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The Fordyce Letter

Straight Talk for the Recruiting Profession


Articles tagged 'businessdevelopment'

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How to Quickly Identify ‘Good’ Accounts, Part 1



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Out of the millions of companies we have available to prospect for new business, how does one quickly decipher through it all and identify “good accounts?” This is arguably one of the most challenging tasks in the staffing and recruiting industry. And we haven’t even started selling yet!

Good Accounts Defined

What is a good account? That depends on your business model and sales objective.

For example, are you selling MSP or VMS type programs or are you trying to get a contract in place to be one of many suppliers to a large managed program? Or is your model such that your goal is to establish one-on-one relationships with the end-using hiring managers? Based on those different objectives, I would define “good accounts” differently, based on each of those unique sales objectives.

But let’s assume (and I think this is the case for most staffing/recruiting professionals) that your objective is the latter.

Your goal is to establish one-on-one relationships with the actual hiring managers so that you can sell value and generate high-end gross profit margins. Your goal is to avoid HR and Procurement at all costs!

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Business Development: The Truth About Getting Those New Job Orders



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Recently, I had a conversation with a staffing agency president who was interested in buying some guru or others insight for business development.

He said, “But Rachel, I don’t want any insight, I want a quick and dirty tool that will help me find and get job orders.”

In another case, the managing director of a contingent staffing agency said, “I don’t have enough job orders, I need MORE, a lot more so we can pick and choose what we work on.”

How fast do you think they will be out of business?

Let me make this crystal-clear to you as a person who has led million-dollar lead generation efforts for technology projects/staffing firms and was responsible for search agency business development: There is NO quick and dirty tool to get business and the days of picking & choosing what to work on are OVER.

The staffing agencies that are doing well today are the ones that:

  • Have a specific niche focus and do very well in what they do. They don’t just specialize in IT or sales, generally they specialize in IT security, SAP professionals, or independent sales agents for insurance. They focus on recruiting professionals where there is demand, scarcity, or emerging needs (they understand the market) and they work with recruiters and sourcers who understand these positions and can find and fill the orders. They have relationships with clients and understand where the client needs are and work to fulfill them — whether directly or through splits.
  • Understand that business development is a process and takes work to achieve relationships. One staffing agency recruiter/account executive talked with me about how she called month after month to contacts, especially when they told her “not right now”. One of the people she contacted for six months gave her a job order that was pretty significant. He thought of her first. I had that happen as well, seven months of calling, emailing, and watching the company to see if an opportunity would come, and it did. It takes time, effort, and patience to build new business.
  • They wisely invest in tools and support that will enhance delivery and fill job orders (client loyalty) or have direct impacts on business development effort. Instead of spending a few thousand dollars on branding, take your unique value proposition and engage someone who will work with you to do lead generation. Real branding can take years to develop — IBM didn’t achieve its brand equity overnight. Many staffing agencies do not have websites, though a website can be designed and built for less than $3,000 and SEO applied.
  • They know too that there is no magic bullet or shortcut to getting new job orders. Some staffing agencies invested in sales training methods and techniques, only to find the system created more complexity and even negative effects rather than positive. The best system is to understand your core competencies, what makes you worth working with, and how you can bring value to a new client and then bring that message to prospective clients. Value does not translate to cost either. One staffing agency executive had a unique focus , she could find and network with resources that could bring direct bottom line impact to organizations seeking to expand sales efforts in particular demographic markets. I worked with her to develop a 30 second pitch encapsulating that value. This, by the way, is also an example of a staffing agency that positioned candidates as a “solution” to a business problem — something articulated in a recent Fordyce article.
  • They also know the days of “picking and choosing” are over. I don’t know of any industry where organizations source business and then pick and choose which contracts or projects they will work on. If a company gets a project it can’t fulfill, it usually will enagage another firm to assist or pass it to someone else. It is ok to say “NO, this is not something we specialize in. However, I can refer you to XYZ if you have a need in this area.” Companies only go after business that they know they can fulfill or meets certain guidelines. Staffing agencies need to gain a better hold on their core competencies and source job orders that they know they can fulfill. From conversing with corporate recruiters in charge of agencies, they only will work with companies that have a track record of fulfilling job orders — the rest they are scrapping.

