Welcome to The Fordyce Letter:

The Fordyce Letter

Straight Talk for the Recruiting Profession


Articles tagged 'clientmanagement'

Uncategorized

Time Management, Offers, and Client Meetings



imgGary-small

Editor’s note: Gary Stauble’s “2 Minute Coaching” gives you quick, easy-to-implement ideas on various subjects. Here he offers advice on using an egg timer for personal productivity, orchestrating a “yes” within 24 hours, and how to streamline client meetings.


Topic #1: The Power of the Egg Timer

Some of the best ideas are also the most simple, low-tech, and easy-to-implement. With all the advice out there on personal productivity and time-management, it’s easy to overlook this simple tool: the egg timer.

One of the best ways I know to boost my productivity on workdays is to use a countdown timer during golden hours.

Uncategorized

Don’t Overlook Transparency in Recruiting



fordyce-default

I have been a recruiter for 15 years, starting out within the Professional Services side of the house where recruiting was more the “churn and burn” atmosphere, then transitioned in-house to be part of a growing software company where we hired over 150 folks within one year.

I love what I do and am very passionate about the hiring process and assisting my clients in finding the best talent available for their organizations. I feel that a company’s most important asset is their people and that you cannot overstate the value of an excellent match between employee and employer.

How we go about doing that, however, can vary greatly from recruiting firm to recruiting firm. What might work for one person does not necessarily work for another.

Over the years what has consistently worked for me is to be transparent with both my clients and my candidates.

Uncategorized

Are Mo, Larry, And Curly Doing Your Hiring?



fordyce-default

I’m serious.

Let’s get real, have you ever hired someone you knew little about for a job you knew less about? It happens to all of us.

I started my own company for the first time when I was 29 years old. I had a pre-teenager, a young son, and a new baby due any day.

The company I was with was shutting down, literally, that night. The girls and I took our stuff and needed a place to go, FAST. I had no operations experience, no management experience, no finance, no marketing, and certainly no technology experience. I had no operational infrastructure, organizational design or business plan.

We had a couple desks, a phone, and a hard floor. Failure was not an option, as I was the breadwinner.

Our first year we did $1,000,000.00 in sales, we had a temp division and a direct hire team. As I began to think about growing, I started to hire. I hired people who reminded me of me. Imagine that? In one year I hired 35 people. All failed, were fired, quit, or stayed far….far too long.

I was a producer and I knew how to make the donuts, fry them up in a pan, serve seconds, and then make more donuts. I did this over and over again for over a decade. It was who I was.

When the Pinnacle Society accepted my application I was flabbergasted.

Uncategorized

Ask Barb



fordyce-default

Q. I’ve been producing between $225,000 and $250,000 for the past five years. I hear about recruiters who produce over $1 million themselves and find it hard to believe. I’m working 60 hours a week just to maintain my production. I’d like to break the $300,000 level next year, but there are just so many hours in the day. What would you suggest I do to increase my production?

A. First, you don’t need to work more hours. After five years, you are working on automatic pilot; implement changes that will result in increased production and income. In order to form a new habit it takes 21 working days of repetition, which is why you should never make more than one change each month.

Select from the following ideas:

  • Review the number of send-outs you book each month (candidate interviewed by decision maker). Increase the number of send-outs you book and you will increase your production.
  • Study where your office made placements in 2009 and mirror those job orders. This is the quickest way to your next deal.
  • Only work hot orders in 2010.
  • Email a copy of your job orders to everyone in the hiring process to make sure they are all in agreement on the specs. Over 50% of the time our clients make changes.
  • Increase all your stats by 10% and you will increase your production by 25%.
  • Stop wasting time on candidates you can’t place (95% of your candidate flow).
  • Climb the ladder: begin placing the supervisors of those you currently place. The salaries are higher, and so are your fees. You also have a database of candidates — the supervisors are listed on all your application forms.

Segment your day and attempt to make 65% of your planned outgoing calls by noon.

The one common denominator of Big Billers is they arrive at work with their outgoing calls planned. Focus on results-oriented actions, implement any of the ideas above, and you will more than hit your production goal.

Q. I saw you when you spoke in Montreal, and your session changed my life. When others were struggling this year, I have had the best year of my career by focusing on send-outs and identifying new clients for both Direct and Contract business. What happens in the United States definitely affects us in Canada. I was on the verge of quitting and want to thank you for convincing me to “tough it out.”

