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  • SME Workforce Readiness Diagnostic

    SME Workforce Readiness Diagnostic

  • Find out where your hiring process could be stronger
     
    Finding and keeping the right people is one of the hardest parts of running a business. We hear this from employers across the country every day. 
     
    That is why we built the SME Workforce Readiness Diagnostic, a free, 10-minute tool that helps you understand how your current hiring practices are working and where a small number of targeted changes could make a real difference. 
     
    Unlike a generic HR checklist, this diagnostic tool gives you a personalized hiring profile based on how your organization actually operates, along with specific, practical actions you can take in the next 30 days. No HR background required. 
     
    It covers the things that matter most to smaller employers: how roles get defined, where you find candidates, how you assess them, and how you set new hires up to stay. 

    There are no right or wrong answers. The goal is to give you an honest picture of where you are and what is worth focusing on next. 
     
    If you would like to talk through your results or learn about supports available in your region, we are happy to connect with you. 

    After reviewing your results, we invite you to complete a short feedback survey to share your experience using the tool and your intention to apply the recommendations. Your input is valuable in helping us refine and improve this resource for businesses like yours.

    To show our appreciation, the first 30 businesses to complete the survey will receive a $50 gift card. In addition, all respondents will be entered into a draw to win a $350 gift card.

  • Introduction

    About You
  • Does your organization also operate in other provinces?*
  • In which other provinces does your organization operate?*
  • In which other province does your organization operate?*
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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Business Profile

    About Your Business
  • 1. Which industry best describes your organization? (You can select up to two options.)*
  • Note: The industry list is based on the CIS list that can be found here.

  • 2. Approximately how many employees does your organization currently have?*
  • 3. How often does your organization hire new employees?*
  • 4. What types of roles does your organization most often struggle to fill? Select up to 2 (most pressing)*
  • Note : To proceed with 'We do not experience significant difficulty filling roles', please ensure all other options are deselected.

     

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 1

    Operational Capacity and Hiring Reality
  • 5. Who is primarily responsible for hiring in your organization?*
  • 6. How much time can your organization typically dedicate to hiring when a role opens?*
  • 7. When hiring becomes difficult, what is the biggest constraint? Select up to 2 (Most common)*
  • Did you know? 

    Most hiring challenges in small and medium-sized businesses are not caused by a lack of knowledge. They are caused by a lack of capacity to act on what you already know. 

    Time, clear ownership, and the right level of internal support determine whether good hiring intentions translate into consistent practice. The next sections of this diagnostic will help you look more closely at how those factors are currently shaping your outcomes. 

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 2 — Workforce Planning & Role Clarity

    Operational Capacity and Hiring Reality
  • 8. Before hiring for a role, how clearly are the responsibilities and expectations defined?*
  • 9. How clearly are the skills (what someone needs to know how to do) and competencies (how they need to work and behave on the job) required for the role defined before recruitment begins?*
  • Did you know?

    Most hiring challenges are not caused by a shortage of candidates. They are caused by a shortage of clarity before the search begins.

    When a role is not clearly defined before recruitment starts, the hiring process quietly becomes a process of figuring out the role through the candidates themselves. This shifts expectations mid-stream, makes fair evaluation nearly impossible, and increases the likelihood of a hire that looks right at the time but does not stick.

    Employers who spend even 15 minutes defining responsibilities, success outcomes, and must-have capabilities before posting a role consistently report faster hiring cycles and stronger early retention. The investment is small. The return is significant.

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 3A — Talent Access & Pipeline

  • 10. Where does your organization typically source candidates from? Select up to 3 (Most used)*
  • 11. How intentional is your approach to accessing different talent pools?*
  • Did you know? 

    Nearly all of Canada's labour force growth now comes from immigration. Not some of it. Nearly all of it. 

    For small and medium-sized businesses competing for the same familiar pool of candidates, this is not just a demographic fact. It is a practical signal about where the talent is and where it is going to keep coming from. 

    Employers who have begun hiring from internationally trained talent pools are not doing it as a social good. They are doing it because it works. The next section of this diagnostic will help you understand where your organization currently sits in relation to this talent pool and what, if anything, is getting in the way. 

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 3B — Global Talent

  • 12. Has your organization explored hiring internationally trained professionals or newcomer talent?*
  • 13. When considering candidates who trained or gained experience outside of Canada, what tends to be most challenging for your organization? Select up to 3*
  • Note : To proceed with 'This is not a significant challenge for us ', please ensure all other options are deselected.

     

     

  • Did you know? 
     
    When hiring feels difficult, the instinct is to assume there are not enough qualified candidates. In most cases, the real issue is not scarcity. It is where you are looking. 
     
    Most small and medium-sized businesses rely on the same two or three recruitment channels consistently. Over time this creates a closed loop: the same postings reaching the same people, producing the same results. The perception of a talent shortage builds not because qualified candidates do not exist, but because your current channels are not reaching them. 
     
