Tag Archives: Talent Management

It Takes a Smart Firm to Keep Smart People – China Daily

It’s good to bring in staff from overseas, but that is only half the job.

Since China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, a great number of its state-owned enterprises have developed businesses overseas. An increasing number of SOEs are also conducting international commerce with other countries. Both trends show us that the need for excellent international talent has become inevitable for SOEs. But the fierce competition among all kinds of companies in the knowledge-based economy has led to an urgent lack of foreign talent in SOEs over the years.

There is no doubt that it is critical for companies to take care of their foreign talent, especially high-end management talent and multitalented expats. From human resource management to human resource development, to retain foreign talent can be presented in every detail. But it is difficult to say whether SOEs have done a good job in retaining foreign talent.

To begin with, I would like to talk about the process of adaptation by foreign talent to the Chinese working environment. SOEs should always bear in mind that foreign employees may not stay at the company till the end of their contract.

If an SOE really wants a foreign talent to stay in the company for a long time, it really needs to take action. For instance, in order to help skilled foreigners get used to the environment quickly, a mentor from the company can be arranged to help the foreign employee with life and work issues. SOEs can also plan team-building activities to encourage them to communicate with local employees. Moreover, SOEs can organize training sessions for new employees so that they can get familiar with the company within a short time.

Another important issue is that fairness, transparency and efficiency in performance appraisals should be improved so skilled foreigners can receive objective feedback about their work. A fair performance appraisal plays an important role in the development of one’s career. Foreign employees enjoy positive recognition from their company, while negative feedback may stimulate them to work harder.

It is also very important for a foreign talent to see an SOE’s real action. To be specific, if a foreign talent performs very well, he or she expects to see a salary increase that matches what is noted in the performance appraisal.

Developing a better incentive system is also a positive action to take for SOEs.

What needs to be addressed is that both psychological and material incentives should be considered. The psychological incentive refers to an encouraging environment for foreign talent. Positive comment and feedback from management can infuse foreign talent with confidence, which can also develop into work motivation.

As for material incentives, I think SOEs should come up with some smart ones. By saying smart, I mean incentives that are tailored to foreign talent. Take housing subsidies. For foreign employees, a housing subsidy is not really practical. The majority of foreign employees in China rent houses rather than buy them. Instead of paying for the housing subsidy, SOEs could choose to pay for Chinese language courses if they are going to stay in China for a long time.

Another issue is with Chinese medical insurance. The Chinese medical insurance only covers expenditure in Chinese hospitals, but it is difficult for most foreign employees to talk with doctors or nurses in the local language. SOEs should consider foreign hospitals or clinics as options.

Lastly, taking care of the family of a foreign employee is also a good way keeping them. Foreign employees, being in another country, are unable to spend time with their families. Arranging a trip for the family of the foreign employee may be a great idea.

There are still a lot of challenges for SOEs. Attracting and retaining international talent is certainly not an easy task, but it would be helpful for SOEs to solve the issue of retaining talent by considering the suggestions set out here.

The author is CEO & founder of RMG Selection, an Asia-focused human resources and recruitment consultancy.

http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/weekly/2013-04/26/content_16451326.htm

10 Trends in Talent Management 2013 – RMG CEO on CEOONLINE

人的问题永远是最重要、最复杂、最棘手、最容易出错的环节,无论如何强调人的重要性都不为过。人错了,一切都白费,人对了,一切都顺了。

2012年底,《世界经理人》进行的“中国企业面临的最大管理挑战” 调查结果印证了这一点。调查结果显示:未来十年,人力资源是企业面临的最大管理挑战!

如果你想胸有成竹地应对最大管理挑战,你就必须了解2013人力资源管理的十大趋势。

最佳管理智囊档

姓名:潘瑞宝Robert Parkinson 职位:罗迈国际商务咨询(北京)有限公司首席执行官

资历:14年猎头顾问经验,曾在全球包括中国在内的四个国家进行人才咨询和管理。

公司:罗迈国际(RMG SELECTION),是一家由资深顾问组成的国际招聘组织,专注于各行业各职能部门的中高端人才搜寻,并同时提供人力资源咨询,薪资调研,心理测试以及领导力训练课程。

Blog:rmgselection.blog.ceconlinebbs.com/ Read the whole article: http://www.ceconline.com/hr/ma/8800065629/01/

Talent Crunch – RMG CEO on China Daily

Gianni Serra, the Asia representative manager of ELS srl, an Italian event management company, is a worried man these days as he cannot find the “ready-to-use” talent needed to get his business up and running in China.