The Client Perspective

From the client perspective, no one has time to manage multiple agencies and spend time ramping-up or working with firms that have no ability to fulfill what they need. Just as agencies don’t have time to spend talking with or dealing with unqualified candidates, firms have no desire to deal with unqualified firms. Firms that repeatedly fail to deliver or do poorly will be dropped permanently from the roster and, in this environment, a reputation for failing to deliver is not one that you want to earn.

Many “experts” will emerge who will advise you on what to do or how to get job orders, if they haven’t made a business development call or closed business — pass them by. Be sure to ask, when your material, advice, or insight was applied — how much new business did your clients secure, in what timeframe? The best way to spend your limited funds on business development is to find a resource who will work with you to develop the message, write your website copy, develop emails, and make those hundreds of calls to establish the relationship.

There are incremental resources like me or actual agencies that do not require “big bucks” to help you. Spend your money where you get a return; if done properly, the money you spend will repay itself in new job orders.

Truth, Justice and the American Way of Headhunting

Getting Business: A Guide to Increasing Your Customer Base in Challenging Environments



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In my travels supporting sales/marketing efforts for HR service companies, I hear a common lament: how can I get more business and find more prospects with a need for my recruiting/staffing services?

Today, this is particularly more top-of-mind because key clients are:

  1. Freezing hiring activities or cutting back.
  2. Reducing their vendor lists.
  3. Pulling more of the recruiting internally.

The net effect — combined with stiff recruiting competition — reduces the need for adding more recruiting or staffing resources.

Drivers of Success

Many larger recruiting firms have developed strong networks, both client- and candidate-based, have marketing/advertising dollars, and strong methodologies. This does not mean they have a lock on clients.

The first driver of success, of course, is delivery. Many companies are willing to give agencies a shot, particularly if they are willing to perform contingency search. A lot of failure to break in is attributed to lack of delivery.

I have seen situations where the TPR was given a chance but blew it, for example, because the candidate presented was scraped from a job board and recognized by the client, did not do due diligence and had the candidate drop out, or didn’t have the recruiting/sourcing competency in the first place to build an adequate pipeline suited for that client.

Many times, recruiters or account executives also fail to forge ongoing interactive relationships; they meet the client once and then never contact them with updates or let them know what is going on. The client will never do business with those firms again.

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Solidly Constructed Recruiter Training



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The construction industry is constantly changing, and at one executive search firm in Asheville, North Carolina, its best recruiter is only as strong as its in-house training.

That’s why, four years ago, Kimmel & Associates started the “Certification” program to assist in the corporate growth of its clients.

“Construction executives need us to be as smart and well-informed as possible,” explains Guy Ross, vice president of the construction-focused executive search firm.

Ross says the Certification program makes staff “that much more versatile and sharp” and “reminds me to live up to the principles and high standards that I preach when I talk to the new employees.”

That’s why all new employees undergo the in-house program, which offers 50 classes taught by senior consultants. Classes explain everything from the complex landscape of a search to how to thoroughly serve their clients and candidates.

“A class might ostensibly be about cold-call recruiting or marketing or presenting an offer to a candidate, but there is a subtext that underpins every class: represent the client with integrity, help the candidate advance his or her career, know your market, serve the other recruiters here and the professionals out there we work with,” says Michael Thurman, a consultant who completed the program earlier this year.

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You Are Probably Underpaid



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A problem exists in the Recruiting Industry. The problem is that not all recruiters feel that the fee they charge is justified. The truth is though; their fee should probably be more. There are lots of recruiters out there working less than 25% fees. This is what today’s post is about.

I mean, you write an order, you do the work, sometimes you did the work last year so the groundwork is done, then you send the invoice and you get paid. This I think is one of the biggest problems since most people involved, the client and lots of times the recruiter, think they are paying for the candidate instead of the process. If you leave out the process bit of it, it is easy to see why one may think that a 25% fee is too much.

I often talk to recruiters who tell me that they are amazed at the fees their clients agree to pay and that they have no confidence that these fees will continue. Then there are those recruiters who spend a good portion of their time negotiating and carefully choosing their searches, not just based on the fact the search is available, but rather because everyone involved appreciated the collective effort of finding the right person and the cost is secondary.

Paul Hawkinson has an article that appeared in the Fordyce Letter a few years ago and it’s a good one. It’s called Why Recruiters Are Worth What They Charge. If you read it and understand it to the point that you can talk about it convincingly, You can incorporate it into your discussions with potential and existing clients.

