The Record (Troy, NY)

Small businesses seeking seasonal help need to get creative

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg AP Business Writer

NEW YORK >> Small businesses are having a harder time finding holiday staffers this year as they try to compete with big players like Amazon for a shrinking labor pool. Human resources consultant­s say owners need to get creative in where they look, and what they offer prospectiv­e hires.

Here are some tips:

• Go beyond the obvious places when looking for staffers. Owners should recruit seasonal staffers among people who don’t work, like retirees, or who work off-hours, like bartenders, says Kate Zabriskie, owner of Business Training Works, a company that offers management and other business training.

Owners should also consider flexible staffing, offering work in terms of hours rather than days, to attract stay-at-home parents and others who have limited time.

• Be generous with hiring bonuses and other incentives. Owners should give their seasonal staffers as big a bonus as they can afford, and also consider perks like gift cards and tickets to sporting events or the theater.

It’s best to ask staffers what they’d like.

• Offer seasonal staffers benefits. Seasonal staffers usually get only their pay, and at retailers, a discount on merchandis­e.

Owners will be more competitiv­e if they offer the same benefits they give regular employees, like paid time off and profit-sharing, says Carlos Castelan, managing director of The Navio Group, a human resources consultanc­y.

• Work with other businesses. Many retailers may lure seasonal staffers with discounts, but they might have more success if they band together with other stores, and offer discounts to each other’s employees, Zabriskie says.

“Maybe an employee could get a new tire at 25 percent off even though they’re working in a women’s clothing store,” she says.

• Hold a job fair or recruiting party, perhaps along with other small businesses. Small businesses could follow the lead of Taco Bell, which this summer experiment­ed with three-hour hiring parties at four Indiana restaurant­s.

A total of 80 people attended, and 40 of them were hired. Employees at the stores talked with visitors about working for the company, and people could have interviews on the spot.

Bjorn Erland, a Taco Bell vice president, said the company ran the experiment because of the increasing difficulty it and its franchisee­s have had in finding staffers.

 ?? AP PHOTO/STEVEN SENNE ?? Chris Welles, owner of American Rhino, stands for a photograph at his apparel store in Boston. Welles isn’t taking chances with holiday staffing. He’s paying seasonal employees more than last year and offering sports and theater tickets to persuade people to work at his stores rather than at giants like Amazon.
AP PHOTO/STEVEN SENNE Chris Welles, owner of American Rhino, stands for a photograph at his apparel store in Boston. Welles isn’t taking chances with holiday staffing. He’s paying seasonal employees more than last year and offering sports and theater tickets to persuade people to work at his stores rather than at giants like Amazon.
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