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On Becoming a Great Recruiter, Part 1
Eight steps to becoming a top 10%
recruiter
Over the next eight weeks,
you have a chance to learn what it takes to become one of the top
recruiters in the country. This means you'll be able to make at
least $150,000-$175,000 per year; you'll be seen as a true career
consultant by your candidates and a true partner by your clients.
Bottom line: What this means is that you'll make more placements
with better people more quickly while negotiating on opportunity,
not compensation. However, to get to be a high-earning,
well-respected recruiter, you'll need to try out the techniques
presented in this article.
Most likely, many of them will run counter to your current
approach. It's in these areas that you'll have to work harder to
overcome your beliefs and still try out the ideas. This is how you
grow, and getting through these rough spots is the key to personal
change management. So, put some extra effort in here. But enough of
the talk. Let's get started on getting better.
First, I want you to write down the one single thing you need to
do to become a better recruiter. Whether it's making cold calls,
taking the assignment, negotiating offers, or whatever, I want you
to focus on improving this one skill over the next eight weeks. This
focused intensity will allow you to extract something meaningful
from each of these articles and apply it directly to your work. Feel
free to email me the area you've chosen for
personal improvement, but beware — if you tell me now, you'll need
to tell me in eight weeks how you got better.
Here are the eight key topics we'll be covering during this
series, and a few tips to get you started right away.
- Benchmarking your performance. Since this a
project, and not just a series of articles to read, you'll first
need to figure how good you are today. Take this recruiter diagnostic
right now to get started. At the end of the project, you'll take
the same diagnostic again to see how much you've improved. We'll
also be taking a big survey as part of this. It will be the first
to collect critical recruiter performance metrics like
requisitions handled by recruiter, sendouts per hire, placements
per month, and income. Sign up here if you want to be part of
this important study.
- Taking the assignment: To ensure that you
don't exclude the best people from consideration, you'll need to
convert job descriptions into career opportunities. I call these
"performance profiles." Preparing these will instantly create a
partner relationship with your clients and allow you to become a
true career consultant for your candidates. Here are a few articles you can
read to get a head start. To get a feel for this, the next time
you take an assignment, ask your hiring manager client these two
questions: 1) What are the two or three things that a person
taking this job needs to do to be considered successful during the
first year? and 2) Why would a top person want this job? At the
end of the meeting, ask your client if he would see a person who
could do the work described even if the person had fewer of the
skills or less experience than what was listed in the job
description. This will get your client to start thinking about
performance rather than years of experience or skills.
- Active candidate sourcing. You can find
great, active people if you know the secrets of maximizing the
effectiveness of job boards, aggregators, job posting management
systems, web analytics, and your applicant tracking system. Here's
a test to see if you're even in the game. Assume you're a top
candidate who is only going to use Google to find a job. Put in
the generic title of the job, the core skills, the word "jobs,"
and the location. Did your job show up on the first page? If not,
figure out what search terms a person would have to use to find
your job within five minutes. This will give you some clues on how
to redesign your ad strategy driven by the need to find your jobs
quickly. Of course, if your ads are boring, it doesn't really
matter.
- Passive candidate sourcing. My mantra is that
with a phone and ZoomInfo or a list developed by Shally Steckerl,
you can find three to four top people for any assignment within
two days. You've got a month before we get to this topic, but
start tracking these metrics now: number of cold calls per day,
percentage of returned calls, number of people open to considering
your opportunity, and the number of good referrals per call. Now,
track the same metrics for these referrals. What you'll discover
is that working the referred list is three to five times more
productive than working the cold list. So, the secret to
passive candidate recruiting is getting good referrals. We'll show
you how when we get to this upcoming article.
- Using the interview to assess competency and create
opportunity. Some of you think that the primary purpose
of an interview is to assess candidate competency. This is only
one of many competing objectives. In my mind, there are even a few
that are more important. One is to enable the recruiter to
identify areas of job stretch to the candidate while the interview
is being conducted. Of course, you need to have prepared a
performance profile before the interview and also be able to
conduct a performance-based
interview. Together these two techniques allow you to
conduct this type of career gap analysis in real time. Not only
will you gain instant respect from the candidate, but more
importantly, you'll be able to recruit the candidate based on
opportunity rather than compensation. Try this as a starter: Ask
your top candidates if they would be open to exploring a career
opportunity if it offered 20-25% job stretch and job growth even
if the compensation increase was modest. You'll discover that most
will say "yes." Then, of course, you've got to prove it. But
proving it is why you must be great at interviewing to be a great
recruiter.