You know sometimes, there is nothing quite as nice as making a decision half way through a sales pitch that you are not going to take the search even though you know you are going to get the option to do the search.

TFL archives

MAXIMIZING PRODUCTION IN A STRONG MARKET



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Congratulations!

If you’re in the Search and Placement business right now, your timing is terrific.  Historically, our industry has always been one of L-O-N-G boom, followed by a bust …. followed by another

L-O-N-G boom!  We are only two or three years into this boom.  Lots of time to go! Moreover, as this is written, we stand on the verge of our greatest times ahead, beyond anything we have every seen.

Why?  No secret.  Population trends.  The giant Baby Boom generation of 1946-1963, 78 million of them, aren’t kids any more.  They currently hold down the vast majority of positions in corporate America.  And following them, in the next 17-year time frame, we have the Gen X-ers, 43 million of them, to fill the same positions now held by the 78 Million boomers.  You are already seeing the leading edge of this situation.  For the decade of 2000 to 2010, workers 55 and over will increase by 77%, four times the rate of those from 25 to 54.  The oldest boomers will start retiring in 2008.  And it will continue, fewer and fewer qualified candidates to fill corporate positions, for 17 years!  Hmmmm!… Long term labor shortage, anyone?

In such a market, however, there is a great tendency to drift away from the habits and thought patterns of success.  Earning a good living or even doing extremely well is not enough.  In a boom market, you must maximize your production.

Here are 15 reminders or ideas designed to help you to do so. Check yourself against the following, and see how well you do.

1)        Early Arrival – Did you arrive in our office on time this morning?  This means no later than 8:30!  If not, you are “coasting,” just sailing along on a good market.  Establish the right habit patterns right now. Otherwise, you are forfeiting the income that should be yours.

2)        Daily Planner – Was your written planner fully filled-out this morning?  A brilliant but unplanned search consultant will be out-produced by a good well-planned one.  Paul Hawkinson, editor of The Fordyce Letter, has written that, “One of the things all top producers have in common is that they are well-planned.”  Is that you?

3)   Five Calls before 9:30 A.M. – Survey after survey has shown that most business sales are   made before noon.  No early time on the phone means wasting the most productive time. Even if you are not a “morning person”, grit your teeth and do it!  To quote the author, “push the stupid buttons on the phone!”

4)       Early “Reward Program” – It is not easy for some to acquire the habit of hitting the phones early.  But with a little effort, you can psychologically train yourself to doing so. Just give yourself a “reward” (cup of coffee, short walk around the office, whatever works) after five presentations.  No five presentations, no reward!  By doing

so, you will develop the habit of an early start.

5)   Limited Non-Business Calls – Personal calls are business killers!  They significantly interfere with your concentration, besides taking time away from work. No more than one a day, either incoming or outgoing.  And no more than five minutes!  For information on how to reduce these calls without irritating the caller, see the book “Breakthrough!”

6)       Five New Prospective Account Presentations, Three Minimum – Every day in almost any market, you must search for new clients.  Client relationships are not “forever”; your clients today will not be the same in three years … and shouldn’t be! Expand and upgrade, or lose.  Equally to the point, too few searches means working on what you do have.  Lack of prospecting means it may be the wrong one.

7)      Thirty Extensive Conversations

There is much more to “numbers and ratios” than “hash marks.” But keeping track of extensive business conversations is the place to start.  New people will need more calls to achieve this number, but will not have more of these extensive business discussions than will the experienced.  But every day, thirty real conversations a day will keep the bill collector away, if your skills are right.

8)      An Interview a Day – Your first thought on planning your day for tomorrow must be “where will I get my interview?” Phone interviews count. A first contact between candidate and client is an interview.  A daily push for an interview will yield you results – in any market.  Many days, of course, will not produce an interview  … but it should always be your goal and first thought.

9)   New Sign on Your Phone – Improving your skills is a habit.  An easy way to do this is to post a note on your phone every week reminding yourself to implement a new on-the-phone habit pattern.

 

10)     Stay Till 5 P.M … At Least! – A habit of “ducking out” early will get worse and worse over time, eventually becoming a downward spiral.  If you try to “beat the traffic,” eventually the market will beat you!

11) Skill Improvement Tonight? – Andrew Carnegie wrote that, “Careers are made or marred after working hours.”  At least three days a week, you should be reading a chapter in a business book, critiquing your own taped call, watching part of a business video, always striving to improve.  If you commute, listening to good audiocassettes on the way to work (suggestion: www.larrynobles.com) makes a great deal of sense.

