Source: https://recruitingdaily.com/news/hcm-talent-technology-roundup-april-9-2021/
OutMatch combined capabilities in assessments, video interviews and reference checking to deliver what the company calls a more “humanized” hiring experience. In the words of CEO Greg Moran, the new Hiring Experience Stack will allow candidates to “drive their own selection process.”
The Stack can be layered onto any company’s existing ATS to let candidates advance their application through the Dallas hiring platform’s workflow. Candidates can also showcase their soft skills using its recorded video interview tools.
From the employer’s point of view, the stack allows recruiters to create assessments that can capture necessary data without compromising the job seeker’s experience. It also automates reference checking and provides recruiters with a wider view of candidate data and a more precise measure of the hiring experience’s impact.
In November, OutMatch acquired Checkster with the intention of integrating its reference-checking and post-hire analysis functionality. Just a month earlier, the company purchased FurstPerson, an assessment firm specializing in pre-hire simulations. In September, it acquired LaunchPad, a recruitment automation platform.
Speaking to the website Dallas Innovates, OutMatch CTO Chris Gardner said the company will spend 2021 exploring how to combine data from its products to help customers better execute on talent acquisition plans.
“By focusing in these areas we can improve our customers’ recruiting brands, accelerate their diversity and inclusion initiatives, humanize the hiring process for candidates by putting them in more control and help recruiters deal effectively with high volumes of applicants,” he said.
Background screening firm InfoMart launched Career Wallet, an app that works much like a smartphone’s digital wallet does for retail purchases. With it, users can compile and share information such as employment history, education and skills training through their phone.
After users build their profile, Marietta, Ga.-based InfoMart verifies their credentials. Consumers then manage their own data, deciding what information to share and with whom during a job search. Employers can access credentials through the app or an API.
“Given the needed adoption of digital identities, the time of the digital skills wallet has come,” said InfoMart CEO Marco Piovesan. “Authenticated digital identities are crucial to establishing transparency, trust and seamless economic opportunities.”
In addition, employers need to hire more quickly as talent acquisition’s dynamics are changed by the expansion of gig workers and hybrid work. “Noted industry analysts are emphasizing the importance of a design-oriented and employee-focused hiring experience that is simple, automated, and digital,” the company said.
The great majority of employers, 85% of them, have a formal strategy governing their approach to HR technology or plan to implement one in the next year, according to a study by XpertHR. Almost 90% have deployed some form of technology to support HR, with the most common being an HR management/HRIS system, used by just more than 71% of organizations. At most companies, HR technology strategy was part of its wider HR strategy.
PlanSource launched its Nova software release, the first of 2021. Included updates focus on the company’s work to simplify the benefits experience and increase the use of automation, and includes the launch of PlanSourceIQ, a suite of AI add-ons designed to hyper-personalize shopping experiences and increased HR efficiency. Two new products within the PlanSourceIQ family, DecisionIQ and DependentIQ, offer optimized decision support and eligibility verification solutions.
ResumeSieve launched its candidate evaluation platform, The Sieve, and said it was offering extended benefits to early adopters. The company said its tools use AI to automate the evaluation of resumes and provide quick insights that would otherwise take recruiters a significant amount of time and effort.
Learning platform provider Strivr and consulting firm DDI announced a partnership to help users sharpen their leadership skills. The partnership brings together DDI’s experience in leadership development with Strivr’s expertise in virtual reality-based learning. Through the partnership, companies will be able train their leaders in key skills through a combined immersive and peer discussion format. The first virtual reality scenarios the companies developed include resolving conflict and driving change.
Staffbase and General Atlantic announced a strategic partnership, through which the investment firm will lead a $145 million financing round to help with international growth and strengthen the startup’s position in the employee engagement space. Staffbase has a global workforce of 450 employees in 11 locations, including London, New York, Vancouver, Amsterdam and Berlin. In March, the company merged with Bananatag, Canada’s leading provider of internal communications solutions.
Crosschq closed $13 million in Series A funding in a round led by Tiger Global Management, with participation from returning investors, GGV Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners, Slack Fund, SAP, Intersect Capital and Rocketship.VC. The company will use the investment to enhance its analytics capabilities to track and measure quality of hire, and also to grow its artificial intelligence, go-to-market and development teams, expand partnerships and continue its efforts to encourage diversity in hiring practices.
Virtual recruiting service Celential.ai secured $9.5 million in Series A funding in a round led by GSR Ventures, with participation from Spider Capital, TSVC and select individual investors. As part of the round, Amer Akhtar, former Yahoo Small Business President and CEO of ADP China, joined the company as CEO.