A. Thank you for your comments. Since June 2009, there has been a steady increase of job orders in the United States in most niches. Many U.S. companies cut too deep and the lack of talent was negatively impacting their bottom lines.

I’d like to share two ideas with you that will help you increase your business:

  • On the contract side, ask all your clients and prospects how many Baby Boomers will retire this year. Baby Boomers are retiring at a rate of one every six seconds. Suggest they bring them back as contractors on YOUR payroll. They could work fewer hours or several months of the year, whatever fits their retirement plan. Your bill and pay rates will be high and there is NO interview process. We’ve had clients very grateful for this suggestion!
  • On the direct side, ask clients and prospects if they have hired anyone in the past few years they need to “upgrade.” There was great competition for talent in the past five years, and many clients hired the best person they could find rather than the talent they needed. Explain that now is a great time to upgrade those marginal hires.

There will be great competition for top talent in the future so continue to be perceived as an expert in your niche, continue increasing your send-outs, and expect to have a great year!

Q. I’m having a difficult time staying motivated every day. I arrive at work with a positive attitude and it seems to take only minutes until I get a call that ruins my day. It can be someone no-showing for an interview, someone accepting a counter-offer, or one of my clients hiring a candidate who is not mine. The calls we get from candidates are getting nastier and nastier and our clients are not being straight with us. I often feel the job boards are going to put me out of business. Your answers are always so positive and I’d like to know how you never seem to get down? I know I’m not the only recruiter who feels this way.

A. You sound like you may have “quit and stayed.” Our profession is impossible if you’ve lost your passion. A call can’t ruin your day unless you let it! None of us can control what happens each day, but we have 100% control over how we react! You have to adapt the attitude “next” or “so what, now what?”

Problems increase when you are not following systems and let details fall through the cracks. If you want to decrease problems, listen more when you are interviewing to identify the real reason candidates are contemplating a change. When you write a job order, ask for interview times and get a specific target date to fill so you can determine which orders are hot. If your candidate calls are “nasty” you are not being honest with the candidates you can’t place, which represents 95% of your candidate flow. If candidates don’t have skills, stability, and experience, you quite often can’t place them and need to provide them with alternatives.

Job boards will never replace us! Most of our clients want to hire the best person for a job, not the best person on the job boards. They normally want us to recruit a qualified candidate from their direct competition. If you are only attracting candidates from job boards, you need to learn how to recruit.

Clients do not want us to present the same candidates they are surfacing from job boards. They often want us to present “passive candidates” who will consider a change for the right opportunity.

I believe this is the greatest profession on Earth, which is why I maintain my positive attitude.

You need to have an attitude adjustment, you need to get back your passion for “changing people’s lives,” or you need to consider a different career! We hold people’s lives in our hands, so evaluate whether you have indeed “quit and stayed.”

Uncategorized

Google Apps for Managing Client and Candidate Communications



fordyce-default

My email inbox is empty…FINALLY!

Well, we finally made the move. I resisted it just like I resisted the iPhone. (I didn’t realize what I was missing out on.)

Last week our recruiting and software business switched from Outlook to Google Apps email. I was so worried I would miss my folders and the interface I grew so accustomed to. Once I realized the goal was to have an empty inbox and my time spent digging for old emails had come to an end, I was excited.

You know those emails that you try to locate at a moment’s notice (where your client committed to something important) that often seemed impossible to find in Outlook?

For companies trying to cut costs and become more efficient with fewer resources, this is a no-brainer.

Uncategorized

Help Your Clients Frame a Quality Offer Letter



fordyce-default

Clients who lose their funding, change their minds, or don’t fully understand what it will take to get a person into their positions abound. So what can you do about it?

Many trainers will tell you to “take control” of the situation, but with the news proclaiming higher and higher unemployment numbers, that has become easier said than done. And with searches becoming scarce, walking away is harder and harder.

Instead, turn your process over and gain control, help your client understand what’s involved, and identify the challenges up front.

To quote Stephen R. Covey: “Begin with the end in mind.”

Start the process with an eye to the offer letter. What are the main components of a good offer letter? A nice “Welcome to the team” message, a high-level overview of the position, some basic expectations, salary and benefit information including relocation, and an expected start date.

Let’s look at each one of these:

The “Welcome Aboard” message. Typically this is a boilerplate message at the top of an offer letter, but companies should be using this as a beginning of their onboarding process. Making a real statement about why the company wants someone in this position can make a real difference. As you take the search information, keep an ear open for the things you can include in that opening paragraph.