12) Reading in the Office? – Office time is for planning and implementing.  Whether general newspaper, magazines, or industry newsletters, reading should be done after hours.  Stay focused on production in the office.

13) Office Conversations – Whether non-business discussions or pointless conversations started by non-productive people, this is a trap!  Pleasantries are fine, but more than five minutes is too much.

14) Stay Off the Internet – Innumerable surveys have proved that most web shopping, surfing and chat is done during business hours.  If this is you, it will drain your results.  This author was recently quoted in Investors Business Daily‘s “Leaders and Success” section saying, “click your Internet connection off, so you are not tempted to use it.  Turn it on only when you really need to, and then turn it back off!”  What is recommended for Investors Business Daily readers is also recommended for you.

15) “No Computer” Day – So you think your computer helps you to increase production? Maybe.  But try this.  At least one day a week, implement a “no computer day.”  If you have everything computerized, just do hard copy printouts (known as paper) the day before, and roar through your day until planning time without turning it on.  If you’re a manager, try this for your entire office. Expect to see your staff completing all planned calls early in the day. Why do you think that might be?

How do you measure up on the 15 points?  There is more to success in our business than staying effective and focused.

Without solid skills, you will be out of luck.  But good markets and bad, it is the place to start.

Our industry and your production will be doing better and better in coming years.  You are probably doing well right now.  But those who fail to truly maximize our current market reduce their success, their income and the enjoyment of a job well done.

Do your best now to improve in every way.  Great times are ahead!

Fees, TFL archives

Justifying Your Fee – A Value Proposition



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Almost everyone involved in selling a product or service understands that, in order to complete a sale, the potential buyer must reach a point where they believe the value (whether perceived or real) of the product or service is greater than its’ cost. In terms of our industry, our fee must be justified by the value of our service. This begs the question:

“Who establishes the value?”

The answer to this question cuts to the heart of justifying your fee. The answer is:

“The client establishes value.”

TFL archives

Overrides – Good idea or bad?



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Business has improved and many of you are beginning to re-staff and reconfigure. Hopefully you have learned the importance of NOT just “FILLING A DESK,” and have developed a hiring process to identify the top talent your firm needs to achieve future goals and growth.

If you are like the majority of the owners and managers in our profession, you are a “working manager or owner.” You must now make the decision to spread yourself even “thinner” or delegate the training and supervision of newly hired recruiters to someone else in your office. Before making this critical decision, ask yourself this question: “Is this the best use of my time?” If the answer is NO, you need to delegate and compensate someone else to handle this responsibility.

If you promote someone into the role of team leader or department manager you must address their “WIIFM.” It has been my belief for years that most recruiters are “social workers who like money!” One of the motivators for the type of individuals is CASH.

You can make this a WIN/WIN. Your team leader will become motivated to train, groom and mentor others, and they have a vested interest in the success of this person. People do things for their own reasons, not yours. An override on production is that type of motivation.

Often, top producers are promoted into management roles, because of their proven level of success. Top production does not make someone a good manager and, often, this type of individual is too selfish to share their valuable time mentoring or managing. Identify the individuals on your sales team who are team players, natural teachers, “givers” vs. “takers” who would enjoy the complexities of management and mentoring.

You must thoroughly think out your decision to pay an override, because it is difficult to “take something away” that you have offered. You don’t want to lose a good producer in the process!

Following are some of the most common questions asked about overrides:
Q. When should they be implemented?
A. When it is NOT THE BEST USE OF YOUR TIME to continue in this role and you have someone on your staff who can effectively handle this responsibility.

Q. How does this impact your supervisor’s personal production?
A. If you have a structured training program and systems in place, it will not have a major impact on your supervisor’s production. If you don’t, and put the total responsibility for a new hire on the supervisor, it could drastically reduce their production.

Q.What is the threshold when overrides should kick in?
A. This depends on your margin of “profit.” You need to budget a certain percentage for overrides.

New hires – Overrides are often paid on cash-in for the first six months of employment

Others – Overrides are often paid on cash in after certain Levels of production are attained. These are often Paid on a quarterly basis to ensure consistent Production.

