Hire Ground

Hire Ground | Episode 20: Lessons from the Hiring Season and What's Next for Hire Ground

16 min · 30. juni 2026
episode Hire Ground | Episode 20: Lessons from the Hiring Season and What's Next for Hire Ground cover

Beskrivelse

Season 1 Finale: Lessons from the Hiring Season — and What's Next for Hire Ground Season 1 of Hire Ground started last August and ran the full length of the hiring season. In this finale, Christina Greenberg and Josh Czupryk close it out with the takeaways that actually stuck. It's also a transition episode. Josh is stepping back as a regular host to finish his dissertation, handing day-to-day hosting to Christina and the Edgility Search team. He'll be back as a guest whenever he can pull himself away from coding qualitative interviews. Before they sign off, they trade the season's most useful lessons: * Run your search like a real estate listing. A messy hiring process signals that you're messy at your best and candidates read "days on market" the same way buyers do. Priority deadlines create real urgency and keep people moving. * Timing beats a head start. This year's data was clear: searches launched in January and February ran the cleanest and drew the strongest pools, while roles posted before Thanksgiving mostly meant spinning wheels and multiple slates. Pre-source in the fall, but launch with intention. * Negotiate the whole pie, not just salary. Post the range (it's the law in over 20 states, and it's the right thing to do), benchmark against what people actually earn rather than what gets posted, and coach candidates to name their one or two highest-leverage asks instead of stacking six. And once you've shaken on it, honor it. Walking back a deal is the fastest way to burn the credibility you'll need on Day One. New episodes are back in your feed later this summer.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Hire Ground sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

21 Episoder

episode Hire Ground | Episode 20: Lessons from the Hiring Season and What's Next for Hire Ground cover

Hire Ground | Episode 20: Lessons from the Hiring Season and What's Next for Hire Ground

Season 1 Finale: Lessons from the Hiring Season — and What's Next for Hire Ground Season 1 of Hire Ground started last August and ran the full length of the hiring season. In this finale, Christina Greenberg and Josh Czupryk close it out with the takeaways that actually stuck. It's also a transition episode. Josh is stepping back as a regular host to finish his dissertation, handing day-to-day hosting to Christina and the Edgility Search team. He'll be back as a guest whenever he can pull himself away from coding qualitative interviews. Before they sign off, they trade the season's most useful lessons: * Run your search like a real estate listing. A messy hiring process signals that you're messy at your best and candidates read "days on market" the same way buyers do. Priority deadlines create real urgency and keep people moving. * Timing beats a head start. This year's data was clear: searches launched in January and February ran the cleanest and drew the strongest pools, while roles posted before Thanksgiving mostly meant spinning wheels and multiple slates. Pre-source in the fall, but launch with intention. * Negotiate the whole pie, not just salary. Post the range (it's the law in over 20 states, and it's the right thing to do), benchmark against what people actually earn rather than what gets posted, and coach candidates to name their one or two highest-leverage asks instead of stacking six. And once you've shaken on it, honor it. Walking back a deal is the fastest way to burn the credibility you'll need on Day One. New episodes are back in your feed later this summer.

30. juni 202616 min
episode Hire Ground | Episode 19: We Know What to Do. We Just Don't Stick With It. cover

Hire Ground | Episode 19: We Know What to Do. We Just Don't Stick With It.

The Education System has a consistency problem. In this episode of Hire Ground, Christina Greenberg and Josh Czupryk sit down with a true titan of the field: Michael Moore. With a career spanning 52 years—from the classroom to the superintendent’s office to national leadership strategy—Moore has seen every initiative, reform movement, and pendulum swing the industry has produced. What emerges from this conversation isn't a simple trip down memory lane. Instead, it is a clear-eyed interrogation of why K12 leadership feels more fragile today than at any point in the last half-century. Moore and Greenberg dive into the "hard math" of sustainability and the structural crises currently threatening the teacher pipeline. In this episode, we explore: * The Principalship Paradox: Moore contends that campus-level leadership has become so complex that even a seasoned superintendent might struggle to run a single building today. We discuss the new "policy storm" of social media, family dynamics, and shifting student needs that have fundamentally redefined the role. * The Evolution of "Grow Your Own": How leadership development is moving away from structured, technocratic programs toward more organic, community-rooted pathways that prioritize relational trust. * Austerity and its Aftermath: A look at the "policy storms" facing current districts. Moore offers a cautionary tale from the 2008 downturn, questioning whether districts are currently repeating the painful mistake of eliminating recruiting functions exactly when they need them most. * AI vs. The Human Element: Is AI a near-term panacea for the teacher shortage, or simply a tool to reduce adult workload? Moore weighs in on where technology ends and the irreplaceable skill of a teacher begins. * The 30% Pay Gap: We look at the rational barriers preventing talent from entering the profession and the "headcount math" required to actually move the needle on teacher compensation. Michael Moore’s perspective is rare: he is a veteran who refuses to be cynical. He argues that the field’s deepest problem isn’t a lack of good ideas—it is a chronic failure to stay committed to them. This episode is a must-listen for any K12 talent professional looking for a reminder that while the work is harder than ever, we already have the map; we just have to stay the course. Listen now and join the conversation on how we can finally start sticking with what works.

15. april 202617 min