“The education programs in China have not kept pace with global education standards,” says Serra, who is searching for Italian-major graduates in China. “Many of the people I interviewed had good language skills, especially in writing and reading, but lacked in communication and problem solving skills.”

Like Serra, many foreign enterprises and domestic firms are now finding that talent is not just the scarcest commodity in China, but one that is essential to maintain economic momentum.

At first glance, it may sound odd that in a nation of more than 1 billion people, there is a talent shortage. But that is the reality. Though there are no exact numbers to estimate the actual shortfall, it is widespread and not confined to any specific industry. Human resources still remain the most formidable challenge for the big, small and medium-sized firms in China along with the multinational and foreign companies.

More than 59 percent of the 160 China-based respondents in the PricewaterhouseCoopers’ annual global CEO survey admit that hiring in China has become increasingly difficult. The survey points out that the talent shortage is spread across all sectors, with an acute shortage of senior and middle managers.

According to a study conducted by Manpower Group, 33,000 global employers found that vacancies at the managerial and executive level are more difficult to fill in China than in other countries.

Such findings have serious implications for both foreign multinationals and State-owned enterprises and private companies, especially as many of the latter are nursing global ambitions.

Arthur Yeung, academic advisor to the Executive Education Program of the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) in Shanghai, says demand for skilled and well-educated people has outpaced the supply in China, especially after the economy has moved into the high value-added mode.

“The talent shortage in China is acute and a major source of concern for local companies and foreign multinationals,” says Yeung, who is also the Philips Chair Professor of Human Resource Management. “China used to be a manufacturing-driven economy, where there are a large population of blue-collar workers and factory managers to manage the process. But ever since it shifted its focus from manufacturing to high value-added industries, the challenge of attracting and retaining staff has gone up.”

“The shortage of talent could slow China’s growth as productivity gains slow,” he says.

Growing demand

Robert Parkinson, CEO and founder of RMG International Business Consulting (Beijing) Co Ltd, a recruitment consultancy, says that China has grown so rapidly in the past decade that the demand for talent is not able to match the potential for domestic growth.

“The US took nearly 60 years after World War II to achieve the kind of growth that China has done in 25 years. So naturally, you will be more stable if you grow more slowly,” he says.

China might have a vast pool of low-cost labor, supplying everything from textiles, toys and computer chips in a short time. But the “China speed”, the pace at which products are designed and factories are equipped, appears to have hit a speed bump when it comes to creating qualified graduates.

A report published in June by McKinsey Global Institute says that China will still face a shortage of about 23 million college-educated workers by 2020, despite producing the most college graduates in the world.

Fewer than 10 percent of the Chinese job candidates on average would be suitable for employment in a foreign company, the report says.

Learning gap

Parkinson at RMG International Business Consulting explains why many graduates, despite good paper qualifications, are often said to be unable to adapt themselves to the working environment, which often plays a major role in the talent shortage issue.

He says the Chinese educational system focuses on learning a lot of facts and curricula rather than teaching people to think creatively.

“In China’s education system there is general focus on specific experience and technical ability rather than the ability to lead, manage and market,” Parkinson says.

“In the US and Europe, there has been an economic boom for the last 30 years, and halfway through that, people started to realize that it was not good to be a specialist in just one technical area. The ability to sell, think out of the box, and imbibe transferable skills are more important than knowing how the factory production line works.”

Employers are facing a shortage of talent across a broad range of industries, but the fiercest demand is for skilled and experienced workers in sectors with huge growth potential.

In the accounting industry, the demand for qualified Chinese accountants has skyrocketed in the past decade, as a growing number of private and State-owned enterprises are seeking public listings both at home and abroad.

“The growing complexity of accounting management has made it difficult for audit firms to find experienced accountants,” says the managing partner of a local audit firm, on condition of anonymity.

“We can’t grow fast if we don’t have access to qualified people.”

Elisa Mallis, chair of the Human Resources Working Group of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, says for European companies the talent shortage is at all levels but more acute in the leadership rungs.

“In China, many people become managers much earlier than expected. So there is a lack of experience and specific leadership competencies compared with their global counterparts, especially in strategic thinking, being highly adaptive, collaborative and open and in skills related to empowerment and people development,” she says.

Cherol Cheuk, general manager of Hudson Shanghai, an international recruitment company, says with rising domestic consumption, not only will the demand for goods and services go up, but also the demand for skilled people in service sectors.

