In Israel, Tech Talent Crunch Forces HR Execs to Be Extra Creative
Human resources executives working in the Israeli market shared their insights at Calcalist’s conference on employee experience
16:2505.11.19
Israel’s severe tech talent crunch is no news for the local human resources executives who participated in a panel on attracting talents at Calcalist’s conference on employee experience held Tuesday in Tel Aviv.
When recruiting new employees in Israel, you have to approach passive candidate and this requires a different HR strategy then you would need in other places and fields, Alona Eyal-fried, director of HR at Intel Israel, said.

Alona Eyal-fried, director of HR at Intel Israel. Photo: Orel Cohenצילום: אוראל כהן
One of the main challenges today, no matter the size of your company, is branding it as attractive for potential employees, Amit Daniel, senior vice president of marketing and employer branding at Nasdaq-listed surveillance and business intelligence company Verint Systems Inc., said. “We work very closely with the HR team to help it locate potential employees and address the relevant challenges. We need to differentiate our company from other multinationals such as Google and Microsoft on the one hand and small startups on the other,” she said.

Amit Daniel, senior vice president of marketing and employer branding at Verint. Photo: Orel Cohenצילום: אוראל כהן

Rotem Amitai, vice president of HR at Riskified. Photo: Orel Cohenצילום: אוראל כהן

Keren Massad, vice president of HR at code management startup JFrog. Photo: Orel Cohenצילום: אוראל כהן
"With the talent crunch we are facing, it is not sustainable to keep looking for a military computer unit veteran with years of experience,” Daniel said. Hiring young inexperienced workers or ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) women gives the company more points of view, driving it to think differently, she explained.

