Nobody likes to pay a candidate. But sometimes that’s the only way to get one to interview or accept an offer.If you’ve thought about the idea but were concerned about the legality, here are the answers to the seven questions most frequently asked:1. ARE RECRUITER-PAID SIGN-ON BONUSES LEGAL?Yes.While you might be tempted to hold your nose with one hand and your wallet with the other, this is a perfectly legal way to do business.Simply stated, you can do whatever you want with your money. Paying it to a candidate as an inducement to accept a job is no problem. Just don’t couple the payment with any secret deal regarding the length of the candidate’s employment or other items that could damage the “client”.Applicant-pay fee statutes typically prohibit any reduction of the scheduled fee or “other consideration” to be paid. So if the candidate pays any part of your fee, check your local laws carefully before proceeding.2. SHOULD THE BONUS BE A PERCENTAGE OR FIXED AMOUNT?I suggest you use a fixed dollar amount rather than a percentage of the fee received. This moves away from the idea that the candidate is receiving a commission, and therefore is participating in getting your fee.3. HOW MUCH SHOULD THE BONUS BE?Whatever works for you to pay your bills and make more placements.These bonuses tend to be a fixed fee that approximates 20% of the fee charged. But as with recruiter compensation, fees, and everything else connected with the business of placement, there is wide variance in the bonuses paid.The amount of the bonus does not matter legally.4. IS A WRITTEN AGREEMENT WITH THE CANDIDATE REQUIRED?No. I don’t recommend it unless:a. You’re concerned about the candidate mischaracterizing the deal to the employer using legal-sounding words like “fraud” and “conspiracy.”b. The candidate insists on it.If you transmit anything in writing, make it a simple letter. The candidate’s signature is not required.Don’t agree to do anything except to pay him a specified amount at a specified time as sign-on bonus if he accepts a job with an employer you present.If you use a CAA (Candidate Acceptance Agreement), keep it separate from this informal letter. Don’t even reference it. The payment of money is all you are doing in exchange for a benefit to you.5. CAN THE PAYMENT OF THE BONUS BE CONDITIONAL UPON RECEIPT OF THE FEE?Yes. However if you can afford it, I wouldn’t do it that way.As with using a fixed dollar amount rather than a percentage (as covered in the answer to Question 2), you don’t want to have the bonus appear to be a commission.I’d wait 30 days after the start just to be sure you have a deal.6. MUST THE EMPLOYER BE NOTIFIED OF A BONUS?No. There is no specific legal requirement, and it’s a real stretch to find a “fiduciary duty”.You know the employer’s response is likely to be:a. Don’t do it, orb. Charge us less.However you can conjure up scenarios where not disclosing the deal could cost you future business or the charge that you misled the employer.If I was still working a desk, I’d probably leave it up to the candidate (and not include anything about confidentiality in the letter). Candidates have all sorts of reasons for accepting jobs, and few tell them all to prospective employers.Treat the bonus as a separate deal from the placement fee. It has different parties, is a different amount, and will occur at a different time.7. CAN I USE THE SIGN-ON BONUS AS A COUNTEROFFER COUNTERATTACK?Yes. You can wait to see whether there’s a counteroffer before attempting to save the placement with a payment to the candidate.Now you know the answers. If sign-on bonuses will make additional placements for you do the math!
Subscribe today to the print edition of The Fordyce Letter and receive 12 issues for just $189.
Articles older than two years are available here for free online but only subscribers get exclusive access to the latest tips and freshest perspective found in each and every issue of The Fordyce Letter newsletter.
Tags [what's this?]
The tag cloud below is just a way of showing which "tags" have the most articles associated with them in our archives. The bigger the font size, the more articles you'll find on that subject.
What's a tag, you ask? Well, a tag is just an open-ended way of categorizing content on the web. Rather than being limited to an arbitrary list of pre-defined categories, tags allow our editors to more precisely classify the articles in our archives.
