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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Recruiters Add Value, Not Redundancy
By Bill Radin

Consider the following scenario. On Monday morning, a candidate posts his resume on the Internet. Within minutes, the resume is consumed by five different recruiters, who immediately “submit” the resume to the same company via email attachment. The question is: Which recruiter now has “ownership” of the candidate?

None of them. Why? Because the sixth person to find the candidate's resume happens to be the company's own staff recruiter, who deliberately leaves his email unopened. Since none of the “submitted” resumes were under consideration, it's the staff recruiter who “owns” the candidate from the perspective of the company, which neatly sidesteps the obligation to pay a fee.

The five heartbroken recruiters may cry foul, especially since “ownership” of the candidate's resume is their only claim to fame. But in truth, what did any of them do to deserve a fee?

Nothing. In this particular case, the five recruiters failed to do that which the company was unable or unwilling to do for itself; namely, to quickly surface a qualified candidate. It seems the company was fully capable, thank you very much, of performing the research task.

Barbarians at the Gate?
By definition, the purpose of delegating the recruiting function to a third party is to gain assistance, not enter into a fractious competition. For every recruiter who fights for a fee that's based on a mere technicality (as in, “We found the candidate's resume on the Web five minutes before you did!”), take a hard look at what you're doing. Quite possibly, you're creating a nuisance and cheapening the perception of your value.

With recruiters and employers competing for the same pool of public-domain candidates, it's no wonder so many companies have assumed a siege mentality. Backed into a posture of self-defense, they've erected a fortress called the “agency agreement,” a formidable contract designed to maintain their control over candidate ownership rights through rigorous recruiter submission procedures and restrictive access to managers.

To all the despairing recruiters who complain that “The resume was already on file”; or “Twenty recruiters got to the candidate's resume before me,” you have my sympathy. But the reality of the situation is, if you're not adding value, there's a good chance your services are unnecessary and unwanted.

Create Distinction to Avoid Extinction
Suppose you can find high-quality candidates by methods unknown or inaccessible to your clients or your competition. If that's the case, congratulations. Your contribution to the recruiting process has obvious merit. But if you're simply recycling the same people as everyone else---or trying to make a career from being first in line---you'd better be prepared to lose out on a lot of placements.

There's more to recruiting than finding a resume on the Internet, or anywhere else, for that matter. To command respect and truly earn your fee, focus on the true benefits you bring to the hiring process, such as:

Expertise. As a niche market specialist, you have the means to grasp the essence of each search, and quickly identify the best sources of talent. In so doing, you'll refer the most qualified candidates for the job, and reduce the time it takes to hire.
Sole-source simplicity. To avoid confusion and duplication of effort, many managers prefer to limit the number of recruiters they use. If you can provide fast, seamless service, then you can add value by establishing a preferred vendor relationship.
Heavy lifting. Cold-call recruiting is nerve-wracking and scary. But isn't telephone bravery one of the main reasons recruiters earn the big bucks? If your clients had the stomach for cold-calling---or if every qualified candidate could be found online---no one would need your service.
Insight. A perceptive recruiter has the ability to look beneath the surface of a resume and identify a candidate's true assets and liabilities. By exercising good judgment with respect to candidate screening, you'll save the hiring manager's time and help shape the decision to hire.

As raw data becomes more available to everyone, try to put into perspective the actual reason for your existence. If you, your clients and your competition are all delegating to the same source---the Internet---the more you risk redundancy and become expendable. Only by increasing your value will you earn the respect you deserve and the income that's rightfully yours.

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