Tips for Recruiters
Table of Contents

Twelve fact-filled articles about candidates, employers, and key elements of the placement process

1. Recruiters Add Value, Not Redundancy
Is candidate "ownership" your only claim to fame? If so, extinction is a distinct possibility

2. Finding the Recruiting Script That Works

How to combat the cookie-cutter approach to recruiting new candidates

3. Stimulate Candidate Referrals and Fill More Jobs
Improved relationships will increase the flow of candidates

4. How to Expand the Supply of High-Quality Candidates
Thirteen additional sources of new referrals

5. Intelligent Internet Recruiting
How to convert raw data into interviews and placements

6. Storyboard Your Recruiting Script
How to create a sense of excitement and urgency when you talk to candidates

7. The Power of Interview Preparation
Give your candidates the competitive edge when interviewing for your jobs

8. Candidate Control: The Key to Recruiting Success
Understanding your candidates' motivation for change

9. Fight the Counteroffer Bug
Find out how early detection can prevent disaster

10. You're Worth the Fees You Charge!
Why you should hold the line on search and placement fees

11. Negotiate for Higher Recruiting Fees

Increase your earnings from improved client relationships

12. Fee Negotiation Tactics

How to fight the pressure to slash your fees

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Candidate Control: The Key to Recruiting Success
By Bill Radin

Like any other professional service that deals with the public, recruiters continuously struggle with the issue of control. The same way doctors wrestle with “patient control” and lawyers boast about “client control,” so recruiters agonize over “candidate control.”

However, if you look at recruiting realistically, you’ll recognize that you can no more “control” the actions of another person than you can control a speeding vehicle that’s hydroplaning down the interstate at 70 miles an hour in a driving rainstorm. That is, the force of momentum will to a greater or lesser degree affect the direction your candidate takes, just like it will a 3,000-pound car.

The best you can hope for is that you’ve selected the right vehicle for the trip and that your preparation, training and reflexes will guide you safely towards your destination. Your degree of control, in other words, is relative to a variety of external factors, the most important of which is the candidate’s true motivation for change.

Revealing the Source of Discontent
I’ve found that people experience dissatisfaction with their employment situation due to one or more of the following reasons:

• Personal. The candidate’s relationships with those at work are unfulfilling. Perhaps the peers and/or supervisors are incompatible with the candidate, or they have different goals. Or maybe there are vast differences in political, religious, socioeconomic or educational backgrounds. Or the overall corporate culture seems out of synch to the candidate, or the “feel” or “look” of the company’s surroundings leaves something to be desired.

• Professional. The candidate’s ability to achieve career goals or technical fulfillment is stalled, or unattainable. As recruiters, it’s on the professional aspects of a candidate’s employment equation that we most often (and erroneously) focus our attention.

• Situational. The candidate’s dissatisfaction has nothing to do with the personal or professional aspects of the job; rather, the dissatisfaction is tied to circumstances. For example, the candidate’s commuting distance might be intolerable, or the air quality or school system in the candidate’s city might have deteriorated; or the candidate’s spouse might have recently accepted a job in a different city.

The point is, there may be a hundred different value-related reasons behind a candidate’s apparent discontent. As recruiters, it’s our job to develop an awareness of the factors that motivate a candidate to explore his or her options---and to offer viable career solutions.

Unless you’ve pinpointed the precise motivation behind a candidate’s interest in interviewing for another position, you’ll have no leverage in the job-changing process. And worst of all---if the candidate has no real motivation for making a change---you’ll find yourself as a mere facilitator in a tire-kicking exercise, in which your efforts will serve only to satisfy a candidate whose only interest is to extract a counteroffer.

At which point, you need to ask yourself: Who’s really in control?

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