Most Emailed Articles
- Why Recruiters Are Worth What They Charge
- $1 Million Time Management
- Three Questions For Every New Client
- Stop Kidding Yourself - The Numbers Matter
- Consistent Marketing
- Organizing and Starting the Candidate Search Process
- What Sourcing Is and What It Isn’t
- Creating Compelling Presentation
- Candidate Leadership In The Qualifying Call
- Getting Business: A Guide to Increasing Your Customer Base in Challenging Environments
TFL Archives
- September 200611 articles
- August 200611 articles
- July 200611 articles
- June 200611 articles
- May 20069 articles
- April 200612 articles
- March 200611 articles
- February 200612 articles
- January 20064 articles
- December 20051 articles
- November 200510 articles
- October 200510 articles
Subscribe to Updates via RSS
Need help understanding what exactly RSS is? Read this short article or watch this short video.
TFL Contributors
- Alan Carty
- Alan Oaks
- Barbara Bruno
- Betsy Harper
- Bill Vick
- Bob Macdonald
- Bob Marshall
- Bob Pudlock
- Brian Tracy
- Brendan Shields
- Charles Black
- Clay Abbott
- Dan Seidman
- Dave Staats
- David Manaster
- David Peterson
- David Szary
- David Thaler
- Dawn Josephson
- Dean Bare
- Dennis Smith
- Donald E. Breckenridge, Jr.
- Doug Beabout
- Duane Acker
- Elaine Rigoli
- Frank McCarthy
- Garry Kranz
- Gary Stauble
- Gene Grim
- Genevieve Tucker
- Jason Davis
- Jay Brunetti
- Jeff Allen
- Jeff Skrentny, CPC/CTS
- Jim Shaki
- Joe Straining
- John Bartos
- John Kreiss
- John Patrick Dolan
- John Sullivan
- Jordan A Greenberg
- Jordan Rayboy
- Joseph Ankus
- Joyce Lain Kennedy
- Joyce Routson
- Larry Nobles
- Lou Adler
- Margaret Graziano
- Mark Berger
- Mark Suss
- Matt McMahon
- Maureen Sharib
- Michael D. May
- Michael Gionta
- Michael Goldman
- Mickey Matthews
- Mike Ramer
- NAPS
- Neil McNulty
- Paul Davenport
- Paul Hawkinson
- Paul Herrerias
- Paul Houston
- Pedro Silva
- R Gaines Baty
- Rachel Schneider
- Rick Davis
- Robert Style
- Robin Gillman
- Robin Tan
- Russ Riendeau
- Russell Riendeau
- Sam Manfer
- Scott Love
- Stephanie Lada
- Steve Finkel
- Steve Watson
- Terry Petra
- Tiffani Griffith
- Todd Raphael
- Tony Beshara
- Wade Pierson
- Warren Rosaluk
- Wendell Williams
- Bill Vick
Paul Hawkinson: The Legend Behind The Fordyce Letter
Paul Hawkinson has been at the helm of The Fordyce Letter since 1980. He continues to push himself and his readers to the pinnacles of excellence.
Fordyce Letter Network Activity Feed
- Untitled
- Elvie Pope's profile changed
- Margaret Graziano started a discussion called Recruiting Networking Frusterations
- Margaret Graziano added the blog post 'Another Month Another Trip TO The Silicon Valley'
- Kelly Kidd joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- Untitled
- Untitled
- donna marshall joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- Untitled
- Tina Huckabay joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- G. Robert Bishop joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- Danielle Zittel replied to the discussion 100 funniest things you've ever seen on a resume
- Ralph Chapman - HR Search Pros, Inc. joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- Untitled
- Laurie Hillmon created a group called O&G Engineering & Designer Recruiting
- Nancy Ford added the blog post 'Recruiter, Counselor, Confidant'
- Laurie Hillmon joined Fordyce Letter Network. Leave a Comment for .
- Brendan Shields added a video:
- Untitled
- Richard Detoy added the blog post 'The Next Bailout?'






Recent Comments