I spent 8+ years working on our cleaner recruiting funnel.
Here is the EXACT 6-Step Hiring Funnel we use and the numbers you need to be targeting.
๐ฐMoney making thread for any local service biz entrepreneur
//The MaidThis Franchise Hiring Playbook๐//
Core concept here: treat your recruiting funnel the same as you would for your marketing funnel.
We talk about ROI, CPC, ROAS, etc etc for marketing. Why not do the same for recruiting?
Fix that labor funnel and you'll be growing faster than 95% of the competition ๐
1๏ธโฃ: STAND OUT FROM COMPETITION
Make a playful job ad about the CANDIDATE, not your company.
Hire a copywriter if you can't do this, or read a bunch of job ads that convert.
Ex: the subject line of of our our job ad copies is "Not another crappy $10/hr job". ๐
Why is this important? Because your competition is NOT doing this. They have a generic "we are looking for professional X,Y,Z".
People are NOT just looking for the highest paid job. They want fun and culture. Show that and you set yourself apart from the masses immediately.
Pro tip for this: remove as many 'we' statements as you can. The candidate wants to know whats in it for them....make the job copy about the candidate almost exclusively.
List your requirements, but stop talking so much about your company. Thats for later in the funnel.
2๏ธโฃ: COMPANY CULTURE
This is the hardest one, but you HAVE TO build a fun culture for the employee.
I don't believe you're getting a vastly superior cleaner from $15/hr to $19/hr...its prob the same-ish person.
Stop competing on price. Build a culture they want to join.
3๏ธโฃ: THE FUNNEL AND NUMBERS
Let's get into the nitty gritty now. Keep these metrics and numbers in mind so you know if you're performing on par or not.
If you're off-track with these #s, then you know this is the part of the funnel you need to work on.
The 4 Step Funnel is โฌ๏ธ
Step 1) Online Job Ad: we target <$2 per qualified applicant (QA). This means they hit our 5 criteria to move forward to the phone screening phase. We push qualified applicants into a Trello board.
<$2/QA = good
$2-4 = okay
> $4 = bad
Depends on niche and geographic market.
Step 2) Initial Screening Call:
This is where we ask 5 key questions to see if the candidate hit the main qualifications to move on. This call should be 5-10 min max.
Normally we're seeing ~25% of qualified applicants passing this phase onto Step 3. Even after we pre-screen โฌ๏ธ
If 50% of the people you speak to are good enough to make it to the 2nd round call, you're in really good shape.
If you're at a 10% rate, for ex, then you know you have a problem between Step 1 to Step 2 of the funnel. Focus on fixing that, then move on.
Step 3) Video Interview Call: Reminder texts sent before. I'd say a 50% show up rate here is good and on track. Review qualification questions, assess demeanor, ask Core Value-based questions.
If you're under 25% show up rate, go back and fix Step 2 of the funnel
Step 4) Test Cleaning and/or Onboarding Call
At this stage, either you feel good enough to move the candidate straight to onboarding call (paperwork setup, policies, etc). OR you move them to a test cleaning phase, if you're worried about reliability โฌ๏ธ
Roughly 3/4 (75%) of applicants who make it here should make it to the finish line. If they aren't, same as before...go back and assess the earlier funnel steps.
Let's run through the math.
20 Qualified Applicants = $40-80 spend target
25% make it past initial phone screening = 5
50% show up rate = 2.5
50-75% successfully onboarded = ~1.2 to 1.8 successfully onboarded cleaners.
This doesn't include labor hours for your recruiter.
TL;DR of the Labor Recruiting Playbook
1๏ธโฃ Good recruiting copy
2๏ธโฃ Company culture fixing
3๏ธโฃ Phone Screening
4๏ธโฃ Video Call
5๏ธโฃ Test cleaning
6๏ธโฃ Onboarding
Your labor funnel is more important than your marketing funnel. Track your recruiting numbers diligently.
If you're here -- Thanks for reading.
Want to learn about local biz tactics I use at MaidThis Franchise?
You want to walk into a market as the only person who has something everyone wants.
Then, you sell it to them.
Here are 11 businesses with virtually no competition:
1/ Dog poop scooper
I met a guy making ~$20k/mo with pretty decent margins doing this.
The ticket amount is low, so you need high density.
It's a needed service that is pretty hard to find.
2/ Home service concierge
Hereโs the pitch:
- Wealthy people own expensive homes
- Itโs not worth it for them to care of it themselves
- So they pay someone a healthy monthly fee to take care of *everything*
Iโm booking a safari and just got off the phone with a local company.
Smoothest sales pitch Iโve ever heard. I dropped $5K in 10 minutes.
In fact, I was *relieved* to hand over my credit card. THATโS how dialed in this companyโs pitch was.
Hereโs the 4 step sales process they used on me:
The first thing they did? ๐๐ก๐๐ฒ ๐๐๐ญ๐ฎ๐๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฒ ๐ฉ๐ข๐๐ค๐๐ ๐ฎ๐ฉ ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐ฆ๐ง ๐ฉ๐ก๐จ๐ง๐.
While other safari companies were hiding behind contact forms and getting back to me in โ1-2 business daysโ, these folks were like "Hello, want to see some lions?"
No-brainer, but already puts them wayyy ahead of competition.