Q. What other factors should be considered?

A. Several….

a. Develop a specific budget for overrides

b. Write a detailed job description outlining the supervision responsibilities as well as your detailed expectations of this role

c. If this individual has never managed, provide management training.

d. Set a specific time frame

e. Schedule performance evaluations

When you delegate some of your management responsibilities to a capable person, the override could be the best investment you’ve made all year. You now have time to focus on generating profits and building your business.

* Go to http://www.staffingandrecruiting.com/recap

If you want to learn how to solve the top ten hiring mistakes and get a list of 12 questions you should ask during your interview with prospective hires for your office. You can listen to the audio of a free teleseminar or download? the PDF file handout for this training.

TFL archives

Growing Your Firm – The First Step



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Our already good market continues to heat up, with prospects of a long boom ahead. In this type of market, many owners are rightfully adding to their staffs.

New owners who may never have done so before, however, will encounter unexpected problems. Even experienced owners who may not have hired new people since pre-recession days will experience difficulties.

There is no question that growing and developing a top-quality, high-profit search and placement firm is complex and challenging. But it isn’t all that way. Some problems really do have clear and, yes, easy answers. Foremost among these is finding new prospective consultants.

It’s interesting to note that managers of firms whose business it is to find candidates for other firms frequently have difficulty identifying prospective candidates for their own firm. It shouldn’t be that way. You have a lot of “natural advantages” in finding quality people for your own firm. But are you taking full advantage of them?

Two Errors

 

People in our business who say it’s difficult for them to find and attract quality people to their organization, or who claim that “it’s harder to find good consultants than it used to be” believe what they’re saying. But if you examine their methods of doing so, you’ll almost always find that they’re falling into two easy-to-correct traps which cause these problems.

Too Few Methods

 

First, they utilize limited methods of identifying candidates. It’s odd that managers who constantly emphasize multiple ways of obtaining new business or identifying prospective recruits fall into this trap. Yet you see it all the time. How many ways do you know of obtaining candidates? And do you utilize them all?

What normally happens is that an owner/manager will get good results from one method of finding potential recruiters. And they’ll stay with that method to the practical exclusion of all others!

Let’s take ads as an example. Now there’s nothing wrong with running ads for new employees, and it can be highly beneficial. But it isn’t terribly consistent in terms of results. You can get good people one time. You can run the same ad a year or a month later and get poor results. Or the market can change. In a slow economy, there will be good sales-oriented people who will respond. In a strong market, as we currently enjoy, there are a lot fewer. Lack of recognition of this has caused many owners to remain stuck with a means of identifying prospective search consultants as their main source, which should be only one of the arrows in their quiver.

Finding quality people for your firm isn’t difficult. It does, however, require a variety of methods to yield consistent results. We’ll cover them in this article.? But don’t pick out just one or two ways to utilize. Implement them all!

On-Going Effort

The second mistake leading to a shortage of qualified potential recruiters is not identifying prospects on an on-going basis.

You see this all the time. A manager wants to add staff. What do they do? They immediately launch a big campaign, generally utilizing only one method, to find them. Wrong!

If expanding your organization is a possibility, you should start accumulating prospects three to six months before you need them. For that matter, a year in advance is not too long.

“But,” you may say, “if I start that far in advance, by the time I need these people, they’ll be gone!” Not necessarily. That may be true if your primary means of identifying prospective consultants is running ads. But while ads are one option, we’ll be covering many other ways of doing so. Most of the people you’ll find in other ways will still be available. If you doubt that, just haul out a handful of recruit forms from your files, and see how many will still be there after six months!

Moreover, let’s remember that we’ve got quite an opportunity in our business. A properly constructed presentation to a candidate who has shown initial interest should “re-activate” that individual in a high percentage of circumstances.

Most search and placement firms can improve the profitability of their operations quite readily in a number of ways; improved selection process of consultants, improved training, improved supervision and evaluation will all directly result in significantly increased production.

Before these steps can be taken, however, the owner/manager first must accomplish the primary goal – identifying candidates initially.

Following are some ways of doing so, and how to utilize these techniques for best results.

Ads

 

Owners who believe “we can’t advertise for consultants” just haven’t tried the right ads. Advertising is only one of the ways which should be used as part of your staffing strategy, but it should not be overlooked. Suggested principles to maximize results are:

1. Run ads under the “sales” section of the paper.

Sales-oriented people are likely to read this section first and more thoroughly. It is also a smaller section, thus your ad will be less likely to get lost amidst others. If your major newspaper has no sales section, consider starting your ad with the word “sales,” “sales opportunity,” or “sales-oriented person” to get proper placement and attention.