High-level overview of the position. Getting this down early in the process can help avoid a multitude of problems. As a benefit to the recruiter, saying this back to the person giving you the search can show you were listening well enough to summarize, give you the opportunity to demonstrate your understanding, and clarify any other issues. Once you have it confirmed by the client, you have your explanation of the position for candidates. Because it was discussed upfront and agreed to by the client, there is a clear understanding of the type of candidate you are finding. If there is a change later, all parties should recognize it was a change from the original discussion. Look at this from another angle. You’ve taken a search from a client but the job description is all over the place. You are trying to do the high-level overview but you are having problems. So you ask the client to summarize. If the client can’t successfully summarize, there is a problem with the search. At that point, ask to include others in the discussion, ask additional questions, or redirect the conversation back to the most important aspects and rank them. If the client does give you a summary, you can then see what you missed in the information or what contradicts their summary and have additional discussion. Either way, you know you understand the search as it is defined in that moment.

Expectations. We all know how important it is to make sure candidate and client expectations match. But which expectations are important enough they should be in writing? Having this at the beginning of the search can dramatically change your focus when sourcing candidates. Also, the discussion identifying these is a great time to clarify details about the search.

Salary, benefits, and relocation information. We’re all probably good at asking for this upfront so this is nothing new, but think about how to use it in the sales process. How can you word the compensation in the offer letter so the candidate is excited about it? What unique benefits does the company offer that a candidate may get excited about? And of course, be completely clear on relocation. Understanding exactly what is covered and how it is managed can make all the difference as you work on the search.

Anticipated start date. An expected start date is a great tool to use in framing the search. Although a start date isn’t set in stone, discussing this when you take the search helps establish a timeline and it is easy to back up from that date to determine when interviews need to happen and more. Clients who think the process takes too long get a real education when discussing the potential start date as they realize it isn’t the recruiter holding up the process. Discussing this at the beginning of the search also shows the recruiter’s commitment.

It is highly likely that the client already has a standard format for an offer letter, and therefore, won’t want to use your form letter.

That’s fine, but you may be able to give them some unique ideas. Once you complete the search-taking process, sending over a sample offer letter with these components, demonstrating a true understanding of the position and the needs, confirming the big expectations, and targeting a specific start date sets you apart from the competition.

Which, as you can see, really is beginning with the end in mind.

Uncategorized

In Sync: Support Clients Through Economic Changes



fordyce-default

In an attempt to stay afloat in this shaky economy, many businesses are taking a close look at their operating processes, reevaluating their hiring needs, and determining how best to obtain top-notch talent.

As you are well-aware, these companies have also taken a good, hard look at their current relationships to determine which are aiding them in reaching established goals and which are impeding progress.

To remain market leaders in their fields, companies must look for ways to rehabilitate, re-train, and enhance in order to address today’s unique talent needs.

Management really has to break down the entire process and make a best guess as to what it will be in the future. This future must be determined with as much acumen and forethought as possible, getting away from the “business as usual” blueprint and stepping outside the box into a new realm of creative and rejuvenating prospects.

During this coming of age of talent acquisition, retention, and development, hiring authorities should be on the lookout to attract new, diverse skills while retaining and further developing those skills that will continue to keep the company ahead of the pack. As companies look to attract new talent, it is imperative they first contemplate current and future goals, and then determine the characteristics needed in the new hire to help achieve those goals. Truth be told, if companies really take the time to assess talent needs, they may be presently surprised at what they might find right under their noses. Associates may have abilities and interests vital to the new direction of the company that have not been utilized.

As clients become more creative and forward-thinking, they will expect the same from their search providers. As top search providers, we should always be in sync with what is going on around us and strive to cultivate the skills necessary to advance and transform client talent needs.

Uncategorized

Building a STRONG Client Relationship



fordyce-default

I’ve often heard recruiters comment that their main responsibility is to provide a service by sourcing and hiring candidates. I find that although sourcing and hiring is certainly at the heart of what I do, I believe that the keystone of my role as a recruiter is to continually build and refine my client relationships.

In doing so, the sourcing and hiring comes secondary and without fail.

Additionally, I prefer using the term “providing a solution” vs. “providing a service.” We are ambassadors of our respective companies, who in turn provide a solution to our clients.