“If you look at the healthcare industry, it is the only industry that has not been affected by the global economic turmoil,” she says. “Since most Chinese people are moving up to the middle class level, they are also now more keen than ever to ensure longer life with proper healthcare facilities. So there is a huge demand for such services, especially in medical business and allied sectors like biotechnology and medical equipment.”

According to a report by Antal International China, a global executive recruitment organization, China’s most talent-demanding sectors are luxury goods, hospitality, leisure, finance, retail and healthcare.

“These industries are all service-oriented, probably because the concept of ‘excellent service’ is still quite new in China,” says Sarah Jones, head of operations at Antal International China. “The talent shortage mainly lies in the mid to senior-level bracket, due to the fact that very few candidates have the required five years’ experience needed to fill those positions.”

A limited supply of talent and the increasing challenge of recruitment are also resulting in high turnover rates.

A report by Hudson shows that across all sectors in China, 52 percent of the employees remained with one employer for two years or less, while 7 percent remained for more than four years.

A similar survey of China’s business climate by AmCham-China in 2011 showed that the voluntary turnover rate had risen to 20 percent in 2010, the highest rate in the last decade.

Foreign multinationals increasingly report that their employees are leaving to join State-owned enterprises and private companies rather than the previous common practice of switching from job to job in search of ever-higher paying jobs at foreign companies, the report says. The rise of Chinese global employers will place additional pressures on multinational employers to retain their top talent, it concludes.

China’s executives and leaders are now looking at alternative strategies such as internal training and building a larger base of potential managers including those from overseas.

Jones at Antal International China says human resource directors need to rethink their recruitment strategies in China, as “hiring expats for professional and managerial positions does not appear to be a sustainable solution, as they hardly understand local culture and business style”.

Zhou Xing, assurance partner of PwC China, says that good company culture, training and promoting recruits are key to keeping a low turnover rate.

“We are doing what we can to help them grow and learn new regulations and rules of accounting as well as other soft skills for career development and give them a clear and attractive career path and a sense of pride of being part of the company,” Zhou says. “Most of our mid-to-senior managers are from entry-level positions and have been working in the company for more than 10 years.”

She says the turnover of PwC China remains close to 15 percent, an average of the global turnover in the auditing industry, meaning that the staff are quite satisfied with the current working conditions.

PwC China hired about 1,900 graduates in 2012 from more than 18,000 applicants, an increase of 18 percent over the previous year.

“We don’t have any problems in hiring raw recruits, and most of them are very intelligent, hardworking and willing to take the initiative,” Zhou says.

But some argue that despite the fact that multinational companies train and promote managers from entry-level positions, the process is time-consuming and costly.

“Sometimes companies have a very shortened timeframe within which to develop their staff into senior leaders, and it will take several years for these employees to be future leaders of the organization,” says Yeung at CEIBS in Shanghai.

“So I think companies need to accelerate the process, provide select employees with special training and mentoring to put them on a fast track to secure future company management positions.”

Government strategy

In recognition of the risks of talent constraints on business, the Chinese government rolled out its 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15) outlining a strategy for finding and nurturing talent, with the idea of bringing 2,000 skilled Chinese home all in an effort to meet the country’s pressing talent demand.

The program is aimed at encouraging experienced engineers, scientists and other experts of Chinese origin back from the West to grow more domestic companies into the ranks of the world’s top 500 companies.

The commencement of MBA courses in many colleges is also testament to the government’s effort in increasing the education level of China’s workforce and to build an innovation economy.

China’s business schools such as CEIBS in Shanghai and the Guanghua School of management at Peking University now rank among the top business schools in the world.

However, some say that China is not a good breeding ground for training talent, and if China is not able to provide a more competitive and creative environment, it cannot generate talent.

“I think how people are going to be managed needs to be changed in China, because people need to realize that the kind of ‘top-down’, ‘managing to please the boss’ is not good in a modern competitive enterprise,” says Parkinson of RMG.

“If you have a culture that encourages ideas and criticism and people work there not just for the money, then you have a sustainable development in your company.”

Read the whole article: http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/weekly/2012-08/31/content_15722771.htm

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China's Next Top Scout – RMG CEO on China Daily

More headhunting companies are coming to the fore in finding candidates for domestic firms

Each time Li Yunqing, the director of human resources at Digital Leader Tech Co in Beijing, tries to fill a new position in the company, she struggles to find the right person from a list of candidates on the Web. Often, she finds that an Internet search for talent frustrating. What’s worse, she says that when candidates come in for an interview, most have not bothered to read the job description. “This is seriously a waste of time for my work as well as for the company,” says the 30-year-old executive at the high-tech firm.