Present our fine business as a sales opportunity with superb potential!

Really, we are neither “counselors” nor “consultants.” It requires a sales-oriented person to do well in our business. Let the candidate know it in the ad. The good ones won’t be scared off.

2. Local suburban newspapers or business newspapers.

These frequently get good readership and are less expensive than major papers. They are worth trying, and frequently offer good value. Moreover, it is easier to “target” locations of candidates, reducing commutes.

3. In major newspapers, run ads on weekends only.

Running ads for a full week usually isn’t worth the cost.

4. Display ads, even small ones, with space for a headline.

These are usually preferable to a classified ad. Improved visibility will yield more results.

5. Consider an unusual headline.

Even a heading of “Unusual Sales Opportunity” will draw attention. Management Recruiters used “If I Had a Brother” (I’d sell him an MR Franchise) for years with good results. One of the best-drawing ads we’ve seen was a first line of “Break Your Mother’s Heart!” and a second line of “Become a Recruiter and Out-Earn your Father.” While this drew mixed reviews (surprisingly, people of different ethnic backgrounds responded to this in very different ways), it pulled very well and yielded a number of excellent candidates.

6. Screen thoroughly on the telephone before inviting the candidate to your office.?

Evaluate the candidate under the conditions he or she will be working – on the telephone! Only after doing this should a personal interview take place.

7. If an ad pulls well, keep running it.

Don’t change the wording because you’re getting bored with it. Change only when the response curve drops.

From Candidate to Recruiter

Most people in our business started as potential candidates looking for the right position.? Then some smart placement manager told them of the potential in our business. History can’t be wrong; this is a valuable tool in staffing your office which should not be neglected. However …

1. Identify what specific qualifications you want to pre-screen.

Examples: All people with 3-15 years sales experience who have not held more than two jobs in the last five years; all people with 2-10 years IT experience who respond to the question “Would you consider a sales position?” affirmatively. Specifics are imperative.

2. Let your consultants – and secretary – know your criteria for “automatic pre-screening.”

Do not allow only your recruiters – who may not want another addition to your firm – to refer candidates to you. Let your secretary/receptionist do the initial evaluation and pass the candidate on with the comment “the manager will want to see this person.”

3. Remind your people to be alert for prospective consultants fairly frequently.

It is easy for them to overlook this.

Other Salespeople

The average small business receives many calls or visits from salespeople of products ranging from office equipment to office supplies to investments. It is a mistake not to see these people. Apart from the possibility of your benefiting from their products, they represent an often-ignored source of potential consultants. If they represent their firm well, they may represent your firm well. Do not assume they are all happy. Many excellent producers originally called on the firm that eventually became their employer in an outside (or telephone) sales capacity.

Obtaining Referrals

 

Many search and placement firms have not thought of spreading the word among their candidates, clients, or non-client (e.g. marketing call that does not result in a send-out) companies that they (the search firm) are seeking additional consultants. If done properly, emphasizing the success and growth of the recruiting firm before asking for referrals, this will strengthen the regard in which the placement firm is held by the candidate or company. If done consistently, it is an excellent source of consultant referrals.

An additional benefit is that if a hiring authority refers to you someone who becomes a consultant for your firm, the hiring authority has a built-in bias towards this person’s success. This can result in a solid account coming along with the new consultant.

Personal Contacts

Some of the most successful owners and consultants in our industry originally were attracted to our business in this way. People in our industry generally have both a wider-than-average and a higher-quality-than-average circle of acquaintances, thus making this means of finding new recruits particularly worthwhile. Yet, surprisingly, they fail to take advantage of it. Important points to maximize the return from this over-looked source of consultants are:

1. Present our industry in positive terms.

This means speaking of yourself as the owner of an “executive search” or “professional recruiting firm,” not an “employment agency.”

2. Always smile when mentioning your firm by name or by industry (see above).

This is an important subliminal selling technique. A genuinely positive attitude is our best choice, but good sales habits serve as an effective substitute. A slight rise in voice pitch and in volume at the same time (unless your voice is already too high or too loud) will reinforce positive perceptions.

3. Remember – business is not only good, but growing.

A negative comment will instantly turn off a prospective consultant.