The solution is quality talent through a quality recruitment process. Below are several core objectives I use in building and maintaining my client relationships. I’m hopeful that in some way they can assist you as you strive to build strong, cohesive, thriving, and lasting client relations.

Know Your Product

What is your product? Your client is your product!

Far too often recruiters are ill-prepared when it comes to understanding their client.

What is their culture like? What services do they provide? What is their benefits package? What separates them from their competitors? What is the actual job description and requirements of the role? Where do they stand in the market? What makes them successful? It’s imperative to your success to know your client’s landscape inside and out.

Listen to Your Client

One vital key in building any relationship is knowing how to be a good listener. As a provider of solutions (talent solutions), we are considered subject matter experts (SMEs) in our field.

Uncategorized

The Four Rules for Successful Recruiting in a Recession, Part 2



fordyce-default

In yesterday’s part 1 of this article, I explained the first two rules to follow in a tough, tough marketplace. After all, when dealing with client objections in this economy, you’ve got to have a strategy in place to deal with them. Here are the next two rules you need to implement immediately.

Rule Number 3: Show how you can add value—and eliminate the problem.

Once you have identified the source of the problems troubling your client, show how you can add value. The truth in this economy is that while it’s easy to find average talent today, it’s still extremely difficult to find exceptional talent.

In extraordinary times, ordinary people don’t solve problems. “C” players simply don’t have what it takes to help their teams triumph over the myriad of issues this economy creates for businesses. Lucky for us, that’s our specialty. We bring exceptional talent to our clients. That is how we add value, whatever the economy.

I recommend the following general script:

“Mr. Client, let me ask you a question. What we’re finding is that in today’s market average talent is everywhere, but exceptional talent is very difficult to find. Those are the individuals knocking the sales quotas down for your competitors in the Southeast. Here is my question…since I talk to the “A” players in your market on a daily basis, would you like me to bring to your attention the top “A” players in the Southeast? The people who could quickly solve your revenue issues?”

With this simple paragraph, you’ve identified exactly the value you bring to the table and how you directly solve customer problems.

If you do this right, there can be no hiring-freeze objections. You bring exceptional talent to the table — the people who find a way to be successful in any economy. It’s a very clear choice: a team stuck with average players and failure or a team stacked with “A” players and thriving, whatever the economy! You are the one who can make that difference for them…

Rule Number 4: Spend more time getting good business.

In a recession, it’s not that there is no business to be had, it’s that unfortunately, most of it is bad. When the economy is this tight, clients reduce fees, put multiple recruiters on a single search, and delay hiring indefinitely. A successful recruiter’s goal is to get enough good business to eliminate the need to work on bad business.

Bob Marshall came up with the Job Order Matrix a few years ago and it still is worth its weight in gold today. The Matrix poses a series of questions that rate a job. It distinguishes between great job orders or search assignments and those that need to be left alone.

To acquire more good business, increase your marketing time. It isn’t enough to market a few hours a day; you’ve got to invest serious time every day to get good business.

Marketing time is based on the number of “A” search assignments you have and your unique marketplace. If you are going to take a true “A” player to market into your prospect and client base, you will have a lot more success than other marketing techniques today. My rule of thumb – if you don’t have enough “A” search assignments to hit your numbers for the next three months, then increase your marketing time.

Times are tough. Every industry in our country is facing challenges. But I like to tell my staff that strong winds make strong trees. With every day that passes, we are one day closer to a better economy. And when we emerge from this storm, we will have the improved skills and increased professional confidence born of experience.

More important, our clients need us. Don’t let them stop you from helping them make it through this recession. We will all benefit from doing our jobs the best we can, even in a challenging economy.

Uncategorized

The Four Rules for Successful Recruiting in a Recession, Part 1



fordyce-default

We’re in the middle of it, folks. The toughest economy in decades. We hear it every day from prospective clients and long-time customers alike.

“We have a hiring freeze” or “We are about to have a “RIF (reduction in force)” or even “We’ll work with you, but only if you cut your fee.”

Today’s marketplace is not for the faint-hearted. These are trying times in the recruiting world for those not fortunate enough to be deeply entrenched in the rare market unaffected by a struggling economy.

There is good news, however. In a sort of Darwinian way, weak recruiters are going to remove themselves from the industry. The rest of us will stay and fight for our careers.

It won’t be easy, but those of us who won’t accept defeat are going to make it happen. To do that, you’ll need to follow four rules of recruiting in a recession.