- Using the interview to defend your candidate against
managers who make dumb decisions. Another important
purpose of the interview is to prevent good candidates from being
excluded from consideration by those who conduct superficial or
biased interviews. If you've ever lost a good person because
someone on the interviewing team was unprepared, emotional, or a
weak interviewer, you know how devastating this can be. Equally as
bad is having great candidates not even be considered because they
didn't have the right skills, experience, or academic background.
Good interviewing skills can minimize these types of non-hires.
Knowing the job and conducting an in-depth, performance-based
interview provides the recruiter with the evidence needed to
overcome these types of bad decisions. Here's a test you might
want to try out to prove this. First, ask your hiring manager
client what it would take for him to see and hire a candidate from
you if the person had half the experience listed on the job
description. He'll probably say, "Demonstrated proof the person
has done exceptional work doing similar things required on the
job." Then, ask the manager to describe some of these typical
projects. Now, use the interview to get the proof you need that
your candidate has done exceptional work in these areas. This test
also demonstrates a core secret of great recruiting: By getting
the hiring manager to switch the hiring decision to performance
objectives rather than skills, you can cut your sendouts per hire
in half.
- Advanced recruiting and negotiating offers.
Handling objections, overcoming concerns, dealing with
counteroffers, and candidates saying "no" are part of the daily
grind of every top recruiter. In this article, you'll discover
what you need to do to cut lost placements by 50-75%. While you
won't close every deal, you'll have the tools and techniques to
improve your odds. Remember that if a deal turns sour in the final
stages, you have to do the search over again.
Here's how to get started on this: Start keeping track of why
your candidates say "no" or opt out of the process, whether it's
at the beginning, midstage, or after an offer is extended. Bunch
these into groups and put a graph together from most common to
least common. (FYI — this is called a "Pareto analysis.") The top
two or three of the most common concerns probably represent more
than 50% of all of the problems. So if you eliminate these, you'll
be 50% more productive. For now, just write down what you normally
do when you hear these problems, and the outcome. In the article,
you'll find two techniques to eliminate these problems. The first
is to have a well-developed, clever counter every time a candidate
raises one of these concerns. The second and better approach:
Anticipate the counter in your pitch or presentation before it
gets brought up.
- Keeping the deal closed and tracking your performance
improvement. The fight for top talent is intense, so
expect a counteroffer or a competitive offer. How you keep deals
closed is part of being a good recruiter. Getting hiring managers
involved in this stage is vital, as well as some serious
handholding and visualization exercises. Keeping deals closed at
the end actually starts at the beginning by converting boring job
descriptions into compelling career opportunities. Collectively,
this is how good recruiters earn big bucks. In this final article,
we'll tie all of the pieces together into an easy-to-use
checklist. You'll use this as your personal improvement guide and,
in combination with the survey and diagnostic test, you'll have
your own career game plan locked in place.
Once you
successfully complete the exercises contained in the interactive
series of articles, you'll be a better recruiter and on a faster
personal growth curve. Once you experience it yourself, you'll be
able to confidently say to any top candidate, "Would you be open to
explore a situation if it was clearly superior to what you're doing
today?" Better yet, 90% will say "yes" to your offer. Of course, now
you have to prove it. But showing you how is the whole point of this
series on becoming a great recruiter.
Lou Adler (lou@adlerconcepts.com) is the president of
The Adler Group, a training and consulting
firm helping companies hire more top talent by implementing
performance-based hiring. His Amazon bestseller Hire With Your
Head (John Wiley & Sons, 1997, 2002) started the
performance-based hiring and selection movement. This was
followed-up with the award-winning Nightingale Conant audio tape
program, POWER Hiring: How to Find, Assess, Hire and Keep
Great Talent (1998). Adler is a veteran recruiter and founder
of CJA Executive Search. His early industry career included general
management positions with the Allen Group, as well as senior-level
financial management positions with Rockwell International's
Automotive and Consumer Electronics groups. Adler holds an MBA from
UCLA and a B.S. in Engineering from Clarkson University, New
York.
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© Copyright 2006, BlackDog Recruiting Software Inc.
PO Box 3004 Crested Butte, Colorado, 81224
Contact us: go4recruitingsoftware@go4.bz
Phone: 970 349 0364
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