4. The “conversion.”

Whenever you determine the occupation of a person whom you may wish to consider, immediately make a comment such as “Hmm, You know, some of the best producers in our industry come from exactly that background.” This will effectively surface any dissatisfaction with his present position. Make it a habit to comment in a similar fashion consistently. Be alert for interest.

Finder’s Fees

This refers to bonuses paid to consultants for submitting people who are ultimately hired as new consultants. We suggest that cash rewards are not the way to utilize this technique. This leads to indiscriminate submission of candidates.

Rather, consider paying a limited commission/override to the consultant submitting the candidate, possibly of 10% of gross fees billed (payable on cash-in, of course), for the first six months of the new person’s employment. This means that the consultant submitting the prospect has a vested interest in the new hire’s success, and that they get paid nothing for submitting a failure. This can be very effective and is worth considering.

The Secret to Growth

Keeping an office fully staffed is an on-going process. The prudent owner/manager will utilize these suggestions – and others that have worked well for them – on a continual basis, whether they have a current need or not. A pendaflex file filled with background forms of potential consultants is a strong bulwark against an under-staffed office, and gives the manager the strength to terminate an unproductive person should it become necessary. Only in this way can we truly maximize our billings and our profits.

Is this a good time to add to staff? For most firms in search and permanent placement, the answer is a clear “yes!” The critical issues of properly selecting, training and developing of recruiters are, of course, mandatory. These have been addressed in other articles posted at the author’s website.

The beginning of increasing production, however, must be simply finding prospective consultants. The larger the pool from which to choose, the more likely it is that the manager will select the right ones. The above points, if followed, will greatly add to the success of any firm.

TFL archives

Multiple Searches – Exclusivity – ” Do You Make A Deal?”



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Many search firms across the country are now hiring additional recruiters. Inevitably one of your “rookies” will be thrilled they just obtained twenty searches from the same client and they have an exclusive. Before they take a breath – they now ask the dreaded question, “What kind of a deal can I give them, for all this business?”

There are several issues with this scenario. First of all, you need to research why this client has so many open positions? Unless this client is experiencing tremendous growth, this could be a red flag indicating turnover, inability to attract candidates, or other non-desirable issues. You also need to find out how “long” these positions have been vacant.

Next, I don’t believe exclusivity exists. Call me a cynic after thirty years of recruiting, but I don’t believe for a minute this client is giving you exclusive searches. I’ve personally placed candidates in positions, where the client had already paid 2/3 of a retained search, which is the closest you come to exclusivity. They hired my candidates because they were the perfect match!

Think about this for a moment … this client has twenty positions to fill and is being pressured to fill them.? It’s just not a smart business decision to give one recruiter an exclusive. If another recruiter called this client marketing a candidate who was a perfect fit, do you think for one minute the employer would NOT schedule the interview? Of course they would see the person from the other source, without hesitation!

The other issue here is the time you would spend, focused on this one client. It is a smart guideline, to never allow one client to make up more than 25% of your personal activity. If one of your clients puts their searches on hold, there is still much activity that can assure you hit your production goals. Many experienced recruiters had a difficult time during the past few years because they had stopped marketing for new clients. They had a few clients that gave them all the searches they could handle. When these clients stopped hiring, the recruiter had to rebuild their client base from scratch, which is no easy task.

In a candidate-driven market you need to represent the “hot” companies in your area of specialization. If you want to identify those companies, just ask every candidate you interview to list the five companies they feel have the best reputations. This is very different from focusing the majority of your efforts on one client with multiple positions.

Lastly, and most important, I want to address the question of reducing your fee for “all this business.” My definition of business is placements, not search assignments. If you want to offer a discount, offer a discount on multiple HIRES not multiple searches.

Example: You might offer a $3,000 discount on every third hire. It is easier for your client to understand a flat dollar amount vs. a percentage discount, and it actually appears you are offering more.

There is one more issue with this type of scenario that you need to consider. A company might give you multiple search assignments, to prevent you from recruiting out of their company. If you have worked with a company for a period of time, sent top talent and not achieved hires, this is not a client. Clients are companies who trust you to identify top talent and they hire from you!

It goes back to the old adage … “If it looks too good to be true, it probably is!”

I’m not suggesting you don’t work with this client. Just be realistic with your expectations and don’t let this one client monopolize the majority of your recruiting time.

Finally, only offer discounts for multiple HIRES. We provide an extremely valuable service, top talent is difficult to find and you should focus your efforts where you can gain the greatest return. You’re worth it!