Tag: Working With Recruiters

Types of Recruiters: Corporate vs Agency

March 18th, 2010

A post over at JibberJobber got me thinking about how agency recruiters and corporate recruiters often have a different view of the world and, for a job-seeker, knowing the ropes here can make a world of difference in the success (or failure) of your career search.

Corporate Recruiters

Corporate Recruiters generally get paid a salary (not commission) by the company for whom they are hiring. They are full-time, salaried employees who have been hired as an internal, dedicated resource aligned to support some unit(s) or function(s) of the company.  They are required to focus not only on “the fill” of a position, but often have some say in the big-picture of a company’s recruiting strategy.  They (or their bosses) are (hopefully) involved in talent management initiatives along with workforce/succession planning.  They are often deployed against solving special deficiencies in the organization around certain talent requirements.  The corporate recruiter has to focus not only on the transactional element of the jobs they fill, but also on the overall impact to their organization and they have a long-term, vested interest in the success of the organization overall thanks, in part, to the talent they bring to the table.

Corporate recruiters often have a set of job requisitions, or a “req load” that they are tasked with filling.  Many companies measure their recruiters in terms of the old stand-by metric: “time to fill” (how long a job is open before it is closed) while many progressive organizations are tying in other metrics designed to determine overall “ROI” of the acquired talent back to the business.  They are often part of a recruiting or staffing division of a larger Human Resources department.

Corporate recruiters are often focused on the strategy and quality of a hire long before the posting goes live on the website and long after the newly minted employee smiles for their security badge on day one.

Agency Recruiters

Agency/External/Third-party Recruiters work either alone or in concert with others in an agency/vendor model.  Their fee structure can be either contingency (pay-per-placement), contract (on-site, but paid as a consultant) or retained (off-site recruiting, but paid a flat fee per search or set of searches) search.  Contingency recruiting is the most-common type of external third-party recruiting agency you will find. Their focus is generally on a specific market and/or set of companies/industries or skills.  You may find agencies dedicated to nursing, finance, or engineering, or you will find general “full-service” agencies with specialized divisions to help across several of your business needs.

Agency recruiters (sometimes called headhunters) are simultaneously trying to please two clients–the company that pays their headhunting fees and the candidates who they find, develop and submit to companies.  If push comes to shove, the corporation wins the fight between the two because having the best, most-qualified candidate doesn’t do any good if nobody will hire them from you (and pay the fee).

Some agencies may have dedicated business-development people out selling the firm’s abilities and locking in contracts. In the “back office”, there may be one or several recruiters and even sourcing/support people searching for and dialing up people that fit the newly caught job orders the sales people bring in the front door.  In this model, the recruiter owns the candidate relationship while the sales person owns the client/business relationship.

Other firms, especially smaller boutique/custom recruiting shops have recruiters who run a “full-cycle desk” meaning they are responsible for finding opportunities to fill and filling the jobs–the entire recruiting lifecycle.  Often, these are the most highly specialized, niched recruiters.  Often with several years of good recruiting behind them (and the nice car and bling to prove it) or a chosen preference for controlling everything (or both), these recruiters  are usually the best in the business and have seen and heard it all.  Efficient, quick, and expensive, they make hiring manager’s headaches go away, and they are paid well for it. Often, these recruiters tend to specialize in high-level, executive recruiting or very niched industries where there may be a very limited number of candidates in the world who could perform the job.

Agency recruiters are deployed when either companies do not have the internal resources to do a qualified search for a given job, or they want to outsource much of the finding, screening and administrative work of hiring. Often, companies of all sizes, including startups will partner with agencies to provide a “second pair of eyes” to ensure the right person gets hired for the job, no matter if they came from an agency, or from a direct applicant.

Compare / Contrast

Some key differences you should note about each recruiter is to understand their focus, how they get paid, and how they view a “hire”.

Both roles are highly transactional, but the agency recruiter is very narrowly focused on filling their open positions quickly. That drives the kinds of conversations you can have.  They aren’t naturally going to spend a lot of time with you unless you’re similar to talent they have placed before.

Also note that while corporate recruiters are generally paid salaries, headhunters earn some sort of commission-based incentive either straight-commissions or a low base salary and they have to earn the rest of their keep. Time is money for all of us, but even more for agency recruiters.  So. Please. Be. Brief.

Agency recruiters will work to staff up a whole team of people if hired to do so, but that is the extent of their influence on the organization.  An internal recruiter is tasked with (and takes on) owning long-term per-placement quality overall.  Therefore, they are more apt to develop long-tail relationships and develop broader pipelines knowing that a wide net may be better in the long-run than lots of small, focused nets being cast in the short-run.

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Where are the Girl Geeks for the Tech Jobs?

May 3rd, 2008

A few days ago, I was part of an interesting conversation. I had a lunch meeting with three managers of a department for one of my clients. One (male) had just completed several first-round interviews with candidates I had provided. Another manager (female) asked him a very simple, but awkward question:

How many girls did you hire?

Of course, I chimed in quickly that our candidates are selected solely on skill-match, qualifications, education and relevant experience and NOT on their gender… which is the truth.

However, a few days later that comment is ringing in my head.

Its not that I have never recruited a woman to fill a job… we do it a lot… but there is no denying it that, if I was to take a look at the gender of my candidates, most of them are male. Of course, I don’t TRACK that sort of thing in my office.

Also, my company is likely one of the most fair/balance organizations I’ve ever worked for in terms of men/women employees…

About a month ago, Gizmodo published a story reporting that Girl Geeks are “On the Rise

the male-dominated era of technology and gadgets may be coming to an end. Some activities, such as using a DVR to record a TV show, or streaming movies or games, are more popular amongst women than men.

But, when it comes to filling technical jobs with a balanced number of male/female candidates, where ARE the girl geeks?

I have a few theories:

  • My recruiting processes are structured in such a way that our jobs are just not interesting to female applicants?
  • Girl Geeks have secret clubs that they tell nobody about… and they share their jobs with each other only.
  • Girl Geeks have a drive and purpose that is different than the current bulk of candidates I work with. It appears that many professional women I know have a strong entrepreneurial “I can do it myself” streak… maybe “workin’ for da man” (pun only half-way intended) is even LESS interesting to women?

Please comment, below… especially if you are a girl-geek and you have some insight for me?  I would especially like to know if, as a woman, you feel the existing job-search “system” out there is unfair to you, and why…

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