But help is, and has recently been, popping up in greater numbers in China in the form of headhunting companies, which Li says has made her work much easier. As more and more Chinese companies strive to compete against multinational companies and find success in the global economy, more are using recruitment services as a way to find top-level talent and stay ahead.

According to the report for Executive Search Industry in China, in 2006 there were approximately 3,000 headhunting companies in major Chinese cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. This year, there are currently 23,000.

Foreign headhunting companies first established offices in China 15 years ago but their practices initially focused on multinational companies, helping them find employees to work on the Chinese mainland.

In most cases, the recruiters gravitated toward hiring Malaysian Chinese, Singaporean Chinese, candidates from Hong Kong or Taiwan or Chinese returnees from the United States.

But during the financial crisis in 2008, as many multinational companies suffered and put a temporary halt to global recruiting, demand for talented employees from domestic companies grew. And as China surfaced from the recession as one of the most dominant players in the global economy, the need for local talent from Chinese companies skyrocketed.

“When we first entered into the Chinese market in 1998, 90 percent of our clients were multinational companies, but today we see half of our clients from multinational companies, and half from local companies,” says James Darlington, Asian regional director of Antal International, a global HR consulting firm. “This is very impressive as more local Chinese firms started to see how important it is to get the best people.”

Ma Rong, director of headhunting at Sam’s Party, a leading domestic recruitment firm in China, says she believes at least 50 percent of enterprises in China, such as Haier Group, Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co, Inner Mongolia Mengniu Diary (Group) Co, Midea Group and Gree Electric Appliances Inc, are using headhunting companies to find management-level talents to compete on the global stage.

“A few years ago, these Chinese enterprises were not concerned with using headhunters to find middle or top talents for their management team, but now they want to beat the multinational companies,” Darlington says.

Mark Carriban, managing director at Hudson, an international recruitment company that established offices on the Chinese mainland 11 years ago, expects a balance in their portfolio of international and local clients.

Currently, 85 percent of Hudson’s clients are multinationals in China, while 15 percent are domestic. “As many local companies internationalize and acquire business overseas, their HR policies will become more refined. Therefore they will demand more quality recruitment service from foreign headhunting companies,” Carriban says.

He says that as the government shifts economic focus from exporting to increasing domestic consumption, Carriban says there will be more opportunities for Chinese companies to hire domestic talent.

“We have found there is a bigger demand from retail and the luxury sectors as people’s living standards in China get better,” Carriban says.

According to Hudson’s January figures on recruiting in China, 66 percent of companies in the country said they would increase hiring in the first quarter of 2012, an increase from 64 percent the previous quarter. Sectors such as automobiles, healthcare and life sciences, green energy, retail and industrials in China are showing a picture of health and growth this year.

The big question with recruitment services in China, however, is how quickly will a country based on the traditions of using guanxi – which translates to relations and is the central Chinese idea of personal networking – accept recruitment service companies? Is there any room for headhunters in a country where the right guanxi makes all the difference in ensuring that a business venture is successful or a job position is filled?

Robert Parkinson, founder and CEO of RMG Selection, a recruitment consulting company based in Beijing, says Chinese companies will take a long time to truly embrace the concept of recruitment services because guanxi still plays an important role in Chinese society.

Liu Qinghui, a 28-year-old engineer who specializes in designing in antennae for electronics, found his current job through the recommendation of his tutor at college.

“I know I was qualified for this position, but there are so many people out there. Without a recommendation from my tutor, I might not able to pass the resume screening,” he says.

Often it is acquiring the right guanxi with the right people that will determine whether a company is successful in China. Moreover, the inevitable risks and barriers entrepreneurs encounter while doing business in China will be minimized when they have the right guanxi.

“It will take five or 10 years for Chinese people to use headhunting companies for outsourcing,” says Parkinson, 34, who has been in Beijing for almost seven years.

Nonetheless, it is clear to many recruitment consultants like Parkinson that more Chinese companies are finding that the best way to be successful is finding the right personnel.

“I think we are seeing two trends in the Chinese side: Some companies are trying to build a stronger local management team with individuals who have international work experience. So for them, they are looking for more returnees,” says George Fifield, managing director of Korn/Ferry International’s Beijing office. “On the other side, I expect to see a lot of demand from Chinese companies to help them find people in Europe, Australia and North and South America as they start overseas operations.”

