You’ve
probably heard the expression “necessary evil.” Usually it applies to something
unpleasant that we do not like but are forced to accept in order to achieve a
particular objective. Taxes, for example.
Recently however, I heard this idiom
applied to recruitment consultants. Not by a client or candidate, but by a
recruiter! Even worse, he was a team leader.
Let’s examine this statement for a
moment.
Are we “necessary”? The fact is that
when it comes to recruiting, clients have a lot of options:
- They could head-hunt candidates for themselves. Of course, why would the client take time away from what they’re good at to spend time on something in which they have no training, experience or aptitude?
- They could advertise on job boards. Assuming they know where to advertise, and are able to write good ad copy, they then have to sift through an inbox full of resumes — most of which are unsuitable. Oh, and they’ll have to pay full rate card for the advert.
- They could search for resumes on job boards and call candidates directly. Assuming they’re willing make the investment of time and money, what would they say? Are they able to qualify candidates effectively? Do they know how to sell an opportunity? Do they know how to turn a “not interested” into 2-3 candidate referrals?
- They could advertise the job on their own website. But will they generate sufficient traffic to get a decent response? Even if their company is well known and well regarded, they’re only attracting active job seekers. What about the great candidates who are not looking a job?
- Advertise in local, regional, national or trade press. After shelling out thousands of dollars/pounds all they get is one day (or one week) of exposure with no guarantee of success. And they still have to do all the work themselves!
- Word of mouth. They could conceivably find the perfect candidate by networking with their industry contacts, including clients, suppliers and employees. But then again, they might not.
It seems that clients do have
several alternatives when it comes to recruiting staff. Therefore it would
inaccurate to say that we’re necessary to the process.
On the other hand, there are obvious
benefits to outsourcing all this work to a competent recruiter:
- We save our clients a lot of time, hassle and money.
- We work very hard to find candidates who fit our clients’ job role and company culture.
- We promote their employer brand and actively sell their jobs in the marketplace.
- We can produce better quality shortlists, faster than they can do it themselves.
- We manage the whole process and often have a higher acceptance rate than offers made directly by the employer.
- We usually take all the risk and the client only pays if we produce results!
It seems to me that we provide tremendous value to our clients and candidates, and the fee we charge is worth every penny!
Now let’s look at the second part of
this expression, the part about being “evil.” Are recruiters evil?
Well let’s see…We help our
candidates to improve their careers. We help our clients to grow their business
and hire great people. I’m having trouble seeing where the “evil” part comes
in!
So coming back to our cynical team
leader who thinks “recruiters are a necessary evil”…
How does this bizarre idea (also
known as a limiting belief) affect his performance?
- Does he perform to his full potential?
- Is he an obvious choice for future promotion?
- Is he a great role model for his team members?
- How do his beliefs affect his client/candidate relationships?
- What about his job satisfaction?
- How about his overall sense of fulfillment, achievement, happiness?
Even without knowing this
individual, I bet you can answer the above questions accurately.
We need to be very careful when we
come into contact with other people’s beliefs which ones we let in, and
especially which ones we choose to accept.
Next time you have a negative
thought, or hear something negative from a colleague, client, candidate, or
manager ask yourself the following questions:
“Is that really true?”
“Where does that idea come from?”
“How credible is the source of that idea?”
“What evidence is that assumption based on?”
“If I adopt that idea, will it help me or hinder me?”
“Is that a thought that a big biller would think?
“If not, what would a big biller think instead?
“Where does that idea come from?”
“How credible is the source of that idea?”
“What evidence is that assumption based on?”
“If I adopt that idea, will it help me or hinder me?”
“Is that a thought that a big biller would think?
“If not, what would a big biller think instead?
I’ve had the privilege of working
with, training, coaching
and interviewing hundreds of recruiters including some of the biggest billing
recruiters in the country. I can tell you for a fact that 99.9% of them have
incredibly positive belief systems. Big billers wouldn’t entertain this
“necessary evil” notion for two seconds.
You can choose your beliefs. Make
sure they’re the right ones. Which ones are the right ones? They’re the beliefs
that help you to maximize your performance and feel good about yourself!.
About Author:- “Mark Whitby — The Recruitment Coach — helps recruiters
and recruiting firm owners to maximize their billings and business
performance. If you want to generate more clients, candidates and
placements, get your FREE tips now at: http://www.RecruiterTrainingOnline.com.”
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