potential workers still choose to stay at home for various reasons, Petrini
said. 
     Making a living wage, transportation and child care are "all factors that
someone has to consider before they make a decision to come back to work," she
said.
     "Right now, they are looking at it and thinking I don't see how I am going
to do it," Petrini said.
     Deb Gray, franchise owner of an Express office in Pittsburgh, saw more job
seekers getting hired in August than in July "because we are reaching further." 
     "We're just really being targeted in our searches - it doesn't mean it's
any easier to find them," she said. 
     Continuing the trend of prior months, August saw another three-point
increase in the "show rate" of potential candidates, i.e. job seekers coming to
her office for help finding employment. 
     In terms of staffing levels, "Our greatest demand is mid-to-senior," Gray
said. 
     Employers "are asking for and we are able to find" mid-to-senior level
workers, but at the entry level, "workers are still scarce," she said.
     On the employment trend going forward, Gray saw hiring as "more steady than
not" into year-end.
     However, she stressed, "I think it's tied a little bit more uniquely to
what's going on in the oil and gas industry here." 
     Preet Kuar, Executive Recruiter and Business Development Manager at Pacific
Staffing in Sacramento, CA saw "a lot of direct hire activity" in August. 
     Clients "are grabbing talent. They are not waiting for three-four rounds of
interviews," as in the past, she said. 
     Instead, any delay now often is on the part of candidate, as prospective
new hires assess the offer, compare other offers and counter with their own
demands, Kuar said.
     "Because this might be the second time looking in the 'good' job market,"
these candidates feel they can "dictate their needs," she said. 
     In the past, Kuar would ask employers what the "deal breaker" would be for
a given position. Now, "more and more" she has to ask the prospective candidate
"what's going to be a deal breaker if I get this offer?" 
While still "educating both sides," Kuar and her team of recruiters are spending
more effort on "managing" prospective hires.
     "The closing is taking a lot more energy out of the recruiters," Kuar said.
     MNI spoke with Peter Kitchin, Executive Director at Michael Page of New
York, which deals primarily with filling permanent professional positions. About
80% of Michael Page's placements are at the mid-level, with a salary range
between $75,000 and $150,000. 
     "August in a nutshell has been encouraging both in terms of job postings
that we see from existing clients as well as potential clients," he said. 
     Kitchin saw no "real substantive change" between August and July, with
summer hiring continuing the theme of "positive trending."
     "I'm fully expecting and anticipating that we will go into a very strong
September and October period, really adding to the momentum that we are seeing
in the market place," he said. 
     The July-August period in 2017 was "much stronger and more consistent" than
the same two months in 2016, he said. 
     There was "consistency across all industries," in terms of hiring needs,
with notable hiring in "virtual commerce," which is "replacing the hiring that
we see in more traditional retail sectors," Kitchin said. 
     In terms of industry demand, Daniel Morgan, owner of two Express franchises
in the Birmingham, AL area, noted that "anything transportation" was especially
hot in August, with the steel industry also seeing solid demand for workers. 
     Whether deliveries, trucking or any other kind of transportation in any
sector, employers tell him, "If you can find me somebody, I can put them to work
tomorrow," Morgan said.  
     On the U.S. hiring trend going forward this year, "I just don't see a
slowdown coming," he said. 
     "We have seen steady increases even through August; I don't see it slowing
down in December based on the feedback we're getting," Morgan said. 
     August U.S. non-farm payroll data will be released Friday Sept. 1 at 8:30
a.m. ET.
     MNI's median estimate looks for 180,000 for headline non-farm payrolls,
with a range of 160,000 to 220,000. The unemployment rate is seen unchanged at
4.3% and average hourly earnings are seen rising 0.2%.
     Editor's Note: Reality Check stories report on sentiment among business
people and their trade associations. They are intended to complement and
anticipate economic data. If you are currently an MNI subscriber and want to be
on the Reality Check email-distribution list, contact sales@marketnews.com
--MNI New York Bureau; tel: +1 212-669-6438; email: vicki.schmelzer@marketnews.com

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