“By using these headhunting companies, we could find candidates more efficiently, and most importantly, they are very focused and the candidate they find for us very much meets our requests,” Li of Digital Leader says. “It’s good to use headhunting companies as they have a bigger database of the talent pool.”

Li says many headhunting companies in China provide candidates for their clients until the client is totally satisfied with a candidate. If a candidate is not up to par, the person will not be hired full time after a three-month probation period.

Despite the need for managers among Chinese and multinational companies, there is one major challenge for all of them: a dwindling supply of talent.

Francois de Yrigoyen, deputy general manager of Manpower Group China, says “because (more and more seniors are coming into the period of) retirement and (because of the) one-child policy in China, there is not enough talent for this booming market”.

“The challenge here I think is to build supply – a supply of people who have years of speaking foreign languages, who have lived overseas, studied overseas and have some understanding of what it is like to work in different companies,” Fifield says.

Carriban says they are facing a shortage of high-performing candidates who can make a difference at companies. He also says there is a certain shortage in candidates with leadership skills, sensitivity to multiple cultures and strong English language proficiency.

Many foreign recruitment consulting companies in China have addressed this shortage by offering training courses in English and leadership programs for their clients.

Today, the hottest sector looking for talent is in research and development. According to China’s Ministry of Commerce figures, there are now 1,200 foreign multinational R&D centers in China, representing a $12.8 billion (9.3 billion euros) investment. There are no fewer than 353 such centers in Shanghai alone. Top level talent will clearly be in high demand over the next 10 years.

“When I came to China seven years ago, mostly our practice in China was predominately with multinational companies and very little work with Chinese companies. Today, one-third of our business is with Chinese companies and two-thirds of it is with multinationals in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou,” Fifield says. “But I hope that ratio will flip because we are in China, so our practice should be China-based or China-oriented.”

Read the whole article: http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/epaper/2012-04/06/content_14992467.htm

Read the newspaper: https://www.rmgselection.com/images/rmg%20news_cd_apr_rp_2.png

China’s Next Top Scout – RMG CEO on China Daily

More headhunting companies are coming to the fore in finding candidates for domestic firms

Each time Li Yunqing, the director of human resources at Digital Leader Tech Co in Beijing, tries to fill a new position in the company, she struggles to find the right person from a list of candidates on the Web. Often, she finds that an Internet search for talent frustrating. What’s worse, she says that when candidates come in for an interview, most have not bothered to read the job description. “This is seriously a waste of time for my work as well as for the company,” says the 30-year-old executive at the high-tech firm.

But help is, and has recently been, popping up in greater numbers in China in the form of headhunting companies, which Li says has made her work much easier. As more and more Chinese companies strive to compete against multinational companies and find success in the global economy, more are using recruitment services as a way to find top-level talent and stay ahead.

According to the report for Executive Search Industry in China, in 2006 there were approximately 3,000 headhunting companies in major Chinese cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. This year, there are currently 23,000.

Foreign headhunting companies first established offices in China 15 years ago but their practices initially focused on multinational companies, helping them find employees to work on the Chinese mainland.

In most cases, the recruiters gravitated toward hiring Malaysian Chinese, Singaporean Chinese, candidates from Hong Kong or Taiwan or Chinese returnees from the United States.

But during the financial crisis in 2008, as many multinational companies suffered and put a temporary halt to global recruiting, demand for talented employees from domestic companies grew. And as China surfaced from the recession as one of the most dominant players in the global economy, the need for local talent from Chinese companies skyrocketed.

“When we first entered into the Chinese market in 1998, 90 percent of our clients were multinational companies, but today we see half of our clients from multinational companies, and half from local companies,” says James Darlington, Asian regional director of Antal International, a global HR consulting firm. “This is very impressive as more local Chinese firms started to see how important it is to get the best people.”

Ma Rong, director of headhunting at Sam’s Party, a leading domestic recruitment firm in China, says she believes at least 50 percent of enterprises in China, such as Haier Group, Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co, Inner Mongolia Mengniu Diary (Group) Co, Midea Group and Gree Electric Appliances Inc, are using headhunting companies to find management-level talents to compete on the global stage.

“A few years ago, these Chinese enterprises were not concerned with using headhunters to find middle or top talents for their management team, but now they want to beat the multinational companies,” Darlington says.

Mark Carriban, managing director at Hudson, an international recruitment company that established offices on the Chinese mainland 11 years ago, expects a balance in their portfolio of international and local clients.

