Hiring technical people in government is (not that) hard

2 Jan 2020 03:42 PM

Blog posted by: , 23 December 2019 – Categories: collaborationprocessRecruitment.

There were more than 50% of contractors in technical roles when I joined MoJ in April 2018. In a technical workforce of about 200 that’s a lot of contractors. 

Hiring technical people in government is hard, they said. Let’s find out, I thought.

MoJ had a recruitment freeze when I joined. It thawed in October 2018 and I began recruiting technical roles the following month. By July 2019 the results exceeded my expectations:

The numbers break down as follows:

*7 existing contractors applied and became permanent staff.

Strategy

I started by using the recruitment freeze to my advantage and used that time to gather information, ask for help and form a plan.

Gathering information

I wanted to find out why people felt technical recruitment in government was so hard. The dominant themes were:

Asking for help

Next, I needed to find people willing to help. I asked the technical community for volunteers. 30 software developers, web operations engineers and technical architects stepped forward. I proceeded to arrange recruitment training for them all.

Forming a plan

Step 1: Create a partnership with our Recruitment team

I formed a close working relationship with our Recruitment team. The team was instrumental in my success.

Three key changes proved critical to achieving great results: 

Step 2: Design a clear internal process

I knew I'd be managing concurrent campaigns for several months (as many as 15 at one point!). I was looking for mids, seniors and leads in software development, web operations and technical architecture. Campaigns would be aligned to our UK regions; London, Birmingham/Nottingham and Sheffield. My process had to be slick and purr away in the background, I still had a day job after all! Here’s what worked:

Staying on top of things

Managing interview panels

CV review and interview scheduling

Offers

In time, I was able to delegate hiring responsibility to the leads I had recruited in each MoJ agency/business unit.

Step 3: Advertising

As well as appearing on our MOJ job board, our vacancies were cross-posted on some technical job boards. We also promoted them on social media, highlighting the benefits of joining the civil service:

Looking ahead

With the recent introduction of Success Profiles, I’m making changes. I’ve created a Hiring Manual to support panel members in giving candidates the best possible interview experience.

I’ve started creating detailed role-level definitions. I’m publishing these to help candidates prepare for their interview. They will also help interview panels assess and score candidate answers consistently.

Here are our role level definitions for the technical architecture profession:

Behaviours Tab: 

Expectations for each behaviour are clearly defined. Within each behaviour I define one or more complementary strengths.

Technical Tab:

Expectations for each technical skill are clearly defined. These are based on the Skills Framework for the Information Age (SFIA). Each skill is linked back to the Digital, Data and Technology Capability Framework.

I’ve also created a new bank of 100 interview questions. Each question relates to a behaviour and strength or technical skill in the role-level definitions. We can use these to create bespoke interview questionnaires for each campaign. Panel members can check each interview question against the relevant role-level definition for guidance on scoring candidate answers fairly.

Summary

Hiring technical people in government is not that hard...if you can offer market rate salaries, run a slick process and properly support the people involved.

I am committed to ensuring MoJ has the clearest, most open and supportive recruitment experience government can offer. For both candidates and colleagues who agree to take part in this important process.