Tag: Recruiting

Generative AI, Recruiting, and Talent Acquisition


Free Download Generative AI, Recruiting, and Talent Acquisition
Released 9/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280×720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Skill Level: Beginner | Genre: eLearning | Language: English + srt | Duration: 30m | Size: 75 MB
Generative AI will have profound effects on fields like recruiting and talent acquisition. But how quickly will these changes take shape? And what can you do to prepare for the future of work?

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Skills-First Recruiting with a DEI Mindset


Free Download Skills-First Recruiting with a DEI Mindset
Released: 09/2023
Duration: 35m | .MP4 1280×720, 30 fps(r) | AAC, 48000 Hz, 2ch | 120 MB
Level: Intermediate | Genre: eLearning | Language: English
Successful recruiters wield their skills like artists, molding many different approaches into one. In this course, Stacey Gordon does just that, combining DEI with the power of a skills-first mindset to leverage the insights and outcomes of both approaches. Explore the key distinctions between traditional recruiting, diversity recruiting, and skills-based recruiting, building your awareness of how DEI fits into the latter to boost your hiring and performance outcomes. Supercharge your approach to recruiting by building relationships, identifying new competencies, rewriting your sourcing strategy, aligning your company’s value propositions with the values of your candidates, screening for skills and acumen, and much more.

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Touts Recruiting Indentured Labour in the Gulf of Guinea


Free Download Martino, "Touts: Recruiting Indentured Labour in the Gulf of Guinea "
English | ISBN: 3110754649 | 2022 | 290 pages | EPUB | 5 MB
Touts is a historical account of the troubled formation of a colonial labor market in the Gulf of Guinea and a major contribution to the historiography of indentured labor, which has relatively few reference points in Africa. The setting is West Africa’s largest island, Fernando Po or Bioko in today’s Equatorial Guinea, 100 kilometers off the coast of Nigeria. The Spanish ruled this often-ignored island from the mid-nineteenth century until 1968. A booming plantation economy led to the arrival of several hundred thousand West African, principally Nigerian, contract workers on steamships and canoes. In

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