To find top talent, Puberty Group posts job openings on its own social media pages. This unconventional method yielded 15,000 applicants for a single role. It creates a funnel of candidates who are already fans, ensuring they understand the brand's voice and are passionate about the work.

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Aspiring social media professionals can bypass traditional career paths. By creating and growing a successful niche fan account ("stan account"), they build a public portfolio that demonstrates their ability to create engaging content and build an audience, attracting recruiters from major brands.

The same marketing funnels used to acquire paying customers can be directly applied to attract and 'close' new employees. This reframes recruiting from a siloed HR function to a core marketing activity, allowing you to leverage skills you already have to build your team.

Your hiring funnel has an ideal customer profile, just like sales. Analyze your top-performing employees to identify common demographics, past experiences, and behaviors. Use this 'avatar' to filter applications and target your sourcing efforts, increasing the likelihood of success for new hires.

An unexpected benefit of a B2B creator program is its potential as a talent pipeline. Common Room sponsored a creator who became so engaged with the product's value that they later hired him to lead their SDR team. This creates a powerful feedback loop where an authentic evangelist now dogfoods the product and leads a core GTM function.

Most hiring funnels start with inbound applicants from job posts, which is the least effective source. Instead, prioritize a five-tier sourcing strategy in this order: 1) Your "squad" (past top performers), 2) internal talent, 3) referrals, 4) outbound sourcing, and only then 5) inbound applicants.

When hiring for social media roles, prioritize candidates who have successfully built their own public platform. This hands-on experience is a non-negotiable prerequisite for understanding platform nuances, virality, and authentic creator collaboration. A traditional corporate background is insufficient for this specific role, as it lacks proof of practical expertise.

Marketing leaders can significantly increase recruiting success by personally messaging high-value candidates on LinkedIn. A direct message from a hiring manager like a CMO has a much higher response rate than outreach from a recruiter, signaling the role's importance and providing a direct line to leadership.

As you get older, your professional and social networks naturally become more distant from up-and-coming talent. To counteract this, create 'magnets'—like a recreational sports team—that attract ambitious young people, providing an alternative channel for talent identification and sourcing outside of traditional networks.

By explicitly stating a preference for hiring from his audience ("OZ Nation"), Hormozi reveals a powerful recruiting strategy. His content acts as a filter, attracting individuals already aligned with his company's culture and philosophy, creating a high-quality, pre-qualified talent pipeline.

Rejecting conventional headhunters and pedigrees, WCM actively sources talent from unique places. They successfully hired a key team member after discovering his insightful investment commentary on Twitter, where he was posting under a fake name, proving that talent can be found anywhere.