Currently, 85 percent of Hudson’s clients are multinationals in China, while 15 percent are domestic. “As many local companies internationalize and acquire business overseas, their HR policies will become more refined. Therefore they will demand more quality recruitment service from foreign headhunting companies,” Carriban says.

He says that as the government shifts economic focus from exporting to increasing domestic consumption, Carriban says there will be more opportunities for Chinese companies to hire domestic talent.

“We have found there is a bigger demand from retail and the luxury sectors as people’s living standards in China get better,” Carriban says.

According to Hudson’s January figures on recruiting in China, 66 percent of companies in the country said they would increase hiring in the first quarter of 2012, an increase from 64 percent the previous quarter. Sectors such as automobiles, healthcare and life sciences, green energy, retail and industrials in China are showing a picture of health and growth this year.

The big question with recruitment services in China, however, is how quickly will a country based on the traditions of using guanxi – which translates to relations and is the central Chinese idea of personal networking – accept recruitment service companies? Is there any room for headhunters in a country where the right guanxi makes all the difference in ensuring that a business venture is successful or a job position is filled?

Robert Parkinson, founder and CEO of RMG Selection, a recruitment consulting company based in Beijing, says Chinese companies will take a long time to truly embrace the concept of recruitment services because guanxi still plays an important role in Chinese society.

Liu Qinghui, a 28-year-old engineer who specializes in designing in antennae for electronics, found his current job through the recommendation of his tutor at college.

“I know I was qualified for this position, but there are so many people out there. Without a recommendation from my tutor, I might not able to pass the resume screening,” he says.

Often it is acquiring the right guanxi with the right people that will determine whether a company is successful in China. Moreover, the inevitable risks and barriers entrepreneurs encounter while doing business in China will be minimized when they have the right guanxi.

“It will take five or 10 years for Chinese people to use headhunting companies for outsourcing,” says Parkinson, 34, who has been in Beijing for almost seven years.

Nonetheless, it is clear to many recruitment consultants like Parkinson that more Chinese companies are finding that the best way to be successful is finding the right personnel.

“I think we are seeing two trends in the Chinese side: Some companies are trying to build a stronger local management team with individuals who have international work experience. So for them, they are looking for more returnees,” says George Fifield, managing director of Korn/Ferry International’s Beijing office. “On the other side, I expect to see a lot of demand from Chinese companies to help them find people in Europe, Australia and North and South America as they start overseas operations.”

“By using these headhunting companies, we could find candidates more efficiently, and most importantly, they are very focused and the candidate they find for us very much meets our requests,” Li of Digital Leader says. “It’s good to use headhunting companies as they have a bigger database of the talent pool.”

Li says many headhunting companies in China provide candidates for their clients until the client is totally satisfied with a candidate. If a candidate is not up to par, the person will not be hired full time after a three-month probation period.

Despite the need for managers among Chinese and multinational companies, there is one major challenge for all of them: a dwindling supply of talent.

Francois de Yrigoyen, deputy general manager of Manpower Group China, says “because (more and more seniors are coming into the period of) retirement and (because of the) one-child policy in China, there is not enough talent for this booming market”.

“The challenge here I think is to build supply – a supply of people who have years of speaking foreign languages, who have lived overseas, studied overseas and have some understanding of what it is like to work in different companies,” Fifield says.

Carriban says they are facing a shortage of high-performing candidates who can make a difference at companies. He also says there is a certain shortage in candidates with leadership skills, sensitivity to multiple cultures and strong English language proficiency.

Many foreign recruitment consulting companies in China have addressed this shortage by offering training courses in English and leadership programs for their clients.

Today, the hottest sector looking for talent is in research and development. According to China’s Ministry of Commerce figures, there are now 1,200 foreign multinational R&D centers in China, representing a $12.8 billion (9.3 billion euros) investment. There are no fewer than 353 such centers in Shanghai alone. Top level talent will clearly be in high demand over the next 10 years.

“When I came to China seven years ago, mostly our practice in China was predominately with multinational companies and very little work with Chinese companies. Today, one-third of our business is with Chinese companies and two-thirds of it is with multinationals in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou,” Fifield says. “But I hope that ratio will flip because we are in China, so our practice should be China-based or China-oriented.”

Read the whole article: http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/epaper/2012-04/06/content_14992467.htm

Read the newspaper: https://www.rmgselection.com/images/rmg%20news_cd_apr_rp_2.png

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