    Expanding your talent pipeline does not mean working harder. It means being more deliberate about where you look and more open about what qualifies someone for the role. In a labour market where internationally trained professionals and career changers represent a growing share of available talent, the employers who are finding strong candidates are often simply looking in more places than their competitors. 

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 4 — Candidate Assessment & Decision-Making

  • 14. How structured is your process for assessing candidates?*
  • 15. When evaluating candidates for the same role, how consistently does your organization use the same criteria to assess all of them?*
  • Did you know? 

    When two candidates look equally strong on paper, the quality of your assessment process becomes the only thing separating a great hire from a costly one. 

    Most organizations rely primarily on interviews and gut instinct to make that call. The problem is not that instinct is always wrong. It is that instinct is inconsistent. The same candidate interviewed by two different people on two different days can produce two completely different hiring decisions, not because the candidate changed, but because the process did not give both interviewers the same foundation to evaluate from. 

    Introducing even a small amount of structure does not remove judgment from hiring. It gives judgment something reliable to work with. Employers who add two or three consistent evaluation criteria and one practical scenario to their interview process consistently report more confident hiring.

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 5 — Skills vs Competency Understanding

    Technical skills refer to the specific abilities required to perform tasks in a role. Competencies refer to how those skills are applied in the workplace, such as problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
  • 16. When defining a role, how clearly do you think about both what someone needs to know how to do (skills) and how they need to work and behave on the job (competencies)?*
  • 17. When writing a job posting or role description, do you include both what the person needs to be able to do (skills) and how you expect them to work with others and handle situations on the job (competencies)?*
  • 18. When interviewing or evaluating candidates, how confident are you in your ability to assess both what they can do (skills) and how they will actually perform and behave in the role (competencies)?*
  • Did you know?

    Most hiring decisions are still driven primarily by experience. Years in the field, job titles held, industries worked in. These are useful signals, but they are not the same thing as capability, and they do not always predict how someone will actually perform in your specific environment. 

    The difference between skills and competencies is the difference between what someone knows how to do and how they apply that knowledge when it matters. Two candidates with identical resumes can perform completely differently in the same role because one has the technical skills and the other has both the skills and the competencies to use them effectively under real conditions. 

    This distinction becomes especially important when you are evaluating candidates whose experience does not map neatly onto your job description: career changers, people from different industries, or internationally trained professionals whose background looks different on paper but whose underlying capability is directly relevant. Employers who hire for competency alongside skill consistently access a wider and stronger talent pool than those who filter primarily on experience. 

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 6 — Onboarding & Retention

  • 19. When a new employee joins your organization, how do you typically support them in getting started?*
  • Did you know? 

    Hiring does not end when an offer is accepted. In many cases, it is only just beginning. 

    The first 30 to 90 days of a new hire's experience are the most critical and the most overlooked. This is the window where expectations either get confirmed or start to erode, where a new hire decides whether they made the right choice, and where the investment your organization made in finding and selecting them either pays off or quietly starts to unravel. 

    In most small and medium-sized businesses, onboarding is informal and inconsistent. What a new hire experiences depends heavily on who their manager is, how busy the team is, and how much time anyone had that week. The result is that some hires integrate well and others do not, and the difference has less to do with the quality of the hire and more to do with the quality of the welcome. 

    Employers who build even a simple, consistent structure around the first 30 days, clear expectations on day one, a named point of contact, and two or three scheduled check-ins, report significantly faster time to contribution and meaningfully lower early turnover. The structure does not need to be formal. It needs to be intentional. 

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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
  • Section 7 — Workforce Strategy & Decision-Making

  • 20. When your organization has open roles that are difficult to fill, how do you typically respond? Select up to 3*
  • 21. How proactively does your organization plan for future workforce needs?*
  • Did you know? 

    How your organization responds when a role is hard to fill reveals something important: whether hiring is being treated as a short-term problem to solve or a long-term system to manage. 

    Reactive responses, increasing recruitment efforts, redistributing work, adjusting expectations, are sometimes necessary. But when they become the default, they treat the symptom rather than the cause. The same roles become difficult to fill repeatedly. The same pressure returns. The organization stays in a cycle it never quite escapes because the conditions creating the problem are never addressed. 
    The difference between organizations that break this cycle and those that do not is rarely resources or expertise. It is timing. Employers who have even one structured conversation per year about anticipated workforce needs, which roles are likely to open, which skills will be harder to find, what talent relationships to start building now, consistently report less reactive pressure, faster hiring, and stronger candidates when vacancies do open. 

    Hiring well in the future starts with planning deliberately in the present. This final section of the diagnostic is designed to help you understand how your organization currently approaches that planning and where the most productive opportunities to strengthen it lie. 

  • Let's stay connected ...

  • 22. What types of support would be most helpful to strengthen your hiring and workforce practices?*
  • 23. Would you be open to connecting with resources and supports available in your region to strengthen your hiring and workforce practices?*
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    In collaboration with

  • The IECC logo
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